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Shark-Obsessed Film Crew Finally Gets 'Impossible' Shot Of A Great White Attack

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Shark week

Until now, even the most highly-skilled wildlife cameraman have been unable to capture a Great White shark leaping straight out of the water from a bird's-eye view.  

A mission to get the "impossible shot" was documented in Discovery Channel's Shark Week series. We've pulled out the highlights.  

To get the "impossible shot," Shark Week veteran Andy Casagrande and his team headed to Gansbaii, South Africa, known for its dense population of Great Whites.

Watch video clips here > 



The objective: To get a never-before-seen view of a Great White leaping vertically out of the water in what is called a "Polaris Attack."

Watch video clips here > 



The first overhead view of a Polaris breach was captured by the Shark Week film crew in 2001. But researchers have been chasing after one particular angle for more than a decade.

Watch video clips here > 



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

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11 Haircuts That Ruined Celebrity Careers

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miley hair

After Miley Cyrus tweeted photos of her new haircut, in which part of her head was shaved, fans and foes were quick to disapprove. 

Cyrus blew off her haters, tweeting "if you don’t have something nice to say don’t say anything at all ... Never felt more me in my whole life. LOVE my hair. feel so happy, pretty, and free.”

But a bad haircut can result in more than a few mean jokes. Many celebrities have found that taking scissors to their scalps can even ruin their careers.

Maybe the haircuts just signified bigger issues, like the star losing focus. But either way, the style correlates strongly to the star's success. 

From cancelled television shows to bringing down a pop star, check out the power of a hairstyle. 

Lindsay Lohan dyed her natural ginger locks blonde and became known as a Hollywood party girl.

After starring in box office hits "Mean Girls" and "Freaky Friday" with red hair, Lindsay Lohan was one of the most sought-after actresses in the world. 

But shortly after she dyed her red hair bleach blonde and lost a ton of weight, Lohan started to be seen in a different light. 

Today, she's often associated with partying more so than acting.



Britney Spears' shaved head signified her downfall.

Britney Spears was the queen of the pop scene since she was 16-years-old. 

But then, in 2007, Spears walked into a salon and shaved her head in front of hundreds of paparazzi flashbulbs. Instantly, public perception shifted and instead of a sex symbol, she was seen as an unstable person. 

Since then, Spears has been working hard to regain her pop idol status. 



Katie Holmes was the girl next door when she starred on Dawson's Creek.

Then she married Tom Cruise, got this mom haircut and started going by "Kate."

Her career became nearly non-existent. 

But today, the divorcé is back to her signature long locks and her career is on the rise, with a Broadway play up next on the agenda.



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This Julia Child Remix Is Delicious And A Bit Creepy

WATCH: Jon Stewart Comforts Rob Pattinson With Ice Cream In First Post-Scandal Interview—Here's Today's Buzz

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  • Jon Stewart comforted a broken-hearted Robert Pattinson with ice cream and "girl talk" on the "Daily Show" Monday night. While Kristen Stewart's name was not brought up, the two fellas did discuss break-ups. Watch below.

                        

Visit NBCNews.com for breaking news, world news, and news about the economy

SEE ALSO: 25 awesome things you should know for "Shark Week" >

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WATCH: The 100 Greatest Maniacal Laughs In Film History

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Master YouTube video editor James Chapman has put together 100 clips of the most memorable maniacal movie laughs throughout film history.

With the tagline "Some good, some bad. All insane" Chapman starts with "Batman and Robin" and works his way up to "The Muppets."

To see an entire list of the films used, click here.

Watch the below video, it may make you laugh—or cry.

SEE ALSO: These 5 lousy movies are why Paramount will be the last studio to hit 1B at the box office >

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Fox Interns Call For More Interns To Join New Lawsuit

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Joseph-Gordon-Levitt, 500-Days-Of-Summer

The unpaid interns of the entertainment industry will not go quietly!

Two interns, Alex Footman and Eric Glatt, sued Fox Searchlight last fall for violating minimum wage and overtime laws. 

Now, the plaintiffs are looking to "broaden the scope of the case to include all interns who participated in Fox Entertainment Group's internship program," according to The Hollywood Reporter.

The pair's new lawsuit now names two additional plaintiffs. Eden Antalik was a corporate FEG intern while Kanene Gratts worked as an intern on the movie "(500) Days of Summer."

The lawsuit claims that further investigation shows "the same hiring, personnel and company policies that applied to Searchlight interns applied to all interns who participated in FEG's internship program."

In response to the original suit last October, the company blamed any "intern abuse" on "Black Swan" director Darren Aronofsky and his production company, saying they were never Fox Searchlight interns. 

In July 2010, 20th Century Fox and other Fox entertainment units started paying their interns $8 per hour, but were unpaid before that time, even though they had to fill out I-9 forms, sign confidentiality agreements, and were considered employees.

Similar cases were filed against Conde Nast, Hearst, and "The Charlie Rose Show." At Conde Nast, the company reformed its internship programs to add a $550 stipend, per semester.

SEE ALSO: Unpaid interns forced to work like unpaid interns >

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ABC, CBS, Fox And NBC Don't Want You To Visit These 2 Websites

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television

In addition to people cutting the cord on television, broadcasters face a new threat from two big online streaming sites.  

Aereo and copycat site BarryDriller.com allow viewers to watch broadcast TV online, and the big networks are fighting to put an end to them. 

New York-based startup Aereo, backed by IAC chief Barry Diller, allows viewers to watch live television virtually anywhere—from a computer, phone, tablet, or other mobile device—with a fixed payment plan of anywhere from $1 (for a day pass) to $80 per year. 

On the heels of Aereo, BarryDriller.com, headed by entrepreneur Alki David, began streaming broadcast signals over the Internet last week to a few cities including Los Angeles and New York for a fee of $5.95 per month or $59.95 per year

Aereo users receive the channels they want through a remote high-definition antenna that captures television signals and sends them to devices over the Web.  

Users can also record shows in a DVR cloud to view later.  

Aereo currently offers 28 channels including major networks, CBS, NBC, FOX, ABC, The CW, and PBS; Spanish language channels Telemundo and Univision; Asian language channels including SinoVision; the home shopping network, local New York channels, and syndicated programs and films. 

An injunction request against Aereo by broadcasters including ABC, NBC, and Fox among other companies was denied by Judge Alison Nathan last month:  

"although [the plaintiffs] have demonstrated that they face irreparable harm, they have not demonstrated that the balance of hardships decidedly tips in their favor." 

Fox filed a lawsuit Friday in the U.S. District Court in Los Angeles against BarryDriller.com for retransmitting programming. Now, according to Deadline, a joint copyright infringement claim has been filed by the big networks ABC, CBS, and NBC. 

The networks are looking for an injunction against the streaming site along with unspecified damages.  

David claims his site is just like Aereo, with both sites giving viewers access to free content already available online.  

This isn't the first time David has had legal issues with the big networks. After launching a similar site FilmOn in 2010 David agreed to pay the networks $1.6 million earlier this month to settle copyright claims. The site is currently still live.

SEE ALSO: The Insane Clown Posse will sue the FBI >

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Our Strategy And Leadership Vertical Is Hiring A Reporter

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business insider, bi, dng

Business Insider's popular War Room vertical is looking for a reporter. Could it be you? Here's how to know if you're the ideal candidate:

*You're an excellent writer

*You have a basic understanding of business

*You consume all types of news and use social media to get it

*You're familiar with Harvard Business Review, Fast Company, and other sites that cover the latest trends in business

*You love to learn about what makes CEOs, innovators and creative minds tick   

*You know how to package information in a fresh and creative way

*You have an MBA or you've considered getting one at some point

If this job description interests you, send me an email (jliebman@businessinsider.com) with a paragraph on why you're the one for the job. Please include your resume and a few clips.

Please also note: This job is full-time, and is based in our NYC headquarters.

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Is TV News Making More Mistakes Or Are They Just More Obvious?

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CNNIs TV news making more mistakes? Or are they just more obvious?

Almost all of the major national news organizations have made high-profile mistakes in recent months: CNN and Fox News initially misreported the Supreme Court decision on Obamacare. ABC News erroneously linked the Colorado shootings to a member of the Tea Party movement. And NBC edited the Trayvon Martin phone call in a highly misleading way.

There are at least two possibilities at work, both involving the crush of tweeted, Tumbl'd and wall-posted information that besieges anyone with access to a laptop or a nice phone.

One: The old-school, TV elite are making more mistakes because of the pressure of competing not just with each other, but with the unwashed, unedited and un-vetted masses breaking stories from their parents' attics.

Two: Traditional journalists are making the same number of mistakes they always have. But the same motley confederation competing with them to break news is also holding them more accountable than ever before. That, fans of accuracy would agree, would be a good thing.

It could be a combination of both. And it remains to be seen whether that will lead to a golden age of accountability in which everyone is kept honest, or an Idiocracy in which people throw up their hands and refuse to believe anything.

Once the 24-hour news cycle made newspapers look hopelessly stodgy. Then online news sources started making TV look slow. And now Twitter is doing the same to websites. There are more sources of news than ever. But many of the news outlets with the most experience in sorting the factual from the inaccurate are strapped for time and resources, thanks to staff cutbacks across the field of journalism.

There's also no hard line between TV and online, obviously: Every network uses social media to stay in touch with viewers, promote stories and track down sources. But given the mainstream draw of the top news TV outlets, they are generally held to higher expectations than smaller operations. And their reach makes their errors more obvious.

It's easy to say they need to act like grown-ups – and recognize that it's more important to get it right than to get it first. But to say that is to minimize the constant pressure of a news environment in which a blogger can post, tweet and mass email a piece of breaking news in the time it takes a traditional news anchor to tie his tie.

"There's just a lot more on the air now, and the pressure to get there first is considerable," said Tom Brokaw, one of the best of those traditional anchors, speaking to TheWrap during a recent Television Critics Association panel.  

Brokaw said mistakes have always been a part of journalism, and that when he looks lately at the corrections section of a given newspaper, "It doesn't seem to be getting any smaller."

"The important part about making a mistake in journalism is catching it quickly, acknowledging it, and apologizing and moving on," he said.

The Internet is gleefully happy to help that process along, as CNN Worldwide managing editor Mark Whitaker noted in an interview last month. Any error, he said, is instantly posted across several platforms.

Mistakes – and often facts, because, well, people are crazy – bring instant online demands for corrections, apologies and firings.

Two of those repercussions occurred in the case of ABC News reporter Brian Ross' Tea Party mistake, when he noted that a man with the same name as the suspected Colorado shooter had a page on a Tea Party website. Ross apologized and has kept his job.

One of the great frustrations of traditional journalists is that independent entities can share stories or mere speculation without going through any standards and practices. But so, sometimes, do TV journalists.

That's exactly what happened with Ross, who was speaking extemporaneously and apparently didn't vet his information through proper channels before sharing it live on the air.

ABC News President Ben Sherwood said after another recent TCA panel that Ross didn't follow network procedures.

"In general, I think that what we do is we typically put on the air what we confirm and know to be true and that [which] is reportable," he said. "This is an instance where clearly – just watch it – clearly Brian said we have something, we don't know if it's the same guy – but there is a connection between a guy of this name and this particular organization."

He added: "We don't do that."

Ross, in other words, did what millions of people do every day on Twitter: Post information without checking with an editor, a lawyer or anyone else. The faster the news breaks, the greater the risk of mistakes, as CNN and Fox News learned with their Obamacare fumbles.

CNN, beset by recent ratings woes, prides itself on fast and accurate breaking news. Whitaker said last month that CNN was reviewing its entire process because of the error.

As the Associated Press documented, CNN reported on the morning of the decision that the Supreme Court had struck down the health care law's individual mandate, but expressed doubt five minutes later, and two minutes later corrected itself.

Fox News also reported that the individual mandate had been found unconstitutional, but within two minutes corrected itself. Anchor Megyn Kelly asked for the removal of an inaccurate onscreen headline.

Michael Clemente, Fox's executive vice president of news and editorial, said in a statement that the network reported "the news as it happened," noting that it had accurately reported that the mandate was found unconstitutional under the commerce clause.

But both CNN and Fox initially missed the fact that it was found constitutional under Congress' right to tax.

CBS said it avoided the error by refusing to rush to judgment or listen to chatter from outside its newsroom – even from other networks.

"CBS This Morning" executive producer Chris Licht said during a TCA panel that CBS News Chairman Jeff Fager and President David Rhodes never call him asking, "'Why don't you have this thing ABC has?"

Rhodes jumped on the setup: "Because it's probably not true," he quipped.

But what CBS considers a more cautious approach hasn't helped it beat NBC or ABC in ratings: It lags both networks in its morning and evening news programs. On Sundays, CBS's "Face the Nation" is tied with NBC's "Meet the Press" for the highest ratings in the key demo and is just behind NBC in total viewers.

And not every aspect of CBS's operation is as sewn up as "CBS This Morning" aims to be. CBS fired a sports blogger in January after he reported Joe Paterno's death hours before the coach's family said he actually died. The producer was following a report by a Penn State student publication. Many news outlets – including TheWrap – picked up on the CBS death report, crediting the network.

NBC News, meanwhile, fired a producer in April after the network aired a misleading clip of a 911 call in the Trayvon Martin shooting. The edit made it appear that gunman George Zimmerman had said, unprompted, that Martin was black. In fact, he had only identified Martin's race when the dispatcher asked for a description.

CBS News anchor Katie CouricWould you believe the Internet noticed?

SEE ALSO: The Insane Clown Posse will sue the FBI >

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Mobile Games Dominate Handheld Market, Crush Sony And Nintendo

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infinity-bladeRichard Firminger, CEO of metrics firm Flurry Analytics, revealed to the audience at the ongoing Gamescon 2012 GDC that the iOS and Android have been "killing off the handheld video game market," Gamasutra reports.

Both Sony and Nintendo currently have portable gaming systems out on the market—the PS Vita and 3DS, respectively.

Firminger revealed that shares in revenue in 2011 for the iOS and Android games in North America sat at 58 percent of $3.3 billion. In comparison, in 2009 shares were only 19 percent of $2.7 billion.

His statement closely follows Niklas Smedberg's belief in the future of gaming. A senior engine programmer at Epic Games, he also admitted to a group of developers at the GDC "mobile is the new PC."

You can read the full story on The Verge.

SEE ALSO: Electronic Arts makes a big bet on Microsoft's Windows phone >

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'Iron Man 3' Production Delayed After Robert Downey Jr. Pulls On-Set Stunt—Here's Today's Buzz

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  • iron man tony starkProduction on "Iron Man 3" has been put on hold after Robert Downey Jr. injured his ankle while performing a stunt on the North Carolina set. Marvel Studios says, "There will be a short delay in the production schedule while he recuperates.”
  • Jimmy Kimmel is engaged! The late show host has put a ring on Molly McNearney, the co-head writer of "Jimmy Kimmel Live!" after three years together. It feels like just yesterday he broke up with Sarah Silverman.
  • You may have some of your questions from "Prometheus" answered. When the DVD for the film arrives later this year, there will be 35 minutes of deleted footage to watch.
  • Michael J. Fox will be returning to television next year, according to the AP. The "Back to the Future" star is working on  a new family comedy series from “Arrested Development” writer Sam Laybourne and "Easy A" director Will Gluck. Fox left television in the '90s to focus on fighting his battle with Parkinson's though making guest appearances on TV series. 
  • Former "Blossom" star Mayim Bialik has been hospitalized after a horrific car accident that almost led to her hand being amputated. Luckily, Bialik later tweeted that she "will keep all my fingers," but admitted her husband had to type the message. As her "Blossom" co-star Joey would say, "Whoa!"
  • Zoe Saldana has been cast to play Nina Simone in new biopic "Nina" about the singer's life. No word on whether or not Saldana can actually sing.
  • Pop music power couple Justin Bieber and Selena Gomez are apparently phans of Phish, who knew?!

SEE ALSO: Why Fox is about to lose the rights to a "Daredevil" remake to Marvel >

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This Band Just Told Mitt Romney To Stop Stealing Its Music

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silversun-pickups

Los Angeles-based band Silver Sun Pickups have sent Presidential candidate Mitt Romney a letter of cease and desist after he used their 2009 song "Panic Switch" during recent campaign events, The Hollywood Reporter is reporting.

In response, the group have released this "biting" statement:

We don't like people going behind our backs, using our music without asking, and we don't like the Romney campaign. We're nice, approachable people. We won't bite. Unless you're Mitt Romney!

Romney's campaign has since apologized, stating the song was "inadvertently played during event set-up before Gov. Romney arrived at the location ... we will not play it again."

During the 2008 Presidential Campaign, Presidential candidate John McCain was also asked by the Foo Fighters, Jackson Browne, and John Mellencamp to stop using their songs.

SEE ALSO: Why Fox is about to lose the rights to a "Daredevil" remake to Marvel >

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Overseas Markets Are Saving Hollywood

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minigun battleship

With the budgets of major films soaring and movie attendance stagnant in the United States, Hollywood is using 3D technology and premium theaters like IMAX to bolster the sizzling foreign box office even in the midst of a worldwide economic downturn.

The special-effects driven and animated films that movie studios are so busy exporting have the advantage of being heavy on spectacle and light on dialogue, allowing them to overcome culture barriers to be enjoyed by a wide and remote audience, studio executives and analysts tell TheWrap.

“If you look at the stories that we’re telling, like ‘The Amazing Spider-Man,’ these pictures are meant for every person on the planet,” Rory Bruer, worldwide president of distribution at Sony Pictures, told TheWrap. “They’re not U.S.-centric. They’re relatable for everyone.”

So far, it seems to be working. A survey of the top 10 global box office hits so far this year shows that some films are actually playing better in translation than they are with U.S. audiences.  

Take “Ice Age: Continental Drift”: The animated sequel debuted in North America to mediocre reviews and has so far racked up a decent $143.7 million domestically. But abroad it’s been a different picture entirely. The fourth film in Twentieth Century Fox’s Pleistocene era franchise has drawn a massive $620.5 million at the foreign box office, making it ones of the year’s biggest, albeit unheralded, hits.

Also read: Currency Woes: Why the Weak Dollar Is Helping -- and Hurting -- Hollywood

“[Ice Age] has a broad, universal character base that is beloved on a worldwide basis,” Chris Aronson, head of distribution at Fox, told TheWrap. “In certain territories, like Latin America, this is one of the biggest films of all time.”

And it’s not the only film that has found foreign audiences more hospitable. “Men in Black 3” and “The Amazing Spider-Man,” for instance, were outperformed domestically by their predecessors, earning $176.6 million and  $255.5 million respectively. Yet overseas audiences seemed to find the films fresher, propelling the latest “Men in Black” to $445.3 million at the foreign box office and helping to justify more “Spider-Man” sequels by pushing the latest wall-crawler film to $435.1 million at the foreign box office.

“Some of these older franchises don’t play as well when they’re rebooted here, but if you think about it from the perspective of an Indian audience, when the first 'Spiderman' or the first 'Men in Black' came out, they didn’t have the same cinema-going experience that they do now,” Bruce Nash, founder of the box office statistics site The Numbers, told TheWrap. “Now they can see it as it is meant to be seen in a fancy theater with bunch of friends and a great sound system.”

Even films that have been unequivocal smashes with U.S. audiences, like "The Avengers" and "The Dark Knight Rises," have racked up more than half of their total grosses at the foreign box office.

The rare exception is "The Hunger Games," which relied on domestic ticket buyers for nearly two-thirds of its $684.4 million worldwide take.

There’s another advantage to the increasingly global nature of the movie business, as well. The expanding marketplace for U.S. films is alleviating the pain of costly flops.

Also read: Fall Movie Preview: 13 Films We're Dying to See

This year’s two most notorious turkeys, “Battleship” and “John Carter," both drowned in red ink. But the situation would have been much more dire were not for foreign audiences.

“John Carter” eked out only $73 million domestically, but overseas’ ticket buyers were far more amenable to the fantasy film’s charms, pushing it to a $282.7 million gross globally. Likewise, “Battleship” sank with $65.2 million gross at the domestic box office, but overseas its explosions and aliens played better, racking up an additional $237.6 million in foreign territories.

From 2007 to 2011, the box office in Europe, the Middle East and Africa underwent a 24 percent increase, a 38 percent jump in Asia Pacific and an 86 percent leap in Latin America, according to the Motion Picture Association of America. In 2011, the total international box office was up 35 percent in U.S. dollars from five years ago. In the U.S. and Canada, however, the box office over that same period rose a mere 6 percent.

Also read: Why America Doesn't Count at the Box Office Anymore

Helping to fuel this growth has been the expansion of 3D screens, which from 2007 to 2011, jumped by 61 percent in Europe, increased by 58 percent in Asia and grew by 97 percent in Latin America, according to IHS Screen Digest.

With China loosening its restrictions on the number of films it imports and countries like Brazil and Russia dramatically increasing the number of modern movie theaters within their borders, studio executives expect the good times to keep rolling.

American movies are even venturing into places they haven’t been in decades; witness Twentieth Century Fox’s announcement this week that “Titanic 3D” will sail into Myanmar, a part of the world that’s been closed to Hollywood for a generation.

With an eye toward broadening that appeal, studios are peppering their films with actors who have a significant fan base in foreign countries, but are largely unknown on these shores. 

Also read: 5 Breakout Movie Stars of Fall 2012

Take, for example, Japanese megastar Tadanobu Asano’s key role as a heroic navy captain in “Battleship” or Irrfan Khan’s supporting performance as a morally questionable scientist in “The Amazing Spider-Man” -- both men may be fine actors, but their appearances helped broaden the film’s appeal to foreign audiences.


There are still limits to what works overseas, however. It’s the rare comedy, like “The Hangover,” that is able to play well abroad, meaning that punch-line driven films like “21 Jump Street” will have to content themselves with making the bulk of their profits in English-speaking countries. Yet, as other countries grow more attuned to the American idiom, that could change too, as evidenced by the more than $100 million brought in by "Ted" at the foreign box office.

“It varies from film to film,” Aronson said. “It has to do with the types of comedies and the types of humor, but there are some that play well on a territorial basis.”

Another trend that may accelerate, is the practice of debuting films like “Battleship” and “Prometheus” overseas before they premiere domestically, allowing them to hit the American market having racked up a sizable financial cushion.

“The studios are less shy about releasing a movie internationally first than they were a few years ago,” Nash said. “There’s no longer a feeling that American moviegoers are going to feel snubbed if ‘Spider-Man’ opens 24 hours earlier in France.”

SEE ALSO: Fox is about to lose Its "Daredevil" rights to Marvel >

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Ben Stiller And Christine Taylor List $9.6 Million Upper West Side Duplex

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ben stiller uppper west side $9.6 million duplex

Ben Stiller and wife Christine Taylor have put their Upper West Side duplex on the market for $9.6 million, according to The Real Estalker.

The couple originally purchased the home in 2008 for $10 million, so they are listing it at a loss.

The apartment has five bedrooms, five full bathrooms and one half bath. The building has a doorman and is a co-op.

The duplex is on the corner of Riverside Drive and West 84th Street.



The buyer must put 25 percent down.



There are views of the Hudson from most of the rooms.



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Jay-Z Will Make Millions Despite Owning Less Than One Percent Of The Brooklyn Nets

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New York Post Phil Mushnick Brooklyn Nets New York N------The New York Times has a story out Thursday about the heavy influence Jay-Z has on the Brooklyn Nets despite only having an ownership stake that's one-fifteenth of one percent (~0.067%).

But what stands out most from the piece is the nearly infinite ways in which Jay-Z is due to rake in some serious dough from his minuscule $1 million investment in the team.

Here are five that caught our eye:

  1. The Net's new arena, Barclays Center, will open with eight sold out Jay-Z concerts
  2. The arena's most exclusive "Vault" suites, for which fans will have to shell out $550,000 a year to have access to, will offer patrons Armand de Brignac champagne. Jay-Z "promotes" and "holds a financial interest" in Armand de Brignac
  3. Jay-Z's 40/40 sports bar/club will open a new location at the Barclays Center
  4. Rocawear, Jay-Z's clothing line, will have a store at the arena
  5. The Nets employ an advertising agency, Translation, which is half-owned by Jay-Z

The piece is meant to show the kind of power Jay-Z's been given just so he can make the team "cool" and "hip" to a younger generation of fans that will become part of a new fanbase.

Read the full NYT story and also find out what other kind of non-monetary powers Jay-Z's been given by the Nets→

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NYC Club Sues Drake And Chris Brown For $16 Million Fight Over Rihanna

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chris brown drake fight The club where Drake and Chris Brown got into a physical altercation, reportedly over their shared ex-girlfriend Rihanna, is suing the pair for $16 million.

Entertainment Enterprises, the company that owns the Greenhouse trademark, claims the two artists were responsible for the June 14 brawl at their Manhattan club, W.i.P.

According to the papers filed in Manhattan Supreme Court on Wednesday, the pair "began to fight violently with each other" and "made deadly weapons" out of whatever they could find. 

The suit specifically says that, at minimum, the two did nothing to stop the fight between their two entourages, and that they, “Overtook the entire space. Terrorized patrons ran for cover...most were unable to protect themselves.” 

Entertainment Enterprises is also owner of the adjacent club Greenhouse. The lawsuit alleges the melee cost them a $4 million licensing deal. The bar was also temporarily shut down and lost its liquor license

Police are still investigating the brawl, but no criminal charges have been filed. 

The suit says the stars “should have foreseen that their notoriety and celebrity would ensure that their acts had far reaching and devastating effects."

One of the injured patrons was NBA star Tony Parker, who was hit in the eye by flying glass and is suing the club for $20 million. 

Maybe the two could just pay the money directly to Parker and call it even.  

SEE ALSO: Tony Parker claims he almost lost his eye in the brawl >

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The King Lives On: A Tour Of Elvis Presley's Famous Stomping Grounds

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Elvis Presley Candle Memory

Thirty-five years ago today, the world mourned the death of one of its greatest musicians: Elvis Presley. And though he's gone, he certainly hasn't been forgotten.

Elvis has been memorialized in films, music and pop culture. Today he is so deeply ingrained in our culture that even the youngest kids know the words to his songs and Elvis impersonators populate stages around the world.

But there is nowhere where he is more revered than Graceland, his former home in Memphis, Tennessee, which he shared with his wife Priscilla and daughter Lisa Marie. Today it's a museum and monument that attracts hundreds of thousands of visitors each year.

Every year we remember the King during Elvis Week, a celebration of his life and career. As part of this week-long celebration, a candlelight vigil is held annually on Aug. 15 to mark his death. Yesterday, about 75,000 people attended the candlelight vigil.

In honor of the anniversary of Elvis's death, we've pulled together some pictures of Graceland.

Originally built in 1939, Elvis purchased the 14-acre property, called Graceland, in 1957.

Source: Elvis.com



Since opening in 1982 as a museum, Graceland has become a major tourist site, attracting over 17 million Elvis fans to date.

Source: Elvis.com



The living room has a custom 15-foot sofa and 10-foot coffee table, which Elvis purchased after buying Graceland.

Source: Elvis.com



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

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Jon Stewart & Stephen Colbert Get Exclusive Merchandising Deal With Urban Outfitters

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Jon Stewart Stephen Colbert

Apparently Comedy Central thinks its viewers are "urban."

The network has just signed an exclusive partnership with retail chain Urban Outfitters to launch products from "The Daily Show With Jon Stewart," "The Colbert Report," and "Indecision 2012.

The merchandise will be available in stores nationwide starting August 15--just in time to get your “smart, funny and election-inspired" goodies before the November election.

Product highlights include:

Graphic tee: America ("The Colbert Report")
Mug: "The Best F#%king News Team Ever" ("The Daily Show")
Mug: "Incompetent, Incoherent, Incapable" ("Indecision 2012")

Additional merchandise featured includes: "The Colbert Report" wall art "You Want Me" and tumblers "I Am Drunk (And So Can You)," "Let Freedom Drink!" and "Time To Get Star Spangled Hammered;" "The Daily Show" logo graphic t-shirt and button set (four) - "I'm Kind of Insane and I Vote," "Button of Zen," I am Bi-Partisan Curious" and "I Actually Took Time Out of My Morning to Pin This Stupid Thing on My Shirt;" and COMEDY CENTRAL's "Indecision 2012" brand logo graphic t-shirt. 

No word on price points yet, but hopefully the products won't be one of Urban Outfitters' many ridiculously overpriced items.

While the retail giant often collaborate with more upscale designers, this will mark its first exclusive product partnership with a TV network.

But it's all part of Viacom's overall plan to build its consumer product lines.

"Viacom CEO Philippe Dauman has told investors that he sees a big opportunity for his company to grow by promoting sales of consumer products tied to its entertainment brands," according to Deadline.

Viacom properties Paramount and Nickelodeon are also participating in Dauman's plan to stock retail shelves with licensed merchandise.

At Paramount, “for the most part we’re going to greenlight films with consumer products potential,” Dauman told investors at the Nomura U.S. Media & Telecom Summit in May. “Nickelodeon will show improvement and it won’t take that long,” he added.

Now it's time for Comedy Central to get a piece of the pie, too.

SEE ALSO: This band just told Mitt Romney to stop stealing its music >

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Here's Why The World Will Be Watching Tomorrow's Pussy Riot Trial Verdict

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Pussy Riot Trial

Tomorrow at 3pm Moscow Time (8am EST), the court in Russia's Pussy Riot trial is due to

If found guilty of "hooliganism" and inciting religious hatred Nadezhda Tolokonnikova, Maria Alekhina and Yekaterina Samutsevich could potentially face seven years in jail.

The defendants were arrested in February after playing their anti-Putin "punk prayer" in a Russian Orthodox Church. Seven years certainly a tough jail term for playing one song, no matter what the venue, and the trial has attracted international attention. Rock royalty like Sir Paul McCartney and Madonna have voiced their support for the group, and translations of the trio's inspirational closing statements have gone viral in English language press. New York City will see a public reading of the statements tonight featuring film star Chloe Sevigny and others (More information on that event here) and international protests are planned tomorrow.

Pussy Riot's fame is remarkable. When they were arrested in February, few in the West had heard of them. They were only a small part of the anti-Putin protests that had erupted after the Duma elections in December, and those protests had largely dropped from international attention after Vladimir Putin was reelected as President in March.

However, when the rest of the protests dimmed, the spotlight began to shine on Pussy Riot. There's a few reasons for this — the provocative, performance-art esque video of the band singing (while wearing their trademark balaclavas) or the fact they are young women (two with young children) no doubt helped. Additionally, the fact that the case dragged on for so long (the performance itself was held almost six months ago, remember) that the the world had time to notice the trial and get up to speed on the case.

This international pressure seems to have had some effect. Prosecutors are now asking for three years in prison for the performers rather than seven, and Putin himself has made comments that seem to call for leniency.

However, the outcome of the trial will probably say a lot about the future of Russia and the Russian opposition. The Russian government was relatively light on dissent during the protests this winter, but there have been signs that they are beginning to clamp down (the most prominent leader of the opposition movement, Aleksei Navalny, was charged in a long-dead corruption trial last month). Observers can't tell if international pressure will cause the government to buckle or will he become doubly-determined?

There is one clear precedent for Pussy Riot, and it's worrying. The trial is being held in the same courtroom as the trial of Mikhail Khodorkovsky, the former Yukos oil oligarch who was arrested in 2003. Khordorkovsky was once the richest man in Russia, and his arrest was international news. Despite that, he has languished in prison for almost 10 years.

Khodorkovsky was charged with fraud and tax evasion, but the consensus is that his real crime was angering Putin. Pussy Riot have not only insulted Putin, but they've also revealed the hypocrisy of the increasingly influential (and corrupt) Russian Orthodox Church (for more on that, check out this London Review of Books article).

Earlier this month, Khodorkovsky released a statement on the trial. It began:

It is painful to watch what is taking place in the Khamovnichesky Court of the city of Moscow, where Masha, Nadya, and Katya are on trial. The word “trial” is applicable here only in the sense in which it was used by the Inquisitors of the Middle Ages.

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WATCH: Al Roker Just Called Out Matt Lauer For Getting Ann Curry Kicked Off 'Today'

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Al-Roker, Today-Show

Well it appears Al Roker is on Team Curry. 

The 'Today Show' personality made a not-so-subtle jab at anchor Matt Lauer and the way the Ann Curry situation was handled during Thursday morning's broadcast. 

Roker, Lauer, and Curry's replacement Savannah Guthrie were interviewing the gold medal-winning U.S. Women's Rowing team, and discussing the tradition of throwing a teammate into the water after winning a race.

"The tradition here in New York is you throw her in the Hudson River," joked Lauer.

A full ten seconds after the joke, Roker chimed in, "Which is different than our tradition… which is you throw one of us under the bus, but that’s another story."

Guthrie and Lauer responded with a stern "Mr. Roker."

The awkward 'Today' moments are piling up, following Curry's return as a correspondent last week in London

The clip has since been removed from NBC's website.

Check out the video below: 

SEE ALSO: Curry and Lauer's awkward 'Today' reunion at the Olympics >

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