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Spike Lee threw an awesome Prince block party with 5,000 fans — here's what it was like

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spike lee prince party

Spike Lee is a hardcore Prince fan, and he showed it Thursday night.

The director hosted a block party in Brooklyn for anyone who wanted to come and celebrate the life of Prince, who was found dead that morning.

A packed crowd showed up to dance, sing along, and say goodbye to their idol.

See what it was like below.

SEE ALSO: Prince's incredible life: The 16 most memorable photos of the musician

Spike Lee threw the block party in his native Brooklyn, and he said 5,000 Prince fans showed up to sing and dance for the "historic" event.

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Spike Lee himself did some singing and dancing.

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There he is celebrating. The party was right outside the offices of Lee's production company, 40 Acres and a Mule.



Fans showed off their purple and some face paint.

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Questlove shares the hilarious story of how Prince once fired him

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dead prince fired questlove

When you run an empire, you have to fire someone from time to time. If you're the late Prince, one of those people was The Roots band member Questlove.

Earlier this year, Questlove told the story of his strange and brief time under Prince's employ on the Storyville video series.

It turns out the drummer was on a blind date with a big group of friends, and they had tickets to Prince's "Musicology" concert tour in Philadelphia. But at the last minute, Questlove discovered he had failed to buy a ticket for himself. So he made arrangements to meet Prince's assistant at the backstage door.

"All of a sudden, like speeding 40 miles per hour around the stadium hallway bend was Prince on a golf cart," Questlove recalled. "He's whipping this cart like it's 'Golf and the Furious.'"

Prince brought Questlove in, but he had to sit on the stage because the show was totally sold out — not one seat available. Then Prince's assistant went over to Questlove and said The Purple One wanted him to throw Prince a party after the show. Oh, and Prince wanted to play pool, too. After some phone calls and wrangling, Questlove found a venue, got a pool table brought in, grabbed his records, and hustled to the party.

Questlove, who's also a DJ, was excited to spin some tunes he believed Prince would surely appreciate. But that wouldn't be the case, especially when he played Nigerian Afrobeat musician Fela Kuti.

"Next thing I know, he came over to my booth and said, 'Play something else.' I was flabbergasted, because to that point nobody fronted on Fela," Questlove said.

Before Questlove could recover, Prince's assistant handed him a "Finding Nemo" DVD and told him to play it.

"Okay, maybe they mean like background," Questlove thought. "So I put on the DVD and she comes back again. 'You can cut the music off' ... I was, like, wait, did I just get fired and replaced by a cartoon fish?"

And this isn't the only unusual story of Prince firing someone that's made the rounds. Vulture included another from a crew member in its list of outrageous Prince stories.

"No crew members were allowed to look at him or talk to him," the source who worked for Prince told Vulture. "I literally saw him fire a guy for looking at him. He just said, 'Why is that guy looking at me? Tell him to leave.'"

Listen to Questlove tell his firing story below:

SEE ALSO: Police release transcript of Prince 911 call: 'People are just distraught'

SEE ALSO: How celebrities and friends are mourning Prince's sudden death

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NOW WATCH: Back in 2014, dancer Misty Copeland told us a story about working with Prince

Jodie Foster says she cried the first time she put on her costume for 'Taxi Driver'

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Jodie Foster Dimitrios Kambouris Getty

The Tribeca Film Festival held a 40th anniversary screening of "Taxi Driver" Thursday night, and many of the principals behind the movie were there to talk about it, including director Martin Scorsese, screenwriter Paul Schrader, and stars Robert De Niro, Jodie Foster, Cybill Shephard, and Harvey Keitel.

During the talk, Foster, who was 13 at the time of shooting, revealed what she thought of the costumes she had to wear to play Iris, the prostitute Travis Bickle (De Niro) saves at the end of the movie.

"I was mortified," she told the audience at the Beacon Theater in New York City. "Just the hot pants and the dumb hat and the sunglasses. The first day I met the costume designer and put on the clothes, I cried."

Jodie Foster Prostitute Taxi DriverFoster also said she had to go through a four-hour psychiatric evaluation just to star in the film.  

"The Board of Education didn't want me to work on it," Foster said. "A young actor needs to have a tutor on set and they said I couldn't have one so we hired a lawyer and they had to determine if I was psychologically sane enough to play the part and I passed."

When the film was released in 1976, some criticized the fact that Foster was subjected to such mature material, including a lot of violence, at a young age. But Foster said during the talk that she enjoyed the experience immensely, especially all of the fake blood in the movie's gory finale.

"Seeing these big gallons of kyro syrup [fake blood] and all the guys would teach me what they were doing with it, it was fascinating," she said. "People asked me how frightening that last scene was to shoot. Honestly, it was kind of fun." 

SEE ALSO: 41 movies you have to see this summer

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One of the stars of 'Silicon Valley' says he's never watched the show

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As the premiere of "Silicon Valley" got ready to start in San Francisco, Zach Woods got out of his seat and left the room.

It wasn't just a poorly timed bathroom break. Despite starring in the hit HBO show as Jared, Woods says that he's never watched the program.

In a Q&A session after the premiere, Woods said that he doesn't watch to avoid being too critical of himself. He's seen himself in some clips when the actors have to revoice a line, and he then starts questioning everything about his acting.

"My first thought is always like, 'Oh, my god, my face is so weird. And I can't believe that I'm employable on television.' And then I see things about the acting that I don't like, and then I start fixing problems that may or may not even be there," Woods said.

To dodge making those unnecessary tweaks, Woods just doesn't watch the show.

"As a way of protecting myself from my own interference, I don't watch it," Woods said.

SEE ALSO: 'Silicon Valley' stars: It's hard to be 'more ridiculous' than the real thing

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The 12-year-old star of 'The Jungle Book' did a ton of crazy things while the rest of the cast acted from a recording booth

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Neel Sethi was plucked out of obscurity to play Mowgli in "The Jungle Book." His feature film debut posed a unique challenge: he acted alongside characters that were mostly created in post-production. 

Story by Ian Phillips and editing by Carl Mueller

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Sheriff says Prince's body showed 'no signs of trauma,' rules out suicide as cause of death

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Prince performs during his 'Diamonds and Pearls Tour' at the Earl's Court Arena in London, Britain, June 15, 1992.   REUTERS/Dylan Martinez

The Carver County Sheriff's Office held a press conference to confirm the details surrounding Prince's sudden death on Thursday.

"In life, he was a private person and we plan to honor that," Sheriff Jim Olson said to open the conference.

Bound by the necessity to keep many details surrounding Prince's death confidential as the investigation is ongoing, Olson explained, "This case is 29 hours old and it continues to evolve."

As for the cause of death, Olson said there were no signs of trauma to Prince's body, which he explained to mean that "there was no signs of violence." He also said that he had "no reason to believe it's a suicide."

"There had been so many rumors I've read about. I can't dispel them all," Olson said.

In light of reports that Prince possibly suffered from a drug overdose or the complications of a previous drug overdose, Olson said that he wouldn't comment on any medications Prince was taking, nor his health.

The investigation will include a look into his medical records and any available surveillance video. He wouldn't reveal if investigators removed any items from Prince's home. Olson did confirm that there have been no emergency calls regarding Prince in Carver County in the past year.

As for the status of the autopsy on Prince's body, the Midwest Medical Examiner's public information officer Martha Weaver confirmed that it started at 9 a.m. and concluded at 1 p.m. on Friday. The singer's body was then released to his family. Further tests will include "a meticulous exam" of tissue samples and toxicology tests from blood draws. Results are expected to take a few weeks.

Sheriff Olson also gave a more detailed picture of Prince's final hours of life and the reporting of his death.

The singer was last seen alive on Wednesday night at 8 p.m. when an acquaintance dropped him off at his Paisley Park home in suburban Minneapolis.

On Thursday, members of Prince's staff became worried when they couldn't contact him on Thursday morning. They went over to the house to find him unresponsive on the first floor of the house in the elevator. They made the 911 call at 9:43 a.m. Medical professionals attempted CPR unsuccessfully upon arrival to his home. He was declared dead at 10:07 a.m. He was 57 years old.

Regarding the scene upon arrival, the sheriff said, "It was certainly somber. He was a friend to the people present in addition to being an employer."

SEE ALSO: Questlove shares the hilarious story of how Prince once fired him

SEE ALSO: Police release transcript of Prince 911 call: 'People are just distraught'

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NOW WATCH: Broadway’s 2 biggest shows had spontaneous Prince tributes, and they were amazing


Kelly Ripa says she'll return to 'Live' after taking time off to 'process' Michael Strahan's exit

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Kelly Ripa has broken her silence after failing to return to "Live" earlier this week following the announcement that Michael Strahan is leaving the show.

In an email obtained by Deadline, Ripa thanked the daytime show's staff for their support and confirmed she would be returning to work on Tuesday.

“I wanted to thank you all for giving me the time to process this new information,” Ripa wrote in the email late on Friday. “Your kindness, support, and love has overwhelmed me. We are a family and I look forward to seeing you all on Tuesday morning."

Ripa failed to return for work this past Wednesday after ABC announced that Michael Strahan would be leaving "Live" for a full-time job at "Good Morning America." Guest cohosts Ana Gasteyer and Erin Andrews replaced her this past week. As Business Insider previously reportedRipa will also be out on Monday, when “Pretty Little Liars” star Shay Mitchell will fill the cohost spot.

Ripa was reportedly upset after being blindsided by Strahan's departure news. CNN reported that a source close to the situation said Ripa "is beyond angry."

When Ripa returns, she's expected to cohost with Strahan five days a week until his exit this summer. The show will then probably repeat the process it used to find Strahan in 2012 when he replaced the retiring Regis Philbin. In that case, Ripa will have a string of guest cohosts, who are essentially auditioning in front of millions of viewers for the permanent spot.

SEE ALSO: Kelly Ripa isn't returning to 'Live' until next week amid anger over Michael Strahan leaving

SEE ALSO: Kelly Ripa skips 'Live' because she's 'beyond angry' over Michael Strahan leaving

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14 reasons why Denver is the best place to live in America

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denver coloradoU.S. News & World Report recently named Denver the best place to live in America, beating out hyped-up cities like Austin and Portland.

And it delivers. From a strong job market and low unemployment rate to a thriving restaurant scene, Denver has become a cultural hub. It not only boasts practical perks, such as a low crime rate and good schools, but it has that intangible glow that makes it trendy and desirable.

Here are 14 reasons to consider Denver as your next hometown. 

SEE ALSO: The 50 best places to live in America

DON'T MISS: The 20 best places to live in America if you want to make a lot of money

First of all, there are jobs. Strong aerospace, defense, biotech, healthcare, finance, and hospitality sectors create a wealth of positions, both in number and diversity. The city has also become a hotspot for millennials, bringing in fresh talent and energy. Between 2011 and 2014, nearly 3,200 new firms opened in Denver, driving down the unemployment rate and helping add more than 165,000 new jobs.

Sources: U.S. News, Wall Street Journal



Not only are there jobs, but they also pay well. At $53,060 per year, Denver’s average annual salary sits higher than the national average of $47,230.

Source: U.S. News



Denver’s unemployment rate also beats the national average. Only 3.1% of Denver residents are unemployed, compared to 4.9% of all US citizens.

Source: FRED



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Tom Hanks realized he had to do this one thing to go from comedy star to serious actor

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Tom Hanks John Oliver Jamie McCarthy Getty

Tom Hanks wasn't always the iconic movie star we know him to be today.

Like most in Hollywood he started at the bottom. Beginning his career in the comedy realm with highlights like the TV show "Bosom Buddies" and later romantic comedies like "Splash," "Bachelor Party," and "The Money Pit" (to just name a few), he was building his stardom but not doing anything that was Oscar-worthy.

During a talk at the Tribeca Film Festival on Friday, moderated by John Oliver, the two-time Oscar winning actor admitted what he had to do to go from making forgettable movies like "Turner & Hooch" to classics like "Philadelphia."

"At one point in my mid 30s when I was making an awful lot of movies about the goofy headed guy who can't get laid, I realized then that I had to start saying a very very difficult word to people, which was no," said Hanks, referring to turning down roles.

forrest gumpAt that time in his career he was the star of movies like "The 'Burbs," and "Joe Versus the Volcano." In 1990 he starred in "The Bonfire of the Vanities," a movie that was considered a box office bust, though it was a turning point for Hanks because it was a serious role. Three years later would come "Philadelphia" followed by "Forrest Gump" a year later. He would win best actor Oscars for both roles.

"The odd lesson for that is I figured out that's how you end up making the favorable work you do," said Hanks. "Saying yes, then you just work. But saying no means you made the choice of the type of story you wanted to tell and the type of character you want to play."

Hanks admits he still works too much, but the offers he gets now are a little more attractive than "Turner & Hooch"-type roles.

SEE ALSO: Here's the amazing story behind one of the most famous lines uttered in a movie

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Tom Hiddleston did some gory research to prepare for his latest movie

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When it comes to playing a part in a movie, Tom Hiddleston feels most comfortable when he knows everything his character does.

But for his latest movie, “High-Rise” (available on demand April 28 and in theaters May 13), the British actor did some gory research to play pathologist Dr. Robert Laing.

He witnessed a human autopsy being done, as in the movie there is a scene where his character does some work on a severed head (yes, this movie is really gory).

“There was no one I knew who had the authority of how to do this,” Hiddleston told Business Insider while attending the Tribeca Film Festival. “I didn't have the first clue. So I simply got in touch with a forensic pathologist in a hospital in England, and I went to see him for an afternoon. I went and watched him perform an autopsy on a human corpse, and it was not an easy experience.”

Though his character only briefly does surgery on the deceased, for the actor it was important for him that it looked as authentic as possible.

“If you have to preform something on camera, you want to make sure people who actually do that go, ‘Yeah, that's how you do that,’” he said. “Whether it's making an omelet or dissecting a disembodied head.”

SEE ALSO: INTERVIEW: Why Tom Hiddleston is the hardest-working actor in Hollywood right now

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An Olympian jumped up an entire set of stadium bleachers in 5 leaps

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Norwegian sprinter Ezinne Okparaebo is looking to make her third-straight Olympics in Rio this summer, and has been documenting her intense training regiment on Instagram.

Her videos give you an idea of just how athletic and hard-working Olympians are.

In one specific video that gained a ton of attention online, Okparaebo does a stair-jumping drill where she scales an entire set of stadium bleachers in only five leaps.

Story by Tony Manfred and editing by Jeremy Dreyfuss

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Inside the potentially 'messy' future of Prince's $300 million estate

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AP prince death

Among the tremendous amount of questions being asked in light of Prince's sudden death on Thursday, many deal with the future of his immense fortune.

After several decades in the entertainment industry, Prince's net worth is estimated at $300 million. For any person, but especially someone as wealthy as the late entertainer, creating a trust or will for when one passes is important.

"The question is, is there some document that says here's where my stuff goes and here is who controls my stuff when I'm gone?" Los Angeles-based attorney Laura Zwicker, a partner at Greenberg Glusker who specializes in clients worth more than $100 million, told Business Insider.

The thing is that entertainers are more likely to avoid making such a plan.

"My experience with people in the music industry is, even more than other people, they think they'll live forever," the estate attorney said. "So, getting them to focus on a plan is really a challenge."

If Prince hadn't created a trust or will, Zwicker told us what we could expect for the distribution of his estate.

"Prince was a careful planner, at least in respect to his music interests," Zwicker said. "That suggests he was a lot more thoughtful and sophisticated than other entertainers. He would seem more likely to have made a will or trust. If he didn't plan, then this can get very messy."

SEE ALSO: Questlove shares the hilarious story of how Prince once fired him

DON'T MISS: Police release transcript of Prince 911 call: 'People are just distraught'

Who has claims on Prince's estate?

Since Prince was not married and had no children and his parents are deceased, his estate would next go to his siblings and their children, followed by other relatives in the absence of a will or trust, according to the office of the Minnesota state attorney general.

Prince had six siblings, two of whom are reportedly dead. In the case that Prince didn't create a will, his estate would mostly likely go to his sister, Tyka Nelson. The 55-year-old was close to her brother.

Beware the unknown relative: Zwicker said that people claiming to be related to an artist after death happens "all the time. 'Prince is my dad!'"

"Even if you have planned appropriately, those kind of things can happen," Zwicker added. "In a lot of cases, they end up having actual illegitimate kids that nobody really knew about."



What about control over Prince's future earnings?

Celebrities have extra levels of their estate that most others don't have to worry about, such as future earnings. For Prince, that could take place in unlimited ways and result in an endless amount of earnings.

Prince was very protective of his music copyrights. Last year, he pulled his music from Spotify and other services. Also, his videos are very hard to find on YouTube. One of the few places one can find them legally is on Jay Z's Tidal service.

So what's at stake when it comes to his music interests?

Royalties: Not only does Prince have all of the hits he has released, but The Purple One has written hit songs for other artists. For example, Prince wrote Sinead O'Connor's "Nothing Compares 2 U," The Bangles' "Manic Monday," and Chaka Khan's "I Feel for You," among many others.

His music vault: Reportedly, Prince has a vault of unreleased songs. Which ones did he consider unfinished? Or did he want them released in a certain way? And just how much should they go for and to whom or to which company?

Licensing: If Prince were alive, would he want one of his songs used in a commercial for zit cream? If he didn't craft a plan, then whoever inherits his estate could license his vast library of songs to any advertiser, streaming-music service, or artist to re-record.

His name and likeness: For celebrities, their physical appearance is worth a fortune. With today's technology, Prince's appearance could still be used in commercials and other artists' music videos in the form of holograms and on product packaging.

"People are using hologram technology in advertising, so he could be in a coke commercial," Zwicker suggested. "His intellectual property is immensely valuable. As we've seen with the Michael Jackson estate, sometimes it's more valuable after death, than it was during their lifetime."

In Robin Williams' case, he left his estate to his foundation and put a 25-year ban on the use of his intellectual property, name, and likeness for publicity after his death.

But if an artist doesn't have a plan, "Everything they stood for could vanish after their death," Zwicker warned.



And then there are other costs of being Prince.

His ex-wives: First, if he was providing payments to one or both of his ex-wives, Mayte Garcia and Manuela Testolini, then whomever inherits his estate would be responsible to continue those payments.

Zwicker said: "If the divorce agreement said, 'I agree to pay my spouse $10,000 for the rest of her life without regard to whether I'm living or not,' then that meant that $10,000 a month would continue to have to be paid. That really depends on what the divorce agreement said."

The government: It seems unfair that one is taxed all their life, and then they're taxed again after they die. But that's reality. Zwicker said that the US government takes about 40% of the estate, which is due nine months from the date of death. Whoever takes over Prince's estate will be responsible for that payment.

Zwicker said:

The Michael Jackson estate really brought this into stark contrast for people because his estate valued his name and likeness and his music catalog at virtually nothing, a couple thousand dollars. The IRS had come in and said, "No, it was worth hundreds of millions of dollars."' So, now they're in tax court with a tax bill that I believe is almost $300 million and there was no planning done for that ... If you don't plan, then somebody will have to sell your music catalog at a bargain-basement price just to pay all the tax on it.

The one way around this estate tax is to leave one's fortune to a charitable organization. For someone as charitable and religious as Prince — he was a devout Jehovah's Witness — there's a chance he planned to support a charitable organization with his estate after death.

"Everybody talks about how much Prince gave back to the community and the Twin Cities, so it's possible that he could've, if he had planned, left money to organizations, not only to his church, but outreach programs in the community that provide music training or something like that," Zwicker suggested.

Money owed to other countries: For the wealthy, this can become quite a problem. In 2012, the French government sued Prince for unpaid taxes on income made there while touring. In cases like that, the person who controls Prince's estate would be responsible to pay those taxes.

And in the case of a death, foreign-estate laws can be very different from US estate laws — especially if you own any assets in that country.

The attorney said:

In the United States, you can leave your estate to anyone you want. There are no rules. But in many European countries, there are what are called forced heirship rules, where your spouse is entitled to this percent of your assets, and your kids are entitled to this percent. And if you don't have a spouse and kids, these are the people who are entitled to share in your assets — even if you have a will.



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Here's how the first movie about what it's like to be a woman on Wall Street got made

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Equity_press_1 Sony Pictures Classics

The financial world has been explored on the big screen from Gordon Gekko's greed in "Wall Street" to the housing market bust in "The Big Short," but a movie has never looked at this cutthroat world from a female perspective — until now.

For over two years, the movie "Equity" was the passion project of actresses Alysia Reiner (Natalie Figueroa in "Orange Is the New Black") and Sarah Megan Thomas, who — along with screenwriter Amy Fox — spent time embedded with females who work on Wall Street to capture the challenges they face through a compelling feature drama.

The project grabbed the attention of director Meera Menon and "Breaking Bad" star Anna Gunn, who signed on to play the film's lead, senior investment banker Naomi Bishop.

"I just wanted to know more about this world and this woman," Gunn told Business Insider about why she took on the role.

Menon felt the same way, as she was drawn in by the perspective of women working in a male-dominated work world.

"What really hooked me was Naomi's speech in the beginning about why she does what she does is because she likes money," Menon told Business Insider. "I wanted to understand who she was."

The film follows Naomi as, recently denied a promotion, she attempts to one-up her male colleagues by taking the IPO for the newest social-media platform that's taking the world by storm.

With only five months before cameras started rolling, Menon and Gunn worked on their prep. For Menon, it was creating, on an independent film budget, a world of high finance and luxuries that major players in the business live on.

Gunn not only talked to the people who confided in Reiner and Thomas — who also star in the movie — but she also found insight after taking a tour inside Goldman Sachs.

She admits that she was very keen to the fact that there were very few women there, but the ones she did meet helped greatly.

Equity Robin Marchant Getty

"We all had dinner that night, and in that less formal setting I got to do my detective work in terms of watching everyone and taking pieces of them all for Naomi," said Gunn.

Menon and Gunn said that they couldn't help but take some of the experiences from their own lives working in the male-dominant movie business and put it in the film.

"It's that feeling of scarcity and wanting more," said Gunn, comparing the lack of opportunities for women on Wall Street and the lack of roles for women in the movie business.

"The attitude of working 10 times harder to get half as far," Menon added. "The constant fight for relevance that I don't think men experience as acutely."

This is highlighted in a scene in "Equity," where Naomi, while frantic on the day her IPO opens on the market, finds that while having a snack with her team, the chocolate-chip cookie she's given has less chocolate chips than the cookies her male counterparts received. This makes her goes ballistic.

The scene is funny, but is also a social commentary on equal rights in the workplace that hasn't been lost on audiences. At the film's screening at the Tribeca Film Festival, many of the women in the audience cheered loudly during the scene.

"That's a story [Reiner and Thomas] was told of a real encounter that took place on the trading floor," said Menon.

"It was a scene that made us laugh in rehearsal, but we never realized the impact it would have with audiences," said Gunn.

Sony Pictures Classics bought the film at this year's Sundance Film Festival and will release it on July 29. As word of mouth begins to grow for the film, Gunn hopes that there's not just an empowerment female audiences get from the movie, but also an understanding that in a position of authority "likability" is not a necessity.

She said:

That's one thing I'm proud this movie is exploring, the whole concept of being likable. I remember a lot of the women saying that, too, when I did research, "There's a fine line to walk." Hopefully, that question of whether a woman in a leadership role is likable or not will cease to be such a thing and it will be about the person's talents and character and their goals. It's something that I feel men don't have to necessarily deal with.

"Equity" screens at the Tribeca Film Festival on April 24.

SEE ALSO: Here's the amazing story behind one of the most famous lines ever uttered in a movie

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A couple who put their life savings into a surf business can't keep up with demand after Mark Cuban and Ashton Kutcher invested $200,000

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slyde

Angela Watts' mother saved $10,000 for her and her fiancé Steve's wedding, but instead of using it to get hitched, they put $8,000 of it into their surfing company, Slyde Handboards, ahead of their "Shark Tank" pitch last June.

The couple has since been married, and the Watts told Business Insider that since their pitch aired in the latest episode of the show's seventh season, "We haven't been able to keep up with the orders, because they just keep coming in."

Mark Cuban and guest Shark Ashton Kutcher split a $200,000 investment for a 22% stake in the company, and the deal closed last November.

Angela Watts told The Orange County Register that the deal changed their lives by easing their struggle to scrape by and allowing them to move operations from their bedroom in Dana Point, California, to a proper office in San Clemente, several miles south.

In the Tank, the Watts sought $200,000 for 15% equity for their company, which Steve founded in 2010. He grew up bodysurfing in South Africa, and he enjoyed using random flat objects, like fast-food trays, as hand planes to help him gain more control over a wave as he glided across it. It's a practice that's been around for decades, but Watts wanted to create a hand plane with the same careful design companies put into surfboards.

The average Slyde hand board retails for about $170. Here's one of them in action:

Watts' future wife, Angela, joined Slyde in 2013 in a role similar to co-CEO, and the two committed full-time to Slyde and invested roughly $40,000 of their own money into the company — their life savings. To get the company rolling, the couple lived off credit-card debt (which they're still paying off) and didn't pay themselves a salary.

They applied three times to "Shark Tank," and when they finally were accepted, their total sales from 2011 to the first half of 2015 were $356,000, and they expected to end 2015 with $295,000 in annual revenue.

The numbers were a bit low for the Sharks, but Cuban wasn't worried, because one of his best investments from the show has been Tower Paddle Boards, which is highly profitable and bringing in around $10 million in annual revenue. He considered Slyde Handboards to be a perfect complement to his surfing business.

Kutcher, whose investments include Uber and Airbnb, said that the surfing space was way out of his element, but he could see himself using the product and saw potential for big sales.

Kutcher said he'd be happy to join his buddy Cuban in a deal for 25% equity, which the Watts were able to negotiate down to 22% after both Kevin O'Leary and Robert Herjavec made offers. The Watts made a deal with Kutcher and Cuban after considering the value of their talents and networks.

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"We could not have asked for better partners," the Watts told us via email. "Both have been incredible in helping us in not only refining our message and brand but helping us focus on the right things to grow the business. Ashton and his team are social media wizards and Ashton himself has some really awesome ideas for the brand and Mark and his team have brought a level of business knowledge to our team that any Fortune 500 company would kill for."

Since closing their deal last year, the Watts have regularly stayed in touch with Cuban and Kutcher via email, and they have monthly conference calls with Kutcher and his team to discuss strategy.

Cuban has also hooked Slyde up with Amazon Exclusives to give them continued exposure.

The Watts said that Kutcher's comment, "This is cool 'cause you're cool," gave them confidence that he and Cuban would respect their brand.

"The attitude both of them displayed on the show toward keeping to our roots was a huge reason for us choosing them," they said.

SEE ALSO: 'Shark Tank' investor Barbara Corcoran explains why every 20-something should spend a week using only cash

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NOW WATCH: Robert Herjavec on Ashton Kutcher's ‘Shark Tank' debut

Why Netflix, Amazon, and Hulu aren't true competitors (NFLX, AMZN)

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On Sunday, Amazon began to offer Prime Video as a standalone streaming service for the first time, bringing it closer in concept to the likes of Netflix and Hulu.

Prior to Sunday, to get Prime Video you had to subscribe to the entire Prime bundle, which included things like two-day shipping and access to Amazon's music streaming service. Setting aside the fact that at $8.99 per month, Prime Video is a bad deal, there’s another reason why it’s not a “Netflix killer.”

If you look at the overlap of users on the iOS apps for Netflix, Amazon Video, and Hulu, it suggests that the latter two services are as much complements to Netflix as head-to-head competitors.

First, let’s look at the overlap graph for Netflix (courtesy of SurveyMonkey Intelligence):

Screen Shot 2016 04 18 at 8.52.59 AM

These numbers suggest that a substantial amount of Netflix subscribers don’t subscribe to Hulu or Amazon Prime, which makes sense given the scale of its US subscriber base (Netflix had 46 million US subscribers at the end Q4 2015, versus Hulu's last-released 9 million subscribers as of April, 2015).

And if these kinds of percentages also held true for Hulu and Amazon Prime — if we observed that subscribers to those streaming services largely don't subscribe to Netflix — it would paint a picture of a zero-sum ecosystem where the three companies are fighting to become the single streaming service you choose (albeit with Hulu and Prime being much smaller). You pick the one service that best suits your needs, and call it a day.

That’s simply not the case.

Here is is a graph of Amazon Video’s user overlap:

Screen Shot 2016 04 18 at 8.53.21 AM

And Hulu’s:

Screen Shot 2016 04 18 at 8.53.10 AM

Here you can see that a huge portion of the user base of these apps also use Netflix: 53% for Hulu and 62% for Amazon Video.

While Netflix has won the battle for one-service users, that likely isn’t the market that Hulu or Amazon are betting on.

The high rate of overlap suggests that Hulu and Amazon’s subscribers are people who have begun to buy into a streaming future. This is a future where you create your own entertainment bundle via a mixture of standalone streaming services.

And in that world, Prime Video isn’t a dark horse “Netflix killer,” it’s just one more channel of content.

SEE ALSO: Amazon's new Netflix competitor is a bad deal for most people

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NOW WATCH: Here's how to see how much you've spent on Amazon in your lifetime

41 movies you have to see this summer

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Cheer up, summer is around the corner. And with that comes a whole lot of blockbusters from Hollywood, plus some comedy and surprising doses of thoughtful drama.

Wedged between the must-see titles like "Captain America: Civil War," "X-Men: Apocalypse," and "Suicide Squad" are Seth Rogen's "Neighbors 2" and the new "Ghostbusters," plus titles for the kids, like "Finding Dory" and "The Secret Life of Pets."

Here we break down 41 (!) movies that should be on your calendar this summer.

Release dates below subject to change.

SEE ALSO: Disney has 6 'Star Wars' movies planned through 2020 — here they are

"Captain America: Civil War" (Release Date: May 6)

The Avengers are up against their fiercest foes: themselves. In the third "Captain America" film, a rift in the group has led the superheroes to pick sides — Team Captain America and Team Iron Man. Heralded by many to be the best Marvel movie yet, this blockbuster has off-the-charts hype.



"High-Rise" (Release Date: May 13)

Tom Hiddleston continues to show the range of characters he can play as he stars in the latest from director Ben Wheatley. In this trippy thriller, he plays a doctor who moves into a swanky high-rise that is slowly making residents go mad.



"Money Monster" (Release Date: May 13)

Directed by Jodie Foster, this thriller starring George Clooney and Julia Roberts follows a popular financial TV host (Clooney) who is held hostage by an irate investor on his live television show.



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

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