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The 5 best new songs you can stream right now

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the weekndNow that new music comes out every Friday — though not always on every streaming service — it can be hard to know where to find the next great song.

To help you out, Business Insider compiles this rundown of the best new music you can stream right now.

This week, The Weeknd released a single with Daft Punk, and Detroit rapper Danny Brown premiered a fresh new track on Apple Music. 

Check out this week's best new songs:

SEE ALSO: The 5 best new songs you can stream from the week of September 16

Danny Brown — "Tell Me What I Don't Know"

Detroit rapper Danny Brown premiered a new song from his upcoming "Atrocity Exhibition" LP on Apple Music's Beats 1 radio this week. Brown aptly described the cinematic-sounding track about street violence in his hometown as "like a scene in 'The Warriors.'"

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Sugar for Sugar — "Bizarre Love Triangle"

Outside of her fame in film, Scarlett Johansson has quietly had a secondary career as a singer for nearly a decade. The actress's new band, Sugar for Sugar, debuted a stellar cover of a New Order song for an upcoming charity album benefitting amfAR, an AIDS research foundation. 

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NxWorries (Anderson .Paak & Knwledge) — "Lyk Dis"

The music of NxWorries — the duo of talented singer/rapper Anderson .Paak and producer Knwledge — recalls '70s soul legends like Al Green and Curtis Mayfield with a hip-hop edge. "Lyk Dis," the group's smooth and explicit new single, finds .Paak rapping and singing about the art of lovemaking.  

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This gorgeous new racing game does something incredibly smart

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I don't know about you, but I play video games to play them. Not to watch pretty videos, not to adjust settings — my time is limited, as is yours, so I appreciate it when a game gets to the point quickly.

The gorgeous new racer "Forza Horizon 3" nails this.

Forza Horizon 3

I started the game, and within minutes of the absolutely ridiculous "Fast & Furious-style" intro, I was behind the wheel of the Lamborghini Centenario you see above. 

The premise of "Forza Horizon 3," as explained in the intro, is simple: You're the boss of a festival — the "Horizon" festival — which combines street racing culture with, uh, like a fancy version of Burning Man? Kind of?

burning man

The ridiculous tone of the rest of the game is set in these two minutes. Here's an actual quote:

"It's big and it's hot and the roads are just wide open. Bro, we're talking fast cars, cool beats, summer sun, classic style, blazing days, banging nights, burned rubber, wild parties, and exotic animals. So put your pedal to the floor as we welcome you to Horizon Australia."

Indeed.

"Forza Horizon 3" is a game that revels in being over-the-top, and it's thankfully done with a wink and a nod (and probably the word "bro"). 

After a late title screen, three minutes after pushing start, I'm behind the wheel of the aforementioned Lambo. Like so:

Forza Horizon 3

And that's tremendously meaningful! I got this racing game to race cars, right? That's the point? Well here I am! Racing cars!

More seriously, it's just a crazy way to start a game. Most racers ask you which car you'd like to start with, if you want to drive in automatic or manual, and all sorts of other stuff. Heck, most games in general still open with stuff like brightness settings and difficult levels. 

Instead, "Forza Horizon 3" says, "Hey, you're in Australia. The game is very pretty. There are lots of cars. Now get in one that's going fast and make it go even faster." Sure thing!

Forza Horizon 3

In doing so, the game teaches basic mechanics (pull the trigger to accelerate, push Y to rewind the race, etc.), sets a tone for the game (go FAST!), and immediately pulls you in. It certainly pulled me in. 

And then, when you're getting comfy? "Horizon 3" thrusts you into a totally different vehicle:

There's good reason for that: "Forza Horizon 3" is a racing game where you'll drive through a diversity of regions. It's totally normal to jump from a street race to a rallycar race in one step.

As such, the first five or so minutes of "Forza Horizon 3" is one of the most satisfying I've played in any game. It goads you in with silliness, then throws you into racing at full speed — and that's a damn-near killer combo.

"Forza Horizon 3" arrives on September 27, exclusively on Xbox One and Windows 10. Check out the first 30 minutes of gameplay below (including the amazing intro), care of Polygon:

SEE ALSO: This is the most beautiful game on Xbox One by a mile

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NOW WATCH: 5 hidden features to get the most out of your Xbox One

Bruce Springsteen says Donald Trump is a 'moron'

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Bruce Springsteen Jamie McCarthy getty final

The Boss has spoken.

In an upcoming interview with Rolling Stone, rock and roll icon Bruce Springsteen didn't hold back about his thoughts on Donald Trump.

"Well, you know, the republic is under siege by a moron, basically," said Springsteen. "The whole thing is tragic. Without overstating it, it's a tragedy for our democracy."

Springsteen has stayed quiet about the election as he's been on tour with the E Street Band, but with his autobiography "Born to Run" coming out September 27 he's beginning to do press, and the inevitable questions about the election have begun.

But while giving his opinion on Trump, Springsteen also believes musicians shouldn't be the ones people turn to about politics.

"I don't think people go to musicians for their political points of view," he said. "I think your political point of view is circumstances and then how you were nurtured and brought up."

So we know how he feels about Trump, what about Clinton?

"I like Hillary," said Springsteen. "I think she would be a very, very good president."

The complete interview will appear in the next issue of Rolling Stone.

SEE ALSO: The FBI is looking to child-abuse allegations against Brad Pitt

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: An aspiring cop went undercover in a jail and says inmates have more power than guards

How actor, tech entrepreneur, and 'Shark Tank' investor Ashton Kutcher spends his millions

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Ashton Kutcher

Ashton Kutcher wears many hats.

If you know him primarily from films and television, including "Dude, Where's My Car?" and "That '70s Show," it may surprise you to hear that the 38-year-old actor has also become an entrepreneur, philanthropist, and successful venture capitalist in the tech space. He has even appeared on ABC's "Shark Tank."

Read on to see what else the successful former star of the MTV prank show "Punk'd" is up to — and what he's doing with his millions.

SEE ALSO: Ashton Kutcher says the best investment he's ever made is something anyone can afford

Born in downtown Cedar Rapids, Iowa, in 1978 — minutes ahead of his fraternal twin, Michael — Kutcher comes from humble beginnings. His parents, Larry and Diane, were both factory workers and raised their three kids on a farm.

Source: Biography.com



Kutcher started earning and saving from a young age. His odd jobs included mowing lawns and roofing as well as skinning deer at a meat locker and baling hay. "When I was 13, I saved $1,400 for a snowmobile," he tells Grow. "I worked after school and on weekends for one and a half years, and put every cent into a savings account."

Source: Grow



Kutcher continued working a variety of jobs to pay his tuition at the University of Iowa, where he enrolled in 1997 and planned to major in biochemical engineering. He dropped out and ended up going the modeling and acting route, but his interest in science and technology would resurface years later when he started investing in tech companies.

Source: TechCrunch and Biography.com



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The 18 worst 'Shark Tank' pitches ever

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kevin o'leary

Hundreds of entrepreneurs have pitched their companies on "Shark Tank" since the show debuted in 2009, but some of the most memorable pitches are the worst ones.

They stand out for different reasons. In some, the products are ridiculous. In others, the entrepreneurs are completely unprepared or so arrogant they appear clueless.

In anticipation of the Season 8 premiere on Friday, we've gathered the Sharks' least favorite presentations as well as our own picks for the worst pitches in the show's history.

SEE ALSO: 15 behind-the-scenes secrets you didn't know about 'Shark Tank'

Pavlok, Season 7

Maneesh Sethi's pitch went so off the rails that it ended with Kevin O'Leary calling Sethi an "a--hole" and telling him to "get the f---- out of here."

Sethi came into the Tank asking for $500,000 in exchange for 3.14% equity of his company Pavlok. It manufactures wristbands which, through either a manual or automatic prompt, shocks its wearer when performing a bad habit.

It's inspired by decades-old Pavlovian research, but when Mark Cuban asked Sethi if there were any peer-reviewed studies on the effectiveness of his invention, Sethi could only point to an 8-person pilot program with the University of Massachusetts at Boston (not televised) and the research that predated Pavlok. Cuban and Sethi started arguing with each other and Sethi lost his cool, once grabbing his face in frustration.

O'Leary eventually told Sethi he was intrigued and made an offer that Sethi liked. But Sethi refused it, saying, "I would take an offer from anybody besides Mr. Wonderful," using O'Leary's nickname. He clarified that it was indeed personal, and that's when the altercation happened.

"Oh, well ... are you all out?" Sethi asked.

"F--- you," O'Leary responded.



The Skinny Mirror, Season 8

Belinda James is the founder of The Skinny Mirror, a company that sells custom mirrors to individuals and businesses that makes the viewer appear skinnier than she is (James' target audience is women). She only sold $85,000 worth of her mirrors when she walked into the Tank, but valued her company at $1 million, asking for $200,000 for 20% of her business.

In her pitch, James admitted that one could buy a slimming mirror elsewhere, and when several of the Sharks said it was a con, she tried extolling the virtues of businesses selling more products when women look at themselves trying on clothes in a Skinny Mirror.

"You can smile all you want, but the truth is you're lying to people," O'Leary said. "I'm out, but I also forbid any other Shark from investing in this."



NoPhone, Season 7

In 2014, advertising creatives Van Gould and Chris Sheldon thought it would be fun to create a gag gift with an accompanying website to satirize society's increasingly intimate connections to its smartphones and the antisocial behavior that followed. Their creation, the NoPhone, went from a joke with friends to an actual side gig, and they raised around $18,000 on Kickstarter for their useless hunk of plastic that was advertised as a way to help break a smartphone habit.

The guys are funny, and their satire of companies like Apple is clever, but it was painful to have to watch them go through their pseudo-pitch, for $25,000 in exchange for 25% equity. It seemed as if the Sharks were only slightly in on the joke — and it was never fully clear if Gould and Sheldon were trying to build a novelty gift business or were just mocking the process.

"There's only one thing I hate more than people staring at their phones, and that's dumb patents," Cuban said.



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How Fox's 'The Exorcist' lured Geena Davis back to TV

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geena davis the exorcist fox

Despite being devastated by the cancellation of her first television series, 2005's "Commander-in-Chief," Geena Davis is back a decade later on Fox's "The Exorcist," which premieres Friday at 9 p.m. 

On "Commander-in-Chief," she played the first female president on the ABC drama, which was initially celebrated by critics and viewers alike. But production issues plagued the show and viewership began to decline.

"I had a terrible time getting over that show getting canceled, actually," Davis, 60, told Business Insider when we sat with the actress in August. "We only had one season and it was very disappointing. I loved the show. I loved it. It was the No. 1 new show. And various elements caused it not to be renewed, but it was a fantastic experience."

One would think that having an experience like that would sour Davis on returning to the small screen, but it was actually quite the opposite.

"It was a great experience," she said. "So, I was missing TV and having a show tremendously for a long time and hoping something else would come up, it just took a while."

Davis admits she's picky about the roles she takes. She calls herself "spoiled" by having been in some Hollywood's most successful and memorable movies early in her career, including "Thelma and Louise," "A League of Their Own," "The Fly," and "Beetlejuice."

"I got to play so many cool parts," she said. "There’s not many female actors who got to be a baseball phenomenon and a road warrior, an amnesiac, an assassin, a pirate captain, and then the president, so I really got spoiled and felt like I don’t want to just take some boring part. And if I haven’t run out of money, I don’t need to."

For Davis, who has been a vocal activist for women's equality in Hollywood, choosing to play the first female president wasn't a hard decision. But now, the actress has returned to series television for Fox's "The Exorcist."

"I’m a big fan of horror movies and I would’ve done more if really good ones had come my way," said Davis, whose horror movie experience includes 1986's "The Fly" and to an extent, 1988's "Beetlejuice," which she called a "goofy horror movie."

geena davis alfonso herrera fox exorcistDavis knows that "The Exorcist" isn't just any horror movie. It actually means something to its fans.

"I think for a large percentage of the population, 'The Exorcist' is the scariest movie ever and it started everything," she told us. "It was the first truly scary movie. When I heard from my agents, 'They want to talk to you about doing 'The Exorcist,' I was like, 'The Exorcist'! [sighs] And I noticed now I tell somebody I’m doing a new show, it’s called 'The Exorcist,' and they’re like 'Oohhh' — people always just have that reaction to the title. I think it was an exciting possibility to try."

On Fox's "The Exorcist," Davis plays a mother who senses that there's more going on with her depressed daughter than mourning the sudden death of a college friend. She confides in a local priest, played by Mexican actor Alfonso Herrera, and then it brings on the demons.

There is one thing Davis really wants viewers to know about her new show.

"I hope people will realize that it’s not a remake of the movie in any way," she said. "It honors the movie and acknowledges it. Our story takes place in the same world that that happened 40 years ago, but it’s the current day and a different circumstance. But evil has come back, this time to Chicago. It’s very exciting."

Watch a preview of Fox's 'The Exorcist" below:

SEE ALSO: 'Lethal Weapon' star Damon Wayans on taking on the iconic role: 'I was intimidated'

DON'T MISS: The 20 best new TV shows this fall you need to watch

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: Emma Watson beatboxed for gender equality with 'Hamilton' star Lin-Manuel Miranda

People are outraged over 'Transformers 5' using Winston Churchill's home as a Nazi headquarters

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transformers 4 paramount pictures final

On Wednesday, the production for "Transformers: The Last Knight," the fifth movie in the profitable "Transformers" franchise from Paramount, set up shop at the birthplace of Winston Churchill. Blenheim Palace.

A common setting for Hollywood movies — recent titles like 2015's "Cinderella" and "Spectre" have shot there — "The Last Knight" had a different idea for the use of the palace as it became the setting of a Nazi headquarters for the film.

According to The Sun, actors dressed in SS stormtrooper costumes walked the grounds and giant swastika flags huge outside of the building.

Here's how Blenheim Palace typically looks:

Blenheim_Palace_wikipedia

And here's how it looked while "The Last Knight" was filming there:

“I know it’s a film, but it’s symbolically disrespectful to Churchill. He will be turning in his grave,” Col. Richard Kemp, former commander of British forces in Afghanistan, told the Sun.

Churchill is buried a mile from Blenheim Palace, an estate located 60 miles northwest of London, in Oxfordshire. The current resident is the 12th Duke of Marlborough Jamie Spencer-Churchill, who was not at the palace at the time of filming, according to The Sun.

churchillThe plot is currently unknown for "Transformers: The Last Knight," which is directed by Michael Bay and stars Mark Wahlberg and Anthony Hopkins, but should we assume that there is a time travel aspect to this one? Are they going back to World War II? Time travel was featured in the "Transformers" cartoons, but not in the movies yet. Or maybe it's a prequel?

Still, wouldn't it have been a better idea to shoot this sequence in a different location and not the birthplace of the British Prime Minister who helped defeat the Nazis?

Business Insider contacted Paramount for comment but did not receive an immediate response.

SEE ALSO: The 11 greatest Westerns of all time, ranked

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: Watch this BMW turn into a Transformer in a matter of seconds

Disney, not Salesforce, should be the company looking to buy Twitter, says early investor (TWTR, DIS)

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disney

Rumors are flying that Twitter is up for sale with a formal bid on the horizon, according to reports from CNBC

Among the potential suitors are Google and Salesforce — an interesting line-up of companies to early investor and Spark Capital partner Nabeel Hyatt

Hyatt, who has no inside information about the company, offered up another name that should be in the running if the company was truly up for sale: Disney. 

For starters, there's an obvious connection. Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey is on the board of Disney so there's a friendly relationship there. 

But the bigger picture is that Twitter is building a media company, not just another social network and especially not a sales tool, Hyatt argues. 

This fall, the company began its push in earnest by live-streaming NFL Thursday night football and releasing a TV apps so people can follow along if they have an Apple TV or Xbox. It will also livestream the presidential debates, starting September 26.

"Twitter is and has always been a media company, and everyone who thought of them as a messenger company got it wrong," Hyatt told Business Insider in an interview. "And if anyone thinks they're a sales tool and should therefore meld in perfectly to Salesforce, I don't think has spent that much time with the core teams of either of those two companies."

Disney isn't just themes park business, but a conglomerate of media entities including ABC and ESPN. If Twitter starts to challenge both those properties earnestly, Disney could potentially scoop it up to help them become interconnected rather than competitors. To be clear, Hyatt has no inside knowledge and there's been no reported interest during this latest round of rumors. But it doesn't mean Disney couldn't be an interested party in Twitter down the line.

"If they're not going to be an independent company, then you have to look at large media companies that are good stewards," Hyatt said. "And I think Disney is the perfect place."

SEE ALSO: Here's one overlooked reason it makes total sense for Salesforce to buy Twitter

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: Apple just accidentally leaked this iPhone 7 video on Twitter


How a movie about eagle hunting nabbed a 'Star Wars' lead actor and a chart-topping singer

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the eagle huntress Asher Svidensky sony pictures classics final

In 2014, photographs taken by Asher Svidensky of a 13-year-old Mongolian girl named Aisholpan attempting to be the first-ever female eagle hunter in her country instantly went viral.

Eagle hunting is predominantly taught only to males, and involves first building a connection with a golden eagle and then going out with it and hunting foxes and hares.

Aisholpan, whose father is a prominent eagle hunter, gained international notoriety thanks to Svidensky's photos as she set forth to break the mold and bring the art of eagle hunting to modernity. 

Basically, the story was just waiting to be made into a movie.

Director Otto Bell was transfixed by Svidensky's photos and quickly got the life rights of Aisholpan three months after her story went viral. He immediately began shooting in Mongolia as she continued her apprenticeship, which included her being part of the annual eagle festival.

Returning home, Bell realized he was completely broke. Having spent his life savings of $80,000 and getting a loan from the bank of $12,000, he was struck with fear as he realized he still didn't have enough money to finish his feature debut.

Otto Bell Matt Winkelmeyer Getty"I learned that Aisholpan had to achieve one more task before she could be declared an eagle huntress by the elders, I had to go back and film that," Bell told Business Insider while the film played at the Toronto International Film Festival. "That was a really dark time, a lot of sleepless nights."

He dug up the contact info of documentary titan Morgan Spurlock ("Super Size Me"), which Bell had done commercial work for years earlier, and cold called Spurlock to see if he'd come onboard the film as an executive producer.

"I cut together ten minutes from the eagle festival and I sent it to Morgan," he said. "He called me back that day and said, 'I've never seen anything like this, how can I help?'"

With the added financing from Spurlock, Bell went back to Mongolia, got the footage that he needed, and returned ready to edit the film. What he didn't realize was this film that would be titled "The Eagle Huntress" would eventually get the attention of some major players in the entertainment world.

Finding a Jedi

Before Spurlock came on, Bell already had an idea how to make his documentary stand out amongst the countless others that are made every year.

Highlighting the journey of the first female in twelve generations of her family to be an eagle hunter, Bell decided to tell the story not like a fly-on-the-wall non-fiction but as an action movie. With breathtaking photography of Mongolian landscapes where Aisholpan and her father gallop on horses to slow-motion shots of her eagle gracefully tracking its prey (cut over fast-paced music), Bell creates a movie that feels more Jerry Bruckheimer than the Maysles brothers.

But the movie also has a strong theme of female empowerment, and to drive that home Bell and Spurlock knew they needed to do something that would give the movie attention beyond its genre-busting feel. 

After wowing audiences at the Sundance Film Festival earlier this year, where the film was bought by Sony Pictures Classics, Bell had the fortune of signing on with talent agency CAA, who also has Daisy Ridley, star of the latest "Star Wars" movies, as its client.

Daisy RidleyThe film was sent to Ridley, and the night before he flew to Sundance, Bell got a call from her wanting to be involved.

"It was clear that she had been moved by it," said Bell. "She talked about how she cried on the phone to her mother when she watched it."

Ridley agreed to come on as an Executive Producer. Then, following the film's reception at Sundance and being bought by Sony Classics, the decision was made to add narration to the movie, and Ridley agreed to do it.

Bell flew to London and recorded in one day the narration Ridley delivers in the movie (which is around five minutes of the 87-minute movie).

This allowed Bell to eliminate the numerous title cards that were present in the opening of the cut that was shown at Sundance and replace it with gorgeous drone shots of the Mongolian mountains over the narration by Ridley introducing us to Aisholpan.

"We want a G rating, we want this to be a family documentary," said Bell, "so with Daisy's narration it's a hand-hold through the film. Though there are subtitles, her narration is going to help young kids."

Landing a pop star

But perhaps even more powerful than the movie nabbing a Jedi is the original song they got from a chart-topping artist.

While in postproduction on the movie, and with its Sundance premiere drawing closer, Spurlock came up with the idea to include pop songs in the movie. Bell admits he wasn't a fan at first.

"With the music I wanted it to be more impressionistic and he wanted it to be more commercial," said Bell. "We fought a bunch during post production — but in a very constructive way."

Bell and Spurlock could never agree on the same music until finally, according to Bell, Spurlock asked, "Who do you want?'" and Bell answered, "Sia! F---ing get me Sia!"

"And sure enough he did," said Bell with a laugh.

As post production pushed on, Bell said Spurlock would give matter-of-fact mentions that he was talking to Sia's manager. Then a few weeks before Sundance began, Bell got a call from Spurlock to come to his office.

"I was like, 'S--t, now what?" said Bell.

siaBell arrived at Spurlock's office, and Spurlock told him he wanted to play him something.

"He pressed play on his laptop and I swear to god we both cried," said Bell.

Sia had written and recorded the song "Angel By The Wings" for the movie in a matter of days. Bell would place it at the end of the movie moments before the screen goes black and the end credits roll. The powerful pop girl power anthem matches the message and tone of the movie perfectly and gives audiences an uplifting feeling when they leave the theater.

Bell has experienced on numerous occasions the reaction of audiences at that moment when Sia's song comes, and he said it's the most effective when the movie has been shown to kids.

"Those are our best screenings," he said. "Middle schoolers, high schoolers, that music plays at the end and then I'll be with Aishoplan and she comes on stage and kids just start cheering."

Bell admits there were many nights while making the movie when he wondered if people would be as moved as he was by the story of Aishoplan. But the journey the film has taken since filming wrapped has given him confirmation.

"With Daisy and Sia, when they saw it and were moved by it, that was a real validation to have those ladies come on board," said Bell. "It's not just me who loves it, it's these incredibly powerful women as well."

"The Eagle Huntress" opens in theaters October 28.

SEE ALSO: A new documentary investigates murder allegations against John McAfee and finds chilling answers

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Here's how movie star and Oscar-winning producer Brad Pitt rose to fame

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brad pitt

Brad Pitt arrived in Hollywood nearly two decades ago. Today, he's one of the most recognizable faces in the world.

While looks may have nabbed him some early roles, it took great ambition, talent, and the ability to swivel between acting and producing to create a career that could stand the test of time.

Pitt has starred in many of the most enduring and beloved movies in entertainment history, including "Thelma and Louise," "Interview with the Vampire," "Moneyball," "A River Runs Through It," and "Ocean's Eleven."

As with any Hollywood heart throb, Pitt's personal life has sold a great number of magazines. He has been attached to some of the biggest actresses in the entertainment business, from Gwyneth Paltrow to Jennifer Aniston, and soon-to-be-ex-wife Angelina Jolie.

Here's how this Missouri kid found his way to Hollywood and rose to fame:

SEE ALSO: Angelina Jolie has filed for divorce from Brad Pitt

DON'T MISS: How Angelina Jolie became the most famous actress in the world

Brad Pitt was born in Shawnee, Oklahoma on December 18, 1963 and grew up in Springfield, Missouri. He was the eldest of three children in a conservative household of parents, truck company owner Bill Pitt and family counselor Jane Pitt.

Source: Bio Channel



Just two credits shy of a journalism degree at the University of Missouri, Pitt gave in to his love of films and set off for Los Angeles in the late-1980s.

Source: Bio Channel



In LA, Pitt worked as a limousine driver for a few months, while taking acting classes. Within seven months, he found an agent and began booking acting work, including the soap opera “Another World"in 1987, and “Growing Pains” in 1987 and 1989 (in two different roles).

Source: Fox News



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The 20 best new TV shows this fall you need to watch

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westworld

This fall is jam-packed with new options. In order to help viewers make up their minds, we're naming the shows we're most looking forward to.

There are remakes like Fox's "Lethal Weapon" and "The Exorcist." There are spins on what worked last year, such as true-crime docuseries like CBS's "The Case of: JonBenét Ramsey." Or quirky niche comedy like FX's "Atlanta."

We've watched all the premiere episodes made available to press or we've seen the trailers. In some cases, we've even spoken to the people behind the shows. There were some shows that we had dismissed in theory, but then they ended up pleasantly surprising us.

Here are the 20 best new TV shows this fall based on what we've seen:

 

SEE ALSO: Here are the 10 rising Hollywood stars who are taking over TV in the fall

DON'T MISS: The 21 biggest stars of fall TV you need to know

"Loosely Exactly Nicole" (MTV), Mondays at 10:30 p.m.

Writer and stand-up comedian Nicole Byer has a really infectious energy in this sitcom loosely based on her own life. She's an overweight black woman trying to make it in Hollywood, and Byer doesn't mind pushing the envelope of taste.



"Atlanta" (FX), Tuesdays at 10 p.m.

Donald Glover delivers in his return to series television after bailing on NBC's "Community." The good thing is "Atlanta" is worth every bit of the three-year wait viewers endured before it finally debuted. This semi-autobiographical take on Glover's hometown follows his character Earn as he teams up with his rapper cousin to make something of themselves. It's both deeply intimate and hilarious.



"One Mississippi" (Amazon), Streaming now

Absolutely no one has had worse health luck than comedian Tig Notaro. Somehow she rolls all that suffering, then adds the death of her mother, into a fully unique take on life and family on "One Mississippi." The series marries grief with humor, and Notaro's incredibly relaxed voice leaves viewers with new tools in dealing with life's messiness.



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Palmer Luckey denies writing blog posts slamming Clinton, says he's not voting for Trump

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Facebook-owned Oculus VR, the folks behind the Oculus Rift, are in the middle of a public relations nightmare.

It was revealed this week that 24-year-old millionaire and creator of the Oculus Rift, Oculus VR's main product, contributed $10,000 to a group called Nimble America. The group's focus: putting up billboards that slam Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton in juvenile ways.

Like this one, said to be up in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, already:

Nimble America anti-Hillary Clinton ad

Nimble America employs memes, of the type passed around on Facebook by that guy from high school you keep meaning to un-friend, and its plan for supporting Republican presidential candidate Donald J. Trump is to deploy those memes, in billboard form, against Hillary Clinton.

As a member of Nimble America said on Reddit: "We've proven that s---posting is powerful and meme magic is real."

On Thursday, The Daily Beast published an article that revealed Palmer Luckey as the financier behind Nimble America. He continues to admit that.

But Luckey also told the publication he, "had used the pseudonym 'NimbleRichMan' on Reddit with a password given to him by the organization's founders." By Friday evening, Luckey was denying that admission.

palmer luckey

"I did not write the 'NimbleRichMan' posts, nor did I delete the account. Reports that I am a founder or employee of Nimble America are false," Luckey said on his Facebook page, which is public.

He apologized for "negatively impacting the perception of Oculus and its partners" in the note, and said he intended on supporting/voting for Libertarian candidate Gary Johnson (the full note from Luckey is at the bottom of this piece).

That said, if Luckey was in fact the "NimbleRichMan" poster on Reddit — which he said he was to The Daily Beast — then we have a much clearer picture into how Luckey actually feels. "We know Hillary Clinton is corrupt, a warmonger, a freedom-stripper. Not the good kind you see dancing in bikinis on Independence Day, the bad kind that strips freedom from citizens and grants it to donors," the "NimbleRichMan" poster wrote on Reddit (since deleted). "Hillary Rodham Clinton is not just bought and paid for. Everyone around her is, too. The elite of the country know it. They don't care. They know she is the candidate that will do what they want."

The posts by "NimbleRichMan" — which Luckey now says he didn't write, but he specifically confirmed with The Daily Beast as his — were mostly found on Reddit's meme-centric unofficial Donald Trump subreddit, dubbed "The Donald." Many have been deleted (which Luckey also claims to not have done), but can still be found archived elsewhere.

The full note from Palmer Luckey on Facebook is right here:

SEE ALSO: Oculus Rift creator Palmer Luckey is financing a pro-Trump meme group

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: CRUZ CAVES: Endorses Trump for president despite a long list of personal attacks

A new documentary investigates murder allegations against John McAfee and finds chilling answers

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The story of John McAfee going from an antivirus-software mogul to a man fleeing Belize on questions about a murder has been chronicled numerous times, but exactly why he had to leave paradise in 2012 is still shrouded in mystery.

Oscar-nominated documentary filmmaker Nanette Burstein ("On the Ropes," "The Kid Stays in the Picture") went down to Central America to find the truth in her new movie, but as with many things related to McAfee, it's layered with more questions than answers.

"Gringo: The Dangerous Life of John McAfee," which recently had its world premiere at the Toronto International Film Festival and will air on Showtime on Saturday, is a revealing look at McAfee's time in Belize from the locals who were there alongside him and some who claim they committed violent acts on McAfee's orders — including murder.

In 2012, a neighbor of McAfee's in Belize, Gregory Faull, was murdered. Sought for questioning as a "person of interest," McAfee fled to Guatemala, and after being arrested there on accusations of entering the country illegally, he suffered heath-related issues and ultimately was expelled from Guatemala and sent back to the US, where he has lived since.

The murder case of Faull has never been solved.

In "Gringo," Burstein travels to Belize and gains the trust of McAfee's associates, members of his security detail, and numerous women to learn of McAfee's alleged involvement in not just the Faull case but other crimes.

McAfee (who has contributed to Business Insider in the past) declined to be filmed for the movie, but Burstein does include correspondence the two had via email.

"I've always been fascinated by people who are under the spotlight of coming from fame, money, power, and how that affects them," Burstein told Business Insider at the Toronto festival. "So John is someone I read about when he was escaping to Guatemala, and there was tons of press, but I still had a lot to learn. There were a lot of surprises along the way."

Nanette Burstein Mike Windle Getty finalIn October of last year, Showtime approached Burstein with the idea to do a story about the Belize episode in McAfee's life. (A year earlier, Spike TV asked her whether she wanted to make a film with McAfee's involvement, for which she would follow him around for a year. She declined. It has since been made into the series "The McAfee Project.")

An executive producer for the Showtime doc, Jeff Wise, who has written numerous stories about McAfee, and fellow producer Michael Hirschorn presented Burstein with a promo tape of interviews they put together of revelations about McAfee from his associates in Belize.

"I was like, 'Now, this is interesting,'" Burstein said.

She jumped on a plane and went down to Belize to begin work. One of the first people she met was through Wise. That person was Eddie McKoy, a local who is known for his ties to gangs in Belize and who goes by the nickname "Mac 10" (like the gun). Having at one time planned to kill McAfee, he ended up being a part of his security detail, according to the film and stories by Wise.

And in the towns of San Pedro and Orange Walk, McAfee's old stomping grounds, Burstein quickly stood out as the woman who was doing a story on the eccentric millionaire who once lived there.

Though the setting was extremely intimidating, Burstein says being a woman in that environment was actually a huge advantage.

"Tough guys like Eddie McKoy saw me as a sister and they were nice to me and respectful," Burstein said. "They would speak to me in a different way than if I was a guy. And the women, because they were younger than me, this maternal thing was happening."

After a few weeks on the ground, Burstein began to get into McAfee's inner sanctum in the country and found some chilling revelations.

The alleged $5,000 hitman

Burstein uncovers allegations about the Faull murder. Most notably, McAfee's caretaker, Cassian Chavarria, claims on camera that McAfee ordered him to wire $5,000 to McKoy with instructions to kill Faull because McAfee thought Faull poisoned his dogs. When Burstein confronts McKoy in the movie with this information, however, he denies it.

Greg Faull ShowtimeShe also learned that the allegations about McAfee's time in Belize don't end there.

A man named David Middleton, whom subjects in the film say McAfee suspected of breaking into his house in Belize, was beaten to death. Men who claim to have been involved in the beating speak in "Gringo" about the incident, saying McAfee hired them.

Then there's a disturbing recollection by microbiologist Allison Adonizio, who was working for McAfee developing antibiotics derived from jungle plants in Orange Walk. She alleges McAfee drugged her one night and raped her.

The director acknowledges she had to be careful not to be susceptible to the rumormongering in Belize, however.

"That was one of the hardest parts of this film, trying to decide what is true and what is an exaggeration, because there's definitely a huge rumor mill in Belize," Burstein said.

In the film, Burstein attempts to ask McAfee questions about what happened in Belize by cornering him at a debate for the American Libertarian Party in New York (McAfee was a 2016 presidential candidate). Once he realizes who she is, however, he walks away. This leads back to an email conversation, one in which McAfee calls Burstein "Satan."

'If I'm going to be crucified, I want to have some fun out of it'

If spending months in Belize trying to gain the trust of people to talk about potentially criminal details weren't stressful enough for Burstein, once in postproduction and faced with a July deadline to lock the movie for Showtime, she endured continued correspondence with McAfee and others in his inner circle.

"As soon as I found out Jeff Wise was involved, at that point I decided I would just start messing with" the film, McAfee recently told Business Insider over the phone of his side of the events. "If I'm going to be crucified, I want to have some fun out of it."

McAfee claims that the email correspondence between Burstein and him featured in the film was not authentic because he never wrote any of the emails. According to McAfee, he hired a group of people to impersonate him in emails with Burstein.

Asked why he didn't just refuse to communicate with Burstein at all, McAfee told us: "Here's the issue, Nanette and Jeff Wise had their minds made up before they even went down there, so why not? I knew it was a film that, without anything from me, what would it be? Seriously, what's a documentary about John McAfee with nothing from John McAfee?"

Burstein, on the other hand, told Business Insider that when she got involved with the film, McAfee was willing to be interviewed but only if he got a share of the film's profits. McAfee says this is false.

Burstein is convinced that McAfee was the author of all the emails she received.

"I would be shocked if I was catfished," Burstein said, using the term for someone duped by a false identity online. "I really would, given that the people that were coming out pretending to have impersonated him did not sound like they could actually pull that off."

Burstein believes her theory was confirmed when McAfee's daughter called her.

"She wanted to make sure she wasn't in the film — she's not," Burstein said. "And I don't know if she was trying to find out stuff for him. She was like, 'My dad is really worried that there's more than one murder [featured] in the film,' and I just didn't say anything."

But when Burstein brought up to McAfee's daughter the suggestion that the emails were not really from her father, according to Burstein, she said, "That's ridiculous, he would never do that, he's a total control freak, he has to do everything himself."

But that's not the only way in which McAfee has picked at the legitimacy of "Gringo."

Cassian John McAfee YouTubeBefore finishing the film, Burstein got word that McAfee posted a video on his YouTube channel that features people from her movie stating on camera that Showtime paid them to say McAfee was behind the crimes discussed in the movie.

The video posted by McAfee includes McKoy and Chavarria saying Showtime paid them.

Burstein, who said she and Showtime did not pay anyone for interviews (but did pay some subjects a nominal fee for use of photos they had of McAfee after the interviews took place), quickly called Chavarria, the man who in the film says he's the one who paid McKoy on the orders of McAfee to kill Faull, after seeing him in the YouTube video.

"I called Cassian and recorded it on my phone. I asked why he would say this," Burstein said, "and he said John paid him $1,200 to say it. That he needed the money. I said, 'Did you lie to me? I cannot put in the film something that's not true.' And he said, 'I swear to God, put it in the film. I would not lie to you — I want to get this out.'"

When contacted by Business Insider, Chavarria did not corroborate Burstein's story. Instead, he said Burstein paid him to lie about McAfee in the movie. When asked to present proof of payment, he didn't respond.

Showtime sent Business Insider the following statement about the accusations that subjects in the film were paid for their stories: "Showtime Documentary Films does not pay subjects for their interviews. We fully support 'Gringo' filmmaker Nanette Burstein and applaud the bravery of those interviewed in the film."

Burstein also sent the following statement: "I am confident that all the interviews I present in 'Gringo' are true. None of my subjects were paid by me or Showtime Documentary Films for their interviews. The people in the film voluntarily came forward to share their stories with me. I truly admire their courage, but understand that under duress, and in light of the vast resources available to John McAfee, these subjects could be pressured to recant their statements."

I swear to God, put it in the film. I would not lie to you — I want to get this out.

McAfee, for his part, told us, "Showtime has done the most disgraceful things to these people in Belize, and I'm trying to bring this to light."

He then sent Business Insider photos of documents from the Supreme Court of Belize in which locals interviewed for the movie say they were paid for what they said.

McAfee also posted more government documents from Belize authorities saying the information in the movie isn't valid in a post on the site for the cybersecurity technology company MGT Capital Investments, of which he is the CEO. In the post, he addresses the rape allegation by Adonizio, which he denies. (The Belize government did not immediately respond to Business Insider's request for comment.)

Burstein told us of the official Belize documents: "What can you do? The guy pays people to do s---."

The 'threatening' texts from McAfee

Burstein calls "Gringo" the most bizarre movie she's ever made and acknowledges that at one point it got very scary for her.

After trying to get McAfee on camera at the Libertarian Party debate, she says, she started receiving emails for the next 24 hours from McAfee that she calls "threatening." Afterward, Burstein says, she received a text message from McAfee stating: "I want to send you something very precious to me. I need an address where you can sign for something."

"My husband was away, I was alone, and the last [email] before the text he called me Satan, which I put in the film," Burstein said. "I didn't know if he was still in New York and he's got an armed security guard who is licensed to carry. I was scared at that moment."

Nothing ever came of it. When asked about the text, McAfee told Business Insider he did text her but only to inform her about the video in which people said Showtime paid them to lie about him. He denies ever asking for Burstein’s address.

But after McAfee first spoke with Business Insider about the text, Burstein sent us a screenshot of the text he sent her asking for her address. When confronted with this, McAfee changed his story and admitted asking for her address but said he did so only to send her back a jar of Marmite that she had sent to him. (Marmite is a food spread common in the UK and Australia.)

"I had already told her how precious Marmite was to me," he said. He believed she was trying to poison him with the Marmite. (This is not the first time McAfee has apparently misled a reporter, having previously sent journalists phones with malware trying to convince them that he had hacked the encryption used on WhatsApp, according to Gizmodo.)

Regardless of whether "Gringo" convinces you that John McAfee is a murderer, as some say, or that he's a victim of a Belizean government plot to kill him, as he claims, it is certainly not short on stories.

In fact, Burstein says that while in Belize she heard McAfee's name tied to more killings than she highlights in the movie.

"I didn't put those [allegations] in the film because I couldn't substantiate enough," Burstein said. "But there were others that were talking, but I didn't know if they were true, and didn't find the people who were directly involved, like the murders in the film."

So would McAfee — who denied on numerous occasions to Business Insider that he was responsible for the deaths of either Faull or Middleton — be shocked if in the future he is linked to other murders in Belize?

"I wouldn't be shocked at all," he told us. "The governor of Belize is certainly not a friend of mine, and I'm certain they would use whatever comes out in Showtime to their advantage, so I wouldn't be shocked at all."

SEE ALSO: The crazy life of for former fugitive and cybersecurity legend John McAfee

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6 things Hollywood gets wrong about doctors — and 4 things it gets right

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The American viewing public can't seem to get enough of doctors. Medical dramas have been a television staple since "City Hospital" aired in 1951. Since then, we've had films and television programs about physicians that have spanned genres — from historical pieces like "Mercy Street" and "Dr. Quinn, Medicine Woman," to soap operas like "General Hospital" to comedies like "Scrubs" to hugely popular dramas like "House," "E.R." and "Grey's Anatomy."

As a result, there are a ton of tropes and clichés out there about medicine and those who practice it. But what's reality and what's just creative license? And how do fictional depictions of doctors change how we view both physicians and medicine in real life?

Business Insider recently spoke with Jenna Reece and Faiz Jiwani, two fourth-year medical students at Columbia University's College of Physicians and Surgeons and the University of Florida's College of Medicine, respectively. They both completed the Masters of Science in Narrative Medicine at Columbia University recently and drew upon their experience to describe some of the popular tropes they frequently see in medical fiction.

Here are six myths about doctors and medicine that Hollywood frequently puts out there, along with four surprising tropes it often gets right:

SEE ALSO: Dr. Oz responds to critics: 'My show is not a medical show'

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Myth: Doctors fit into easy stereotypes

There are tons of stereotypes about doctors out there. Reece listed a few for Business Insider.

"There are a lot of existing tropes about doctors that provide a lot of archetypes to work from," she says. "You have the old mentor, the idealistic young rebel, the womanizer, and the stern one with a heart of gold. You have a lot of characters that exist for your basic cast and then you can have the more extreme characters come in as patients and people will believe it."

In regards to why physicians are frequently featured as protagonists, Jiwani notes that doctors have a certain mystique, due to their years of extra schooling, their high incomes, and the fact that medicine is often not widely understood by the general public. In his own experience, he has had to work past certain initial expectations and stereotypes formed by media depictions of doctors.

"When the physician and patient meet, they meet each other with a history of experiences," he says. "The patient already has some expectation of what the physician will be like."

However, he adds that the fact that there are so many medical dramas out there actually lessens the overall effect of medical archetypes.



Myth: Being a doctor is all about diagnosing and treating patients

You'd never see the snarky Dr. House or the ensemble of "Grey's Anatomy" getting put on hold by an insurance company for hours. 

That doesn't mean that real doctors don't have to deal with a massive volume of bureaucracy, Reece notes. 

However, she adds that such scenes would definitely make any story less compelling.

"I understand why they don't depict it," she says. "It would be terrible. It would be a bad story."



Myth: Medical culture is the same across the board

Reece says that few medical shows are able to accurately capture medical culture. She cited the 2015 film "Trainwreck" as an example of what Hollywood gets wrong about subtle differences between medical occupations. In the romantic comedy, Bill Hader's sweet, soft-spoken character works as a orthopedic surgeon.

Reece says that, while she has met plenty of perfectly nice orthopedic surgeons, gentleness and quietness would be a detriment in that particular field.

"You couldn't be soft spoken," she says. "You'd be eaten alive. You wouldn't get into a residency program for orthopedic surgery if you didn't culturally fit in."



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

The extraordinary life of former fugitive and eccentric cybersecurity legend John McAfee


This former MSNBC anchor says you can't build a $1 billion new media business on advertising

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The new media landscape has seen a wave of job cuts and uncertainty in 2016, but Ozy Media CEO Carlos Watson sounds giddy when he talks about the future of his millennial-focused startup, which turned three last Friday.

“I can feel Ozy taking off,” he proclaims, though you get the sense Watson has always been optimistic about Ozy’s performance.

Watson, a former MSNBC anchor, is particularly effusive when he talks about Ozy’s first TV show, a partnership with PBS called "The Contenders," which takes a look at elections past to put the circus of our current one into perspective. The show premiered on September 13.

“Most people who try [to produce a TV show] never succeed,” Watson says. And it wasn’t always clear Ozy was going to get its own TV show. Watson says Ozy deficit financed two pilots, which was a big risk for the company. But he convinced PBS to sign a multi-million dollar deal, and now "The Contenders" is getting 16 episodes.

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So what exactly is Ozy?

Ozy’s editorial mandate is expansive, and can therefore be a bit hard to pin down.

Watson says Ozy is for people who like something different, who welcome change, and have an open, creative mindset. In practice, this means Ozy focuses on “what is new” and “what is next,” two phrases Watson uses a lot. The simplest example is when Ozy profiles a rising star before they hit the mainstream. Watson points to Olympic gymnast Simone Biles, who he says Ozy profiled years before everyone else.

But while looking for what’s “next” might play well in Silicon Valley, where Ozy is based, it’s not always a recipe for monster traffic. A mainstay of many web-based media companies is the act of putting one's own spin on the news of the day. There’s a reason: people want to read about the topics people are talking about today. And it's cheaper to produce than original reporting or video.

Watson is not a fan of it. “I’m not hiring a bunch of people to summarize,” he says. He takes shots at other millennial-focused sites like Mic and Upworthy, saying they spit out the same “regurgitated,” “recycled” content. “Don’t put me in the CBA,” he laughs, meaning the minor leagues. "Put me in the NBA.”

The business

Ozy gets 20 million monthly unique visitors, but the goal isn’t grabbing massive scale and selling ads against that, according to Watson. He doesn't really think that's going to work out for anyone. 

“It’s unlikely that someone will make $1 billion [online media] business based on advertising” only, he says.

Still, the money has to come from somewhere. Ozy has to eventually build a stable flow of revenue outside of venture capital funding, of which Ozy has raised at least $30 million. 

Watson sees three things as central to Ozy’s financial future. The first is "digital": ad sales, and so on.

But the second is live events like Ozy Fest, a festival that started this summer, which takes inspiration from TED and Coachella, and the final one is a TV and film group.

Besides "The Contenders," there will be many more TV shows to come, Watson says. Ozy is currently shooting three more shows, has 16 in development, and has signed with powerhouse talent agency CAA.

Ozy isn't the first new media company to flock to TV. Ozy joins  competitors like Vice, which has its two HBO shows and a cable channel, and Vox, which has a show on A&E.

The 'me too's'

What Watson seems to dislike the most are publications he calls the “me too’s.” Watson claims Ozy has profiled over 700 people who have gone on to be featured by outlets like The New York Times, The Economist, BBC, and so on. He wants Ozy to be first. He wants Ozy to be different.

Watson talks about Ozy being pushed by the energy of Silicon Valley, a place where unlikely things succeed. It's also a place where companies raise millions from venture capitalists only to fail spectacularly.

Perhaps it’s fitting then that the name Ozy is based on the poem "Ozymandias" by Percy Bysshe Shelley, which tells the story of the broken statue of a king, lying forgotten in the desert sand. The pedestal next to it reads: "My name is Ozymandias, king of kings: Look on my works, ye Mighty, and despair!"

Those 700 profiles of soon-to-be stars could be the building blocks of an empire for Ozy, or they could be another accomplishment of a startup that eventually ran out of cash, sitting on the internet, collecting sand.

SEE ALSO: RBC: Why Netflix stock could double in the next 3 years

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The new 'Magnificent Seven' just had one of the biggest box office openings of any Western

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Who says the Western is dead?

Sony's "The Magnificent Seven" has proven that a movie without any superheros and catered more for adults can make some coin as it took in an estimated $35 million at the box office, according to Exhibitor Relations.

The shoot-'em-up starring Denzel Washington, Chris Pratt, Ethan Hawke, and breakthrough star Haley Bennett (who is also in the anticipated "The Girl on the Train") had a strong Friday with with $12.6 million on the day (including $1.7 million from Thursday previews) and finishing the weekend with $35 million that puts it second all-time for biggest opening weekend for a live-action Western (2011's "Cowboys & Aliens" $36.4 million, all-time is 2011 animated Western "Rango" with $38 million).

The movie is the biggest box office opening for director Antoine Fuqua and star Washington, as this marks their third time working together. Their past biggest success was 2014's "The Equalizer" ($34.1 million).   

We'll see what kind of staying power "Seven" has with stiff competition coming: "Deepwater Horizon" and Tim Burton's "Miss Peregrine's Home for Peculiar Children" opening next week and "The Girl on the Train" the following week.

The weekend's other big release came in second place as Warner Bros. animated movie "Storks" took in $21.8 million. Though that's a little lower than industry expectations, it could find continued business in the weeks to come as more mature titles open in coming weeks, leaving "Storks" the only kid's movie at the multiplex.

SEE ALSO: The 11 greatest Westerns of all time, ranked

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The 20 most-watched TV episodes ever, ranked

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In today's streaming age, initial airings of important TV episodes are no longer the cultural events they once were.

According to Nielsen's measurements of the top network telecasts of all time, the top 20 most-watched TV episodes ever all date back at least a decade.

For example, the "Seinfeld" series finale, in 1998 — which had a very mixed reaction — was the most recent episode to crack the top 100.

Decades-old miniseries like "Roots" and "The Thorn Birds" and finale episodes of the most popular shows in TV history dominate the list.

We compiled the data from Nielsen on the most-watched broadcasts ever to create this list of the top episodes of TV.

Note: We've excluded all live broadcasts, including Super Bowls and award shows, as well as movies broadcast on TV, all of which appear prominently in Nielsen's top 100.

Check out the top 20 most-watched episodes of TV ever:

SEE ALSO: Here are the best TV shows of the past year, according to critics

20. "All In The Family" — "Edith's Problem"

Ratings: 25.2 million viewers*

Date aired: January 8, 1972

Plot (from IMDb): "Edith's irritability as of late may be a sign of her going through menopause. Archie is frustrated when he finds out she can't possibly have her 'change of life' in 30 seconds."

*Nielsen's viewer ratings are determined by measuring the average audience in each minute of a program as a representation of the total number of people who watched the show.



19. "The Fugitive" — "The Judgment: Part 2" (Series Finale)

Ratings: 25.7 million viewers

Date aired: August 29, 1967

Plot: "Lt. Gerard agrees to work with Kimble for 24 hours to prove his innocence, because someone who may have been there when his wife was killed, posted bail for the one-armed man."



18. "Roots" — Part 1

Ratings: 28.8 million viewers

Date aired: January 23, 1977

Plot: "A dramatization of author Alex Haley's family line from ancestor Kunta Kinte's enslavement to his descendants' liberation."



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Go inside the '70s-inspired bar in Manhattan's East Village where 'Entourage' star Adrian Grenier is music director

27 books that can change your life forever, according to my coworkers

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Books can be incredibly powerful. They have the ability to suck us in, take us on adventures, and influence the way we think.

They can teach us, move us, give us new perspectives, and help shape us. And the most powerful ones change our lives forever.

I asked my Business Insider colleagues to share the one book that has significantly influenced them.

If you're looking for life-changing books to read this fall, you may want to check these out:

SEE ALSO: 24 books that will make you a more well-rounded person

'The Road' by Cormac McCarthy

"This book gave me a real sense of my own mortality. I'm usually grateful for this, but not always! It also made me appreciate fatherhood more."

Nicholas Carlson, editor-in-chief of INSIDER

Amazon synopsis: A father and his son walk alone through burned America. Nothing moves in the ravaged landscape save the ash on the wind. It is cold enough to crack stones, and when the snow falls it is gray. The sky is dark. Their destination is the coast, although they don't know what, if anything, awaits them there. They have nothing; just a pistol to defend themselves against the lawless bands that stalk the road, the clothes they are wearing, a cart of scavenged food — and each other.

"'The Road' is the profoundly moving story of a journey. It boldly imagines a future in which no hope remains, but in which the father and his son, "each the other's world entire," are sustained by love. Awesome in the totality of its vision, it is an unflinching meditation on the worst and the best that we are capable of: ultimate destructiveness, desperate tenacity, and the tenderness that keeps two people alive in the face of total devastation."

BUY IT HERE »



'The Tao of Pooh' by Benjamin Hoff

"This book introduced me to the idea that simplicity isn't the enemy of satisfaction; it's the essence of it. The inclusion of such familiar and beloved characters also helped the ideas stick in my mind."

Christina Sterbenz, weekend and features editor

Amazon synopsis: The how of Pooh? The Tao of who? The Tao of Pooh!?! In which it is revealed that one of the world's great Taoist masters isn't Chinese — or a venerable philosopher — but is in fact none other than that effortlessly calm, still, reflective bear. A. A. Milne's Winnie-the-Pooh! While Eeyore frets, and Piglet hesitates, and Rabbit calculates, and Owl pontificates, Pooh just is.

"And that's a clue to the secret wisdom of the Taoists."

BUY IT HERE »



'Anna Karenina' by Leo Tolstoy

"It was the rare work of fiction that actually changed how I saw the world. It made me want to be a more moral and better person."

Paul Schrodt, entertainment editor

Amazon synopsis: "Considered by some to be the greatest novel ever written, 'Anna Karenina' is Tolstoy's classic tale of love and adultery set against the backdrop of high society in Moscow and Saint Petersburg.

"A rich and complex masterpiece, the novel charts the disastrous course of a love affair between Anna, a beautiful married woman, and Count Vronsky, a wealthy army officer. Tolstoy seamlessly weaves together the lives of dozens of characters, and in doing so captures a breathtaking tapestry of late-nineteenth-century Russian society. As Matthew Arnold wrote in his celebrated essay on Tolstoy, 'We are not to take 'Anna Karenina' as a work of art; we are to take it as a piece of life.'"

BUY IT HERE »



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