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The 23 best horror movies on Netflix for Halloween

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Halloween is getting close, so it's time to search though Netflix for some scary movies.

There are so many to choose from, so to make the rest of your October movie-watching easier, here are the 23 best horror movies you can stream on Netflix right now.

Grab a friend and come on in.

Brett Arnold contributed to an earlier version of this story.

SEE ALSO: 100 movies on Netflix that everyone needs to watch in their lifetime

23. "The Taking of Deborah Logan"

An impressive "found footage" horror film that looks at a documentary crew filming a woman suffering from Alzheimer's disease and finding a lot more.



22. "Honeymoon"

Newly married and spending their honeymoon in a rustic cabin, Bea and Paul don't have a care in the world. Until they go mad.



21. "The Wicker Man" (2006)

Neil LaBute's remake of the 1973 horror classic is pretty forgettable, except for the performance by Nicolas Cage. Numerous vintage Cage crazy scenes show his character's evolution into madness.



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Don't believe that 'No Man's Sky was a mistake' tweet — it was a hack

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"No Man's Sky" was a game years in the making. It promised endless space exploration — hop in a ship and jet from planet to planet at your leisure! Go on an alien safari! Collect materials!

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Except some people felt that their expectations were unfairly built up — that the eventual game wasn't what the game's developers promised it would be.

Making this all the more complicated, the game has a small handful of developers — about a dozen — making a massive space exploration game.

On one side, fans felt ripped off; on the other, fans sympathized with a small group trying its hardest to make something gigantic.

In the end, no one was happy. Gamers scorched the game's review page on Steam, the world's largest digital-game store. The game's developers, Hello Games, went silent — until Friday:

No Man's Sky (tweet)

The message was tweeted from the official Hello Games Twitter account; it's since been deleted, and the Twitter account is now set to private.

On first blush, this looks like a potential hack. Why would the folks behind "No Man's Sky" publicly call the game a "mistake"? It's still a product for sale, even if they feel that way. On top of that, it stands to reason that they care about the game they made, regardless of the backlash it received.

"The tweet is from me, but somebody from the team took it down," a person responding from Hello Games cofounder Sean Murray's email account told Polygon. "We have not been coping well," the email said.

Murray didn't respond to an email request for comment on Friday morning. (He's based in the UK, so it's midafternoon there as of publishing.)

If you're wondering whether the tweet was real, it could be clearly seen on the Twitter module on Hello Games' website. The module is no longer on the website.

Hello Games

But don't worry: Your first reaction was dead-on. Murray — or someone tweeting from his account, anyway — says the Hello Games server was compromised.

"Server hacked. We're binging Mr Robot Episodes as quickly as we can looking for answers. Ep05 is a cracker," he tweeted this morning. "If anything was a mistake, it was using Linked In without 2FA" — two-factor authentication.

Hello Games and Murray have otherwise gone dark since launching "No Man's Sky" in August. The team has issued a handful of updates to the game, and Sony's Shuhei Yoshida told Eurogamer this in mid-September:

"I understand some of the criticisms especially Sean Murray is getting, because he sounded like he was promising more features in the game from Day One. It wasn't a great PR strategy, because he didn't have a PR person helping him, and in the end he is an indie developer. But he says their plan is to continue to develop 'No Man's Sky' features and such, and I'm looking forward to continuing to play the game."

Plans for additions to "No Man's Sky" have been discussed, but it's not clear when anything is coming. The game is otherwise available now on both PlayStation 4 and PC.

SEE ALSO: Sony finally responds to controversy over 'No Man's Sky'

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NOW WATCH: Our goal of finding life on Mars could be jeopardized if we send humans to its surface

Inside the Wall Street charity day where celebrities and star athletes pretend to be traders

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Bloomberg Tradebook hosted its fifth annual charity day on Thursday, October 27, with Mike Bloomberg and celebrities taking to the phones to drum up trading commissions for charity. 

Top Chef host Padma Lakshmi, musician Jon Bon Jovi and New York Giants player Victor Cruz were among the celebrities to play the role of celebrity ambassadors in New York.

In London, actress and model Suki Waterhouse and current England football manager Gareth Southgate took part. And in Hong Kong, model Sofi W and actress and singer Gigi Leung were involved. 

The day generated more than $1 million in gross commissions, the net of which will be donated to the 20 participating charities.

Here are some pictures from the event:

Padma Lakshmi, the executive producer and host of Top Chef, was raising funds for the Endometriosis Foundation of America



Jon Bon Jovi was there raising funds for the Jon Bon Jovi Soul Foundation



Rene Goldsberry of Hamilton fame took part, raising funds for Jumpstart



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Legendary rap group A Tribe Called Quest announces the release of its 'final' album

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Legendary '90s rap group A Tribe Called Quest has announced the release of a new album.

The currently untitled project will be "the final A Tribe Called Quest album," according to rapper Q-Tip, and it's set for release on November 11.

Q-Tip explained in a handwritten note on Facebook that his group began working on new material following their first televised performance in 18 years on "The Tonight Show" last November. 

Though his fellow Tribe rapper Phife Dawg died in March before the crew could complete the album, Q-Tip said that Phife "left us with the blueprint of what we had to do."

The new album will feature Busta Rhymes and Consequence, two frequent Tribe collaborators. 

A Tribe Called Quest's last album, "The Love Movement," was released in 1998. The group disbanded after its release. "Beats, Rhymes & Life," a candid 2011 documentary, captured the crew's inner turmoil and attempts at a comeback. 

Read Q-Tip's handwritten note and listen to "Award Tour" below:

SEE ALSO: The best album of every year since 2000, according to critics

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NOW WATCH: The first trailer for the 'Power Rangers' movie is here and it blows the TV show away

Amy Schumer defends her Beyoncé 'Formation' video that caused outrage: 'It was NEVER a parody'

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Amy Schumer felt an explanation was necessary after people were offended by a music video she released to the tune of Beyoncé's "Formation."

The video, which was shot this summer while Schumer was shooting a movie, includes the comedian, her costar Goldie Hawn, comedian Wanda Sykes, and others from the film's production dancing and lip-syncing to Beyoncé's song.

According to the A.V. Club, people on social media accused Schumer of "cultural appropriation and of being disrespectful to the racial politics at the heart of the song ... 'Formation' is about Beyoncé’s experiences as a black woman and the experiences of black women in general."

In response to the controversy, Schumer said she was inspired and empowered by "Formation" and didn't mean to diminish any of the song's meaning.

"I love how in the lyrics of 'Formation' Beyoncé is telling us to get in formation," Schumer wrote in a new essay on Medium. "And also I like to think she is telling us ladies to get information. I did not mean to detract any of the meaning from the video. I am of course horrified and sickened by the events that are addressed throughout that video and didn’t see this as minimizing that and still don’t."

She went on to say of the video, "It was NEVER a parody. It was just us women celebrating each other. The video Beyoncé made was so moving and I wouldn’t ever make fun of that. There is absolutely no way to. I make fun of myself a few times in the video as I do in everything I am a part of. I loved every second of working with those women to make this thing that lifted us up."

Possibly Schumer's most effective defense was the fact that she not only had Jay Z and Beyoncé's blessing on the video, but that Jay Z's Tidal had it for 24 hours exclusively before it was released to the general public.

Watch Schumer's take on "Formation" below:

SEE ALSO: Lena Dunham reveals Amy Schumer auditioned for a role on 'Girls' and why she didn't get it

DON'T MISS: Jimmy Fallon and Amy Schumer looked through each other's phones and explained their weirdest photos

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NOW WATCH: Amy Schumer is doing something awesome for veterans and other women who are re-entering the workforce

An early look at Martin Scorsese's long-awaited 'Silence' was stunning and brutal

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It looks as though Martin Scorsese's two-decade journey to make "Silence" may have been worth the wait.

Business Insider was among the group of outlets invited Thursday night to a presentation by Paramount Pictures of its upcoming titles, and the studio showed off footage of the much anticipated "Silence."

Though the footage was extremely brief — less than a minute, and it didn't include any dialogue — what was front and center was the striking visual work by Rodrigo Prieto, who shot Scorsese's "The Wolf of Wall Street."

Wide shots of waves crashing on shorelines were breathtaking. Some shots also showed the brutality of the movie, including one of men in agony as they hung on crosses.

The movie — which stars Liam Neeson, Andrew Garfield, and Adam Driver — follows Jesuit priests in 17th-century Japan as they face violence and persecution. It's based on the 1966 Shusaku Endo novel, and adapted for the screen by Scorsese's longtime collaborator Jay Cocks ("Gangs of New York").

"Silence" opens in limited release December 23 and will go wide in January 2017. It's widely favored in the Oscar race.

The half-hour presentation, which took place at Paramount's offices in New York City's Times Square, also teased footage for its sci-fi movie "Arrival" (opening November 11), starring Amy Adams; Robert Zemeckis' WWII drama "Allied" (November 23), starring Brad Pitt and Marion Cotillard; the ensemble comedy "Office Christmas Party" (December 9), starring Jennifer Aniston, Jason Bateman, T.J. Miller, and Kate McKinnon; the adaptation of "Ghost in the Shell" (March 2017), starring Scarlett Johansson; and "xXx: The Return of Xander Cage" (January 2017), starring Vin Diesel.

But our favorite footage was of Denzel Washington's "Fences." The actor stars in and directs the adaptation of the Pulitzer Prize-winning play by August Wilson. Washington and Viola Davis reprise the roles they played in the 2010 Broadway revival, which follows a father (Washington) struggling to raise a family in 1950s race-divided America.

The few minutes of footage were the most powerful of anything shown in the presentation, and it was a great tease of Washington's performance, which could be Oscarworthy.

"Fences" opens in theaters Christmas Day.

SEE ALSO: Legendary director Paul Schrader reveals the "good news" and "bad news" of casting Nicolas Cage

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NOW WATCH: Letterman rips Trump, calls him a 'damaged human' who should be 'shunned'

Inside 'Sleepless in Seattle' screenwriter Nora Ephron's pivotal role on Amazon's 'Good Girls Revolt' (AMZN)

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Note: Spoilers if you haven't watched the premiere episode of Amazon's "Good Girls Revolt."

The late Nora Ephron plays a pivotal role in Amazon's new drama "Good Girls Revolt," which debuted Sunday on the company's streaming video service.

The truth is Ephron – best known for writing and directing "Sleepless in Seattle" and "You've Got Mail" – didn't play a role in the events dramatized on the drama.

"Good Girls Revolt" is based on a series of events in 1970 in which a group of female researchers at Newsweek filed a complaint with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission claiming the news magazine only allowed men to become reporters.

In the first episode, Ephron (played by Grace Gummer) is a newly-hired researcher who quits after finding out that she'll never be able to write at the magazine. That act emboldens the other women and begins a chain of events that will lead to the EEOC filing.

Ephron's appearance is based on some truth and some creative license on the part of the show's producers. The truth is Ephron, who died in 2012, did work at Newsweek, but several years earlier than the series is set.

"It happened a few years earlier than we said — probably ‘64 I think — and so we accelerated it and put it at the time of ‘69 so that she was sort of our magical catalyst," show producer Lynda Obst told Business Insider. "I knew her profoundly well. She was one of my best friends, and I informed the family. They knew the whole time we were casting and was aware of everything. In fact, they came to our premiere and were very, very supportive. And I tried to share as much as I could with ['Good Girls Revolt' creator Dana Calvo], who wrote her so beautifully."

With help from Obst, research, and reading Ephron's writing, Calvo felt the maverick writer fit right into the story.

"She had no fear," Calvo told Business Insider. "She never had any fear, and that’s an inspirational person for me. And her mother worked, and so she was naturally feminist. And I think that she loved boys, she loved men, but this would have been a very unnatural situation for her. She inspired women wherever she went. She was like the pied piper of girls. She was that to me, and she was that to almost every girl that she ever met. So I thought it was appropriate."

Good Girls Revolt Nora Ephron AmazonIf you've seen the premiere episode, you probably hoped to see and learn more from Ephron. The producers told Business Insider they were in talks with Gummer to be a season regular role when she opted to join USA Network's "Mr. Robot" instead. But that doesn't mean Ephron falls off the face of the earth after the premiere episode, or that Gummer wasn't pleased with the production.

"She’ll come back in two more episodes, and Grace was just at our wrap party," Calvo told Business Insider. "I mean, there’s so much affection there, and she’s such great friends with so many of the people."

Watch a trailer for "Good Girls Revolt" below:

SEE ALSO: The history of Donald Trump and NBC's love-hate relationship that made him a star

DON'T MISS: The 20 best new TV shows ranked, according to critics

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: Don't be afraid to cancel cable — here's how to watch all of your favorite shows for less than $42 a month

America and Britain have pretty different tastes on Netflix

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There are some interesting trends in Netflix watching by country. Among them: Americans have more low-brow tastes than Brits.

The five popular shows in the US in June: "Orange Is the New Black," "Family Guy," "The Office," "American Dad!" and "Friends."

The top shows in the UK: "Orange Is the New Black," "How I Met Your Mother," "Archer," "Pretty Little Liars," and "It's Always Sunny In Philadelphia."

These estimates come from a new report from 7Park Data. "Orange" led the list everywhere as a popular Netflix original that just released a new season.

Here are the rest:

netflix by country

SEE ALSO: Adam Sandler's panned 'The Do-Over' was the most-streamed movie in the world

DON'T MISS: This is what phone addiction looks like to an artist

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NOW WATCH: 'Shark Tank' investor Robert Herjavec reveals the biggest mistakes small businesses make


The 5 best new songs you can stream right now

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Now 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, Drake released his latest potential hit, and indie-rock band The Shins released their first single in five years. 

Check out this week's best new songs:

SEE ALSO: The 5 best new songs you can stream right now

Drake — "Fake Love"

While the prospect of a new Drake single about fake friends will rightfully elicit a resounding, disinterested groan from half of the world, the other half will vibe out to the stellar melodies and bright production on "Fake Love," likely in semi-ironic appreciation. Please do not hesitate to file your most colorful Drake insults in the comments below. 

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The Shins — "Dead Alive"

Indie-rock greats The Shins are back from a five-year hiatus with "Dead Alive." The spirited single is accompanied by a surreal music video, wherein lead singer James Mercer lives in a miniature world and is nearly crushed to death by a giant in Vans shoes. 

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Saba — "Photosynthesis"

On "Photosynthesis" — a highlight from Chicago artist and Chance the Rapper collaborator Saba's debut album — smooth, guitar-led production runs alongside his compelling, pitch-shifted vocals and a pleasant hook from Jean Deaux. 

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There's going to be another 'Rambo' movie — but it won't star Sylvester Stallone

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The rights holders of the "Rambo" movies are trying to turn it into a "James Bond"-like franchise.

Nu Image/Millennium Films are planning to reboot "Rambo" without Sylvester Stallone, according to The Hollywood Reporter

Titled "Rambo: New Blood," the movie will continue the story of John Rambo, the lead character from David Morrell's 1972 novel, "First Blood," which looked at the struggle of a Vietnam Veteran returning from the war. 

The project is currently in development but a new actor will be taking over the role, a la the numerous actors who have carried the James Bond torch over the decades. 

The 1982 film "First Blood," and the sequels, that followed made Stallone an international star. He last played the role in 2008's "Rambo."

"New Blood" will be directed by Ariel Vromen, who found acclaim with the 2012 movie "The Iceman," starring Michael Shannon.

SEE ALSO: An early look at Martin Scorsese's long-awaited "Silence" was stunning and brutal

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: 'Shark Tank' investor Robert Herjavec reveals the biggest mistakes small businesses make

Why 'Captain Phillips' was banned in China

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Somali piracy is in the news following the release of 26 hostages after nearly 5 years of captivity. Hearing the plight of those hostages, who came from Cambodia, China, Indonesia, Philippines, Taiwan, and Vietnam, we’re reminded of a telling comment from a Sony Pictures executive.

President of worldwide distribution Rory Bruer wrote in a leaked email that China was unlikely to allow distribution of "Captain Phillips." The movie tells the true story of how the US military sent multiple ships and a special operations team to recover an American held hostage by Somali pirates in 2009.

"The reality of the situation is that China will probably never clear the film for censorship," Bruer wrote. "Reasons being the big Military machine of the U.S. saving one U.S. citizen. China would never do the same and in no way would want to promote this idea. Also just the political tone of the film is something that they would not feel comfortable with."

"Captain Phillips" was never released in China.

captain phillips tom hanks

SEE ALSO: 18 Hollywood movies that pandered to China's giant box office

DON'T MISS: Inside the mission to free 26 hostages after 5 years in Somalia

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NOW WATCH: Hitler's Nazi military base in the Arctic was just discovered by Russian scientists

Why the movie that HBO's 'Westworld' is based on was way ahead of its time

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I was around 9 or 10 when I first saw Michael Crichton’s 1973 “Westworld.” The movie was on TV one night and though I didn’t understand what was going on, the ending scared the hell out of me and gave me nightmares for days.

From time to time since, I've remembered that visual of a robotic Yul Brynner roaming around the futuristic amusement park going on a killing spree. But watching the movie again on iTunes earlier this week, I pinpointed what my major fear was back then: helpless isolation.

The main character, Peter Martin (played by Richard Benjamin), after surviving the robot attack, sits by himself as the screen goes to black. What the hell does he do now?

With HBO’s sci-fi hit “Westworld” in full gear, I decided to rewatch the 1973 movie that inspired the show’s creators Jonathan Nolan and Lisa Joy along with executive producers J.J. Abrams and Bryan Burk (maybe a few of them had nightmares watching the movie, too?) to go deeper into the story than the movie’s writer/director Michael Crichton ever could.

Michael Crichton Keith Bedford GettyThough the movie does not hold up well at all, there are still some groundbreaking elements to it that certainly inspired many filmmakers/authors who would go on to thrive in the sci-fi genre.

“Westworld” was Crichton’s first feature film and was kind of doomed from the start. The script was turned down by most studios when the author shopped it around, and he finally found a taker in MGM. But the studio squeezed Crichton on the budget and his lead actors, Richard Benjamin and James Brolin, weren’t signed on to the movie until 48 hours before principal photography began. Brynner was so strapped for cash he took the gig for $75,000 and showed up on set wearing the all-black costume he wore in “The Magnificent Seven.” 

Despite all that, the movie, which was made for around $1.5 million, earned $4 million at the box office and was MGM’s biggest release of that year

What has drawn viewers to the HBO series likely is the same thing that grabbed the attention of audiences in 1973: the desire to see a thrilling experience that we the viewers will never be able to have ourselves.

Westworld 2 MGMPeter Martin (Richard Benjamin) and John Blane (James Brolin) are friends who are on board a hovercraft en route to an amusement park called Delos when “Westworld” begins. For $1,000 a day, Delos provides the experience of a lifetime, as you have your choice of three worlds to immerse yourself in: Westworld, Medieval World, or Rome World. All are inhabited by robots who look and act like humans, except their hands are not humanlike (with all that detail, you think they would have mastered the hands).

John is the more confident of the two and has been to Delos before. Peter is shy and reserved. We are basically going through the whole experience from his perspective.

If this sounds familiar to a pair of characters from the HBO series, I’m with you. Though TV's “Westworld” is far more ambitious than the movie, one thing that certainly feels taken from the movie is the duo William (Jimmi Simpson) and Logan (Ben Barnes), though Logan is a lot more of a jerk than John.

Westworld HBOOnce Peter and John get settled into Westworld, it’s then an hour of cliche after cliche in all the worlds. Peter and John get into bar fights, have sex with the town whores, and shoot people, like the dressed-in-black Gunslinger (Brynner).

There’s also a subplot in Medieval World where a guest has a tryst with the queen and must prepare to fight the Black Knight.

But then things start to go haywire. John gets bitten by a robotic rattle snake (none of the robots is supposed to harm the guests) and a beautiful maiden doesn’t give into the advances of the Medieval World guest (sex robots were created to, well, have sex).

This introduces us to the most comical part of the movie: the staff behind the scenes running Delos. All dressed in white lab coats, they spend their time staring at monitors showing the park, griping about nothing ever working, and fixing robots who have been shot.

Westworld 5 MGMOne of the most fascinating parts of TV's “Westworld” is watching the characters who pull the strings at the park, but Crichton didn’t seem to worry about that too much. The biggest moment for the staff in white coats is after the rattlesnake bite when they converge and wonder if they should close down the park. It doesn’t take them long to decide to push through and keep it open.

The last 20 minutes or so comprise the best part of the movie. The Gunslinger is back in town and he’s new and improved, now with heightened heat censers for sight. He confronts Peter and John again but when John draws, the Gunslinger shoots and kills him. This begins a cat-and-mouse game between the Gunslinger and Peter throughout all the worlds.

Westworld POVBehind the scenes, the dimwitted staff are confused by what has happened to their creations as all the robots in all the words are killing the guests (yes, the Medieval World guest is killed by the Black Knight). In a panic, the staff shuts down the power to the park. But that also causes all the doors in their control room to automatically lock as well. And I guess those doors were pretty tightly sealed because they all suffocate to death.

Meanwhile, Peter is running from the Gunslinger, who can track his footprints thanks to his heat sensor-powered sight.

Finding his way into the control area of the park, Peter gets the drop on the Gunslinger and after throwing acid on him, the Gunslinger finally stops operating.

Peter ends up in Medieval World, hearing the cries of a woman locked in a dungeon. When he unlocks the chains and tries to give her water she begins to spark. She’s a robot, too.

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Peter is alive, but alone (let the nightmares begin).

Yes, “Westworld” sounds cheesy, but there are some very important takeaways.

Once the Gunslinger is given the heat sensor, the movie suddenly has a lot of POV shots from the perspective of the Gunslinger, a pixelated view that was a groundbreaking work of visual effects for the early 1970s.

Then there’s the unstoppable Gunslinger played by Brynner, who today you can’t help but compare to James Cameron’s Terminator.

jurassic parkAnd then there’s Crichton himself. “Westworld” is in many ways a test balloon for the 1990 novel in which he once more highlights a unique amusement park that goes awry, “Jurassic Park.”

But this time, without the restrictions of a Hollywood budget, through the written word, Crichton creates a world that he could have only dreamed while making “Westworld.”

His work once more became responsible for elevating VFX, as Steven Spielberg’s adaptation of the book in 1993 proved that Hollywood had caught up to Crichton’s imagination.

Because of the success of “Westworld,” a sequel was made, “Futureworld,” in 1976. Crichton had no involvement and Brynner makes a small cameo. It’s awful.

There was also a short-lived TV series, “Beyond Westworld,” on CBS. It's awful, too.

It took over 40 years, but a worthy companion to “Westworld” has finally been made with the HBO series. I highly doubt the series will end with Dr. Ford and Bernard suffocating in a control room. But it is important to recognize the significance the movie has had on the sci-fi genre, and in many ways the work of Crichton.

Would he have written “Jurassic Park” if he made “Westworld” the way he wanted to?

SEE ALSO: The history of Donald Trump and NBC's love-hate relationship that made him a star

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The 10 most talked-about new TV shows of the fall, ranked

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The fall television season is in full force and there's definitely been some ratings winners among the new shows, but which shows actually have people talking? In many cases, they aren't the same.

A few of the highest-rated shows on TV right now are NBC's "This Is Us," CBS's "Kevin Can Wait," and Fox's "Lethal Weapon," yet only one of those shows is on our list of ten shows people are most buzzing about.

Conversely, two shows that aren't bringing in the ratings numbers, The CW's "Pitch" and Fox's "The Exorcist," are getting people talking.

To find out which new TV shows are creating the most buzz, we partnered with technology and marketing platform Amobee. It analyzed real-time content consumption across the internet, video, social, and mobile between September 1 and October 26 to determine which shows were generating the most engagement.

Here are the ten most-talked about new TV shows of the season:

SEE ALSO: The history of Donald Trump and NBC's love-hate relationship that made him a star

DON'T MISS: The 20 best new TV shows ranked, according to critics

10. "Notorious" (ABC)

Jake (Daniel Sunjata), a charismatic defense attorney, and Julia (Piper Perabo), a powerhouse television producer, work together when high-profile incidents are breaking.



9. "Exorcist" (Fox)

Geena Davis plays a mom whose daughter has returned from college exhibiting very dark behavior, so she searches out her local priest to help.



8. "This Is Us" (NBC)

This drama follows several people who are connected by their shared birthday.



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We took a look inside the luxury movie theater chain that's taking over the country

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Since it was started by Tim and Karrie League in 1997 in Austin, Texas, Alamo Drafthouse Cinema has become an oasis for movie lovers while also revolutionizing the theater experience with the inclusion of food and drink service.

With 25 locations across the country, it's now widely regarded as the best theater in the world, and if you live in the New York City area, you can finally experience it in all its glory. 

Alamo Drafthouse Brooklyn will officially open its doors on Friday, and Business Insider got a glimpse inside what we can call without argument the most unique theatergoing experience in the city. 

Come take a tour with us inside the newest Alama Drafthouse Cinema in Brooklyn:

SEE ALSO: The 50 best movies of all time, according to critics on Metacritic

Walking in, Stanley Kubrick fans will feel instantly at home as the familiar carpet design from "The Shining" will lead you into the fun.



You can do your best King Kong impression atop the Empire State Building with this photo setup.



This Drafthouse also has a gender-neutral bathroom, a move Tim League made in many of his theaters in the wake of the bathroom controversy in North Carolina.



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The 16 most cliché Halloween costumes of 2016


Here’s what it’s like to play the scariest game ever made — which isn’t even available to buy

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To get into the spirit of Halloween, we played one of the scariest games ever made. It's called "P.T.," which stands for Playable Teaser, and it's a marketing demo developed by "Metal Gear" director Hideo Kojima.

The player's objective is to find a series of hidden clues in a specified amount of time. If successful, players will unlock a trailer for a "Silent Hills" game starring "Walking Dead" favorite Norman Reedus. Unfortunately, "Silent Hills" was canceled and "P.T." was pulled from PlayStation's online store. Now, the only people who still have access to "P.T." were those who downloaded it while it was briefly available. Luckily, we still have it. 

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This haunted house takes photos of people's reactions to getting scared — and it's hilarious

Meet the Facebook star who’s turning the 2016 election into hilarious musical parodies

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This election cycle has been interesting, to say the least. One popular Facebook video star is turning the political circus into something that is laugh out loud funny. Randy Rainbow inserts himself into the presidential debates, speeches and candidate interviews to highlight the absurdity of it all and bright a lighthearted flare to the election. "It's like a spoonful of sugar," he says.

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The history of Donald Trump and NBC's love-hate relationship that made him a star

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NBC and Donald Trump have been intertwined in a very prickly relationship for three decades. When it was good, it was really good. But then it got so bad, it was broken up.

Trump and NBC's relationship has never been so embattled as during his presidential run. All that culminated a few weeks ago when the NBC Universal-owned "Access Hollywood" unearthed a tape of Trump saying lewd, aggressive things about women.

It would've been much more simple if that was all the recording contained, but it also involved newly hired "Today" show cohost and NBC's rising star Billy Bush as Trump's wingman. 

As a result, Trump and NBC's relationship has reached a new low, and some argue NBC could sink Trump's chances of winning the election with its Billy Bush tape, years after it made Trump a star.

Recently, Trump accused NBC and parent owner Comcast of "trying to poison the mind of the American voter."

Let's take a look at the history of NBC and Trump's thorny partnership:

SEE ALSO: How the vulgar Donald Trump tape from 2005 was discovered at NBC and leaked to the public

DON'T MISS: Donald Trump still refuses to concede that he didn't win an Emmy for 'The Apprentice'

1988: "Saturday Night Live" spoofed Donald Trump for the first time in a sketch called "A Trump Christmas," in which Phil Hartman played the real-estate mogul and Jan Hooks portrayed his then-wife Ivana. The show would spoof Trump many, many times over the years.

Source: NBC



2002: Donald Trump, who owned the Miss Universe Organization, decided to take its Miss Teen USA, Miss USA, and Miss Universe pageants from CBS to NBC. NBC began airing them every year.

Source:Quartz



2003: In search of a new reality show idea, NBC President Jeff Zucker met with Donald Trump for the first time. It would become a long and fruitful relationship for them both.

Source: TheWrap



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

'Shark Tank' star Barbara Corcoran says all her best entrepreneurs are 'stupid'

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barbara corcoran

Of all the startup investments Barbara Corcoran has made in her eight seasons on "Shark Tank," about two-thirds of them have flopped.

However, she explained in a recent Facebook Live Q&A at Business Insider's New York office, the remaining third have made her a lot of money.

The common trait of the entrepreneurs who have made Corcoran money? "They're not so smart."

Making deals with unintelligent business founders may sound like a bad approach, but she's referring to the way they carry themselves when things get tough.

Corcoran said that every business, whether it succeeds or fails, inevitably runs into a major obstacle — that moment is Corcoran's test of whether she can trust the founder.

The two-thirds of her entrepreneurs who will lose her money react by blaming someone or something and go sulk "for a number of days, or sometimes weeks," she said. "Those are the people, that I now know as an experienced shark, who are never going to make it in business. The minute someone starts feeling sorry for themselves, they are not an entrepreneur, because you don't have that luxury in life."

Here's where that "stupidity" comes in.

"You almost have to be too stupid to lay low when you're smashed," Corcoran said. "If you want to be an entrepreneur, you have to have a low enough IQ so that you bounce back up and say 'Hit me again.'"

cousins maine lobster barbara corcoranCorcoran is partial to non-MBA types because she prefers working with someone who won't overanalyze risk and who will ignore safe choices to plow through the difficulties of building a business.

"They're smarter on their feet; they're smarter at recovering. They're not book smart," she said. "I don't even know if they have a high IQ, but guess what — they're natural-born entrepreneurs."

She gave an example of a moment when she knew that she would have a great partnership with two of her favorite "Shark Tank" entrepreneurs, Cousins Maine Lobster founders Sabin Lomac and Jim Tselikis.

For a Season 7 update on the deal Corcoran struck with Lomac and Tselikis in Season 4, a "Shark Tank" production crew traveled to Maine to report on the company's franchise expansion.

Corcoran explained in the Q&A:

"I'm thinking, 'How do I get their brand in this update? And so I say, 'Quick, you've got two days to do it — get giant chef hats, put them on your 50 employees. Puff them up with garbage bags! ... And I want "Cousins" in bright red letters across the band.'

"They got that done overnight. I don't know how they did it — 50 hats done, delivered on time. The producer walks into the set, looks at all the employees with the giant chef hats, and says, 'This is no good. Get rid of the hats. Too much.' And Sabin turns and says, 'I'm sorry, it's our company policy. We never let our cooks take their hats off.'

"I looked at Sabin, I thought, 'I love you, baby. I love you so much! You're going to make me so much money.' And of course, he makes me so much money.

"That's called smart on your feet."

Watch the full Facebook Live Q&A:

SEE ALSO: Mark Cuban says 'Shark Tank' showed him there are 3 types of entrepreneurs

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: BARBARA CORCORAN: Chris Sacca is 'probably the most arrogant Shark we've ever had'

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