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Here's The Intense 'War On Terror' Reporting That Just Got A Surprise Oscar Nod

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Special Ops American

After Sept. 11, 2001, the Bush administration began waging a global war on terrorism both openly and on the "dark side."

The full scale of the shadow war is just coming out now, as detailed in "Dirty Wars: The World Is A Battlefield" by investigative journalist and New York Timesbestselling author Jeremy Scahill.

The corresponding documentary just received an Oscar nod.

Directed by Vice President Dick Cheney and Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld, the White House expanded the Joint Special Operations Command (JSOC) into a global capturing and killing machine.

JSOC, which includes troops from a variety of America's best units, grew from fewer than 2,000 troops before 9/11 to as many as 25,000 today.

While most of their missions remain classified, JSOC operators have been used far more aggressively in the past decade than ever before.

"Their real days of glory ... really only started after 9/11," Colonel Walter Patrick Lang, who spent much of his career in covert operations, told Scahill. "They didn't do a lot of fighting before that."

Known within the covert ops community as ninjas or "snake eaters," JSOC operators train to track a target, fix his position, and then finish him off without being detected.

"They're the ace in the hole," General Hugh Shelton, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff under President Clinton, told Scahill. "If you need someone that can sky dive from thirty miles away, go down the chimney of a castle, and blow it up from the inside — those are the guys you want to call on."

The command was "created in secrecy to perform operations that were kept hidden to virtually all other entities of military and governments," Scahill writes, and the White House took full advantage of that.

From "Dirty Wars":

It was the beginning of what would be a multiyear project by Rumsfeld and Cheney to separate this small, elite, surgical unit from the broader chain of command and transform it into a global killing machine.

What they developed looked like a massive paramilitary CIA (which only had about 700 lethal operatives on 9/11), according to Scahill's reporting.

Special Ops AmericanBy late 2002 JSOC operators were discreetly based in Qatar and Kenya for potential missions in Yemen and Somalia. It developed an in-house signals intelligence unit, known as the Activity, and Rumsfeld created a JSOC human intelligence collection operation, called the Strategic Support Branch, that mirrored the capabilities of the CIA.

The addition of the intelligence aspect "effectively meant that JSOC was free to act as a spy agency and kill/capture force rolled into one," Scahill writes.

JSOC even ran an interrogation program, parallel to the CIA's black sites, that would provide the administration with even more flexibility and less oversight (See: Camp Nama).

Rumsfeld worked to make sure that the unit was "unrestrained and unaccountable to anyone except him, Cheney, and the president" while Cheney began going to JSOC headquarters at Fort Bragg in North Carolina to give direct action orders.

"It grew and went out of control under the vice president. It kinda went wild," Vincent Cannistraro, a career CIA counterterrorism officer, told Scahill. "There were a couple of places where, because they weren't coordinated, they weren't informed, they killed people that were not real targets. They were wrong. It happened, frequently."

In September 2003 JSOC, led by Gen. Stanley McChrystal, was running the show in Iraq, including training Iraqi Special Ops units that became unaccountable death squads.

It was also making its presence known in Afghanistan.

Lt. Col. Anthony Shaffer (Ret.), a career military intelligence officer who wrote the book "Operation Dark Heart," wrote that JSOC's force in Afghanistan "had the best technology, the best weapons, the best people — and plenty of money to burn."

From "Dirty Wars":

Unlike the Green Berets, JSOC was not in the country to win any hearts and minds. Once JSOC took charge, the mission would no longer resemble anthropology. It was to be a manhunt, at times an assassination machine.

opsIn early 2004 Rumsfeld signed the secret Al Qaeda Network Execute Order, which "streamlined JSOC's ability to conduct operations and hit targets outside of the stated battlefields of Iraq and Afghanistan."

By mid-2004 JSOC operations in Iraq had accelerated dramatically to the point where they were effectively "running the covert war buried within the larger war and controlling the intelligence," Scahill writes.

In 2005 and 2006 JSOC had its hands full with the Iraqi insurgency. It recruited 12 "tactical action operatives" from the private military company Blackwater from a secret raid (code-named Operation Fury) targeting an al Qaeda facility inside Pakistan.

Scahill notes that by 2007 the budget for U.S. special operations had grown to more than $8 billion annually, up 60 percent from 2003.

In January 2007, Scahill writes, JSOC began "a concentrated campaign of targeted assassinations and snatch operations" in Somalia while a CIA-backed Ethiopian force began an ill-fated invasion of the country.

In June 2008 Vice Admiral William McRaven took charge of JSOC, and the next month President Bush approved a secret order authorizing Special Ops Forces (as opposed to their Blackwater contractors) to conduct strikes in Pakistan without the country's permission.

Special Operations Forces were now being used to "go in and capture or kill people who were supposedly linked to extremist organizations around the world, in some cases allied countries," a source dubbed "Hunter," an operator who worked with JSOC on acknowledged and unacknowledged battlefields, told Scahill.

From "Dirty Wars":

The mindset, [Hunter] said, was, "The world is a battlefield and we are at war. Therefore the military can go wherever they please and do whatever it is that they want to do, in order to achieve the national security objectives of whichever administration happens to be in power."

Shortly after Barack Obama took office in January 2009, Scahill writes, he gave "carte blanche to JSOC and the CIA to wage a global manhunt. Capture was option two."

What Cheney and Rumsfeld built, Obama codified and expanded. More on that to come.

Check out the book>

SEE ALSO: Jeremy Scahill Tells Us How He Uncovered America's Massive, Global Dirty Wars

And: The Full Power Of Vice President Dick Cheney Is Only Now Becoming Clear

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Netflix Got Its First Oscar Nomination

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Netflix The Square

Netflix got its first Oscar nomination this morning for a documentary called 'The Square.'

Nominated for best documentary, 'The Square' takes viewers inside the Egyptian revolution and demonstrates how a group of revolutionaries used a combination social media and videos to liberate their country.

The streaming giant acquired the rights to the movie last month after it announced it was going to make a bigger investment in the movie business.

Directed by Jehane Noujaim, 'The Square' racked up numerous awards at Sundance and Toronto this year before Netflix swooped and grabbed the rights.

Reed Hasting's company struck a chord this year when they unveiled a slew of original TV shows that were nominated for Emmys but now the former DVD by mail company has shown its becoming a considerable player in Hollywood.

Watch the trailer for 'The Square' below. The rest of the 2014 Oscar nominations can be seen here.

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The 9 Biggest Snubs And Surprises From The Oscar Nominations

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best supporting actress oscars

The 86th annual Oscar nominations were announced early Thursday morning.

"American Hustle" and "Gravity" both came out on top, with each film receiving 10 nominations. 

While we're pretty satisfied with this year's list of nods, there were a few big surprises and snubs.

If you missed the announcement, you can check out all the noms here.

SURPRISE/SNUB: Emma Thompson didn't get a Best Actress nod for "Saving Mr. Banks," but her BFF Meryl Streep scored a nod for "August: Osage County."




SURPRISE: Jonah Hill got his second Best Supporting Actor nomination for "The Wolf of Wall Street."



SNUB: No love for Lee Daniels' "The Butler" — not even Oprah! It was the talk show queen's first film role in 15 years, and the critics praised her performance.



See the rest of the story at Business Insider
    






'Jackass Presents: Bad Grandpa' Received An Oscar Nomination

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While Emma Thompson and "Lee Daniels' The Butler" were snubbed during Thursday morning's Oscar nominations, one film that scored a nod was the latest installment of "Jackass."

Yes, "Jackass Presents: Bad Grandpa" will now and forever be known as an Oscar Award nominee. 

"Bad Grandpa" was nominated for best achievement in makeup and hairstyling. It's up against "Dallas Buyers Club," which received a total of six nominations, and "The Lone Ranger."

The film stars an unrecognizable Johnny Knoxville as an 86-year-old man named Irving Zisman who's taking his grandson home to his father. 

Once seeing the transformation, it's not difficult to see why the film is nominated. 

Here's what Knoxville normally looks like: 

johnny knoxville bad grandpaAnd here's how he looks in "Bad Grandpa":bad grandpa johnny knoxville

johnny knoxville bad grandpa

SEE ALSO: The full list of Oscar nominations

More Oscars: The biggest snubs and surprises

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A Minnesota Cab Driver With No Acting Experience Just Scored An Oscar Nod For 'Captain Philips'

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Tom Hanks Barkhad Abdi Captain Phillips

Barkhad Abdi, 28, was nominated for an Academy Award in the Best Supporting Actor category this morning for his role as a Somali pirate in "Captain Phillips."

The role was Abdi's first acting gig — ever.

Abdi was previously a cab and limousine driver in Minneapolis, Minn., when one open casting call in 2011 changed his life.

"I answered a casting call that was on a local TV channel. So I go there to give it a shot, there were a lot of people there the first time," Abdi told the "Today Show" of the "Captain Phillips" audition process. "They asked me simple questions like 'what's your name?' and 'where were you born?'"

A few more rounds of auditions later and the Somali-born Abdi landed the role of "Muse," the pirate ringleader in the Tom Hanks-starring film that hit theaters in October.

Hanks, however, was not nominated for a Best Actor award during Thursday's big Oscars announcement.

The Paul Greengrass-directed movie is the true story of Somali pirates who hijacked the U.S. cargo ship, the Maersk Alabama, and held its captain hostage in 2009.

Tom Hanks Barkhad Abdi

"I became the character. I tried to be that guy in that moment," Abdi told Matt Lauer about his first-time acting gig. "I had to come out with all I got. I used a lot of imagination. I talked to a lot of people who came back from Somalia and I read a lot of pirate stories."

Abdi, who moved to the U.S. from Somalia when he was 14, says he didn't meet his co-star Tom Hanks until the cameras rolled during their first scene together.

Eventually, "Tom helped me a lot to get the part out and would motivate me in a lot of ways."

Abdi got so into his character he started ad-libbing, coming up with the much-hyped line: "I'm the captain now."

While Abdi is now back in Minnesota helping run his brother's store, he does say "I want to continue to act."

In the meantime, he's had plenty of time to hobnob with celebrities during the current awards season, as he's documented on his Instagram account (via HuffPo):

Barkhad Abdi Instagram Barkhad Abdi Instagram

"At the end of it, I'm a Somali person," says Abdi. "But I love acting and I just wanted to show what I could do."

Appearing on the "Today" show Thursday, Abdi said he was so excited about the imminent Oscar nominations that he couldn’t sleep Wednesday night.

Abdi's Best Supporting Actor competition now includes Bradley Cooper, Michael Fassbender, Jonah Hill, and Jared Leto.

But it looks like this is just the beginning for the novice actor who just scored himself the industry's highest acclaim.

Watch Abdi tell his unique story on the "Today Show":

Now watch Abdi in the trailer for "Captain Phillips":

SEE ALSO: The 9 Biggest Snubs And Surprises From The Oscar Nominations

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A Pair Of Custom Sneakers Worn By Drake At A Raptors Game Sold For $100,000 On eBay

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Drake Shoes

A lucky fan received a pair of Drake's sneakers on Saturday at the Toronto Raptors game and sold them on eBay for $100,000

The Raptors held "Drake Night" on Saturday.

Drake introduced the Raptors lineup, performed at halftime, and gave out a couple of pairs of his special edition, OVO Air Jordan X sneakers.

One of the fans apparently was too small to actually wear the sneakers, according to Yahoo! Sports.

Drake told the fan:

"These are definitely not going to fit you...but hopefully you can give them to somebody or keep them as a keepsake."

Well the fan had her own ideas and on Monday night she listed the sneakers on eBay at starting price of $300. 

In only four hours, the sneakers surpassed $2,000. 

By Wednesday the shoes sky-rocketed to the price of $100,040 (with shipping) so she decided to close the deal:

Drake Shoes 

Drake's shoes just missed the price of Michael Jordan's Flu-Game Sneakers >

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Kate Gosselin's Twins Refuse To Speak During Cringe-Worthy 'Today' Show Interview

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Kate Gosselin People magazine cover

Former "Jon and Kate Plus 8" reality star Kate Gosselin and her smiling twin 13-year-old daughters appear on the cover of this week's People magazine next to the headline "Real Life With Our Mom."

But it appears the girls' real life with Kate is not all rosy.

While promoting the People cover story this morning on the "Today" show, the teen girls refused to answer questions from Savannah Guthrie, even after being repeatedly prompted by their mom to "spit it out.” 

Kate then offered, “I don’t want to speak for them but, Mady, go ahead. Sort of the things that you said in [People] magazine, that years later they’re good, they’re fine. Go for it, it’s your chance.”

“No,” Mady replied, saying, “You just said it.”

Guthrie then asked Gosselin whether it was detrimental to continuously showcase her children on national TV, but the onetime reality star insisted her teenagers wanted to do the show.

When asked about bad press the family sometimes received, Mady Gosselin finally spoke up, saying, "I would just say they don't have the full story ... a lot of people think filming this show damaged us, but it's only really helped."

But when Guthrie asked the girls if they would want to do another reality show, they're surprisingly both in agreement with a resounding "Definitely."

"It was really fun," says Mady, also speaking for her twin sister, "Cara thinks so too, she's just not going to say it."

Watch the super-awkward interview below:

In the People magazine cover story, the girls elaborated a bit more about life after reality TV: 

"People expect us to be damaged," Cara says, as Mady joins in: "People think we're supposed to be messed up, like, 'Oooooh, the poor Gosselin kids, they're going to be scarred for life, waaaaah.' Here's the big news: we're not messed up." 

SEE ALSO: The 23 highest-paid reality TV stars

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Playboy Playmate Found Dead At Age 34

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cassandra lynn

Playboy Playmate Cassandra Lynn Hensley was found dead in her friend's Los Angeles home Wednesday, and police are "investigating the death as a possible overdose," law enforcement sources tell TMZ.

Hensley, who was Playboy's Miss February 2006, was just 34-years-old.

TMZ reports, "Hensley's friend found her floating in a bath tub and called police to report a possible overdose. When paramedics arrived they could not revive her. Foul play is not suspected."

Judging by her Twitter account, it appears Hensley had recently been going through a tough time:

cassandra lynn

But her last tweet, a Leo horoscope reading tweeted automatically, was pretty eery:

Thursday, January 16, 2014 - Unspoken obligations prevent you from doing what you wish today, but your guilt may drive your inaction more than any real responsibilities. No matter what you do now, you might not feel completely fulfilled. Working harder isn't the answer, but neither is escape. 

SEE ALSO: THEN & NOW: 18 Actresses Who Played Iconic Superheroes And Villains

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10 Things You Probably Don't Know About This Year's Oscar Nominees

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After this morning's Oscar nominations, the Academy released a bunch of "fun facts" about this year's nominees.

We've put picked out 10 of the most interesting factoids about the actors and directors up for awards this March.

You can read the entire list here.

1. There are eight first-time nominees: Chiwetel Ejiofor, Matthew McConaughey, Barkhad Abdi, Michael Fassbender, Jared Leto, Sally Hawkins, Lupita Nyong'o, June Squibb.jared leto christoph waltz golden globes

2. Meryl Streep's Best Actress nod for "August: Osage County" is the actress' 18th (!) nomination. (She previously won three Oscars for "The Iron Lady" (2012), "Sophie's Choice" (1983), and "Kramer vs. Kramer" (1980).)meryl streep osage county screening

3. At 23, Jennifer Lawrence is the youngest actress with three Oscar nominations.

Jennifer Lawrence Oscar gif

4. This is the second time a Pixar film ("Monsters University") has not been nominated for Best Animated Feature and has been shut out at the Oscars. "Cars 2" received the same fate in 2011.Monsters University Winds of Change

5. Megan Ellison is the first woman to get two Best Picture nods in the same year (for "Her" and "American Hustle"). She's the fourth person to have that honor joining Francis Ford Coppola and Fred Roos ("The Godfather Part II" and "The Conversation"), and Scott Rudin ("The Social Network" and "True Grit").megan ellison

6. "American Hustle" received nominations in all four acting categories AND for Best Picture, Directing, and writing. That's been done twice before — by "Reds" in 1981 and "Silver Linings Playbook," another David O. Russell film, last year.american hustle

7. Martin Scorsese received his eighth nomination for Best Director with "The Wolf of Wall Street." He has previously won for "The Departed" in 2007.
the wolf of wall street leonardo dicaprio martin scorsese8. Composer John Wiliams ("Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azakaban") is the most-nominated living person with 49 noms. (Overall, Walt Disney holds that record with 59 nominations.)john williams composer9. This is Leonardo DiCaprio's third nomination for Best Actor and fourth Oscar nod overall. If he wins, it will be his first Academy Award.

leonardo dicaprio wolf of wall street

10. Disney's "The Wind Rises" is Hayao Miyazaki's third nomination for Best Animated Picture.the wind rises hayao miyazaki

SEE ALSO: All of this year's nominees

AND: The biggest Oscar snubs and surprises

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Russell Johnson, Professor On 'Gilligan’s Island,' Dead At 89

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Russell Johnson Gilligan's Island ProfessorRussell Johnson, who played the professor on “Gilligan’s Island,” died Thursday morning, his agent told TheWrap. He was 89.

Johnson, the last surviving male castmember of the CBS sitcom, died at his home in Washington state of natural causes, his agent confirmed.

Johnson earned a Purple Heart as an aviation cadet in the Air Force during World War II before rising to fame on "Gilligan's island," which ran from 1964 to 1967.

The actor went on to guest-star on a slew of TV shows, but his last on-screen credit was in 1997.

Johnson published his memoirs, "Here on Gilligan's Isle," which offers fans behind-the-scenes anecdotes and answers the oft-asked question: how was the professor able to build a nuclear reactor and a car but never a boat?

Dawn Wells and Tina Louise (Mary Ann and Ginger) are the last surviving "Gilligan's Island" castmembers.

“My 2 favorite people are now gone. The Professor past away this morning. My heart is broken,” Wells wrote on Facebook, referring to Johnson and star Bob Denver, who died in 2005.

She added, “Russell was a true gentleman, a good father, a great friend, and ‘the rest.’ I love him and shall miss him. My heart goes out to [his wife] Connie and his daughter Kim. I love you."

SEE ALSO: Playboy Playmate Found Dead At Age 34

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Macklemore Gives A Surprise Performance On A New York City Bus

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Anyone who regularly uses public transportation in New York City is familiar with impromptu performances. Someone might start singing, rapping, dancing or ranting, and will usually give a full routine whether anyone cares or not. More often than not, most people don't care.

But that wasn't the case when the world famous rap duo Macklemore & Ryan Lewis hopped on a Bronx bus and started performing the insanely popular single "Can't Hold Us."

A production team had previously rigged the bus with hidden GoPro cameras and planted a few guys with camera phones. But no one else was in on the surprise, which is being used to promote the Grammys. 

It's a Bronx bus in the video, but it's traveling through Harlem. Check out the public transport party below:

The performance took place on Nov. 15, but the Grammys released the final version of the video on Tuesday in anticipation of the awards show, which takes place Jan. 26.

TBWA/Chiat/Day LA worked with the production company Tool of North America on the event, and promised Fast Company that besides its handful of plants with cameras, the bus riders had no idea the performance was going to happen.

SEE ALSO: Here's What NFL Logos Would Look Like As Snobbish Hipsters

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Can You Really Get A 'Contact High' From Marijuana?

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Randi Kaye Anderson Cooper pot

Three decades ago, a team of Norwegian researchers hot-boxed a car — for science.

The study volunteers had never smoked marijuana before, but they all piled into a small car for 30 minutes, joints in-hand. Some smoked while the rest were instructed to breathe normally.

The researchers wanted to investigate the same question recently raised by the onscreen antics of Anderson Cooper 360 reporter Randi Kaye, who spent a week reporting on the legalization of marijuana in Colorado: Can you really get a "contact high" from people getting high around you?

According to the Internet, yes and no. An entire thread on Marijuana.com tells  stories of the elusive contact high. One comment claims a girl lied to her probation officer that her friend blew smoke in her face, while another tells about getting stoned from her mom.

Similarly, the researchers' findings, published in the Journal of Forensic Science in 1985, were inconclusive — just as most of the other research has been. The Norwegian study only included ten volunteers, and the smokers were told to inhale as little as possible, leaving plenty to breathe for the non-smoking volunteers. 

Under those artificial conditions, the researchers found that only certain participants had levels of active agents like THC high enough to generate mental and physiological changes. But none of the participants actually felt high — a finding that appeared in a similar study in which experienced users were told smoke normally.

In fact, the hot-box experiment sounds like a drag for all involved. "No subject experienced any feeling of euphoria," the researchers noted. And "the discomfort caused by the heavy Cannabis smoke during the exposure period was universal."

Still, a contact high might be possible, a later study in Clinical Pharmacology and Therapeutics found — but only under extreme conditions. The researchers instructed their subjects to sit quietly wearing colored goggles while a machine in the middle of the room "smoked" 16 marijuana cigarettes in one hour. 

While the physiological effects of the passive smoke inhalation varied, the subjects did report a high this time. No reaction to placebo cigarettes further corroborated the results.

But the researchers estimated that inhaling passive smoke from 16 joints in one hour had a similar effect to actually smoking just one, and they emphasized that different people can react very differently while inhaling similar amounts.

For clarification on the real-life application, we turned to Cecilia J. Hillard, a professor of pharmacology and the director of the Neuroscience Research Center at the Medical College of Wisconsin, who has studied marijuana extensively. 

In her expert opinion, she told Business Insider in an email, "the 'contact high' is purely a psychological phenomenon." The lungs, she explained, are extremely good at trapping the THC in marijuana, "and little residual THC is present in the exhaled air."

In other words, people "may experience runny noses or itchy eyes from the smoke" when others smoke marijuana, but they aren't likely to be hit with enough THC to feel high.

A more recent study, published in 2010 in the Journal of Analytic Toxicology, supported this idea, concluding that passive exposure to marijuana smoke under real-life conditions would only leave "trace amounts" of THC in the blood.

So was Randi Kaye actually high when she couldn't stop giggling during her interview with Anderson Cooper?

After all, she spent an entire day riding around in a car full of smokers, reaching levels of exposure greater than most of the experiments on the effects of passive smoke.

Kaye's high is possible — but not probable. Her demeanor was likely influenced as much by the people she spent time with and a placebo effect as by actual THC.

Most people who think they are experiencing a "contact high" should keep in mind that, as an old study in the Journal of Abnormal Psychology concluded, "social setting and belief interact with smaller doses of marijuana."

In other words: Being around a little bit of smoke probably won't get you high, but when you factor in the placebo effect of that same smoke, you might just end up with a case of the giggles.

SEE ALSO: This CNN Reporter Appeared To Have Enjoyed A Tour Of Colorado's Weed Industry A Little Too Much

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Lena Dunham's Arm Is Missing In Vogue Photoshop Fail

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Lena Dunham Vogue

Lena Dunham's face is featured on the February cover of Vogue for the very first time.

But inside the magazine, it appears Dunham's body has been so drastically photoshopped that in one of the Annie Leibovitz pictures, she is clearly missing her entire left arm:

Lena Dunham Vogue photoshop

While Dunham praised the Vogue photo spread and accompanying article via Twitter (Dear : Thank you. Love, Lena), others are having a field day with the presumably re-touched images.

Jezebel went so far as to offer $10,000 for the unretouched imagesThe site argues:

Lena Dunham is a woman who trumpets body positivity, who's unabashedly feminist, who has said that her naked body is "a realistic expression of what it's like to be alive" and "if you are not into me, that's your problem." Her body is real. She is real. And for as lovely as the Vogue pictures are, they're probably not terribly real...

The final images are gorgeous; there's a 99% chance that the originals are, too. So let's see them. $10,000. Anonymity guaranteed.

Take a look at a few other images from Dunham's Vogue shoot with photographer Annie Leibovitz and judge for yourselves:

Lena Dunham Vogue

Lena Dunham Vogue

SEE ALSO: Lena Dunham Gets First Vogue Cover As Hollywood’s 'Hardest-Working Millennial'

MORE: The 19 Worst Celebrity Photoshop Fails

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Here's The Argument For Sending The Teletubbies To North Korea

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Teletubbies

Can the Teletubbies save the world?

It's a ridiculous question — The "Teletubbies" show, featuring group of multi-colored toddler aliens made for pre-school children by the BBC, has been mostly forgotten since its fame in the late 1990s, with no new episodes since 2001 — and yet ...

In the U.K. politicians still see the show and others like it as an important tool for soft power. Just today, Jim Shannon, an MP from Northern Ireland, called a motion to support attempts to broadcast "Teletubbies" in North Korea, one of the most closed societies on Earth. Shannon said that showing "Teletubbies" and other BBC shows in North Korea could "open up life for millions of people in that country."

Shannon, who told the BBC he didn't watch the show himself, didn't have this idea out of the blue. For example, just recently the U.K. state broadcaster was having serious discussions about whether to extend its BBC World Service radio program into the Koreas. Late last year the Chair of the All-Party Parliamentary Group on North Korea, Lord Alton of Liverpool, told NK News that he was pushing for the World Service to be broadcast from South Korea so that those in the North could hear it (an immediate expansion was later ruled out, however).

What's more, there's been a number of reports in the British press that a deal could be struck to sell some BBC TV shows to North Korea's state broadcaster, though most sources in the U.K.'s foreign office stress that talks are in very early stages.

It may sound silly, but in other countries an expansion of BBC service has coincided with an improvement in relations with the West. An obvious example is Myanmar, where in December 2012, shortly after President Barack Obama's historic visit, the BBC began broadcasting news, children's shows, and other entertainment in the country. It was seen as a natural successor to the BBC Burma Service, which had broadcast in the notoriously closed country since 1940.

"I'm so pleased that the BBC is now able to take the next step forward with the country to offer that same impartial news via television as well," Peter Horrocks, director of global news, said at the time. "It is a great sign of progress for Burma and I'm honored for the BBC to play a role in opening the country up to the world."

The BBC has had a lot of success with its shows abroad — "Sherlock" was a surprising hit in China, for example — and "Teletubbies" makes a lot of sense as an international export, given that the Teletubbies themselves are not of any discernible ethnicity, and their baby babble way of talking doesn't really sound much like any recognizable language. The show has already been exported to at least 120 countries and its narration has been translated into at least 45 languages. A while there was a little bit of controversy — including outrage in the U.S. and Poland about the possibility that Tinky Winky, who is purple and carries a handbag, could be gay — the show was widely praised.

So, can "Teletubbies" help save North Korea? It's worthwhile remembering that Kim Jong-un spent a good amount of his childhood in Europe, and he has shown an inclination to reliving those years — be it by inviting his basketball heroes to North Korea or staging Disney-inspired musicals (though he's a little too old to remember the Teletubbies). This is both a good sign and a bad sign: The appearance of Goofy in Pyongyang didn't stop Kim from having his own uncle executed, and the less said about Dennis Rodman's basketball diplomacy the better.

What's important about the BBC's hopes for North Korea is that they are not aimed at changing the hearts and minds of the North Korean leadership — they are aimed at the average citizen. North Korea has already had to change its message about living standards in South Korea thanks to illegal DVDs of South Korean soaps that make their way over the border. If "Teletubbies" (or, for that matter, "Sherlock" or "Doctor Who") can make a broad impression on the general public in North Korea, then perhaps the West can benefit too. Sure, it'll be an incremental change, but that's how soft power works.

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Hollywood Movie Mogul Plans Film To Make NRA 'Wish They Weren't Alive'

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Harvey Weinstein

Hollywood movie mogul Harvey Weinstein has warned the National Rifle Association (NRA) he plans to make a movie with Meryl Streep that will make them "wish they weren’t alive."

The NRA did not immediately respond Thursday to the warning, made in an interview on shock-jock Howard Stern's show, in which Weinstein said he hoped to turn cinema goers against the gun lobby.

"I don’t think we need guns in this country, and I hate it. I think the NRA is a disaster area," said Weinstein, known for his support for Democratic President Barack Obama and for gun control.

"I shouldn't say this, but I'll tell it to you, Howard. I'm going to make a movie with Meryl Streep, and we're going to take this head-on," Weinstein told the radio host Wednesday.

"And they're going to wish they weren't alive after I'm done with them," the straight-talking studio chief, who has huge clout in Hollywood and is also known for his ability to generate publicity.

He added that he does not own a gun and never wants to.

Mass shootings regularly re-ignite America's debate about gun control, which the NRA strongly opposes. The December 2012 massacre of 20 small children and six adults in Newtown Connecticut spurred Obama into new efforts, but they have been largely stymied in Congress.

A spokesman for the NRA and publicists for Streep -- who secured her record 18th Oscar nomination Thursday morning -- did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Harvey and Bob Weinstein have been behind some of Hollywood's most iconic movies, and they are known for their ability to guide projects towards awards season success, with films like 2010's best picture Oscar winner "The King's Speech."

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A Complete List Of Winners From The Critics' Choice Awards

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12 years a slave

Following Thursday's Oscar nominations, "12 Years A Slave," "Gravity," Matthew McConaughey, and Cate Blanchett took home the top honors during the night's Critics' Choice Awards.

Special awards went to Forest Whitaker, Benedict Cumberbatch, and the "Before Midnight" cast.

The ceremony aired live on the CW network from the Barker Hangar in Santa Monica and was hosted by Aisha Tyler.

Check out the list of winners below (via THR):

BEST PICTURE
American Hustle
Captain Phillips
Dallas Buyers Club
Gravity
Her
Inside Llewyn Davis
Nebraska
Saving Mr. Banks
*12 Years a Slave
The Wolf of Wall Street

BEST ACTOR
Christian Bale – American Hustle
Bruce Dern – Nebraska
Chiwetel Ejiofor – 12 Years a Slave
Tom Hanks – Captain Phillips
*Matthew McConaughey – Dallas Buyers Club
Robert Redford – All Is Lost

BEST ACTRESS
*Cate Blanchett – Blue Jasmine
Sandra Bullock – Gravity
Judi Dench – Philomena
Brie Larson – Short Term 12
Meryl Streep – August: Osage County
Emma Thompson – Saving Mr. Banks

BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR
Barkhad Abdi – Captain Phillips
Daniel Bruhl – Rush
Bradley Cooper – American Hustle
Michael Fassbender – 12 Years a Slave
James Gandolfini – Enough Said
*Jared Leto – Dallas Buyers Club

BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS
Scarlett Johansson – Her
Jennifer Lawrence – American Hustle
*Lupita Nyong’o – 12 Years a Slave
Julia Roberts – August: Osage County
June Squibb – Nebraska
Oprah Winfrey – Lee Daniels’ The Butler        

BEST YOUNG ACTOR/ACTRESS
Asa Butterfield – Ender’s Game
*Adele Exarchopoulos – Blue Is the Warmest Color
Liam James – The Way Way Back
Sophie Nelisse – The Book Thief
Tye Sheridan – Mud

BEST ACTING ENSEMBLE
*American Hustle
August: Osage County
Lee Daniels’ The Butler
Nebraska
12 Years a Slave
The Wolf of Wall Street

BEST DIRECTOR
*Alfonso Cuaron – Gravity
Paul Greengrass – Captain Phillips
Spike Jonze – Her
Steve McQueen – 12 Years a Slave
David O. Russell – American Hustle
Martin Scorsese – The Wolf of Wall Street

BEST ORIGINAL SCREENPLAY
Eric Singer and David O. Russell – American Hustle
Woody Allen – Blue Jasmine
*Spike Jonze – Her
Joel Coen & Ethan Coen – Inside Llewyn Davis
Bob Nelson – Nebraska

BEST ADAPTED SCREENPLAY
Tracy Letts – August: Osage County
Richard Linklater & Julie Delpy & Ethan Hawke – Before Midnight
Billy Ray – Captain Phillips
Steve Coogan and Jeff Pope – Philomena
*John Ridley – 12 Years a Slave
Terence Winter – The Wolf of Wall Street

BEST CINEMATOGRAPHY
*Emmanuel Lubezki – Gravity
Bruno Delbonnel – Inside Llewyn Davis
Phedon Papamichael – Nebraska
Roger Deakins – Prisoners
Sean Bobbitt – 12 Years a Slave

BEST ART DIRECTION
Andy Nicholson (Production Designer), Rosie Goodwin (Set Decorator) – Gravity
*Catherine Martin (Production Designer), Beverley Dunn (Set Decorator) – The Great Gatsby
K.K. Barrett (Production Designer), Gene Serdena (Set Decorator) – Her
Dan Hennah (Production Designer), Ra Vincent (Set Decorator) – The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug
Adam Stockhausen (Production Designer), Alice Baker (Set Decorator) – 12 Years a Slave

BEST EDITING
Alan Baumgarten, Jay Cassidy, Crispin Struthers – American Hustle
Christopher Rouse – Captain Phillips
*Alfonso Cuarón, Mark Sanger – Gravity
Daniel P. Hanley, Mike Hill – Rush
Joe Walker – 12 Years a Slave
Thelma Schoonmaker – The Wolf of Wall Street

BEST COSTUME DESIGN
Michael Wilkinson – American Hustle
*Catherine Martin – The Great Gatsby
Bob Buck, Lesley Burkes-Harding, Ann Maskrey, Richard Taylor – The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug
Daniel Orlandi – Saving Mr. Banks
Patricia Norris – 12 Years a Slave

BEST MAKEUP
*American Hustle
The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug
Lee Daniels’ The Butler
Rush
12 Years a Slave

BEST VISUAL EFFECTS
*Gravity
The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug
Iron Man 3
Pacific Rim
Star Trek into Darkness

BEST ANIMATED FEATURE
The Croods
Despicable Me 2
*Frozen
Monsters University
The Wind Rises

BEST ACTION MOVIE
The Hunger Games: Catching Fire
Iron Man 3
*Lone Survivor
Rush
Star Trek into Darkness

BEST ACTOR IN AN ACTION MOVIE
Henry Cavill – Man of Steel
Robert Downey Jr. – Iron Man 3
Brad Pitt – World War Z
*Mark Wahlberg – Lone Survivor

BEST ACTRESS IN AN ACTION MOVIE
*Sandra Bullock – Gravity
Jennifer Lawrence – The Hunger Games: Catching Fire
Evangeline Lilly – The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug
Gwyneth Paltrow – Iron Man 3

BEST COMEDY
*American Hustle
Enough Said
The Heat
This Is the End
The Way Way Back
The World’s End

BEST ACTOR IN A COMEDY
Christian Bale – American Hustle
*Leonardo DiCaprio – The Wolf of Wall Street
James Gandolfini – Enough Said
Simon Pegg – The World’s End
Sam Rockwell – The Way Way Back

BEST ACTRESS IN A COMEDY
*Amy Adams – American Hustle
Sandra Bullock – The Heat
Greta Gerwig – Frances Ha
Julia Louis-Dreyfus – Enough Said
Melissa McCarthy – The Heat

BEST SCI-FI/HORROR MOVIE
The Conjuring
*Gravity
Star Trek into Darkness
World War Z

BEST FOREIGN LANGUAGE FILM
*Blue Is the Warmest Color
The Great Beauty
The Hunt
The Past
Wadjda

BEST DOCUMENTARY FEATURE
The Act of Killing
Blackfish
Stories We Tell
Tim’s Vermeer
*20 Feet from Stardom

BEST SONG
Atlas – Coldplay – The Hunger Games: Catching Fire
Happy – Pharrell Williams – Despicable Me 2
*Let It Go – Robert Lopez and Kristen Anderson-Lopez – Frozen
Ordinary Love – U2 – Mandela: Long Walk to Freedom
Please Mr. Kennedy – Justin Timberlake/Oscar Isaac/Adam Driver – Inside Llewyn Davis
Young and Beautiful – Lana Del Rey – The Great Gatsby

BEST SCORE
*Steven Price – Gravity
Arcade Fire – Her
Thomas Newman – Saving Mr. Banks
Hans Zimmer – 12 Years a Slave

Joel Siegel Award
*Forest Whitaker

Louis XIII Genius Award
*Julie Delpy, Ethan Hawke, Richard Linklater for trilogy Before Sunrise, Before Sunsetand Before Midnight

Hollywood's Hottest Star
*Benedict Cumberbatch

SEE ALSO: The 9 Biggest Snubs And Surprises From The Oscar Nominations

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Sandra Bullock Drops F-Bomb After Tech Glitch During Critics’ Choice Acceptance Speech

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"Gravity" star Sandra Bullock beat out Jennifer Lawrence to win Best Actress in an Action Movie at Thursday's Critics' Choice Awards.

But as Bullock was on-stage accepting her statue, an unseen voice over the loudspeaker boomed out “Critics’ Choice Awards!” in what appeared to be a tech glitch.

Bullock responded by exclaiming, "What the f---?!"

As the audience laughed, the actress added, “I’m an action hero. You don’t do that to an action hero.”

Watch Bullock get interrupted below:

Wa

Want to see that again?

How about one more time?

sandra bullock wtf GIF

SEE ALSO: A Complete List Of Winners From The Critics' Choice Awards

MORE: Golden Globes miss censor on Tina Fey's Leonardo DiCaprio joke

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23 Times Women Made History On 'Saturday Night Live'

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gilda radner lorne michaels snlThis Saturday, the world will tune in to "Saturday Night Live" for an extra special reason.

Her name is Sasheer Zamata.

Following a public scandal surrounding the show's lack of diversity, Zamata is the show's first black female hire since 2007.

She falls into a long line of venerable comediennes who have graced the stage of Studio 8H over the show's 39-year history.

From trailblazers Gilda Radner and Jane Curtin, who paved the way for female comics in Season 1, to Tina Fey and Amy Poehler, who anchored the "Weekend Update" desk with confidence and flair — here are the 23 ground-breaking moments of women on "SNL."

1. When Lorne Michaels began putting the show together in 1975, he made Gilda Radner his first hire.

The year before, the pint-sized, squawky-voiced Radner came to New York to do "The National Lampoon Radio Hour" and "The National Lampoon Show."

Michaels had seen some of her work with Toronto's "Second City" comedy troupe, and was hooked. "I felt there was a remarkable quality to her," Michaels said, "a goodness which came through whatever she was doing."



2. Radner's quirky characterizations brought her an Emmy for outstanding performance as an actress in a variety series in 1978.

She created such characters as Roseanne Roseannadanna, the frizzy-haired, lisping broadcaster; Lisa Loopner, a nerdy teenager with "mosquito-size" breasts; and "Baba Wawa," a parody of Barbara Walters which made Radner the first person to lampoon a news anchor on TV.



3. Jane Curtin was the first female co-anchor on "Weekend Update."

Curtin's deadpan delivery made her the perfect foil for three different male co-anchors during her time at the desk.

Cerebral and restrained, she never backed down from a debate with conservative-playing Dan Aykroyd during their "Point/Counter-Point" segments. He regularly chastised her, "Jane, you ignorant slut!



See the rest of the story at Business Insider
    






Happy 92nd Birthday Betty White! 15 Things You Didn't Know About The 'Golden Girl'

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betty white birthday

Before Tina Fey, Amy Poehler, and Ellen DeGeneres, Betty White was the Queen of Comedy — pioneering her way from the radio airwaves to quiz shows and sitcoms.

She made a name for herself on "The Mary Tyler Moore Show" and "Golden Girls." In the past few years, White has made a huge TV comeback with cameos on "Community" and "The Middle" before shattering ratings on "Saturday Night Live."

Today, our favorite "Golden Girl" turns 92, and she's still a powerhouse in Hollywood.

Her TV Land show "Hot in Cleveland" will start its fifth season in March. And despite her NBC comedy show "Off Their Rockers" getting axed last year, Lifetime will bring back the series this year for a 20-episode season.

However, how much do you really know about White?

We dug through LIFE's illustrated biography of Betty White to learn what you don't know about the funny woman.

She nearly left the biz before making it big, and almost wasn't on the "Mary Tyler Moore."

Betty's first work in Hollywood was in a Parkay margarine commercial.

White hung around in producer Fran Van Hartesveldt office until he decided to offer her a job in the commercial

This led to her appearance on radio show "The Great Gildersleeve," also headed by Hartesveldt.

(Betty White: The Illustrated Biography)



White has never had acting lessons.

The actress said they were never her thing.

"I just want to bring as much natural as I can," said White. "I'm not saying that people who take acting lessons are false. They're much better than I am, but it doesn't work for me."

(Betty White: The Illustrated Biography)



She originally wanted to be an opera singer.

White opened up to the Canadian Press while discussing her role in animated film "The Lorax" which had the actress sing a few bars. 

"When I was a youngster, I wanted to be an opera singer, so I took very serious singing lessons."



See the rest of the story at Business Insider
    






Robert Redford Blames 'Incapable' Studio's 'Lack Of Campaign' For Oscar Snub

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All Is Lost Robert Redford

Before Robert Redford kicked off the Sundance Film Festival on Thursday  the Utah movie festival he founded in 1978  the 77-year-old actor wanted to clear a few things up about his apparent Oscar snub earlier that day.

Redford starred in November's critically acclaimed "All Is Lost," which earned a single Oscar nod for Achievement in Sound Editing but the Academy failed to recognize Redford's demanding performance as a resourceful sailor lost at sea.

“Let me speak frankly about how I feel about it,” Redford told reporters at a Sundance press conference, according to Variety. “I don’t want that to get in the way of why we’re here."

“There’s a lot of campaigning going on and it can be very political,” he added about the Oscars race. “In our case, we suffered from little to no distribution. I don’t know what they were afraid of. They didn’t want to spend money or they were incapable.”

Redford is referring to the film's distributor Roadside Attractions, which is partially owned by Lionsgate. 

"We had no campaign to cross over into the mainstream," Redford said of the film's failed distribution.

Since its November release, "All Is Lost" has gone on to earn a measly $6.1 million at the box office.

But at the end of the day, the veteran actor says there are no hard feelings. 

“Would it have been wonderful to be nominated?” he asked. “Of course. I’m not disturbed by it or upset by it.”

SEE ALSO: The 9 Biggest Snubs And Surprises From The Oscar Nominations

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