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Martha Stewart Posted A Bunch Of Awesome Drone Photos Of Her Farm

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Martha Stewart has posted some new photos of her Bedford, Conn. farm to her blog. They were taken with a drone flying 900 feet above the ground.

The 153-acre property — once known as “Cantitoe Farm”— was bought by Stewart over 12 years ago, and has a greenhouse, barn, garage, studio, and guest house, as well as horse paddocks and gardens.

“One of my security detail, Dominic Arena, recently purchased a DJI Phantom flying camera,” Stewart wrote on Martha: Up Close And Personal. “These drone-like, radio controlled aircraft are lots of fun to play with and they take extraordinary photos.”

They certainly do. Check out some of the best pictures below with amazing commentary from Martha herself.

"Dominic was up bright and early! Standing near the horse stables, he flew his drone high enough to take this breathtaking sunrise featuring the Cross River Reservoir."Martha Stewart bedford farm"This beautiful aerial shot of my home, which I call the Winter house (center), includes the flower room, carport and studio in the one long structure to the left, the Summer house to the far right, one of the horse paddocks and my beautiful peony garden in full bloom below."Martha Stewart bedford farm"I love the intersection of the four big horse paddocks and the way the fencing makes everything so architecturally pleasing," she wrote. "The grass in these paddocks is cut very short, preventing too much rich grazing which causes the Freisians to get fat."Martha Stewart bedford farmThis is Stewart's gorgeous stable "block" with stable house, carriage house, and farm offices. "My Chow Chow, Ghenghis Khan, loves to play in the small paddock on the upper right, which is sectioned off from the large horse paddock by an electric fence. If you look closely, you can see Dominic near the gate in the boxwood allee."Martha Stewart bedford farmThe property also has a flower garden, equipment shed, corn crib, hoop house, vegetable greenhouse, blueberry garden, hay barn, and greenhouse.Martha Stewart bedford farmAnd since it's Martha Stewart, of course the gardens are extremely well-organized.Martha Stewart bedford farmSee more pictures over at Martha Stewart's blog.

SEE ALSO: A Railroad Tycoon Is Selling His 87-Acre Connecticut Horse Farm For $55 Million

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17-Year-Old World Cup Fan Gets Modeling Deal With L'Oreal After Photos Go Viral

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Axelle DespiegelaereAxelle Despiegelaere was just a 17-year-old from Belgium rooting for her country's soccer team two weeks ago at the World Cup in Brazil when someone took her photo in the stands and likely changed the course of her life.

 

The picture of the attractive Belgian dressed in her country's paraphernalia made the rounds on Twitter and newspapers all over the world.

 

Since returning home to Belgium, the teen set up a Facebook fan page that has amassed over 200,000 likes.

 

Soon after, L'Oreal approached Axelle and offered her a modeling contract. She recently filmed a promotional video for the cosmetics company.

 

Unfortunately, Axelle's team got eliminated by Argentina in the quarterfinals. 

But she still managed to have a good time throughout her trip to Brazil.


But now that she's affiliated with a big brand like L'Oreal, Axelle may want to rethink this photo and caption.

SEE ALSO: The Most Scandalous Wimbledon Outfits Of All Time

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'Game Of Thrones' Leads Emmy Nods — See Complete List Of Nominees

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Happy Emmy Thursday!

The 66th Primetime Emmy nominations were just announced by Mindy Kaling and Carson Daly. 

"Game of Thrones" leads with 19 nods while FX's new series "Fargo" is close behind with 18. "Breaking Bad" received 16 nominations for its final season on AMC.

Meanwhile, Netflix picked up 13 nominations for original series "House of Cards" and another 12 for "Orange is the New Black."

The lead actor category is a tight race this year with both "True Detective" actors Woody Harrelson and Matthew McConaughey going up against each other AND three-time Emmy winner Bryan Cranston for "Breaking Bad."

Here are all the nominees.

Lead actor in a Drama Serieslead actor drama series
Jeff Daniels "The Newsroom" 
Jon Hamm "Mad Men"
Woody Harrelson "True Detective"
Matthew McConaughey "True Detective"
Bryan Cranston "Breaking Bad"
Kevin Spacey "House of Cards"

Lead Actress in a Drama Series
lead actress drama

Claire Danes "Homeland"
Michelle Dockery "Downton Abbey"
Julianna Margulies "The Good Wife"
Kerry Washington "Scandal"
Lizzy Caplan "Masters of Sex"
Robin Wright "House of Cards"

Lead Actor in a Miniseries or Movie
lead actor miniseries movie

Chiwetel Ejiofor "Dancing on the Edge"
Martin Freeman "Fargo"
Billy Bob Thornton "Fargo"
Idris Elba "Luther"
Mark Ruffalo "The Normal Heart"
Benedict Cumberbatch "Sherlock"

Lead Actress in a Miniseries or Movie
lead actress miniseries movie

Minnie Driver "Return to Zero"
Jessica Lange "American Horror Story"
Sarah Paulson "American Horror Story"
Cicely Tyson "The Trip to Bountiful"
Helena Bonham Carter "Burton and Taylor"
Kristen Wiig "The Spoils of Babylon"

Outstanding TV Movie
outstanding tv movie

"Muhammad Ali's Greatest Fight"
"The Normal Heart"
"Sherlock"
"Killing Kennedy"
"The Trip to Bountiful"

Outstanding Variety Series
outstanding variety series

"The Daily Show"
"Jimmy Kimmel Live!"
"Real Time with Bill Maher"
"Saturday Night Live"
"The Colbert Report"
"The Tonight Show with Jimmy Fallon"

Outstanding Miniseriesoutstanding miniseries

"Bonnie & Clyde"
"Fargo"
"Luther"
"Treme"
"American Horror Story: Coven"
"The White Queen"

Lead Actor in a Comedy Series
lead actor comedy

Don Cheadle "House of Lies"
Ricky Gervais "Derek"
Matt LeBlanc "Episodes"
William H. Macy "Shameless"
Louis C.K. "Louie"
Jim Parsons "The Big Bang Theory"

Lead Actress in a Comedy Series
lead actress

Edie Falco "Nurse Jackie"
Julia Louis-Dreyfus "Veep"
Melissa McCarthy "Mike and Molly"
Amy Poehler "Parks and Recreation"
Lena Dunham "Girls"
Taylor Schilling "Orange is the New Black"

Outstanding Comedy Seriesoutstanding comedy series emmy 2014

"Louie"
"Modern Family"
"Orange is the New Black"
"Silicon Valley"
"The Big Bang Theory"
"Veep"

Outstanding Drama Seriesoutstanding drama series emmy 2014

"Downton Abbey"
"Game of Thrones"
"House of Cards"
"Mad Men"
"Breaking Bad"
"True Detective"

Supporting Actor in a Drama
Aaron Paul "Breaking Bad"
Jim Carter "Downton Abbey"
Peter Dinklage "Game of Thrones"
Josh Charles "The Good Wife"
Mandy Patinkin "Homeland"
Jon Voight "Ray Donovan"

Supporting Actor in a Drama
Anna Gunn "Breaking Bad"
Maggie Smith "Downton Abbey"
Joanne Froggatt "Downton Abbey"
Lena Headey "Game of Thrones"
Christine Baranski "The Good Wife"
Christina Hendricks "Mad Men"

Supporting Actor in a Comedy 
Andre Braugher "Brooklyn Nine-Nine"
Adam Driver "Girls"
Jesse Tyler Ferguson "Modern Family"
Ty Burrell "Modern Family"
Fred Armisen "Portlandia"
Tony Hale "Veep"

Supporting Actress in a Comedy 
Mayim Bialik "The Big Bang Theory"
Julie Bowen "Modern Family"
Allison Janney "Mom"
Kate Mulgrew "Orange is the New Black"
Kate McKinnon "Saturday Night Live"
Anna Chlumsky "Veep"

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Netflix Nominated For 31 Emmys — More Than Twice As Many As Last Year

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house of cards

The complete list of nominations for the 66th Primetime Emmy Awards were just announced, and streaming studio Netflix is leading the charge with 31 total nominations.

Netflix was nominated for 14 Emmys last year and won three, including David Fincher's Best Director win for "House of Cards."

A majority of the nominations come from Netflix originals "House of Cards" and "Orange Is The New Black."

"House of Cards" is up for 13 Emmys, with nominations for Outstanding Drama Series in addition to Kevin Spacey and Robin Wright's nominations for Outstanding Actor and Actress In A Drama Series.

Director David Fincher is again up for Outstanding Directing In A Drama Series, and writer Beau Willimon is up for Outstanding Writing For A Drama Series.

"Orange Is The New Black" is close behind with 12 total Emmy nominations, including nominations for Outstanding Comedy Series, Outstanding Writing For A Comedy Series and Outstanding Directing For A Comedy Series.

"Orange Is The New Black" star Taylor Schilling is also nominated for Outstanding Lead Actress In A Comedy Series.

The winners of the 66th Primetime Emmy Awards will be announced August 25 during the live broadcast on NBC.

You can check out the complete list of nominations over at the official website here.

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Viral World Cup Model Causes Uproar With Crass Hunting Photo And Caption

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Axelle Despiegelaere

Belgian 17-year-old Axelle Despiegelaere became internet famous this week after photos of her in the stands at the World Cup went viral and led to a L'Oreal modeling contract.

Facebook fan page for Axelle has accumulated over 230,000 likes and upon her arrival back to Belgium, the attractive teen set up a Facebook page of her own that has over 19,000 fans.

Axelle filled her page with photos from her trip to Brazil  rooting for Belgium dressed in the country's paraphernalia, enjoying the beach in a bikini, and funny photoshops.Axelle Despiegelaere world cup model

But one photo Axelle posted was unlike the rest — a picture of her holding a rifle, proudly sitting behind what appears to be a dead gazelle she shot while hunting.

The caption read: "Hunting is not a matter of life or death. It's much more important than that..this was about 1 year ago...ready to hunt Americans today haha."

Axelle Despiegelaere world cup model

Fans were immediately outraged by the image. Realizing the post may be offensive, Axelle changed the caption to read simply: "this was about 1 year ago..."Axelle Despiegelaere world cup model

When fans didn't let up, Axelle responded to the criticism in the comments of the post Wednesday night:

axelle post 

By Thursday morning, Axelle's entire Facebook page had been deleted.

L'Oreal has not returned our request for comment, but a video Axelle shot for the cosmetics company is still up on their Facebook page. 

The video's description states: "Discover the beauty secrets of the most beautiful supporter of the World Cup!"

See screenshots from the video, which features Axelle using many L'Oreal products, below:

Axelle Despiegelaere L'Oreal VideoAxelle Despiegelaere L'OrealAxelle Despiegelaere L'OrealAxelle Despiegelaere L'Oreal VideoAxelle Despiegelaere L'Oreal Video

Axelle Despiegelaere L'Oreal


NOW WATCH: 6 Scientifically Proven Things Men Can Do To Be More Attractive 

 

SEE ALSO: 17-Year-Old World Cup Fan Gets Modeling Deal With L'Oreal After Photos Go Viral

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North Korea Has Taken Its War With Seth Rogen To A New Level

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Rogen and Kim Jong-Un

North Korea's polarizing leader, Kim Jong-Un, is at the heart of Seth Rogen and James Franco's new movie, "The Interview," and that's not sitting well at all with the controversial country.

Now North Korea is going so far as to send a letter to U.N. Secretary General Ban Ki-Moon demanding that the movie be banned, according to Reuters.

The letter is dated June 27, but Reuters just got their hands on it.

They say the letter accuses the U.S. of sponsoring terrorism and committing an act of war.

The premise of "The Interview" revolves around an American TV-host and his producer getting an interview with Kim Jong-Un. That's when the CIA recruits them to kill the polarizing North Korean dictator. 

The letter to the U.N. came from North Korea's U.N. Ambassador, Ja Song Nam, who wrote, according to Reuters, "To allow the production and distribution of such a film on the assassination of an incumbent head of a sovereign state should be regarded as the most undisguised sponsoring of terrorism as well as an act of war."

On June 25, when the story first came out, Rogen took to Twitter to address the dispute:

 

SEE ALSO: Ireland Is Having A Meltdown, And It's All Because Of Garth Brooks

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The 17 Biggest Snubs And Surprises From Today's Emmy Nominations

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the americans keri russellThe nominations for the 66th Primetime Emmys were announced Thursday morning and not everyone is happy. 

Netflix stunned again, receiving more than double of last year's nominations pushing out comedies like "Brooklyn Nine Nine" and "Parks and Recreation" and dramas including "The Good Wife" and "Homeland" from receiving nods.

While BBC's "Sherlock" and HBO's "True Detective" received their fair share of praise, a lot of favorites went unrecognized.

Snub: Sure, Julianna Margulies received her nod, but "The Good Wife" gets shut out of the drama category despite a huge twist this past season.



Surprise: Netflix was nominated for an outstanding 31 Emmys between "House of Cards," "Orange is the New Black," and Ricky Gervais' "Derrick." Last year, the streaming service picked up 14 noms.



Snub: Despite announcing the nominees, Mindy Kaling didn't receive a nod herself.



See the rest of the story at Business Insider






Garth Brooks Appeals Directly To Ireland's Prime Minister To Let Him Play His Shows

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garth brooks

Garth Brooks has appealed directly to Ireland's prime minister, or Taoiseach, to allow him to play all five shows he says was forced to shelve after Dublin authorities canceled two gigs.  

Earlier this week, the city said it had received hundreds of complaints from residents living near the venue, and decided to rule the five shows would violate local concert statutes Brooks responded by saying he'd only play the entire run of shows, or none at all. Approximately 400,000 people — equivalent to about a tenth of Ireland's entire population— had purchased tickets to the five-run set scheduled for July 25-29.

Speaking at a press conference in Nashville Thursday, Brooks called on Taoiseach Enda Kenny to intervene. "You have a gentleman over there standing by his decision," he said of Dublin's city manager. "There should be somebody above that gentleman who can say we're going to have five shows." Brooks added: "If the prime minister himself wants to talk to me I will crawl swim fly over to him. I will drop on my knees just to let those 400,000 people see me."

There have been reports throughout the day of meetings scheduled, and then canceled, between Kenny and Brooks' tour promoter. Brooks himself indicated he had heard no further developments. Ireland's RTE News now reports an agreement is likely to be reached later this evening, with speculation that the two additional concerts would be held later in the year. 

The numbers getting thrown about the cost of dropping the shows were not insignificant: The Dublin Chamber of Commerce has put the cost of the cancellations at 50 million euros, or about $68 million, and the Irish Mirror reported fans had spent a total of $35.5 million on tickets, with over 200,000 hotel rooms booked for what was to be the start of a mid-summer comeback tour that would kick off in Dublin’s 83,000-capacity Croke Park Stadium later this month.

"It's 'not Ireland' to say, 160,000 people? 'Screw you.' It's not you guys," Brooks said. 

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Motor Sports, Reality TV, And Wrestling Are Popular Interests Among The Least Educated People In America

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bachelor reality tv

Facebook data and online dating profiles can reveal surprising details about how our backgrounds influence our interests.

Part of dating site AYI.com's dating algorithm involves putting users into "communities" based on Facebook interests. A user who likes "Star Wars" will be placed in the Sci-Fi community, and a user who lists themselves as a fan of the New York Giants will be placed in the Football community. This way, AYI can match up users that are in the same interest communities.

As with many dating sites and apps, users are also encouraged to indicate their levels of educational attainment based on one of four categories: high school, some college, college, and post-graduate.

AYI decided to put these two elements of their dating system together. They assigned points to users based on education: one point for high school, two for some college, and so on. Based on this, they found the average education score for each of the interest communities, and the results were mostly what one could have expected.

Here are the ten communities with the highest average education score:

AYI highest education communities

Classical music's score of 2.92 indicates that an average AYI user whose Facebook interests indicate a love of classical music has a college degree.

Here are the ten communities with the lowest average education score:

AYI lowest education communities

 

SEE ALSO: Here Are 6 Things We Know About People Who Drink And Date Online

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Chrissy Teigen Has Scathing Remarks For Forever 21 After They Once Fired Her For Being 'Too Fat'

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sports illustrated 2014 chrissy teigen

Model Chrissy Teigen may have gotten the coveted cover of this year's Sports Illustrated: Swimsuit Edition, but there was a time when not everyone wanted to hire the 28-year-old Mrs. John Legend.

In a new video interview accompanying her July cover of DuJour magazine, Teigen reveals she "hates" retailer Forever 21 for once firing her in the middle of a shoot "for being too fat."

Here's how the incident went down:

"I actually was fired from a job ... Forever 21. They booked me directly when I was much younger. I showed up on set and they asked me if they could take a photo and they shot that photo off to my agency, who then calls me as I'm sitting in the makeup chair. And they say, 'You need to leave right now. They just said you are fat and you need to come get your measurements taken.'

So I hate you, Forever 21. Hate you so much, honestly you're the worst."

Watch Teigen tell the story in her own words below (:30):

It's not the first time the model has called out the retailer.

In 2012, she tweeted:

It's a good thing Teigen says she doesn't take modeling that seriously.

"I am paid a good amount of money to not blink for 12 hours," Teigen joked on "Late Night" this week, telling host Seth Meyers: "It's fun, but I don't take it very seriously."

As DuJour magazine notes in their interview about Teigen's modelesque looks, "What’s far more fascinating is the 28-year-old’s irreverent personality and her penchant for speaking her mind regardless of the consequences."

In the interview, Teigen — a prolific tweeter — talks everything from how she checks Twitter "every 90 seconds" to Instagram "ruining relationships that are already in the shitter."

As one could imagine, Teigen told Seth Meyers of her addiction to social media: "My agency definitely is not so keen on it all the time. Well, just being a model you're not supposed to speak ever, really."

Forever 21 has not responded to our request for comment.

SEE ALSO: 17-Year-Old World Cup Fan Gets Modeling Deal With L'Oreal After Photos Go Viral

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'Fast And Furious 7' Releases Candid Message To Fans After Finishing Filming

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vin diesel fast furious 7

"Fast and Furious 7" has officially finished filming and is set for release in theaters next April.

Production released a very candid message to fans on its Facebook page Thursday thanking them for their support of the film during a difficult shoot to mark the occasion.

The letter doesn't come as a surprise. Since the passing of Paul Walker last fall, the cast and crew have been extremelyopen with fans throughout the entire filming process.

"Fast and Furious 7" will be released April 3, 2015.

Read the letter in its entirety below:

We made it.

Today we completed the last shot in the production of FAST & FURIOUS 7.

We wanted to take this moment to express how thankful we are for your support. We felt the love and strength from our fans throughout this journey, and it’s because of you that we got here. 

There was a time when we didn’t know how we could go on, or even if we should. But we listened to you, and you inspired us not only to keep going but to try and make the best FAST & FURIOUS movie yet.

Our FAST family has been together for almost fifteen years now and has grown a lot in that time. From the start, Vin has been our leader who feels what’s right for FAST in his gut and in his heart. When we had to stop production last year, Vin gathered us back together and moved us forward when we needed it most. He led us to this day. 

Some of us have been here from the very beginning. Vin, Michelle, Jordana and our producer Neal all go back to that first little movie we shot on the streets of LA. We came back to LA in FAST 7, and it was an especially emotional homecoming for those who’ve grown up with each other since that first shoot. 

There are those we count as brothers who we gathered along the way and are with us again: Dwayne, Tyrese, Luda, Lucas and our writer, Chris. We’ve got some new additions this time in Jason, Kurt, Djimon, Nathalie and our director, James. Caleb and Cody joined us to honor their brother and help complete his work. 

Our family is big and strong but it won’t ever quite be whole again without Paul.

All of us -- those who’ve been here from the start and those whose first FAST film is 7 -- wanted to create a special film for him and for you. We believe we have.

Thank you for being there for us. You are the biggest part of our family, and we couldn’t have gotten here without you.

The countdown to April 3 begins.

With love,
Your FAST & FURIOUS Family

SEE ALSO: Vin Diesel says it's been "awkward and uncomfortable" adjusting to Paul Walker visual effects in "Fast and Furious 7"

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Scenes From 'Dawn Of The Planet Of The Apes' Were Directed Over Skype

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caesar dawn of the planet of the apes

"Dawn of the Planet of the Apes" swings into theaters this Friday along with some of the most state of the art motion capture visual effects.

While the film's technology allowed actors like Andy Serkis to bring the planet of the apes to life, it also allowed director (and avid "Planet of the Apes" fanboy) Matt Reeves to tinker with the film's ending via Skype.

According to /Film, Reeves was able to redo the end of the film by directing Serkis over the message service:

"This is the first movie where I’ve ever directed scenes over Skype. And mo-cap enables you to do that. And actually that last shot, when I realized that that was not the right ending, I went to [visual effects studio] Weta and I said, okay, so we gotta do something different. And they’re like, well you’re gonna need a performance. So we did a thing where Andy was in London and he was at [his performance capture studio] the Imaginarium. And we hooked up via Skype and I looked at a big plasma and I talked him through what was going on in that last sequence as he’s coming down those steps. And we basically did it over Skype."

Reeves used Skype to make last minute changes to other scenes as well. For example, Reeves was able to direct actor Jason Clarke and Serkis simultaneously while Clarke was in his hotel room shooting another film in Rome and Serkis was in London.

For Reeves, Skype allowed him to put together these minor reshoots with only six weeks until the premiere and with his cast and crew scattered around the world. It also allowed him to be one of the first to put a film together using the application.

"I don’t know if we’re the only one, or if we’re the first movie to have done a scene on Skype," Reeves added. "But it’s certainly the first time I’ve done it."

SEE ALSO: New 'Dawn Of The Planet Of The Apes' Trailer Will Make You Jump

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L'Oreal Severs Ties With Viral World Cup Model After Crass Hunting Photo Emerges

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Axelle Despiegelaere world cup model

L'Oreal has ended its contract with 17-year-old World Cup fan Axelle Despiegelaere, who landed a modeling deal with the world's biggest beauty company after photos of the attractive teen cheering Belgium went viral.

But fans were outraged after Axelle recently posted a photo of herself to Facebook in which she is holding a rifle, proudly sitting behind what appears to be a dead gazelle she shot while hunting.

The caption, in reference to the World Cup match, read: "Hunting is not a matter of life or death. It's much more important than that..this was about 1 year ago...ready to hunt Americans today haha."Axelle Despiegelaere world cup model

After feeling the heat from fans, Axelle apologized in the comments section of her post, saying "i didn't mean to offend anyone..it was a joke."

L'Oreal isn't laughing.

The beauty giant tells The Independent that Axelle's contract has been "completed."

"L’Oréal Professionnel Belgium collaborated with her on an ad hoc basis to produce a video for social media use in Belgium," said a representative. "The contract has now been completed."

The announcement came after fans took to social media to express their outrage that L'Oreal would be affiliated with Axelle after her controversial post.

Although the representative said L'Oreal is aware of the photograph, it would not comment on whether it was the reason behind the decision to cut Axelle's contract.

But the representative did say to The Independent that L'Oréal "no longer tests on animals, anywhere in the world, and does not delegate this task to others."

In 2012, the beauty giant donated $1.2 million to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency to help improve the testing of safe chemicals. 

Upon arriving home to Belgium after her fame-making trip to the World Cup, Axelle posted to Facebook that she had "Made my decision..signed my contract with L'Oreal!"Axelle Despiegelaere world cup model

The 17-year-old filmed a hair tutorial video for L'Oreal in which she promotes many of their products.Axelle Despiegelaere L'OrealAxelle Despiegelaere L'OrealAxelle Despiegelaere L'Oreal

Unluckily for Axelle, L'Oréal is known for its multimillion-dollar modeling contracts and high-profile ambassadors, including Jennifer Lopez and Blake Lively.

NOW WATCH: How They Make Lingerie Models Look So Good

 

SEE ALSO: Viral World Cup Model Causes Uproar With Hunting Photo And Crass Caption

MORE: 17-Year-Old World Cup Fan Gets Modeling Deal With L'Oreal After Photos Go Viral

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'I Won A Genetic Lottery': What It's Like To Become A Supermodel

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Cameron RussellWhen Cameron Russell was 16 she walked to a newsstand in her hometown of Cambridge, Massachusetts, picked up a fashion magazine called Allure, and found something strange: Cameron Russell.

cameron russell 1

"I barely recognized myself," she tells Business Insider. "I couldn't believe it was a picture of me. But of course it wasn't really. It was hair, makeup, styling, lighting, post, all that. And it looked really sexy, which I had never even considered in my presentation — I was only just 16." 

That was 11 years ago.

Now, at 27, Russell has modeled for Calvin Klein, walked runways for Victoria's Secret, and landed the cover of the Italian edition of Vogue, one of the most coveted spots in fashion.

It all started when she was scouted on the streets of New York as a teenager. But of course there's more to the story.

"The real way I became a model is I won a genetic lottery," Russell explained in a TED Talk that's been viewed 7.7 million times

"And I am the recipient of a legacy," she continued in the talk. "Maybe you're wondering, 'What is a legacy?' Well, for the past few centuries, we have defined beauty not just as health and youth and symmetry that we're biologically programmed to admire, but also as tall, slender figures and femininity and white skin. And this is a legacy that was built for me, and it's a legacy that I've been cashing out on." 

How much does she cash out? When asked for the kind of money she makes per gig, Russell is coy — "that's such a New York question," she scoffs — as well as candid. She says that since was a teenager, she's been making more money than her mother Robin Chase, who founded Zipcar

It's an unsettling contrast.

"Our society often values sexuality and women looking pretty more than women's ideas and women doing great things," Russell says. "Modeling is one of the few professions where women out-earn men, and that's because we're more valuable objects and ornaments. And there is something very disturbing about that, but I've benefited from it."

That TED Talk has turned Russell into something of a public figure. She wrote an op-ed for CNN. She was profiled in the Telegraph UK, New York Magazine, and New York Times under the headline, "Cameron Russell, a Model, Puts Looks Aside." She says that she gets stopped on the street more for her TED Talk than any of her other work. 

cameron russell french vogueWith that newfound platform, Russell has moved into arts-based social activism.

When she's not modeling, she runs Space-Made, an art incubator in Brooklyn, and serves as managing editor for an "experimental" magazine" called Interrupt.

The magazine is a response to the themes she addressed in her TED Talk: privilege and access to media.

Russell, who studied economics at Columbia University, rattles off the relevant statistics: 6% of directors of the top 250 grossing films are women, 3% of creative directors are women, 20% of op-eds are written by women. Interrupt aims to open up that access by bringing a different editor-in-chief with every issue, and thus publishing a variety of voices. 

She's come a long way since that newsstand in Cambridge. When she was a little girl, she told everybody that she wanted to be president. She met Bill Clinton when she was 10; she remembers that he told her to stay in school and meet as many different types of people as she could. She says she followed most of his advice. 

When she was 16, Russell thought her modeling career would be a few gigs and a good story. The next summer, she attended the Naval Academy Summer Seminar in Annapolis, Maryland — she was thinking about join the Navy when she grew up.

But Ford Models scouted her. Initially, she thought modeling would be "an experience" and a way to pay for college, since modeling careers tend toward brevity. Between the opportunities modeling afforded and the disenchantment she felt toward politics, she steered away from going after the Oval Office. 

Now it's more runways and art spaces.

After more than a decade in this career, Russell marvels at the fact that she feels so comfortable in the fashion capitals of Paris, Los Angeles, and London. The fashion world is small, she says. In these 11 years she's worked with maybe a thousand people. By now she knows everybody. 

"When you walk through an airport or look through a magazine, you can name every single girl and you probably know most of the people who worked on the shoot," she says. "That's kind of funny. When you're looking through a magazine, you'd think every single person's a different person, but every third girl is actually the same girl in a different outfit and makeup."

cameron russell by kacper kasprzyk for harpers bazaar march 2014 4Same girl, different team, different day, different product.

This is the model's daily grind. 

On the day of our interview, Russell's call time was 8 a.m. Next comes hair and makeup, then fitting the clothes, and then they shoot until about 5.

The whole thing is a team experience, she says. It's not her voice being expressed; it's somebody else's fantasy or inspiration.

Modeling, Russel says, does take some skill.

"It's going to sound ridiculous," she says, "but knowing how to pose, how to maintain a level of engagement and variation for a day of shooting is actually a skill. When you start, you totally don't know how to do it, so you have to have a lot of direction. Later on, you can carry up to 40 pictures a day for a client, which is part of the reason they hire you." 

For each photo, the photographer will shoot a couple hundred frames. This makes the model's work an initially awkward challenge.

If a photographer asked you to do a couple poses "you might put your hands in your pockets or lean over," she suggests. "At first you feel totally uncomfortable, because you're like, 'are you supposed to move around in front of all these people staring at me like a weirdo?'"

Cameron RussellThe other weirdness is the relentless flakiness modeling forces upon you. Russell describes her schedule as "totally insane": You get booked on jobs in other countries two days before you have to leave, making it impossible to set certain plans with collaborators or friends. 

Maybe that's why so many models are on Instagram. Russell says she's "not very good" at the social network; her peers have way more followers than her. But she takes the selfie-filled app as a cultural case study, saying it's fascinating to see what models post, since it's the first time that models are posting pictures of themselves to the world. That's one of the contradictions in the modeling industry. 

"I've taken tons of pictures of myself in underwear for my clients to sell that underwear," she says, "but to take a picture of myself in underwear and post it to Instagram is kind of unimaginable." 

Instagram, like the magazine and the art space, is about a person's voice.

"There's something nonobvious about a model becoming an activist," Russell says of herself, "because by most understanding and most reality, we are incredibly privileged and very far away from a lot of these issues. But I feel quite connected to these ideas in part because I have been a model for a really long time, which is a profession where you are basically voiceless."

"I'm so incredibly grateful to fashion and modeling," she says, "so that's not meant in a negative way. What I've been thinking about for 11 years is, 'How can I take this access to media where I'm sort of voiceless and turn it into something where I have a voice?' And I think about that for all our editors too." 

interrupt issue 2

SEE ALSO: 'It Just Takes Your Breath Away': What It's Like To Step Into Space For The First Time

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'Game Of Thrones' Creators: 'We Made A Bunch Of Mistakes' In The Premiere Episode

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daenarys game of thrones emilia clarke

"Game of Thrones" was just nominated for 19 Emmys and it's not difficult to see why.

The HBO series is now the most-watched show in the network's history. It recently surpassed "The Sopranos" with an average of 18.4 million viewers per episode. However, there was a time the creators of the show feared the series may not come together.

On an episode of "The Writers Room," a Sundance series which looks at the making of popular shows, co-creators David Benioff and D.B. Weiss recalled receiving poor feedback after screening the pilot for three friends who were also writers.

d b weiss david benioff

"We made a huge number of mistakes in the original pilot," said Benioff. "We screened the initial pilot for three of our friends ... and got to the end and there was just dead silence in the room. One of our friends kind of shakes his head and says, 'You guys have a massive problem.' It was one of the worst experiences, work wise, in my life." 

One problem the duo said they had was providing at least 50 minutes for each episode. Weiss said they had one episode that originally clocked in at 39 minutes.

"We were 93 minutes short for the entire season so we had this two week crunch," said Benioff.

In order to fill the time gap, the creators focused on exploring character-driven storylines, while ensuring they connected with audiences.

Benioff explained one of the key mistakes happens in the last scene of the first episode. Brother and sister Cersei and Jaime Lannister are caught having sex by a child causing Jaime to push him out a window. In the initial cut, it was never made clear the Lannisters were related, making their relationship incestuous. 

"Certain relationships that we thought were obvious were not at all obvious to an audience," said Benicoft.

game of thrones jaime cersei season 4

"There wasn't ever any point at which you were told explicitly, and that's the entire point of the scene," added Weiss.

Benioff says when HBO decided to pick up the pilot episode that despite the mistakes and problems, the two had the chance to rewrite and reshoot much of the premiere episode.

The rest is history.

You can check out "The Writers' Room" on Sundance.

SEE ALSO: Bryan Cranston has a brilliant method for deciding which roles he takes

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How 4 Minutes Of CGI Dinosaurs In ‘Jurassic Park’ Took A Year To Make

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jurassic park dinosaur

Before the 1990s, most visual effects in movies consisted of stop motion and people in suits. 

While computer animation was used in “Star Wars” and “Tron” and in title sequences like 1978’s “Superman,” it wasn't until "Terminator 2" (1991) and Steven Spielberg’s "Jurassic Park" (1993) that a movie used lots of computer-generated imagery, or CGI, and mixed it with live action. 

There are only 14 minutes of dinosaur visual effects in "Jurassic Park," about four of which were made with a computer, but its lasting effect on movies has been monumental. 

Two years later, 1995's "Toy Story" was the first full-length computer-animated movie.

Today just about every film — from James Cameron's "Avatar" to summer blockbusters like Michael Bay's "Transformers" series — owes credit to CGI.

But what is CGI, and how is it used in movies? 

The simplest way to explain computer graphics without getting overly technical is to think of typical hand-drawn animation or stop motion, which consists of a series of drawings or photographs to create the illusion of movement.

peter panSimilarly, a lot of CGI animation in movies involves series of drawings or renderings on a computer screen. These are used to create that same illusion to make something look photo-realistic.

Business Insider recently spoke with Steve “Spaz” Williams, who was a CG Animator at Industrial Light & Magic (ILM), the visual-effects studio that helped bring “Jurassic Park” to life.

Here, with Business Insider, Williams breaks down the steps it took to bring the dinosaurs from paper and pad to the big screen in CGI.

1. They begin with drawn designs and prosthetics of the different dinosaurs. 

The production used CG for velociraptors, brachiosauruses, and the tyrannosaurus rex, which Williams worked on primarily.

T Rex joint image2. Next, those renderings needed to make their way into the computer.

They scanned models, including ones for the T. rex and the velociraptors, into the computers.trex stan winston, jurassic park"In order to get it into the computer we actually fire a laser at the three-dimensional rubber prosthetic model and extract the data so the computer had it essentially," says Williams.

Williams explains it's like the opposite of 3-D printing with them taking an object and turning it into data.

3. They then reconstruct the data to make it work in the computer.

These are two images of T. rex data from Williams' monitor using software called Alias.

dinosaur t rex Jurassic Parkt rex dinosaur

4. An animation piece of software called SoftImage 3D is used to figure out the joint placement on the dinosaurs. 

jurassic park softimageHere, you can see one of the Brachiosauruses in the beginning of the film.

jurassic park softimage
5. After that, the data has to be "rigged" with a digital armature in wireframes. 

This is the framework for the dinosaur that helps provide its structure allowing it to stand up, move, and run.

"This is the first shot I animated for the movie after I built all of the T. rex data," says Williams. "It took me months to get this run right, but once done, we reused the run data for the rest of the jeep-chase shots and ultimately for the following two 'Jurassic Park' movies."dinosaur t rex jurassic parkBelow is another wireframe for one of the raptors in a kitchen scene where the two children are trying to outsmart the dinosaurs.

wireframe raptor jurassic park6. Next, the dinosaurs get their skin. 

"We used a program called Viewpaint, which allowed us to actually paint the texture of the skin in the computer so now we have this textured map," says Williams.

7. To put all of the separate images together, they needed to be rendered by massive graphics computers.

"Now we substitute in this high-resolution mesh data into a low resolution wireframe. That's all being done in computer," says Williams. "It pretty much took 10 hours to calculate one frame. You have to remember film is 24 frames per second. So it would sit there and crunch all night."

Williams built and animated the image below of the first fully rendered T. rex test. It was this video that convinced the producer Kathleen Kennedy and Steven Spielberg that "Jurassic Park" should be made in CGI rather than stop motion.

initial skin test t rex jurassic park Williams also animated all of the shots in a famous T. rex Jeep-chase sequenceHe says each frame in the entire sequence took an estimated 12 hours to render. 

The point where the T. rex breaks through the log is 75 frames long. 

jurassic park jeep"I animated all those shots where the T. rex is chasing the jeep. It took me four months to animate it, just to get the running to work properly," says Williams.

8. From there, the dinosaur needs to be put into a scene through a process called compositing.

This is where all the pieces to the puzzle are assembled together. CGI shots are combined together with live-action shots and any background and foreground imagery referred to as plate photography.

In this case, live-action shots of actors were combined with photography shoots in Kauai and ILM's work on the brachiosauruses and birds.

jurassic park composite

Here's the final shot with the added dinosaurs:

jurassic park composite with dinosaurs
9. Once it's put together, the images are reviewed to make sure they work. When everything looks good, the scene is put to film.

Final images are reviewed on a high-concentrated projector before translated to film.

All together, Williams says it took about a year to bring the dinosaurs to life.

“Basically May of ’92 to May of ’93 was the entire build and composite time for probably 40 shots,” says Williams. 

After $1 billion at the box office, you can't argue with the result.

jurassic park stampede You can watch Williams and others from ILM speak more about the creation of the dinosaurs in a featurette from the Academy of Motion Pictures below:

SEE ALSO: Find out why 'Age of Extinction" was the most difficult "Transformers" movie to make

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HBO Completely Blew Its Chance To Air ‘Breaking Bad’

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breaking bad jesse walt

“Breaking Bad” is making its final Emmy run this August.  

The AMC series was just nominated for 16 awards. Bryan Cranston and Aaron Paul are deservingly up for their fourth and third Emmy awards, respectively. 

Now, It’s weird to imagine the show on any other network. It helped solidify the network as more than a channel that syndicated classic movies like “The Shawshank Redemption” repeatedly. 

However, before the show landed on AMC, there was a time it was being shopped around to other networks. 

You may have heard the stories of how FX or TNT passed on the series.  

According to EW, FX feared the series was too similar to all of its other shows with male antiheroes. “Breaking Bad” creator Vince Gilligan has said two eager TNT executives loved the story pitch about a middle-aged teacher diagnosed with cancer and turning to a life of crime, but they feared getting fired from their jobs over the meth storyline and wanted to change Walter White into a counterfeiter. So much for knowing drama. 

The most important story in understanding how competitive this year’s Emmy’s drama race is knowing how HBO blew its chance to air what many call one of the best shows to have ever aired on TV. 

In a 2011 interview with EmmyTVLegends.org, Gilligan recalled his pitch meeting as the "worst meeting I’ve ever had."  

"The trouble with Hollywood — movies and TV — is people will leave you dangling on the end of a meat hook for days or weeks or months on end. That happened at HBO,” said Gilligan. “Like the worst meeting I ever had vs. the TNT meeting … and it was only like a day apart.” 

“The woman we're pitching to could not have been less interested — not even in my story, but about whether I actually lived or died,” added Gilligan.  

When he got to the end of the pitch, he said this was her reaction: 

vince gilligan breaking bad hbo 

“My agents could never even get her on the phone afterward to even say no,” said Gilligan. 

The irony, is that now, in its final opportunity to take home Emmy gold “Breaking Bad” has to beat HBO’s breakout hit “True Detective,” a series that has some questioning whether it should have been labeled a drama instead of a miniseries, to win. 

The entire interview with Gilligan is great. If you're a fan of the series, you should check it out. 

Gilligan begins discussing the HBO pitch after the four-minute mark.

SEE ALSO: Bryan Cranston has a brilliant method to deciding what roles he takes

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InStyle Apologizes To Kate Hudson For Not Promoting Her New Movie

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Kate Hudson posed for InStyle's July issue, in which she discussed "fashion, body image & dating the world's most famous men." The magazine, however, forgot one pretty important detail in its coverage of the starlet. 

instyle july cover

InStyle left out any mention of Hudson's new movie "Wish I Was Here," also starring Zach Braff. To apologize for the oversight, the publication ran a correction in its August issue. 

According to Ad Age, the editor of the story didn't realize that the error had been made until after the magazine went to press. Hudson and her people apparently did not request any formal apology from the publication for the blunder.

InStyle editor Ariel Foxman said one of the main reasons the actress was on the cover was because of her latest project and so he felt the magazine's readers should know about Hudson's work. 

The magazine ran this statement at the front of its latest issue: 

"CORRECTION We regret that in a feature on Kate Hudson in our July issue (p. 169) we did not mention her new dramedy with director Zach Braff, Wish I Was Here (in theaters July 18)."

SEE ALSO: American Apparel Is Sorry For Its Epic July 4th Social Media Fail

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Angelina Jolie Is Taking Legal Action Over A Video Allegedly Showing Her High On Heroin

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Angelina Jolie heroin video

Angelina Jolie is taking unspecified legal action against British newspaper The Daily Mail for publishing a 16-minute video that allegedly shows her high on heroin in the 1990s, The Times of London reports.

The footage was first released to The National Enquirer, and The Daily Mail published the video on its website earlier this week.

Jolie is arguing that the publication of the video is a gross violation of her privacy, according to The Times.

After The Daily Mail posted the video, the newspaper published another article touting how Jolie has gone from "heroin to heroine."

The video reportedly shows Jolie in a New York City apartment high on heroin as she talks to her father on the phone about family problems. Her alleged drug dealer says he shot the video with Jolie's consent in 1999.

The dealer claims that he supplied Jolie with drugs — including heroin and cocaine — two to three times a week during that time.

It's unclear whether Jolie plans to take legal action against the Enquirer as well.

In interviews, Jolie has previously alluded to a "dark time" in her life and has said that she's lucky to be alive. The Huffington Post points out that in 1996, Jolie said in an interview that she has "done just about every drug possible: cocaine, ecstasy, LSD, and my favorite, heroin." Industry sources say photos that apparently show Jolie high on drugs have been floating around for years.

The alleged heroin video is said to be taken around the time Jolie was promoting the movie "Girl, Interrupted." She won an Oscar for her role in the film.

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LEBRON GOT IT RIGHT: Here Are 11 Reasons Ohio Is The Best State

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Lebron Cleveland

LeBron James is coming back to Cleveland four years after leaving his home-state team the Cavaliers for the Miami Heat.

The famed basketball player announced in a Sports Illustrated essay that he has decided to come home to northeast Ohio, where he grew up and first played in the NBA.

He wrote: "My relationship with Northeast Ohio is bigger than basketball. I didn’t realize that four years ago. I do now."

He got it right. Northeast Ohio, and the state as a whole, certainly is bigger than basketball.

Check out these 11 reasons why Ohio is a shining example of U.S. geography.

McKinley birthplace1. Ohioans become president.

Ohio and Virginia like to bicker about which state can claim the most U.S. presidents. If you consider birthplace, Virginia wins with eight. But looking at primary residence, Ohio comes out on top. Childhood is what really counts anyway.

No fewer than seven presidents call Ohio their home state. In chronological order, William Henry Harrison, Ulysses S. Grant, Rutherford B. Hayes, James A. Garfield, William McKinley, William Howard Taft, and Warren G. Harding all grew up or made their lives in the Buckeye State. 

moody's ohio swing county map2. And when they don't, Ohio picks the president. 

Not unrelated to the last point, Ohio, known as a major swing state, plays an important role in national elections every four years.

Democrats almost always take California and New York, with their 55 and 29 electoral votes, respectively. And, naturally, 38 from Texas go to the Republicans. That's why Florida, 29, and Ohio, 18, matter so much.

In 2012, many publications predicted Mitt Romney couldn't win without Ohio. He didn't — so he lost. But the Obama campaign made the election all about Ohio, and it clearly paid off.

3. Ohioans love to swear. 

Angry comic man on phone swearing

According to rigorous analysis of phone calls (probably with cable companies), Ohioans swear more than any other states' residents. Conducted in 2013 by Marchex, the data examined 60,000 recorded phone conversations over 12 months. 

So this might not seem like a positive — but it is. Swearing is f---ing good for you. It helps people express pain and frustration, making us healthier and less violent. Dropping an f-bomb here and there could also help you at work. A 2007 study out of the U.K. found that swearing creates solidarity and bonding among coworkers and can signal authenticity and leadership to higher-ups.

4. Ohio always denounced slavery.

St. John's Cathedral

In 1802, 63 years before the 13th Amendment, Ohio's Constitution outlawed slavery. And even when including a clause to allow amendments, the creators specifically wrote Ohio would never, ever allow involuntarily servitude.

On top of that, Ohio acted a crucial catalyst in the abolitionist movement in the North. John Brown, an abolitionist hanged for his radical beliefs, lived in Hudson, Ohio. Harriet Beecher Stowe, who wrote "Uncle Tom's Cabin," the quintessential novel decrying slavery, resided in Cincinnati. 

The state also contains many significant stops on the Underground Railroad, including St. John's Cathedral (shown above), also known as Station Hope, the last stop for fleeing slaves in Cleveland before reaching the ferry to Canada. 

Many believe John Mercer Langston, from Oberlin, to be the first publicly elected black official. 

5. Pro football was born in Ohio.

Pro Football Hall of FameCanton, Ohio, is home to the Pro Football Hall of Fame for a reason — the American Professional Football Association, later renamed the National Football League, was founded there in 1920.

Before the NFL, pro football was a bit of a mess. The teams weren't regulated enough and loyalty was lacking because players could jump from team to team based on whoever offered the highest salary. 

So a few team representatives got together and held a meeting in a Canton auto showroom to establish the league. The NFL eventually grew to become a multibillion-dollar powerhouse and the most lucrative sports league in the world.

And the Pro Football Hall Of Fame will soon be even bigger and better than it is now. It's undergoing a two-year $27 million expansion and renovation as part of its 50th anniversary celebration.

6. Ohio produces prominent athletes.

LeBron James

LeBron James is far from the only famous athlete to get his talents from Ohio (even though he rudely took them somewhere else). Two-time World Series champion Roger Clemens was born in Ohio, and NFL quarterback Brady Quinn was one of the top high-school football players the country while he was a student in Dublin, Ohio.

Jack Nicklaus, one of the best golfers of all time, was born in a Columbus suburb and picked up the sport there.

Rock n roll hall of fame7. Rock 'n' roll got its name there.

Cleveland is the rock 'n' roll capital of the world, and it lobbied hard for the hall of fame when music-industry leaders were choosing a home for the museum.

And it makes sense that the Rock Hall would find a home in Cleveland. Without well-known Cleveland DJ Alan Freed, we might not have the term "rock 'n' roll" at all. Freed first coined the phrase as a way to describe the music he started playing on the radio in 1951. 

On top of that, Cleveland radio station WMMS is credited with breaking major acts such as David Bowie, Roxy Music, Rush, and Bruce Springsteen.

8. Several famous musical acts hail from the Buckeye State.

The Black Keys

If you enjoy listening to the Black Keys, the Isley Brothers, Devo, Kid Cudi, John Legend, or Bone Thugs-n-Harmony, you have Ohio to thank. All these artists either grew up in Ohio or got their starts there.

Mark Mothersbaugh and Gerald Casale met at Kent State University, where they were both art students, and formed Devo in 1976. John Legend grew up in Springfield, Ohio, and Kid Cudi started rapping around his neighborhood when he was 12.

9. Ohioans made history in space.

nasa

Ohioans have contributed significantly to U.S. space missions — they've flown aboard most of NASA's major human space flight programs.

John Glenn, the first American to orbit the earth, and Neil Armstrong, the first man to walk on the moon, were both from Ohio. The first American woman to walk in space, Kathryn D. Sullivan, is from Ohio.

On a related note, Ohio is called the Birthplace of Aviation (as our license plates show) because the Wright brothers grew up in Dayton. 

home depot hot dogs10. Without Ohio, we wouldn't know the joy of hot dogs.

Many historians credit Niles, Ohio, resident Harry Mosley Stevens with inventing the hot dog, which he called "red hot dachshund sausages." Initially, they weren't even popular because people thought they contained real dog meat. But hot dogs soon became one of America's favorite snacks.

Minor technicality: Stevens may have moved to New York City before actually placing the dog in the bun. But we count him and his delicious creation as Ohio born-and-bred. 

11. Speaking of food — Swensons.

Swensons

This drive-in burger joint, founded in 1934, has only seven locations across the state. Patrons just have to flash their headlights, and the waiters will run out with a menu, ready to take their order. 

Voted as having the best burger in America in 1999 by Forbes, Swensons is a northeast Ohio staple. If you've never had a Galley Boy, the signature menu item, we mourn for you. It's a double cheeseburger with mayo and barbecue sauce — for only $3.15. Potato teasers, essentially tater tots with cheese and jalapeno inside, are worthy of a trip themselves, too. 

SEE ALSO: The Happiest States In America

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