Quantcast
Channel: DailyDot Entertainment Feed
Viewing all 7080 articles
Browse latest View live

Who is 11-year-old YouTube star Matty B, and why is everyone so mad at him?

$
0
0

In April, an 11-year-old rapper named Matty B posted a cover of the Notorious B.I.G.’s “Juicy” to YouTube. It has more than 6,000 dislikes, and 1 million views. The YouTube peanut gallery voiced its usual barrage of dissent:

“Fuck you MattyBRaps you ruined a legendary song r.i.p. Biggie smalls.”

“Yo you ain't about that life take this shit down, you can't compare you little rich kid.”

“I’ve heard of you for a minute MattyB, I never left hate comments, but this is too far. I know you want to make music for kids your age... But never remix a song made by a legend rapper who's dead. You might get threatened for this, seriously.”

In 2012, Matty, whose real name is Matthew Morris, covered Justin Bieber’s “Boyfriend." That video now has more than 78 million views—and some pretty awful comments. He’s covered Jay Z, Beyoncé, Robin Thicke, Naughty By Nature, Cher Lloyd. When he was just 7, he parodied“Whip My Hair.”

Who is Matty B and why are people so mad at him?

In the current YouTube cycle of star-making and reinvention, you have to be more than a channel. You have to be a content creator. Matty B is an 11-year-old from Georgia, but he’s also a brand, one with 500,000 Twitter followers, more than 2 million YouTube subscribers, and 5 million likes on Facebook. He's not just an Internet brand—he's a family-friendly one. 

That family-friendly appeal extends to his webseries, Matty B’s World, in which the day-to-day life of an 11-year-old YouTube-famous rapper living in Atlanta, Ga., is documented. We see him interact with his mom, Tawny; his dad, Blake; and his little sister, Sarah Grace. In the debut episode, he and his dad, who’s also his manager, discuss whether Matty should cover Jason Derulo’s “Talk Dirty.” Matty talks his dad into revising it to “Drop Dirty” so he can perform a G-rated version with up-and-coming singer Chloe Channell, who was on America's Got Talent. As one does at age 11.

Via email, Matty says he didn’t know much about YouTube until his cousin, Mars, moved in.

"I always wanted to watch YouTube anytime I was allowed.”

Mars, a.k.a. Marshall Manning, functions as Matty's editor and sounding board. Mars’s mother died from cancer when he was 18, and Mars moved in with Matty, his parents, and his sister and three brothers.

In 2010, Mars appeared on American Idol but was eliminated in the first round. He put out an album, titled Welcome to Mars. Soon, a Matty-Mars alliance formed on YouTube.

“I always like music with a cool beat and at first I wanted to take hip-hop dance,” Matty explains, “and then my big cousin, who was a rapper, moved in with our family and he started making YouTube videos and that’s how it all began.”

“All the boys saw him as a big brother,” says Blake Morris, Matty’s dad. “So I kind of got tricked into letting Matt into the entertainment business.”

When I speak to Morris, he relates that Matty’s been at lacrosse camp, and that he’s officially out of school for the summer. In the fall, he’ll be in fifth grade, and Morris stresses that he tries to only work Matty eight to 10 hours a week, in an effort to give him a normal 11-year-old’s life. He's not a stage kid. 

“I remember when he was little, from the time he was old enough to express music, he would dance around,” Morris says, “and he was driven to an 808-type beat. We didn’t know what kind of performer he was until we put him on stage at age 7.”

As for Matty’s first YouTube video, Morris says, “We did it as a marketing play for Marshall. We produced the 'Eenie Meenie' video; that was the beginning. We knew he might be a novelty, but we cultivated that.”

Matty B also performed Katy Perry at age 7. At age 8, a false rumorspread that he had been killed in a car accident. At 9, he covered “Boyfriend,” which has 87,000 dislikes.

He's essentially grown up on YouTube. His fans—"BBoys" and "BGirls"—now span continents. How does he carry the burden of being called the next Bieber?

“Justin Bieber's music has been awesome for me and he and his team have always been nice to me,” Matty says.

Did he expect the comments on that Notorious B.I.G. cover to be so divisive?

“Many videos get both positive and negative comments," Matty says. "Look at the ‘most viewed’ videos all time and you will see huge amounts of both positive and negative comments.”

“We want Matt to be exposed to some of the greatest rap styles ever,” Blake explains. "With Biggie, here’s the story of someone who lost his life; we prayed for them, and Matt loved the song. Matt wouldn't know if that video’s controversial or not. He needs to develop his own style, that’s why we don't mind doing covers. It’s part of artist development.”

Blake says Matty likely doesn’t even know about the controversy in the comments section. He tries to shield him from some of the more antagonistic corners of the Internet, and the family handles social media.

“Matt still doesn’t know what a lot of that means,” he says. “There’s things that he’s said to us that show his innocence. If Matt is asking to sing something like ['Talk Dirty'], it’s because he likes the beat. It’s finding a balance and letting him evolve through adolescence. If anything, we’re forbidding the fruit more than normal parents, because of where he’s headed.

“Does Matt engage his fans? Absolutely. We keep him engaged with the positive side of that. He has an iPhone, so he can look it up, but he’s immune to a lot of that. His earlier videos got a lot more hate.”

In March, Matty B scored a deal with Endemol Beyond, the digital content creation and distribution company that recently gave Courtney Love her own YouTube show. The company's attempting to mold Matty’s pop image in the era of Patrice Wilson’s YouTube hit factory, and multi-hyphenate teen Vine stars. Matty has fans devoted to his brand on YouTube and Facebook, but can it survive outside the Internet? This vlog partnership with Endemol might end up on as a TV deal, if they can “incubate” an audience, Blake says.

Matty B’s about to embark on a summer tour. He seems to be living that super-positive lifestyle, unencumbered by the specter of Internet fame, at least for now. He’s definitely got the messaging down.

“I never read negative comments and that is the best way to stay positive,” he says. “Just ignore the haters, and that is what I rap about, to help others! I get so much love from my fans it is hard to ever be anything but positive.”

Screengrab via MattyBRaps/YouTube


'Ghostbusters' turns 30 with an infographic and a return to the big screen

$
0
0

It might be time to grab your Twinkies and cross the streams again.

It’s hard to believe that it’s been almost 30 years since the asskickers of Ghostbusters first made their way into theaters, but thanks to Sony Pictures, fans will get the chance to see it again (or for the first time) with the re-release of the film to more than 700 theaters on Aug. 29.

There’s plenty of other promotional events in the works around the time the 30th anniversary hits, including new merchandise and a Blu-ray set with deleted scenes.

Even though Ghostbusters seemed like an impossible movie to make at the time, it was more successful than anyone could’ve ever imagined, and Mike Seiders has illustrated all the different pieces that came together to make it happen in one handy infographic.

While an original Ghostbusters movie hasn’t been in theaters since 1989, the fans’ love for the movie hasn’t died down at all; a Ghostbusters art gallery attracted visitors as recently as April.

Talks of a possible Ghostbusters III have been in the works for years. Harold Ramis, who starred in the original movie, had been working on an early draft for the movie before his death earlier this year.

H/T The Verge | Photo via poppet with a camera/Flickr

The dangers of binge-watching 'Orange Is the New Black'

$
0
0

Warning: Spoilers ahead for Orange Is the New Black. And House of Cards.

Yesterday, I decided that instead of waiting until the weekend to binge-watch season 2 of Orange Is the New Black, I would start at midnight PST (well, 2am my time) along with thousands of other fans, and put my body and mind to the test. The show’s Twitter account spoke directly to me:

Why yes, I did take a power nap, and my strategy was to binge-watch OITNB until sleep took me.  

This seems futile, but in the era of middle-of-the-night Beyoncé releases, these things can’t wait another day. Netflix’s last original series debut came around Valentine’s Day, with House of Cards season 2. I watched it all in a weekend, like many did.

But was I really watching it? Do we lose a show’s finer points in the binge watch, as opposed to scheduled, extended viewings? I nodded off in the middle of the season, but was roused awake during the surprise threeway between Frank, Claire, and a secret service agent. Last May’s Arrested Development binge had no particular order, and the narrative was tweaked to switch point of view each episode. Would this have had more impact on a week-to-week schedule?

Orange Is the New Black is a compelling show, one in which women with personalities and backstories populate the screen. It’s the perfect mixture of comedic and dramatic narrative; it elicits empathy, as many popular shows with Internet fandoms do. That empathy is sharpened in season 2. The show changed how we talk about television, both in terms of the next-day watercooler conversations and the role of women in driving a show’s narratives. 

Season 2 continues with the backstories: We get more on Taystee and her mother figure, Vee, who’s now at Litchfield as well. Piper’s back after her fight with Pennsyltucky, and an inevitable betrayal by Alex, who half-heartedly claims she wants to be her “prison wife.” The friendships and dynamics between women in the show continue to be refined. In one scene, Red tells Piper she has to be selfish in prison. I started to wonder what I'd be like in women's prison. Would I just stand there and watch as my new prison friend Lori Petty gets beat up? 

Is binge-watching selfish? Should the binge, by nature of the word, be a solo, more personal venture? Were there OITNB binge-watching parties I wasn’t invited to? Right now, somewhere, there are women watching the show together, clinking wine glasses and laughing, chunky bracelets colliding in slow motion. (Maybe I’m projecting here, but it’s late, I've been drinking rosé, and I’m a bit delirious.)

That “maybe just one more” feeling is exactly why binge-watching can feel so comfortable. There’s a security. We say “just one more” in a lot of daily situations, some of them not-so-healthy, and Netflix has programmed those original shows to be ingested quickly. There’s actually some science behind our addiction.

A Netflix-assisted study from 2013 found that 73 percent of binge-watchers felt good about it, but that might just be the result of a Netflix-assisted study. The company sent an anthropologist, Grant McCracken, into viewers’ homes to assess why this number was so high:

"TV viewers are no longer zoning out as a way to forget about their day, they are tuning in, on their own schedule, to a different world. Getting immersed in multiple episodes or even multiple seasons of a show over a few weeks is a new kind of escapism that is especially welcomed today.”

We need a constant narrative, and social media has provided us with one, but we have to contribute. Watching Netflix is part of that, but so is fear of missing out. McCracken noted the “in case of emergency, break glass” trend in binge-watching: saving shows for a later date. 

The study also found that 80 percent of “TV streamers say they would rather stream a good TV show than read a friend's social media posts.”

Well, that might be true. But last night, leading up to the premiere, Twitter was our lifeline. It's replaced traditional previews before movies. It's a way to keep fans engaged in this new era of social media screenings. 

As the sun started to come up, I finally had to tap out of the binge-watch. I was starting to feel a bit disassociated, and had spilled my rosé after nodding off with it in my hand, ready for just one more. But I also experienced the collective excitement of the binge-watch. Even my dreams were of Orange Is the New Black.

Screengrab via Netflix  

You've never seen a guitar solo from this perspective before

$
0
0

Brad Paisley knows how to make the Internet go haywire: take two topics that go great online and smack them on top of a celebrity selfie.

Last week, the West Virginia country gawd stepped outside a concert in Kansas to snap a (thoroughly documented) selfie with the Westboro Baptist Church. Turns out he’d already been up to a few Internet-ready tricks. 

The night before, jamming out 12-bar blues with his backing band at Joe's Bar in Chicago, Paisley spotted a guy holding a GoPro in the crowd, got up in front of him, and grabbed the camera so he could use it as a slide.

Pretty wild, right?

“It was the perfect storm because I happened to not have my case on my GoPro,” says guitarist Mike Perlof, the GoPro’s owner. “[That] would have made it nearly impossible to play slide guitar with … at that angle that Brad caught.”

Not to mention passing the camera back without skipping a single note.

Photo via Mike Perlof/YouTube

50 Cent is your new favorite Disney villain in 'Malefiftycent'

$
0
0

Rapper 50 Cent has been making the talk show rounds to promote his new album, Animal Ambition, and new Starz show, Power. And perhaps do some damage control after his awful first pitch at Citi Field last month (the old “excessive masturabtion” excuse really came in handy).

Last night on Jimmy Kimmel Live, 50 Cent teased a new movie, a “big one.”

“This ain’t going to no Redbox,” he explained.

I mean, I would watch 50 Cent in Maleficent, but I get the sneaking suspicion this sketch was written just to use the phrase "Get witch or die tryin'."

Screengrab via Jimmy Kimmel Live/YouTube

Teens are blaming everything in the universe on 'The Fault in Our Stars'

$
0
0

Even as the film adaptation of John Green’s The Fault in Our Stars roars into theaters for what’s sure to be a lucrative couple of months, the teen cancer romance novel has come in for some harsh treatment—and not just at the hands of condescending, YA-bashing literary critics.

In fact, Green and his book can be blamed for just about anything, according to Twitter.

But for all the damage and chaos Green has sown, his tearjerker does occasionally have a positive effect on people’s lives—even if he’s using their sense of guilt as leverage.

If we’re not careful, this dude is going to turn us all into weepy, undateable moral paragons.

Photo by MarLeah Cole/Flickr (CC BY 2.0) 

Holy moly, a nun just won Italy's 'The Voice'

$
0
0

Everyone’s favorite singing nun is back, and she’s just won the Italian Voice

Sister Cristina Scuccia, 25, and a member of the Ursuline Sisters of Milan’s Holy Family was last seen when she took the judges by storm in the blind round with a rendition of "No One" by Alicia Keys. While the Internet found new things to obsess over, Sister Cristina slowly progressed through the show and last night won the final with 62 percent of the public vote.

After winning, the nun kept her modest attitude up and asked the audience to join her in a recitation of the Lord’s Prayer. Thanking her fellow sisters who had come along to all of the previous rounds, she lifted the trophy into the air and thanked God. 

With her magnificent victory comes a record deal with Universal, but she hasn’t indicated whether she’ll take it yet. "My presence here is not up to me; it's thanks to the man upstairs!" she said. "I'm not here to start a career but because I want to impart a message."

The songs that led her to the finals are as superb as her Alicia Keys cover, and they included Bon Jovi’s “Living on a Prayer,” “Time of My Life” from Dirty Dancing, and “What a Feeling” from Flashdance.

Screengrab via the Voice of Italy/YouTube

What Sherlock and Charles Xavier have to do with D-Day

$
0
0

Today may be the 70th anniversary of D-Day, but the BBC clearly wasn't thinking about appealing to World War II veterans with its choice of actors to read vintage news broadcasts of the historic event.

In order to share its historic coverage of the turning point for the Allied powers in 1944, the BBC chose three British actors whose butter-smooth voices are most likely to distract us completely from their recitation of news bulletins: Benedict Cumberbatch, Sir Patrick Stewart, and Mad Men's Toby Jones. 

The three actors recited news bulletins from throughout June 6–8, 1944, lending their dulcet tones to one of the most significant moments in human history.

The clips are only a few minutes each, and are available on the BBC website.

Screengrab via BBC


Dumbledore returns to fans in televised new J.K. Rowling adaptation... sort of

$
0
0

The first Harry Potterspinoff movie won’t be out until 2016, but that doesn’t mean J.K. Rowling fans will be bereft of new entertainment until then.

A TV adaptation of Rowling’s adult novel The Casual Vacancy is in the works, co-produced by HBO and the BBC. The first members of the cast have just been announced, and among them is Michael Gambon, the actor who played Dumbledore in the later Potter movies.

Gambon’s role in The Casual Vacancy will be more Dursley than Dumbledore, however. The book is about political and social conflicts in a small English town, beginning after a local politician dies and leaves a seat open in the parish council. Gambon is set to play the unpleasant local council leader Howard Mollison, with Penny Dreadfulstar and recent Olivier Award-winner Rory Kinnear in the role of the deceased Barry Fairbrother.

Several of the other cast members will be well known to British audiences, particularly Keeley Hawes (Spooks; Upstairs, Downstairs) and Monica Dolan. One of the most important characters in the book, Krystal Weedon, will be played by a total newcomer, Abigail Lawrie.

The Casual Vacancy received mixed reviews, particularly from Harry Potter fans who were dissatisfied by the novel’s total departure in tone from Rowling’s previous work. Rowling’s other adult novel, crime thriller The Cuckoo’s Calling, had a far more positive reception. Written under the pseudonym Robert Galbraith, it will soon be followed by a sequel titled The Silkworm, although unlike The Casual Vacancy there is no sign that it’s being adapted for film or TV.

Photo via Wikimedia

Sir Mix-A-Lot performed 'Baby Got Back' with the Seattle Symphony

$
0
0

Sir Mix-A-Lot’s 1992 ode to posteriors, “Baby Got Back,” has somehow remained in our cultural consciousness, a reminder of a simpler time, when the line, "My anaconda don't want none unless you've got buns, hun," spoke to the hearts and minds of a generation. Last year, an oral history was published, devoted to the song and its iconic video. It’s been covered by the likes of Sir Ian McKellen and Kermit the Frog.

Twenty years later, the Seattle rapper still cannot lie. To honor that devotion, the Seattle Symphony, through their Sonic Evolution project, took on the task of reinterpreting his songs last night. Via their YouTube page:

“Each year, in celebration of the past, present and future of our city's musical legacy, Ludovic Morlot and the Seattle Symphony commission world-class composers to write orchestral world premieres inspired by bands and artists that launched from, or are related to, Seattle.

“In addition to writing a brand new composition inspired by Seattle's own Sir Mix-A-Lot, composer Gabriel Prokofiev also orchestrated two of the legendary rapper's most famous hits for this year's concert, including "Baby Got Back.”

It also included a few ladies decked out in their symphony best.

H/T Digg Screengrab via Seattle Symphony/YouTube

What can YouTube success stories really tell us?

$
0
0

My first encounter with Michelle Phan came after having spent a productive morning navigating the hypnotic wormhole that is YouTube zit pornin particular the frankly horrifying work of Vikram Yadav. Feeling desperately unclean and concerned as to the health of my skin, I clicked on a link for Phan's tutorial on making your own pore strips. But her proposed remedy was completely useless; the concoction of microwave-heated milk and gelatin had no effect other than to give my apartment the putrid aroma perhaps more reminiscent of the premises of Mr. Yadav.

Such questionable advice (from an admittedly very small sample of her output), drove me away, but I could well be the only one. Phan’s YouTube channel now has 6.4 million total subscribers and an average of 2.9 million views for each of her videos of beauty and fashion tips.

These are impressive figures, which have literally made her a YouTube poster girl. Now, Think With Google is featuring her success story, along with fellow stars Rosanna Pansino and Bethany Mota, in the YouTube Creator Stories series. 

As an inspirational treatise for would-be Web moguls, the series goes down the self-help route, offering revelations of the “duh” varietypeople like consistent uploads and enjoy fan interactivity, for example. It can apparently also be advantageous to release certain videos at particular times or when a topic is trending, evidenced by her Halloween-themed videos spiking in popularity in October. 

It all sounds so easy, but is it? Phan’s success is clearly exceptional and it feels as though Google is holding out on us a little. While no doubt Phan has been savvy in creating and growing her channel, the real reasons for her success are the same reasons that she, Pansino, and Mota have been chosen to feature in TV ads and handpicked for this series of case studies in the first place.

That all three women featured are undeniably talented, naturally engaging, and attractive isn’t really of any interest to Google. It's just not the inspirational directive needed for this series. No one wants to hear that for them success is impossible, when a few obvious pointers are much more palatable. The whole purpose of an initiative like this and YouTube’s Creator Academy is to maximize activity and engagement with the site.

Who cares, right? Well, I think Google should. It's already hard enough to navigate YouTube’s detritus to find channels worth following without one hundred new pretenders trying to de-gunk your skin. While it’s great that they are championing their top talent, by making their success look easy, they are just devaluing their biggest asset.

Screengrab via Michelle Phan/YouTube 

Watch Weezer's drummer catch a frisbee without missing a beat

$
0
0

What have mid-’90s pop-rock dad heroes Weezer been up to? Practicing for an Ultimate tournament, it looks like.

The band played in St. Augustine, Fla., Friday night. During the song “Beverly Hills,” someone threw a frisbee at drummer Patrick Wilson. (In the photo above, Wilson is the guy who looks like he’s about to catch a frisbee.)

He caught it mid-song—and kept playing, not missing a single beat.

Frontman Rivers Cuomo was impressed:

A concert-goer caught it on Instagram:

H/T @RiversCuomo | Photo via parnes/Flickr (CC BY 2.0)

The 12 most GIF-worthy moments of last night's Tonys

$
0
0

The 68th annual Tony Awards were held last night at New York’s Radio City Music Hall. You’ll find the list of winners everywhere this morning—spoiler alert: The Gentleman’s Guide to Love and Murder took home the big one—but in case you missed the show and wanted to catch the highlight reel, we’ve assembled a collection of hip-popping GIFs for your enjoyment.

Huge Jacked Man … er, Hugh Jackman returned to hosting duties for the fourth time, channeling his inner kangaroo and rapping along with LL Cool J and TI.

The evening included star-studded performances of popular favorites new and old, including Cabaret, Les Miserables, After Midnight, and Rocky.

Neil Patrick Harris astonished the crowd with a glasses-licking, air-humping performance from Hedwig and the Angry Inch before taking home the Tony for Leading Actor in a Musical. “This is crazy pants!” he said.

Bryan Cranston won his first Tony for his Broadway debut turn as President Lyndon B. Johnson in All the Way, which also took home Best Play.

Audra McDonald made Tony history by winning a record-breaking sixth award for her performance in Billie Holliday in Emerson Bar and Grill.

But it was actor James Monroe Igelhart who really summed up the evening’s energy with his acceptance speech for his first Tony in Aladdin. “I know that this is supposed to be the most dignified awards show of the season, but I have to do this: This is a praise shout.”

Congratulations to all the winners and nominees.

Footage via CBS | GIFs by Monica Riese

'The Music Man' gets an unlikely rap cover from Hugh Jackman and friends

$
0
0

One of the most talked-about moments of Sunday’s Tony Awards didn’t come from any of the nominated musicals or plays, but rather from host Hugh Jackman himself.

Speaking about his own beginnings in musical theater, he reminisced about auditioning for The Music Man, a show he figured every school probably put on. But the problem with performing it nowadays is that it’s terribly outdated.

He’s already demonstrated that he knows all the words to “Rock Island,” the musical’s opening number, but to add some modern spice, he got LL Cool J and T.I. to turn it into a rap with him. Regardless of how you feel about the result, the transformation itself is actually pretty ingenious.

If there’s ever going to be an updated movie version of The Music Man, Hollywood just might have its stars.

H/T Digg | Photo via gotsome2007/YouTube

Psy, YouTube, and the curse of the viral hit

$
0
0

On Sunday, Psy released his third single, “Hangover,” with a video featuring Snoop Dogg. The premise riffs on the highs and lows of alcohol abuse, and the opening scene looks a bit like a scene from The Hangover, which is perhaps Psy’s way of cleaving even deeper into the American pop-culture consciousness.

Neither the video nor the song are very good, which leads to a bigger question: Do we really want more videos from Psy?

When a song blows up on YouTube, as “Gangnam Style” did, and continues to do—it’s currently the most-viewed video on YouTube, with more than 2 billion views—it’s almost a digital curse for artists. After the success of “Gangnam Style,” there was an unspoken decree that Psy would be a one-hit wonder. This was his viral moment. Even your dad knew about the horse dance.

Psy’s not alone in this curse. Think about the big YouTube hits of the past couple years: Do you remember the follow-up to Ylvis’s “What Does the Fox Say?” or Carly Rae Jepsen’s “Call Me Maybe”? Is it even possible the Chainsmokers will have another “#Selfie," and did you just shudder thinking about that?

Psy’s “Gentleman” currently stands at more than 600 million views, but it had no dance craze, no bearing on popular culture. “Hangover” has received an impressive 6.8 million views in the past 24 hours, but many commenters lamented that it wasn’t “Gangnam Style.”

Psy is likely tired of “Gangnam Style,” and pairing with Snoop Dogg is a smart way to separate himself from the song and get more eyes on the new video. Psy partnered with Justin Bieber's manager, Scooter Braun, so perhaps he will stay in the American pop consciousness a bit longer. Braun apparently told Psy he needs to rap in Korean if he wants to make it in America. 

In a recent interview with YouTube Space L.A., Psy admitted to knowing everything he does will be compared to “Gangnam Style”: "That means I have a severe, heavy pressure on my shoulder. ... In that way I don't like the song."

Screengrab via officialpsy/YouTube 


Sorry, the 'TFIOS' kiss isn't as groundbreaking as you hoped

$
0
0

John Green has had a big weekend. The film adaptation of his beloved book The Fault in Our Stars opened at No. 1, raking in more than $48 million at the box office. We're as guilty as anyone else of getting swept up in the film's charms, and we're glad it has praiseworthy feminist cred with a smart, funny, and strong female protagonist. So we'll cut him some slack.

But we think he might be just a little drunk on success at the moment. Yesterday, an ebullient Green reblogged a Tumblr GIF of TFIOS' epic romance, Hazel and Gus, and their lovely on-screen kiss:

GIF via fishingboatproceeds

To this touching moment, Green appended the following eager comment:

I just want to point out one thing here: When was the last time the girl kissed the boy in a teen romance? Ever? Has it happened ever? I seriously think it might not have happened ever. 

Really, John? Really? This just happened, like, five minutes ago:

GIF by picture-of-sophisticated-grace

So did this, you know, from that little series your brother produced?

GIF via Leaky News

It's not like this girls-kissing-first thing is anything new. Lauren Bacall's famous go-getter from To Have and To Have Not is one of the most famous on-screen kisses in history, and it's 70 years old:

GIF by Aja Romano

In fact, moviedom is pretty much strewn with iconic kisses initiated by the girl:

GIF via moviegifss

GIFs via Swide

It's even been kind of an epidemic lately:

GIF via chalantness

GIF via felicityrjones

GIF via Giphy

GIF via animatedvault

 
 
 
 
 
GIF via willgardner

GIF via consultingasgardian

But maybe Green's admonition that TFIOS is in fact the first teen romance to have the girl kiss first is actually accurate?

Er, not by a long shot. 

GIF via mbi-gifs

GIF via TV Rage

GIF via Skyrock

GIF via Fan Forum

GIF via Wikia

Well, OK, so John Green got it wrong about girls never kissing first in teen romance. But maybe he specifically just meant feature-length films featuring teen romance?

Except no, no, still no:

GIF via Crushable

GIF via Giphy

GIF via Giphy

Critics already have an unfortunate tendency to allow the works of John Green to overshadow those of other Young Adult authors, a hot topic of discussion in the YA world known as the "John Green Effect." The weekend success of the TFIOS movie comes at a time when many were ready to write off the recent boom in YA adaptations as a dead trend, despite the success of The Hunger Games and Divergent at the box office in the last six months.

So while TFIOS's win at the box office may certainly mean good things for YA, it's important not to let it overshadow other film adaptations of other YA novels. And it's important that we don't let anyone erase the agency women in teen romance and other on-screen love stories have enjoyed over the years. 

Obviously this roster isn't perfect. To quote a friend after looking at all these GIFs, "I'm so happy I can finally go to the movies and see a straight white girl kiss a straight white boy." But it's simply trying to make the point that John Green did not invent the wheel.

It's been done before, and it's been done better:

Update: John Green posted a note to his blog that acknowledges he misspoke about the Hazel/Gus kiss's place in movie history. The author apologizes for being wrong, clarifies a few of his statements, and reminds his readers "I do not deserve any credit for the quality or success of the film."

In my exuberance for the film, I said something that was both flatly wrong and offensive, and I appreciate being called out on it, and I’m sorry.

Screengrab via YouTube

Rooster Teeth raises over $1 million for feature film in 3 days

$
0
0

After just three days, Rooster Teeth has raised over $1 million on Indiegogo to fund its first-ever feature film.

The Austin-based YouTube network behind Red vs. Blue launched the campaign on June 6 to fund Lazer Team, a live-action, sci-fi comedy about finding a signal from outer space and the aftermath of a secret team interpreting that message.

With an initial goal of $650,000, Rooster Teeth cofounder Burnie Burns told YouTube subscribers that Lazer Team was a project he and Rooster Teeth had been working on for a long time.

“We’ve been working on Lazer Team for years now, waiting to get to the point where Rooster Teeth could grow as a company to actually make that movie,” he said. He explained that it was a project that could only be made with the help of the fans, and the funds would help cover visual effects, cast and crew salaries, and shoots in multiple locations.

Well, the fans listened. Rooster Teeth reached its original goal in under 10 hours and broke Indiegogo’s record for the fastest film campaign to reach $700,000. In three days, Lazer Team flew past the $1 million mark thanks to more than 13,000 backers.

The company is already on its way to becoming one of the most successful Indiegogo campaign of all time. It earned even more than Freddie Wong's webseries Video Game High School and is currently the second-most successful Indiegogo-funded film (Gosnell Movie is still the most successful with over $2.4 million)—with 28 days to go.

Rooster Teeth has been amazed by the fans’ response to Lazer Team.

"The dedication of our community over the last eleven years has been amazing. Their support over the last two days has been absolutely humbling,” Burns said in a press release. “Nothing short of awe inspiring. I am so proud to be a part of this group of people, and I look forward to even bigger milestones during the next 28 days of this campaign."

Update: This story has been updated to clarify the nature of Jimmy Wong's webseries, Video Game High School

Photo by Brian Huynh

Here's what it's like to be the drummer of a hardcore band

$
0
0

The GoPro: It’s been in a dishwasher and a crocodile’s mouth. Now, it’s ended up in the next logical place: upon the head of the drummer of a hardcore band.

Converge’s Ben Koller recently strapped on a GoPro during a festival in Seattle, to document what it’s like behind a drum kit. In the video’s description, it’s called a “chesty cam,” so perhaps it was strapped to him like a lie detector, rather than a head-mounted approach. The band performed two songs, “Dark Horse” and “Concubine,” and Koller’s hair whipping back and forth in the frame gives some added out-of-body perspective.

This isn't the first time the "Koller Cam" has been thrown into battle. He seems to be a proponent of the first-person drumming movement. 

One commenter summed it up nicely: “I would binge watch 3 seasons of this if it were on Netflix.”

Screengrab via Benjamin Koller/YouTube

Death Grips gives away surprise new album, featuring Björk

$
0
0

California noise-rap group Death Grips gave the Internet a quiet surprise on Sunday night, amongst chatter about the Tonys and Game of Thrones. The eight-song playlist for new album N***as on the Moon is up on YouTube, Facebook, and Soundcloud.

It’s apparently the first half of a double album to be released later this year on the band's own label, and the surprise release is sweetened by the appearance of Björk on all eight tracks, though it’s not entirely clear what her contributions are. You can definitely hear her vocals on “Up My Sleeves.” However, it’s not a left-field move: She collaborated with the group for Bibliophilia remixes.

The Death Grips sound is difficult to express or define. Some have tried:

That’s a good description, though. Death Grips seem to have found a younger fanbase that was raised by the Internet. They’ve become one of the most sampled bands on Soundcloud, where fans have ripped apart their songs for their own creations. Listening to the songs off N***as on the Moon, it’s easy to see why they're so appealing to producers and DJs.

Death Grips’ career trajectory is as fascinating as their music. Their last two albums, 2013’s Government Plates and 2012’s NO LOVE DEEP WEB, were both given away free online, and the self-release of the latter album got them dropped from Epic Records. Angel Haze pulled a similar punch last December. 

In an official statement on Death Grips' release from their roster, Epic explained they had no room for online shenanigans:

“Unfortunately, when marketing and publicity stunts trump the actual music, we must remind ourselves of our core values.”

They’ve also always had the best song titles:

Photo via Montecruz Foto/Flickr (CC BY-SA 2.0)

Joe Rogan killed a bear with a bow, and the Internet isn't happy

$
0
0

Usually, the attack comes before you kill the bear. In comedian Joe Rogan's case, however, it came afterward—from scores of animal-loving Internet users.

On June 8, Rogan proudly boasted about his slaughter of a black bear while hunting in Canada with Joe Rogan Experience podcast cohost Cameron Hanes. His only weapon was a bow.

Joe Rogan bear

Screengrab via Facebook

It wasn't long before users on TwitterReddit, and Facebook began to retaliate.

"Can't look at this photo.Don't understand individuals who pose with a dead human or animals.I don't enjoy other creature's suffering" Facebook user Feeroozay Darabi commented.

"Why man? What a shame. To waste an animal like that for nothing?" redditor bantamfly said.

Others, however, saw nothing wrong with Rogan's furry prize.

"Why are there so many anti hunters following a staunchly pro hunting guy?? That's what it pitiful sad and stupid. Saw joe Rogan shoot his 1st deer with Steve rinilla on meat esters. He's a great addition to the hunt community. Way to pass on the tradition cam. You are the man," Facebook user Tom Kirklin said.

"I don't know what's so controversial here. I don't oppose trophy hunting, but that's not even what's going on here. In fact Joe does this in part because he opposes factory farming," redditor celerycelerity said.

Despite the criticism, there are no legal problems with Rogan's choice of game—in fact, quite the opposite is true. It is currently hunting season in Canada, and area hunters are counted upon to help control the black bear population.

Nevertheless, Rogan's experience is not without precedent. In November 2013, reality TV star Melissa Bachman suffered similar Internet backlash after posting pictures of a dead lion she hunted in South Africa.

Image via Facebook

Viewing all 7080 articles
Browse latest View live




Latest Images