Quantcast
Channel: Business Insider
Viewing all 124742 articles
Browse latest View live

Here's What's New On Netflix In October

$
0
0

hunger games catching fire

If you're not tuning into any of the new fall TV shows, Netflix has released its new list of releases for the month of October.

There are some good ones here.

Now that Vince Vaughn has been cast in "True Detective," you can catch him in one of his old flicks from 2001, "Domestic Disturbance." Before Jennifer Lawrence returns to the big screen in November, get caught up with "The Hunger Games: Catching Fire."

Chelsea Handler's comedy special "Uganda Be Kidding Me" will premiere halfway through the month. The special is part of a reported $10 million contract the comedienne signed with the streaming service earlier this year.

Here's what you should check out on Netflix in October:

TV

arrow cw"Arrow" season 2 (Available 10/8)
The release date was pushed back until this month, but if you still want to catch up before tuning into season three, here's your chance.

"Sons of Anarchy" season 6 (Available 10/25)
The final season of FX's series is already underway, but now you can relive the last season without paying for the disc set.

Chelsea Handler's "Uganda Be Kidding Me" special (Available 10/10)
It's not technically a show, nor is it a movie, so we'll mention it here. Netflix spent a reported $10 million on Handler so it's worth checking out to see if the comedienne was a wise investment for the streaming site.

Movies

django unchained leonardo dicaprio"Domestic Disturbance" (available 10/1)
Vince Vaughn stars one of his early dramatic roles as a husband with a secret identity. 

"Finding Forrester" (available 10/1)
Sean Connery mentors a young writer in this classic which also features a young Anna Paquin.

"Kramer vs Kramer" (available 10/1)
One of two Oscar-winning Dustin Hoffman performances on this list in which he fights Meryl Streep in a custody battle.

"Rescue Dawn" (available 10/1)
Before he was Batman, Christian Bale was fighting for his life in a torture camp in Vietnam.

"Romeo + Juliet" (available 10/1)
Often the cool version kids will substitute for reading the actual Shakespearean play, it's young Leonardo DiCaprio and Claire Danes longing for love on the streets of Verona Beach with guns in place of swords.

"Sleepless in Seattle" (available 10/1)
Tom Hanks. Meg Ryan. What else is there to say?

"Shivers" (available 10/1)
If you're looking for a scare, it's the first film from horror master David Cronenberg ("The Fly") described as about "bloodthirsty, wormlike parasites" -- in one gruesome and memorable sequence, they attack a woman in a bathtub 

"The Hunger Games: Catching Fire" (available 10/21) 
This is a must watch if you need a refresher before the sequel, "The Hunger Games: Mockingjay — Part I," comes out in November. It's the movie everyone will be talking about this fall.

"Django Unchained" (available 10/25)— If you haven't seen Quentin Tarantino's latest Oscar winner, watch this one for the onscreen tension between Leonardo DiCaprio and Christoph Waltz. 

"Rain Man" (available 10/31)
Don't get too excited for Dustin Hoffman's Oscar-winning performances yet. You'll have to wait until Halloween for this one. We're sad, too.

Need a bigger selection? Here's the full list of October releases:

Available 10/1

"Annie" (1982)
"Annie: A Royal Adventure" (1995)
"Bad Johnson" (2014)
"Charlie's Angels: Full Throttle" (2003)
"Chicken Run" (2000)
"Domestic Disturbance" (2001)
"Ernest Saves Christmas" (1988)
"Finding Forrester" (2000)
"Galaxy Quest" (1999)
"Gilmore Girls: The Complete Series"
"Hit!" (1973)
"Hostages" Season 1
"Jimmy Neutron: Boy Genius" (2001)
"Kramer vs. Kramer" (1979)
"My Father the Hero" (1994)
"Paths of Glory" (1957)
"Please Subscribe: A Documentary About YouTubers" (2013)
"Rescue Dawn" (2006)
"Romeo + Juliet" (1996)
"Shadow of the Vampire" (2000)
"Shane" (1953)
"Sleepless in Seattle" (1993)
"Shivers" (1975)
"The Phantom of the Opera" (1989)
"Team America: World Police" (2004)
"Three Fugitives" (1989)
"Tombstone" (1993)
"The Wedding Planner" (2001)

Available 10/2

"Carrie" (2013)
"Reign" Season 1
"Under the Electric Sky: EDC 2013" (2014)
"The Vampire Diaries" Season 5

Available 10/3

"The Originals" Season 1

Available 10/4

"The Boxcar Children" (2013)

Available 10/6

"Little Man" (2006)

Available 10/7

"Hart of Dixie" Season 3
"In a World ..." (2013)
"Raising Hope" Season 4
"Supernatural" Season 9
"The Following" Season 2

Available 10/8

"Arrow" Season 2
"Jay Mohr: Funny for a Girl"

Available 10/9

"A Long Way Down" (2014)
"The Tomorrow People" Season 1

Available 10/10

"Chelsea Handler: Uganda Be Kidding Me" (2014)

Available 10/11

"Breathe In" (2013)
"Heatstroke" (2013)
"Swelter" (2014)
"Why Stop Now" (2012)

Available 10/14

"Witching and Bitching" (2013)

Available 10/15

"Stay" (2013)
"Tim Minchin and the Heritage Orchestra Live" (2011)

Available 10/16

"Cowgirls n' Angels" (2012)

Available 10/18

"Last Man Standing" Season 3
"Liberal Arts" (2012)

Available 10/21

"Wyatt Cenac: Brooklyn"

Available 10/22

"E-Team" (2014)
"The 100" Season 1
"The Hunger Games: Catching Fire" (2013)

Available 10/23

"Freakshow" Season 2

Available 10/25

"The Carrie Diaries" Season 2
"Django Unchained" (2012)
"Sons of Anarchy" Season 6

Available 10/28

"Bound by Flesh" (2012)

Available 10/31

"Before I Go to Sleep" (2014)
"Rain Man" (1988)

SEE ALSO: The only 10 new TV shows worth watching this fall

Join the conversation about this story »









DAY IN THE LIFE: A Bravo Reality Star Launches Her Clothing Line During Fashion Week

$
0
0

Lilly Ghalichi

Bravo reality star Lilly Ghalichi is most well known for the two years she appeared as "the Persian Barbie" on "Shahs of Sunset."

But what many don't know about the 31-year-old Texas native is that she holds degrees in both law and business, and even passed the bar exam.

But instead of practicing law, Lilly started a bikini line.

Today, Lilly's multi-million dollar brand includes swimwear, beauty, fashion, fine jewelry, champagne, and How-To seminars for aspiring entrepreneurs  all of which she promotes to her over 1 million Instagram followers.

Most recently, the designer launched a new line of women's apparel earlier this month for WantMyLook.com during New York Fashion Week.

Lilly shared her behind-the-scenes photos from Fashion Week with Business Insider.

It's the day of the fashion show, so I go straight into fittings and prep.

I'm in New York City for my first-ever Fashion Week as a designer. I'm presenting The Lilly Ghalichi Collection for WantMyLook.com and I'm so excited to share this passion project with the world.

The first step today is to do final fittings with all the models to catch any last minute changes that need to be made. I'm a perfectionist with everything I do, so this is a very important part of the process for me. 



The stage is already set, it's the calm before the storm.

Next up, I'm doing a final walk through of the venue to check lighting, music, seating arrangements, and everything else in between.

My favorite fashionistas will be filling this room in just a couple hours!



I do a last check to make sure models are ready for the show.

While the models are getting ready for showtime, I'm making my rounds in the glam room to make sure all the looks are coming together as planned.

It's extremely important to me for all the models have their own unique styles on the runway while maintaining The Lilly Ghalichi Collection vision — which is edgy, feminine, and fabulous. 



See the rest of the story at Business Insider






What Really Happens In The 'Family Guy' Writing Process — And Why This Season Could Be The Best Yet

$
0
0

manatees south park"Family Guy" may be one of the most popular shows of our time, but its approach to comedy has also generated a lot of haters.

Just look back to 2006, when Comedy Central's "South Park" captured what many thought about the show in a two-episode takedown, which claimed that Fox's "Family Guy" is actually written by a group of manatees who randomly select combinations of "idea balls" that are used to generate jokes.

The gag, which mocks the absurd cutaways that "Family Guy" is known for, had some venom to it. "South Park" co-creator Trey Parker explained in the DVD commentary that he and co-creator Matt Stone "don't respect ["Family Guy"] in terms of writing." He added that much of Hollywood felt the same way, with producers from "The Simpsons" sending them flowers after the episode and people at "King of the Hill" expressing thanks (despite both shows being on Fox). "There was this animation solidarity moment, where everyone did come together over their hatred of Family Guy," he said.

"Family Guy," created by Seth MacFarlance in 1999, just seemed to make people mad. There were complaints about the show's reliance on "gag-humor," as well as its admittedly ripping off elements of "The Simpsons." The show was offensive, too, even if no more than "South Park." But what may have upset the industry most is how successful it was.

Back in 2006, "Family Guy" was making a comeback after three years off air, during which time its following had swelled through DVD sales and reruns. The fourth season averaged 7.9 million viewers, more than twice as many as "South Park." By 2013, "Family Guy" at 6.9 million ratings was more than twice as popular as "The Simpsons" at 3.4 million viewers.

As "Family Guy" has dominated in ratings, its brand of humor has become more widely accepted, too. Case in point is the much-hyped appearance of The Simpsons in the upcoming "Family Guy" premier on Sunday night — a collaboration that would have been unthinkable just a few years ago.

the simpsons family guy crossover episodeWhy has "Family Guy" been so successful? We asked Executive Producer and Co-Showrunner Steve Callaghan, who has written for the show since its debut.

To start, he says the show has actually put together some compelling stories, despite its irreverence: "The series is constructed in such a way and was created by Seth in such a way that it can accommodate a lot of different types of episodes. We can do an episode that has a message where we take on a political issue, and then the next week we can do one about time travel, and in the next week we can do one where Peter gets a metal detector and goes crazy."

He says the show keeps getting better: "Not only has the look of the animation vastly improved ... but also we found more things to do with the characters, and the characters have become more multidimensional."

And he's excited for season 13: "We're pretty far into our run, but I'm always happy to see that we keep working harder and we keep topping ourselves. I hope fans feel the same way."

It's worth mentioning that many people like those random cutaways, which MacFarlane says are not easy to pull off.

“It’s something that in later years has almost become something that’s s--- upon in writers circles. And it’s interesting because those are the hardest things to write,” MacFarlane said at a panel in 2012. “When you’re dealing with story-based comedy it’s almost easier. With the cutaways, you need to develop a brand new premise, storyline, arc, all in just a few seconds.”

t-rex family guy

As for how the show is made, there are no manatees involved. The process involves many rounds of edits from a large team and takes up to a year, which is typical for TV comedies, according to Callaghan.

He walked us in extensive detail through the production of one episode:

"At the very beginning of every season ... everyone will come in with some thoughts on stories or possible episode ideas and we'll spend a day or so just pitching out all those individual ideas. They could be three or four paragraphs or they could be literally five words depending on whatever depth of an idea someone comes in with.

"Then we'll start breaking the story. What I mean by that is we'll get four or five writers in a room together and we'll start talking about that basic idea and we'll start figuring out okay if there's a story here with a beginning, middle, and end; what might happen in act i, act ii or iii; what are the act breaks; and we'll literally write it out on a dry erase board.

"Once we feel like we have bare structure of the story, it will get assigned to a particular writer who will then go off and write an outline. ... The outline is maybe 10 or 12 pages long and it's just description of the action that tells what happens in each scene.

"They'll turn that into myself and my co-showrunner Rich Apell and a couple of other folks, and we'll give them notes on the outline and then they will go off and they'll have two weeks to write the first draft.

"They will come back after that time with the full script with all the dialogue and the stage direction and everything like that, and then we will as a group go through and rewrite the script line by line, page by page, and fix any story issues that might still exist. We'll try to punch up the jokes and make them better, maybe make some trims. As you can see it's all very, very collaborative.

Speaking at a panel in 2010, MacFarlane described the madness of the writers' room: "It's a completely free, open ... They tell me to f--- off all the time when they think I'm wrong about something. It's a completely open ... You hear about writers rooms where it's like — formulate your pitches before ... make sure it's absolutely perfect before it's ready to pitch — no, dude, if something's on your mind short of cacophony, throw it out there. It might stimulate someone else to come up with something."

Next comes the table reading, as Callaghan explained:

"This is the first time that anyone who is not part of the writers room or part of the writing staff is hearing the script ... We all sit around a big table in our conference room and the actors are there ... we have some representatives from the network and the studio on hand, our crew is present, our writers, and so we'll go through and do a cold reading of the script. Like I said, it's the first time people are hearing it and the whole purpose of that is to hear what works, what doesn't work.

It sounds both fun and nerve-wracking. Here's an example:

 Callaghan continued:

"Based upon how that goes we'll get some notes from the studio and the network, and we ourselves will assess how we think the script went, and we'll do a rewrite based upon that table reading. Sometimes that rewrite can be significant, sometimes it can be relatively minor.

"Once that rewrite process is done, then we have the actors come in and record the episode. ... Then we take all that audio, and our sound engineers will put it all together, and we'll make some notes on that, maybe tighten up things, maybe choose different takes, but we'll finalize the audio and do something called the radio play, which is just the audio for the episode.

"Once that's locked, then the animators will start drawing the episode. That process takes a few months. They do many, many, many storyboards, and what they assemble after that period of time is something called an animatic. It's like a rough version of the show, so it's got audio and it's got pencil sketches, but not every pose is drawn.

"We'll have a screening of that animatic, and we'll have a group fill up our conference room again, and we watch it, and the purpose is sort of the same, to see what's working, what's not working, and again some things that may have worked at the table reading, once we see them executed may or may not work as well as we'd hoped.

"We'll do another rewrite based on that, and then the show gets sent off overseas where a lot of the animation happens for us, and then that episode comes back a few months later, and we watch it one last time, and at this point it's in color and it looks like pretty close to what the episode will look like when it airs. ... We get one last chance to rewrite it and hopefully by this point you're making smaller and smaller changes, but we still do have an opportunity to keep rewriting at this point.

"After that last rewrite then we do our final few things. We'll sit with the composer and figure out where the music needs to go, we'll add in sound effects, we'll do any final cutting to get it down to the proper running time ... put the credits on.

"That whole process takes about a year, so what's nice is that you've constantly got this flow of episodes going through our pipeline. ... It gives you a chance to have a little distance from it and then it comes back and you get another chance to view it with fresh eyes.

"We do about 22 episodes a year, so it's almost as if we have to be juggling two different seasons at one time, because I'll have to be thinking about final changes on a show that might air this coming weekend or the Sunday after that and then also thinking about what the Christmas show is going to be a year and a half from now and everything in between. We have a large board in our writer's room where we track every episode that's currently in production. ... It's a lot of balls to keep in the air, but it is a lot of fun, and we're very lucky to have a very talented writing staff."

Got all that?

family guy peter passed out living room

Callaghan offered some thoughts on his favorite episodes:

"I think our 'Star Wars' episode turned out well, but I think some of my favorite episodes tend to be the ones that ... are smaller simpler stories where we take an idea that on another show might seem a little familiar but we always spin in a 'Family Guy' sort of way. Here's a bad example — and this isn't my favorite episode — but we did an episode called 'Trading Places,' and I remember just because it was one where I happened to write the first draft. It was an episode where the parents and the kids switch places, which is something that we've seen before on many sitcoms, but in this one Chris ends up taking on Peter's job and is so stressed out he has a heart attack, which you wouldn't see on 'The Brady Bunch.'"

As for "The Simpsons" crossover:

"A lot of the credit for that episode should go to Rich Appel, who is the co-showrunner with me. He is a very talented guy, who earlier in his career had worked on and written for 'The Simpsons,' and so he obviously knows the show and knows many of the people who were still involved with the show. ... He contacted them and presented the idea that we wanted to do something like that and I think the fact that they knew him and trusted him and knew that that he had had experience over there gave them the confidence to know that we were going to take the job seriously and that we would do a good job and write the characters as the characters and not abuse the opportunity. ... Once that got going, all the folks at 'The Simpsons' were just terrific. They basically said to us: 'Here's our characters, go ahead and write the show, and just please let us see the script when you're done.' They gave us a lot of freedom to come up with the story we wanted to do and write the episode as a 'Family Guy' episode. In the end not only did they have very few notes but they were very happy with the way it turned out."

As for the future of the show:

"Obviously, we can't do this indefinitely, but i don't feel like there's any sign right now that the show is nearing its conclusion. I feel like if anything we're in a strong period in the lifespan of the show and i feel like it could go for quite some time."

brian griffin stewie griffin family guy writing

SEE ALSO: The best new TV shows to watch this fall

Join the conversation about this story »








Radiohead's Thom Yorke Hopes His BitTorrent Album Will Revolutionize The Entertainment Industry

$
0
0

thom yorke radiohead spotify

Radiohead frontman Thom Yorke has been teasing a new solo album in cryptic tweets all week, and now we finally have an official announcement from the man himself. It's worth getting excited over.

That solo album is available for purchase right now via BitTorrent, becoming the first-ever paygated torrent in history. 

"Tomorrow's Modern Boxes" is a follow-up to Yorke's 2006 solo debut "The Eraser" and the first new material from the Radiohead frontman since the release of Atoms For Peace's album "Amok" in February 2013. 

In a letter co-authored by Radiohead producer Nigel Godrich, Yorke explains why he chose this unprecedented release strategy:

"As an experiment we are using a new version of BitTorrent to distribute a new Thom Yorke record.

The new Torrent files have a pay gate to access a bundle of files.

The files can be anything, but in this case is an 'album'.

It’s an experiment to see if the mechanics of the system are something that the general public can get its head around ...

If it works well it could be an effective way of handing some control of internet commerce back to people who are creating the work.

Enabling those people who make either music, video or any other kind of digital content to sell it themselves.

Bypassing the self elected gate-keepers. 

If it works anyone can do this exactly as we have done.

The torrent mechanism does not require any server uploading or hosting costs or ‘cloud’ malarkey.

It's a self-contained embeddable shop front ...

The network not only carries the traffic, it also hosts the file. The file is in the network.

Oh yes and it's called

Tomorrow's Modern Boxes.

Thom Yorke & Nigel Godrich"

The full album costs $6.00, but BitTorrent users can obtain the audio and video of the album's first track "Brain in a Bottle" for free. 

Radiohead broke ground in 2007 and took the industry by surprise by releasing "In Rainbows" with a "choose your own price" model, inspiring music websites like Bandcamp and other outlets to adopt the technique. In 2011, they announced "The King of Limbs" at only a week's notice and released it as the world's first "newspaper album." It's no surprise that the release of "Tomorrow's Modern Boxes" continues this ambitious trend. 

This could be a huge step forward for BitTorrent, as the service is primarily used for sharing pirated music illegally. According to a press release:

"this partnership marks the launch of the BitTorrent Bundle with paygates, which allows artists to monetize their Bundle content directly. Fans can download the album here and pay using a credit card or PayPal in 140 currencies. The publisher covers the transaction fees and BitTorrent takes 10% after that."

SEE ALSO: Thom Yorke Explains Why He Hates Spotify

Join the conversation about this story »








Here's What Everyone Is Getting Wrong About The Apple Nude Celebrity Photo Attack

$
0
0

Jennifer Lawrence

At the start of the month, a bunch of naked photos stolen from the iPhones of celebrities were posted online.

There seems to be a widespread misunderstanding of how that happened.

A Serious Allegation

Late Wednesday night, the news outlet The Daily Dot posted a story headlined: "Apple knew of iCloud security hole 6 months before Celebgate."

The story is based on several claims made by Ibrahim Balic, "a London-based software developer."

To understand Balic's claims, first you have to know about a type of "hack" called a "brute force attack."

Basically, the hacker sits there and tries to log into a victim's account by guessing over and over what the victim's password might be. 

There is a very standard defense against this kind of attack, used by most service providers — be they online banks, email services, or online storage providers. After a handful of wrong guesses for a password, the service provider freezes access to the account for some amount of time.

In his comments to The Daily Dot, Balic says he found a way to ping Apple's iCloud servers with 20,000 password guesses for a single iCloud account. His conclusion: Apple's iCloud storage service was vulnerable to a "brute force attack."

In The Daily Dot article, Balic says he brought Apple's attention to this perceived flaw six months ago.

After explaining Balic's allegations, The Daily Dot's Dell Cameron implied there might be a connection between the supposed security flaw Balic uncovered six months ago and the "Celebgate hack." Cameron wrote: "A security hole in Apple’s cloud storage service was initially blamed for the Celebgate hack."

By Thursday evening, more than 15 news outlets had followed Cameron's lead, posting stories that made a connection between the security flaw Balic says he discovered and the nude celebrity photos.

The tech news aggregator Techmeme listed all these stories thusly:

Techmeme on Ibrahim Balic

In some of those headlines, the implicit connection hinted at by Cameron between the flaw Balic says he found and the celebrity hack becomes an explicit narrative — a cause and effect. 

The narrative: Apple knew about the security flaw that led to Jennifer Lawrence's private naked photos getting plastered all over the Internet.

It's a useful, simple, juicy narrative. 

The problem is, it seems to be a false one.

The final headline on Techmeme is from ITProPortal. It asks: "Did Apple know about 'celebgate' iCloud flaw in March?"

The answer to that question is probably no, and it's for two reasons.

Reason No. 1: Good luck brute forcing a token prompt.

We did some homework on Apple security protocols — specifically, the one highlighted by Ibrahim Balic. After this research, we're comfortable saying that Balic did not find what he thought he found.

Balic believed he found, in Apple's iCloud code, a prompt for a user's password that he could respond to 20,000 times without being booted from the system.

He did not find a prompt for a user's password.

Balic found a prompt for something else — something called a "token."

"Tokens" are complicated, and how they work is very nuanced.

Here's a basic description.

It turns out that when you log into iCloud and other internet services, you and your computer provide more information than just a password and a username. 

You also provide a third piece of information that identifies you, or rather, your computing device. This is called a "token."

On Apple devices, the "token" is a very long string of digits. We don't know how long, other than "very."

The bottom line is this: Balic was entering possible passwords into a field that was asking for something else. 

Further: Even if Balic were guessing possible tokens, it would take him an extremely long time to guess the correct string of digits.

How long?

Here is screenshot Balic sent to The Daily Dot. Examining, we guess that Apple tokens are 64 digits long.

balic code

A top-of-the-line Intel processor maxes out at about 32,000 instructions per second.

If a computer were able to guess 32,000 64-digit strings in one second, it would be able to guess 1.0098208e+12 strings in a year.

It would take 9.9027471e+51 years to guess all 9999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999 combinations of 64 digit token strings.

You can't "brute force attack" a token prompt, is the point. 

Reason No. 2: That's not how Apple screwed the pooch.

The second reason Balic's narrative regarding the flaw that would cost J-Law her privacy is wrong is that Apple has already explained the reason hackers were able to access celebrity iCloud accounts, and it has nothing to do with brute force attacks.

Because Apple updated its FindMyPhone software shortly after the scandal broke — and because a supposed vulnerability in FindMyPhone had been recently published on a site for developers — many reporters and commenters assumed that the celebrities were victimized by a hack that took advantage of a flaw in Apple's software.

Apple allowed this idea to fester when it posted a vague "Update to Celebrity Photo Investigation" on its site and provided little other information.

But buried in an extensive interview with Charlie Rose, Apple CEO Tim Cook said that Jennifer Lawrence and her fellow celebrities fell victim to something called a "phishing scam."

A "phishing scam" is called that because it's like fishing.

Here's how it works.

A hacker creates an email that looks like it is from some online service that a victim belongs to — perhaps an online bank, a storage service, a social network.

In that email, the hacker asks the user to go to a website and enter his or her user ID and password for the service.

The victim is fooled by the email and does as requested.

The hacker takes the user ID and password to access the victim's account. The hacker also takes the ID/password combination and tries it on a ton of different web services to see if the victim has the same user ID and password elsewhere.

It's easy to think that Jennifer Lawrence and the other celebrities (or their handlers) were dumb to fall for a phishing scheme, that of course Apple is saying that's what happened, because it divorces the company from culpability.

That would be another incorrect narrative.

For starters, phishing schemes can be incredibly sophisticated.

Look at this fake email a hacker sent:

BOFA Phish

The second reason a "celebs are dumb/Apple is blaming phishing to get out of trouble" narrative is wrong is that Apple could have done more to make it harder for iCloud users to fall victim to phishing schemes.

One system Apple could have had in place is something called two-step verification for iCloud. Apple had two-step verification for AppleIDs but not for iCloud.

In two-step verification, whenever a user logs into an internet service from a device he or she has used before or from a location he or she does not usually log on from, the internet service prompts the user to enter a second password. Then the service sends that password to a device that it knows belongs to the user (because the user previously told them so).

Here's an example of two-step verification from Google:

Google two step

For some reason — probably user convenience — Apple did not have two-step verification on iCloud before all those celebrity photos ended up on the internet. Shortly after the scandal, that changed.

Conclusion: A narrative you can believe

Now that we've dismissed all sorts of narratives around the celebrity hacking scandal, let's summarize one you can safely walk away with — at least until Apple does the super smart thing and explains all this in detail itself.

Here goes.

Photos of naked celebrities (probably) did not end up on the internet because Apple ignored a security flaw that was reported six months ago.

What was reported wasn't really a security flaw.

Photos of naked celebrities (probably) ended up on the internet because those celebrities were tricked into giving up their user IDs and passwords — and Apple did not have industry standard security measures in place, measures which could have protected those celebrities.

We reached out to Apple and Balic for this story. Apple declined to comment. Balic maintains he found a way to check passwords.

Join the conversation about this story »








JOB OF THE WEEK: Director, Web Engineering At Starbucks

Go Millennial With MTV Pioneer Judy McGrath And REDEF’s Jason Hirschhorn At IGNITION 2014

$
0
0

_MSC4474 copy

One of IGNITION’s runaway hits last year was a session with an amazing group of media-savvy New York teens, put together by youth-marketing expert Smarty Pants. Nothing beats hearing real voices from inside all the mountains of charts and data.

This year we figured we’d top that by inviting them back, but also adding someone special to the mix: Judy McGrath, who took music video channel MTV and made it into a global cultural icon. McGrath's new project, a joint venture with Sony Music, is Astronauts Wanted, a full-featured digital content platform that AdAge calls “a video network for the Snapchat Generation.” McGrath also just joined the board of Amazon.com.

But there’s more! Joining his former boss in conversation will be MTV’s former chief digital officer Jason Hirschhorn. Hirschhorn's kid-cred includes a stint as co-president of Myspace. More recently he has launched REDEF Group, whose daily remixes of media and fashion news are essential reading for the digital crowd.

Join us at the TimesCenter in NYC for three days of deep dives, extended conversations, and awesome networking with a blue-chip roster of speakers including:

  • Amazon.com founder and CEO Jeff Bezos
  • AOL CEO Tim Armstrong
  • IAC chair Barry Diller
  • Kleiner Perkins’ John Doerr
  • Whisper CEO Michael Heyward
  • Evernote CEO Phil Libin
  • Adobe CMO Ann Lewnes
  • Gilt chair Kevin Ryan
  • former Apple CEO John Sculley
  • Oculus Rift CEO Brendan Iribe, and many more

                                                               Ignition register now button orange

SEE ALSO: See the full IGNITION lineup

Join the conversation about this story »








The 12 Worst 'Shark Tank' Pitches Of All Time

$
0
0

Mark Cuban

In five seasons of ABC's reality pitch show "Shark Tank," we've seen some doozies. Hopefuls have pitched products including an energy drink for Cougars, a vortex chamber that generates gold, and flatulence-scented candles.

At times, contestants show up unable to even explain why anyone would want to buy their product.

With an average viewership of seven million and airtime that's worth about half a million dollars to the aspiring entrepreneurs who make it on, you'd think every pitch would be thoughtful, well-rehearsed, and airtight. But you'd be wrong.

Andrew Figgins, a Chicago-based entrepreneur and owner of the fan site InTheSharkTank.com, says nearly half of the hundreds of pitches that have been made on the show have been awful. The most common problems? Far-fetched ideas, wacky personalities, and a lack of basic business knowledge. "The people who have gone on the show and don't know their numbers get chewed up and spit out," Figgins says.

In anticipation of the sixth season's two-hour premiere on Friday, we take a look at some of the biggest duds in the history of the hit pitch show.

Jason Woods pitches the Kymera jet-propelled boogie board.

Episode 507: "Kymera"

In the most recent season, Woods asks for $250,000 for a 20% stake in his company, which he's been developing for 10 years. The problem is he doesn't have a business plan. Oh, and he's never sold a single one in a decade.



Mark Cuban calls Woods a "wantrepreneur," someone who's got ideas but not a shred of business acumen.

Episode 507: "Kymera"

Because Woods couldn't figure out how to finalize a product and sell even a few with the $130,000 he spent on development over the past decade, the Sharks conclude an injection of capital won't save him.



Brothers Richard and Albert Amini pitch a social media app for doctors.

Episode 501: "Rolodoc"

It would function as a secure platform for medical professionals to upload their medical records and put each other in contact, they say. They want $50,000 in exchange for a 20% stake. Sounds like there may be an idea there, right?



See the rest of the story at Business Insider







The Blue Man Group Just Made The iPhone 6 Unboxing Video To End All Unboxing Videos

$
0
0

The Blue Man Group is known for its wacky, fun, and quirky entertainment.

This time the group decided to take its talents to YouTube and tackle one of those iPhone 6 unboxing videos. Except this one is like no other unboxing video you'll ever see.

As with all unboxing videos, it starts by opening the box.

First they try out a saw, then fixing the mess with duct tape.

Blue Man Group iPhone1

Maybe a kitchen knife will do it?Blue Man Group iPhone2

 Drills are powerful.

Blue Man Group iPhone3

The saw has to work.

Blue Man Group iPhone4

And finally they just sort of give up and wrap it into a present. Presumably for someone else? Apparently step one was just that difficult that they never made it to step two.

Blue Man Group iPhone 5

 See the madness for yourself:

SEE ALSO: Watch Us Unbox The Apple iPhone 6

Join the conversation about this story »








These 'Shark Tank' Entrepreneurs Made The Sharks Cry, Proving Emotion Is Key To A Successful Pitch

$
0
0

shark tank kronos

In the second episode of Friday's two-hour season six premiere of "Shark Tank" on ABC, a young entrepreneur moves even the coldest Sharks — including Kevin O'Leary, a.k.a. "Mr. Wonderful" — to tears with his story of why he gave up a comfortable lifestyle to pursue his passion.

Of course, tears won't guarantee you a deal in the tank, but Phillip Lapuz, designer of the high-end golf putter company Kronos, proved that a big investor is only willing to go the distance with a founder who will do whatever it takes to succeed.

During the pitch, the Sharks know that Lapuz and his business partner and creative director Eric Williams have a quality product, but they are wary of investing in a company that wouldn't see an immediate return. It was only after a display of Lapuz's powerful entrepreneurial drive that investor Robert Herjavec agrees to make a deal with Lapuz and Williams.

The Kronos guys appear in traditional golf attire to ask the investors for $150,000 for 15% equity in their company. Two years ago, they explain, they acquired a deal at the PGA Merchandise Show for distribution of their putters, the cheapest at $500, in Japan and Scotland.

shark tank kronos

They explain that they've sold $260,000 worth of merchandise so far in 2014, with 95% of sales in Japan. Lapuz and Williams tell the Sharks that the reason they have not yet made it in the US is because of the American business model of selling sports equipment through celebrity athlete endorsements, which they did not have the capital to spend on.

O'Leary tells the Kronos partners that there are instances where a piece of equipment catches fire in the golf industry, and there's a chance lightning could strike for Kronos. But it would be a big risk that required a considerable time investment.

By this point in the pitch, investors Mark Cuban and Barbara Corcoran have bailed because they hate golf, and Lori Greiner drops out because she thinks Kronos would only be a big success in Japan.

Playing with one of the putters in his hands, Herjavec asks Lapuz and Williams why they started a business in the first place. Lapuz suddenly becomes choked up, with tears running down his face.

Lapuz explains that he's engaged, and his fiancée lives in Japan. Shortly after his engagement proposal, he left a high-paying job as a consultant and invested $100,000 of his own money to start Kronos, something he had long dreamed of doing. His fiancée's traditionally minded parents couldn't fathom why he would leave a good job to start a business and no longer approve of their daughter marrying Lapuz. He is working for Kronos to take off so that he can get married in the States.

"It's like, do I have to choose between my company of my dreams and my fiancée?" Lapuz asks.

O'Leary, typically the most blunt and cynical investor on the panel, wipes tears from his eyes.

barbara corcoranCorcoran is also moved. "I think you ought to sit tonight and write her parents a thank-you note," she tells Lapuz. "And you ought to start like this: 'Thank you for the insults. For not thinking I'm worthy enough for your daughter. Watch me now, and watch what I do.'

"There's no better motivation in the world than somebody who insults you," Corcoran says. "Those parents are guaranteeing your success."

O'Leary pulls out because he can't figure out a strategy to make it work, even though he'd like to.

Herjavec tells Lapuz he identifies with him, since his main motivation to succeed has always been to validate the many sacrifices his parents, who fled communist Yugolsavia, made for him.

In terms of the business plan itself, he sees a tipping point where Kronos can take over the consumer market. But it's far from immediate. That said, he trusts Lapuz's spirit and is willing to be patient. He offers $150,000 for a whopping 35% stake in the company, which Lapuz and Williams are able to negotiate down to 30%. They come to a deal.

It's impossible to say whether Lapuz and Williams would have been able to make a deal had Lapuz not become emotional, but there's no denying that Herjavec was willing to take a bigger risk than he'd normally have liked to because he felt Lapuz's emotional investment in the company and understood it.

You can have a great product, but your pitch will fall flat if you can't show an investor that you're willing to do whatever it takes to make their investment worth it.

You can watch the full episode on Hulu Plus.

SEE ALSO: The 15 Best 'Shark Tank' Pitches Of All Time

DON'T MISS: Here's How A Billionaire Investor Coached An Entrepreneur Through The Pitch Process

Join the conversation about this story »








US Veterans Send Fox News An Open Letter About 'Boobs On The Ground' Joke

$
0
0

fox news emirate pilot

US military veterans from the Truman National Security Project have written an open letter to Fox News complaining that offensive comments about a female United Arab Emirates pilot were "unwarranted" and "fundamentally opposed to what the military stands for."

During Wednesday's broadcast of "The Five," co-hosts Eric Bolling and Greg Gutfeld ridiculed Maj. Mariam Al Mansouri, the first female UAE pilot and F-16 squadron commander leading airstrikes against ISIS.

“Problem is, after she bombed it, she couldn’t park it," Gutfeld said. "Would that be considered boobs on the ground, or no?" Bolling followed up.

"I want to go back to last night, about this time I made a joke. When I got home, I got the look and I realized some people didn't think it was funny at all. I said sorry to my wife and I apologize to all of you as well, I just want to make that very clear." 

During Friday's broadcast, Bolling stated that his prior apology was "inadequate" and gave another on-air apology to viewers.

Here is the full letter via TPM:

Dear Mr. Bolling and Mr. Gutfeld,

We are veterans of the United States armed forces, and we are writing to inform you that your remarks about United Arab Emirates Air Force Major Mariam Al Mansouri were unwarranted, offensive, and fundamentally opposed to what the military taught us to stand for.

First, foremost, and most obvious to everyone other than yourselves, your remarks were immensely inappropriate. Your co-host Kimberly Guilfoyle was so right to call attention to an inspiring story of a woman shattering glass ceilings in a society where doing so is immeasurably difficult. We never heard an answer to her question: why did you feel so compelled to “ruin her thing?”

As it turns out, women have been flying combat aircraft since before either of you were born.Over 1,000 Women Airforce Service Pilots (WASPs) flew during World War II. Seeing as U.S. Army Air Forces Commander “Hap” Arnold said “Now in 1944, it is on the record that women can fly as well as men,” we can probably guess he thought their parking was adequate. The WASP legacy reaches into the present day; on 9/11, then Lt. Heather “Lucky” Penney scrambled her F-16. Completely unarmed, she was ready to lay down her own life to prevent further devastating attacks on American soil.

Thus the skill of women as fighter pilots is well established. And before you jump to the standby excuse that you were “just making a joke” or “having a laugh,” let the men amongst our number preemptively respond: You are not funny. You are not clever. And you are not excused. Perhaps the phrase “boys will be boys”—inevitably uttered wherever misogyny is present—is relevant. Men would never insult and demean a fellow servicemember; boys think saying the word ‘boobs’ is funny.

The less obvious implication of your remarks, however, is that by offending an ally and cheapening her contribution, you are actively hurting the mission. We need to send a clear message that anyone, male or female, who will stand up to ISIS and get the job done is worthy of our respect and gratitude.

We issue an apology on your behalf to Major Al Mansouri knowing that anything your producers force you to say will be contrived and insincere. Major, we’re sincerely sorry for the rudeness; clearly, these boys don’t take your service seriously, but we and the rest of the American public do.

Very Respectfully,

U.S. Army: Michael Breen, Richard Wheeler, Aryanna Hunter, Welton Chang, Michael Smith, Matt Runyon, Jon Gensler, Scott Holcomb, Terron Sims II, Josh Weinberg, Daniel Savage, Matt Pelak, LaRue Robinson, Anthony Woods, Dustin Cathcart, Kayla Williams, Dan Espinal, Jonathan Hopkins, Andy Moore, Kevin Johnson, Brett Hunt, Russell Galeti, Mick Crnkovich, Jonathan Freeman, Dan Hartnett, Dan Futrell, Matt Zeller, Jason Cain, Adam Tiffen, Sharmistha Mohpatra, Justin Graf, Lach Litwer.

U.S. Navy: Shawn VanDiver, Andrea Marr, Kristen Kavanaugh, Leo Cruz, Scott Cheney-Peters, Margot Beausey, Tony Johnson, Gail Harris, Alex Cornell du Houx.

U.S. Marine Corps: Geoff Orazem, Gordon Griffin, Timothy Kudo, Jonathan Murray, Richard Weir, Rob Miller, Sonia Fernandez, John Margolick, Katelyn Geary van Dam, Rob Bracknell, Andrew Borene, William Allen.

U.S. Air Force: Kelsey Campbell, Erik Brine, Chris Finan, Robert Mishev, Karen Courington.

U.S. National Guard: Kristen Rouse.

Join the conversation about this story »








The Only 10 New TV Shows Worth Watching This Fall

$
0
0

the affair poster showtime

There are 24 new fall shows coming to network TV this fall and even more coming to cable.

It can be overwhelming to decide what's worth watching, so we narrowed down the picks to 10 shows worth checking out across the networks, cable, and online.

Here's what you should tune into.

"Madam Secretary" (CBS)

Premieres: Sun., Sept. 21 at 8:30 p.m.

What it's about: Téa Leoni stars as the new White House Secretary of State who steps in after the previous one died in a suspicious plane crash.

Why you should watch: Initialreviews have been mixed; however, it sounds as if there's potential for the series to be a mix between "The West Wing" and "The Good Wife" mixed with "Scandal." Writer Barbara Hall has previously worked on "Judging Amy."

Watch the trailer.



"Selfie" (ABC)

Premieres: Tues., Sept. 30 at 8 p.m.

What it's about: The modern version of "My Fair Lady," follows Karen Gillan ("Doctor Who") as a self-absorbed social media addict, Eliza Dooley, who asks a coworker, Henry (John Cho), to rebrand her after she realizes she has no friends in real life.

Why you should watch: While the concept sounds gag inducing and a little outdated (Time considered the term a buzzword two years ago) the ABC comedy is actually good. We previewed the show at an event with an audience in which it was well received. The chemistry between Cho and Gillan makes this show worthwhile. Everything that perturbs you about Gillan's character is reflected by Henry, and it turns out he has a few quirks that could be straightened out by Dooley as well.

The main problem here is that the show’s marketing could use some rebranding. The initial trailer is alienating to a general audience who may get offended by a "vapid, social media obsessed narcissist." ABC pulled it from public viewing on YouTube after it was first released. 

Watch the trailer.



"The Flash" (The CW)

Premieres: Tues., Oct. 7 at 8 p.m. 

What it's about: The series will focus on the origin story of how Barry Allen turns into the Flash, the DC superhero with lightning speed.

Why you should watch: The series received a lot of praise from fans when it debuted earlier this year at San Diego Comic-Con. If you're a fan of the CW's other comic book series, "Arrow," you'll enjoy crossover moments between both shows along with a hint of the Flash's main villain in the season premiere.

Watch the trailer.



See the rest of the story at Business Insider






Everything We Know So Far About 'Taken 3'

$
0
0

taken 3 liam neeson

Liam Neeson may not have made a big splash at theaters with his latest film, "A Walk Among the Tombstones;" however, that will change when the 62-year-old action star's next movie hits theaters. 

USA Today revealed a first look at "Taken 3," the sequel to Neeson's 2009 film in which he plays a retired CIA agent seeking revenge on the men who kidnapped his daughter. 

While we can't wait for Neeson's next action flick, it doesn't hit theaters until January.

Until then, here's everything we know about the film.

1. What it's called:

"Tak3n." Yes, the number will be worked into the tile.

2. What it's about:

This time it doesn't sound like anyone in particular is kidnapped. Instead, someone's life is literally "taken."

Via USA Today:

This time, he's the hunted prey after he's framed for the murder of someone close to him.

"I have to go on the run, I'll put it that way, from the not-so-lawful types and the lawful authorities," says Neeson, choosing his words carefully. "Bryan Mills served his country faithfully, but now even they are after him. They must not like me."

Unlike previous films, "Tak3n" will not involve any overseas traveling. "Taken 2" director, Olivier Megaton will return while Forest Whittaker will join the cast as an officer hunting Mills down.

3. How much Liam Neeson is reportedly making:

According to Deadline, Neeson signed a deal "in the vicinity of $20 million" for the sequel. That's a giant leap from his reported $1 million salary for "Taken."

4. When it will be released:

20th Century Fox will release "Tak3n" January 9, 2015.

5. Will there be a "Taken 4"?

Don't count on it. Neeson has said this third film will close out the franchise.

"It's a rollicking good story," Neeson told USA Today. "But I think this is the end."

However, Neeson was adamant a third film wasn't happening for some time, too.

SEE ALSO: How Liam Neeson became an accidental action star at 61

Join the conversation about this story »








REPORT: Japan's SoftBank Is In Talks To Acquire DreamWorks Animation (DWA, SFTBF, BABA, S, TMUS)

$
0
0

Jeffrey Marilyn Katzenberg donor

Japan's SoftBank is in talks to acquire DreamWorks Animation, according to a report from The Wall Street Journal.

A potential price for the deal was not known, the report said.

As of Friday's market close DreamWorks had a market cap of just less than $2 billion.

DreamWorks Animation has produced films including "Shrek", "Madagascar", and "How To Train Your Dragon."

The report said that a deal for DreamWorks would provide SoftBank — which owns about 80% of Sprint and earlier this year sought to combine Sprint with T-Mobile before abandoning the deal earlier this summer — "another route to try to fulfill [its] ambition of challenging America's top two wireless carriers, AT&T and Verizon."

DreamWorks Animation shares are down more than 37% year-to-date, and the Journal said news of a potential deal comes a "crucial juncture" for the company.

From WSJ:

The development comes at a crucial juncture for DreamWorks Animation and its chief executive, Jeffrey Katzenberg, one of Hollywood's highest-profile executives, who has sought to define a long-term strategy that would help the company counteract a recent spell of mixed box-office results.

Since spinning off from DreamWorks SKG and going public in 2004, DreamWorks Animation stock has largely risen and fallen on the box-office performance of its feature films, something Mr. Katzenberg has been trying hard in recent years to change.

A string of box-office disappointments has severely depressed the company's share price, forcing Mr. Katzenberg to assure investors that moves in industries like television, digital video and consumer products will help make its stock price less reliant on the two to three feature films the company releases annually.

The Journal adds that pursuing this deal makes SoftBank CEO Masayoshi Son the first Japanese investor to chase a deal in Hollywood since the Japanese economic bubble of the late 1980s. 

Earlier this month, SoftBank said it would book a gain of a bit less than $5 billion on the sale of a portion of its stake in Alibaba, the Chinese e-commerce giant that went public in the largest IPO in US stock market history. 

SoftBank has a 32% stake in Alibaba, which it first acquired 14 years ago for $20 million; that stake is now worth $71 billion, the Journal said. 

(via WSJ)

Join the conversation about this story »








Chris Pratt Opens SNL Season Premiere With A Funny Song About Himself

$
0
0

Chris Pratt SNL

Chris Pratt opened the season premiere of “Saturday Night Live” by exclaiming that he was so excited to be hosting the show.

"I've always felt such a connection to this show, a lot of that is because when I dropped out of college and moved to Hawaii, I literally lived in a van down by the river," he explained, referencing the famous Chris Farley sketch.

Pratt went on to comment of his recent weight loss, saying, "This summer I was in a little movie called 'Guardians of the Galaxy,' for which I lost 60 pounds. I found this great way to get in shape  it's called the 'Hey fatass, get into shape so you can be in my movie' diet. It actually works really well."

Pratt then picked up a guitar and started singing a song about himself, the weightloss (and gain), and his wife, actress Anna Faris.

"Home's where the heart is and mine's right there," he sang, "It belongs to the hottie in the audience right there. Her name is Anna Faris, she's hosted twice, we had sex... and a baby popped out."Anna Faris

Watch Pratt's full, funny opening monologue and song below:

SEE ALSO: The Incredible Story Of How Chris Pratt Got His Big Break While Living In A Scooby Doo Van In Maui

MORE: Here's How Chris Pratt Got Ripped For Marvel's 'Guardians Of The Galaxy'

Join the conversation about this story »









'Toy Story' Had An Unwatchable Script Until Joss Whedon Saved It

$
0
0

toy story disney buzz lightyear

Pixar's iconic "Toy Story" might never have happened if not for help from future "Avengers" writer and director Joss Whedon.

Based on original Pixar short "Tin Toy," an early rough draft of "Toy Story" was a disaster.

Here's how it was described by Amy Pascale in the recent "Joss Whedon: The Biography": [T]he movie was unwatchable. The story had lost the heart that Tin Toy had; the leads, Woody the cowboy and Buzz Lightyear the astronaut, were sarcastic and unlikeable—not exactly ideal heroes for a children’s movie." Notably, the lead character of cowboy Woody was "a bitter toy who berated and insulted all the other toys and was bound and determined to destroy Buzz."

It wasn’t until Whedon, who had recently created "Buffy the Vampire Slayer," was asked to step in and help refocus the entire script that the film started to look more like the version of "Toy Story" we know.

"They sent me the script and it was a shambles," Whedon recalled in "Joss Whedon: Conversations." "But the story that [John] Lasseter had come up with was, you know, the toys are alive and they conflict. The concept was gold."

What was originally planned to be a three-week job turned into more than six months of working with Pixar. 

One big decision was whether or not the movie should be a musical like recent Disney hits such as  "The Little Mermaid," "The Lion King," and "Beauty and the Beast." Whedon, like Pixar head John Lasseter, decided that wasn’t a good idea.

“It would have been a really bad musical, because it’s a buddy movie,” Whedon told Entertainment Weekly. “It’s about people who won’t admit what they want, much less sing about it. Woody can't do an 'I want' number--he's cynical and selfish, he doesn't know himself. Buddy movies are about sublimating, punching an arm, 'I hate you.' It's not about open emotion."

One of Whedon's biggest contributions was an insight about astronaut Buzz, according to Pascale:

Joss worked closely with Pixar’s team as everyone got their heads around the idea of Toy Story as a buddy picture. Buzz Lightyear had always been conceived as a Dudley Do-Right: dim-witted but cheerful and self-aware. Joss helped them reenvision the character as an action figure who isn’t aware that he’s a toy, and who therefore takes his job as an Intergalactic Space Ranger quite seriously. It was a huge epiphany that turned the whole movie around and created the chemistry in Toy Story.

toy story buzz lightyear

One Whedon change that didn't make the final cut involved Mattel's Barbie. According to EW, the writer, known for strong female characters, wanted the doll to swoop in and save both Woody and Buzz from the film's antagonist, Sid. However, Mattel wouldn't give permission for Barbie to appear.

The animated movie was finally given the greenlight to be filmed in April 1994 and after several more rewrites with Whedon, the film became the first full-length computer animated movie, ushering in a new age for other animated pictures.

"Toy Story" went on to make $361.9 million at the box office and was nominated for three Oscars.

Subsequent sequels performed even better at theaters, with 2010’s “Toy Story 3” grossing over $1 billion worldwide.

SEE ALSO: 2 reasons Disney movies often don't have moms

AND: Tom Hiddleston sent an amazing email to Joss Whedon after reading "The Avengers" script for the first time

Join the conversation about this story »








'Simpsons' Fans Are Upset After 'Minor Character' Death In Season Premiere

$
0
0

simpsons bart simpson homer simpsonWarning: Spoilers Ahead

Last October, Al Jean, the executive producer "The Simpsons," told reporters during a conference call that the writers were "working on a script where a character will pass away."

At the time, Jean said it was a major character and hinted that "the actor playing the character won an Emmy" for the role. Since then, fans have been intensely speculating who would be killed off the show.

After nearly a year of anxious speculation, "The Simpsons" finally said goodbye to someone during Sunday's season 26 premiere.

Despite rumors that Krusty the Clown would be the "Simpsons" character to say farewell, it was a less major character — his father, Rabbi Hyman Krustofski — who ended up being sent to “Jewish Heaven." Comedian Jackie Mason, 83, had voiced the Rabbi Krustofski character since 1991 and won an Emmy for it in 1992.The Simpsons krusty the clown

But fans felt the minor character's death was a letdown after a "major death" had previously been teased.

simpsons krusty the clown

Many took to Twitter Sunday to express their frustration after the episode aired:

On Facebook, fan reacton varied:

simpsons reaction

"Simpsons" EP Al Jean tweeted after the episode:

The rabbi's last word was "Eh," in response to what he thought of Krusty’s comedy.

Jean elaborated to The Hollywood Reporter :

"It was something that we did not plan in any way as a possible event. I had suggested that we do an episode where Krusty's father passes away and the last word he says to Krusty is, 'eh.' I thought it would be funny and sad to deal with that being the last thing your father says to you. The whole thing has been pretty funny in the way that people took something that was not intended to be a brainteaser and completely tied themselves into a knot and then wouldn't believe it when someone told them the truth."

As for the wild fan speculation leading up to the season premiere, Jean told THR:

"I was doing an interview where they asked what episodes we had coming up and I said, 'Well, a character dies and the actor who played the character won an Emmy for that portrait,' and that turned into this huge puzzle. People all over the world were trying and are trying to solve still this mystery."

But Jean assured fans that one "Simpsons" character isn't going anywhere: "I'd lose my job in two seconds if I killed Homer; nothing is happening to him, trust me!"

SEE ALSO: 15 Images From The Upcoming 'Simpsons'-'Family Guy' Crossover

Join the conversation about this story »








Kristen Wiig And Bill Hader's Awkward Interview With Local News Anchor Who Didn't See Their Movie

$
0
0

kristen wiig bill hader

Kristen Wiig and Bill Hader were promoting their new movie "The Skeleton Twins" on a local Denver news station this weekend when they realized anchor Chris Parente had not actually seen the movie.

Parente asked Wiig: "Kristen, I am thinking, on this program, doing the news completely full-frontal, completely nude. Do you recommend that? Do you have advice for going nude?"

After a confused Wiig didn't know how to react, Parente insisted, "You do it in the film!" 

"Not this film," Wiig said with a laugh, adding, "that's a different movie," referring to her nude scene in "Welcome To Me."

Hader broke up the awkward moment by joking, "No, I'm the one who is nude in this movie! And I'm upside down the entire time."

Wiig ended the interview by saying, "this was great."

Watch the awkward interview below:

Parente responded by laughing off the incident on Facebook:

SEE ALSO: How Dan Aykroyd Predicted Bill Hader's Entire SNL Career After 3 Episodes

Join the conversation about this story »








SNL Mocks Marvel's Success With Ridiculous Movie Ideas

$
0
0

guardians of the galaxy gamora star lord

After "Guardians of the Galaxy" killed it at the box office this summer, "Saturday Night Live" used host Chris Pratt to mock the success of Marvel films, joking that they do well no matter what the storyline.

In a parody movie trailer, "SNL" notes how Marvel "can’t fail" and teases a few ridiculous new films, both real and fake.

"Next summer, we're releasing 'Ant-Man,' about a guy who talks to ants! What? Yeah!"Ant Man

"We don't even need comic books anymore, we made a superhero by pointing at a bunch of different random words in the dictionary."SNL

"You're going to fall in love with Marvel's 'Creatures of the Cosmos' — a pastry chef, a Harlem Globe Trotter, an alien real estate sign spinner, a dude dressed as Grimace, and an office chair."SNL Chris Pratt

"And check out this bold move  we took the first four people we found on a city bus and made a movie with them! We dare you not to see... Marvel's 'Bus People.'"SNL Chris Pratt

"Get ready for the spin-off, Marvel's 'Pam.' Pam doesn't matter, she will make $3 billion dollars...SNL pam

"And so will Marvel's 'Fancy Ghosts.'"SNL ghosts

"And 'Some Fancy Shopping Carts.'"SNL shopping carts

"And 'Pam 2: Winter Pam.'"SNL pam

"And Marvel's 'Star Wars.'"SNL star wars

Watch the full, funny movie trailer below:

SEE ALSO: Chris Pratt Opens SNL Season Premiere With A Funny Song About Himself

Join the conversation about this story »








Read Robert Downey Jr.'s Incredible Tribute To His Late Mother

$
0
0

robert downey jr. familyRobert Downey Jr. wrote a touching Facebook tribute to his mother, Elsie, this weekend after she died at age 80 late last week.

The actor revealed intimate aspects of his mother's life, from her short-lived career as an actress to her struggle with alcoholism. After Elsie got clean, she would later help her son do the same.

"In the summer of 2004, I was in bad shape. She called me out of the blue, and I admitted everything. I don’t remember what she said, but I haven’t drank or used since," RDJ writes in his Facebook post. "She was my role model as an actor, and as a woman who got sober and stayed that way."

The full post is below and worth a read:

robert downey jr mom

As promotion for “The Judge” kicks off this weekend, I feel the need to run the risk of over sharing…..

My mom passed away early this week….I wanna say something about her life, and a generic “obit” won’t suffice…

Elsie Ann Ford was born outside Pittsburgh in April of 1934, daughter of an engineer who worked on the Panama Canal, and mother who ran a jewelry shop in Huntingdon, where they settled….a bona fide “Daughter Of The American Revolution.”

In the mid ’50s, she dropped out of college and headed to NY, with dreams of becoming a comedienne. In ’62, she met my dad, (who proposed at a Yankees/Orioles game). They married, had my sister Allyson in ’63 and me in ’65…

There was another “revolution” of sorts going on at that time, of underground counter-culture film and theatre…and with her as Bob Sr’s muse, they jumped in wholeheartedly…

“Chafed Elbows” (a man marries his mother and goes on welfare), “Greaser’s Palace” (a woman relentlessly persecuted by God who never utters a word), and “Moment To Moment” AKA “Two Tons Of Turquoise To Taos Tonight” (in which she played 17 characters) were the stand outs.

By the mid ’70s, the downside of drug culture caught up with many artists. She was an alcoholic…

As the marriage suffered, she continued to work, but not for long. A recurring role on “Mary Hartman, Mary Hartman” (’76-’77) was her last paying job…not that she cared, she’d have done it for free.

I remember living with her and her boyfriend Jonas, (who became a second father to me) in a 2 room 5 story walk up in Manhattan after that…Bunsen burner for a stove, cockroaches, broken dreams…

By 1990, she’d had enough, went to treatment, got sober. Just in time to enjoy several decades of heart disease, bypasses, you name it….

While I strived to have the kind of success that eluded her, my own addiction repeatedly forbade it.

In the summer of 2004, I was in bad shape. She called me out of the blue, and I admitted everything. I don’t remember what she said, but I haven’t drank or used since.

Eventually, when finances allowed, we were able to move her out to LA. She had a special affinity for my firstborn son Indio, and really got a kick out of Exton. Got an iPad, pictures, videos, the whole 9….

Her doctors basically titled her a “Medical Incredible,” said there was little they could do, and were frankly amazed she was up and walking….

Many fond memories of her in the last few years…holidays, kid-stuff, her strutting around with a walking stick. I knew it was difficult, and understood as the visits got shorter.

In March, she suffered another cardiac arrest and was put on life support.

Her wishes were to be left to die if there wasn’t a reasonable chance of recovery, which for some time there was.

I returned from filming the “Avengers” sequel in June, went straight to see her.

To my amazement, she was completely lucid, interactive, mugging + pulling faces.

We couldn’t speak ’cause she had a tracheal tube. I wondered if she might just beat the odds once more.

Another set of seizures answered that, and we brought her home for hospice.

She died @ 11 p.m., September 22nd, survived by her extremely loving and tolerant partner of 37 years, Jonas Kerr.

She was my role model as an actor, and as a woman who got sober and stayed that way.

She was also reclusive, self-deprecating, a stoic Scotch-German rural Pennsylvanian, a ball buster, stubborn, and happy to hold a grudge.

My ambition, tenacity, loyalty, “moods,” grandiosity, occasional passive aggression, and my faith….

That’s all her…and I wouldn’t have it any other way.

If anyone out there has a mother, and she’s not perfect, please call her and say you love her anyway…

Elsie Ann Downey. 1934-2014

Robert Downey Jr. mom

SEE ALSO: Local Anchorman Tells Viewers He Only Has 4 To 6 Months To Live

MORE: Robert Downey Jr. Says There Are No Plans For 'Iron Man 4'

Join the conversation about this story »








Viewing all 124742 articles
Browse latest View live