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madonna just premiered a music video on snapchat

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Madonna just released the first-ever music video on Snapchat's new Snap channel, for her song "Living for Love." With the introduction of its new Discover feature, Snapchat has proved itself to be one of the latest and greatest innovators in the social media world, so it makes absolute sense that the tech company would team up with another innovator to revolutionize how we experience music videos. 

While the 56-year-old herself may not be in the Snapchat demographic, which consists largely of teens and 20-somethings, she has always been a major creative force in her industry. It's no surprise seeing the pop icon take on a completely new way to share music, especially with her pervasiveness across generations and musical tastes. The video itself, which can be seen in its entirety for the next 24 hours on Snapchat's Discover feature, shows the singer giving one of her best performances in years. While its formula is a simple pop standard at best, "Living for Love" has the kind of universality, dance beat, and inspirational message that make it an instant radio favorite. 

Watch Madonna's new video on Snapchat now and look out for her upcoming album Rebel Heart, out March 10.


beyoncé's '50 shades' remixes are here

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Beyoncé's remixes for the 50 Shades of Grey soundtrack just hit the internet and if you can conjure the focus to get through each rendition without ripping your goddamn clothes off, you'll actually find yourself transfixed by the music. The alternate versions of our favorites, "Crazy In Love" and "Haunted," both contain enough bass to actually shake the bed for you. (Sidenote: My hips are literally moving under my desk right now. There's just so much sex in these songs.)

Up until this point, queen Bey had only teased us with snippets of Crazy In Love in that trailer that left us all NSFW inside. But now the full-length version, produced by Boots, and its counterpart (which we admit to preferring) are here. After reports the soundtrack isn't "sexy" enough, how about now? We're actually not sure how this movie could have any more sex worked into it.

Listen below!

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Is Beyoncé Turning Pre-teens Into Strippers?
Kendall Jenner Poses With Photoshopped Boobs, Gives Us Feelings

the 10 most memorable grammy collaborations

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Everyone knows the Grammy Awards are all about the live performances, which is why we got excited when earlier this week it was announced that Kanye West, Rihanna, and Paul McCartney will be performing their new single, "FourFiveSeconds," on this Sunday's broadcast. When the three super-friends take the stage, it'll be the latest chapter in the Grammys' storied history of getting a wide range of artists on stage together for some pretty memorable, once-in-a-lifetime performances. Here are ten of the best.  

Radiohead and USC Marching Band perform "15 Step," 2009
Radiohead can perform with Fisher Price instruments in a public bathroom and they'd still be one of the most transcendent bands on the planet. Put them on the Grammy stage backed by the entire USC marching band and well, this.   

Gorillaz, Madonna, De La Soul perform "Hung Up/Feel Good Inc.," 2006
What starts out as a wonderfully eccentric duet between high-tech pranksters Gorillaz and hip-hop iconoclasts De La Soul takes an electric turn when Madonna herself rises from the stage like a glittering phoenix, and proceeds to bring the house down like only she can. 

Kanye West and Daft Punk perform "Stronger," 2008
This was one of our first glimpses at the intense, animalistic stage presence that would come to define Kanye as a performer—and one of our only glimpses at the reclusive Daft Punk, who rarely made public appearances at the time. Anything for Yeezus, though. 

Eminem and Elton John perform "Stan," 2001
In 2001, Eminem was the biggest star in music. He was also the most controversial. Thanks to lyrics many considered homophobic, the rapper attracted the attention of the Gay & Lesbian Alliance Against Defamation, who picketed outside before the ceremony. But inside, Marshall Mathers sent a message of his own by having Elton John sing the chorus to his monster hit, "Stan." Not only was the performance powerful, but it helped transform Eminem from a cartoon character to a complicated, conflicted artist. 

T.I., Jay Z, Kanye West, M.I.A., Lil Wayne perform "Swagga Like Us," 2009
The four biggest rap stars on the planet on the same stage performing the year's biggest banger—awesome. But a nine-months pregnant M.I.A. upstaging them all? Legendary. 

Christina Aguilera, Pink, Mya, and Lil Kim perform "Lady Marmalade," 2002
Oh, 2002. The year when Pink still had pink hair, Lil Kim still had her face, Mya still had a career, and Christina Aguilera was a force of nature. We miss you. Come back.

Beyonce and Tina Turner perform "Proud Mary," 2008
Introducing her as "The Queen" (something that irked Aretha Franklin), Beyonce brought out Tina Turner to the Grammy stage for her first live performance in seven years. Show. Stopped. The two divas go note for note in what very much felt like a passing of the crown. 

Melissa Etheridge and Joss Stone perform "Piece of My Heart," 2005
The Grammys are really great at getting a bunch of artists to pay tribute to one that is no longer with us. Case in point, this Janis Joplin tribute featuring two of our most soulful singers. The performance was made even more remarkable by the fact that Etheridge, in the throes of battling breast cancer, showed up on stage with her head completely bald. By the time the standing ovation came, you could tell the audience was applauding more than just the performance.  

Lady Gaga and Elton John perform "Poker Face/Speechless," 2010
Lady Gaga loves to remind us that behind all the synthesized beats, jerky dance moves, and state-of-the-art production, all she really needs is a piano to blow us all away. So after she's through with the fame monster schtick, Gaga parks herself in front of the ivories and is joined by Sir Elton—who went from sharing the stage with a gay pariah to sharing one with a gay icon—for a dueling-piano rendition of Gaga's soaring broken-heart ballad. 

Jay Z, Linkin Park, and Paul McCartney perform "Numb/Encore/Yesterday," 2006
Full disclosure: we only included this performance as a reminder that we live in a world where Linkin Park once shared the stage with Jay Z and a Beatle. That is all. 

 

throwback thursday: mila kunis as our sultry cover star

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With her new film Jupiter Ascending hitting theaters this weekend and the recent birth of her daughter Wyatt with beau Ashton Kutcher, Mila Kunis is doing better than ever. From That 70's Show to Black Swan, the hilarious actress has long been one of our on-screen idols, and we can't wait to see what she has in store for the rest of 2015. Until then, we're throwing it back with our December 2011 interview with the siren and reflecting on some of our favorite Mila moments ever. Read below to hear where the new mom was when we talked to her just four years ago.

She had been working as a model and actress for 11 years, had starred in a number of forgettable movies, and was six years into an eight-year contract with That ’70s Show. “And I was like, ‘All right, this has been a good run, but I’m done,’” she says. “I wanted to rethink my life for a minute, because I didn’t think acting could be a career. This is the worst industry you can put yourself in because there’s no security whatsoever. I mean, none. The whole thing is based so much on opinion and nobody is wrong. That person can think I’m great, that person can think I suck, and they’re both right. I was just like, ‘Can I really do this for the rest of my life?’” 

But while Kunis might have had her fair share of bad reviews and disappointments, she was at least financially secure. “What a lot of people don’t realize is that you make more money in TV than you will in film; it’s a very steady salary,” she says. “An obscene amount of money gets given to you for, like...what? So I was 20, and I looked at my bank account and realized that I was secure for the rest of my life. I was like, ‘I’m OK. I can go do other things now.’ I had been happy being poor, so having money made no difference to me. I know people with money say that, but it’s the truth. Of course, it’s a blessing to feel like you have a roof over your head and not having to worry about where your next meal is coming from. But that blessing, I realized, comes at a price.” 

Kunis’s existential crisis was welcomed by her parents—“They were like, ‘Great! Now go to college’”—but not so much by her manager, who had signed Kunis when she was nine years old: “She was like, ‘You’re crazy.’” Nevertheless, Kunis took some time 
to soul search. “I was contemplating whether I wanted to keep doing this or if I wanted to go and explore life. And I realized that acting is the one thing I love to do. I asked myself, ‘What else could I do that would make me happy? What else could I do where I wake up in the morning and think, I get to go to work and do something great and have fun? I couldn’t think of anything else. So I was like, ‘I’m stuck doing this because I actually, truly, love it.’” And so, three weeks after she first considered quitting acting for good, she was back in the saddle.

It’s early one Friday afternoon in October and Kunis and I are sitting in a cabana beside a hotel pool in Santa Monica, California. In contrast to most of the hotel pools in Hollywood, this is not the kind of place where people come to see, or to be seen. It’s surrounded by tall boxwood hedges and is particularly, unusually peaceful; apart from the nondescript house music playing quietly from unseen speakers, the only other noise is the hushed conversations of a few business lunches which have gone on longer than they should have. In a corner, a man in his forties is perched on the edge of a sun lounger playing an electric guitar with headphones on and eyes closed, a contented smile on his white-whiskered face. A few women are sunbathing, iPods in, brightly colored cocktails on glass tables next 

to them. The sun is sparkling on the water. Kunis is wearing a gray blazer with the sleeves rolled up over a loose, white tank top, the neckline of which is low enough that her beige bra is clearly visible. Her black jeans are ripped all over and her black, buckled, calf-high leather boots look expensive but, apparently, aren’t at all. “I bought them four years ago at some store on Melrose for like, $20!” she says. “Aren’t they great?!” She takes a sip from her huge Dunkin’ Donuts iced coffee, her hand—freshly manicured nails a shade of stormy blue—barely fitting around the cup. “Well,” she says, a slightly mischievous grin spreading across her face, “what shall we talk about?”

Now 27, Kunis’s career has never looked brighter. This December she can be seen in Black Swan, a dark thriller directed by Darren Aronofsky, the visionary behind Requiem for a DreamPi, and The Wrestler. It is by far the best film Kunis has ever starred in, and she delivers a career-defining performance; she picked up the Marcello Mastroianni Award for Best Young/Emerging Actor at the Venice Film Festival, where Black Swan premiered earlier this year. Finally, it seems the actress is proving what she’s known all along: that she’s much, much more than just a pretty face. 

But, to be fair, hers is an exceptionally, distractingly beautiful face. You notice the eyes first: They’re huge, almost caricature-like, and ever-so-slightly different colors. When she was younger, the difference was more obvious, and, although it’s subtler now, it’s still there, if you look closely enough. The left one is a little greener than the right, which is more of a hazel. “As I’ve gotten older, I’ve kind of grown into them,” she says, smiling. “You should have seen me when I was a kid with this tiny face and these huge bug eyes! I looked ridiculous!” Kunis’s eyes lend her face an exoticism that’s set off by long, dark hair which today hangs artfully dishevelled around her shoulders. Although one of her first-ever jobs was a Payless shoes commercial for the Spanish network Telemundo because, she says, “I looked Hispanic when I was little,” as an adult her Eastern European heritage is far more obvious, even with her glowing tan. 

Kunis was born Milena Markovna Kunis in Kiev, Ukraine, in 1983, and when her parents brought her and her older brother Michael to America in 1991, she couldn’t speak a word of English. “It was Communist Russia,” she says, “and I think my parents just wanted my brother and me to have a better life—well, to have a future. The move wasn’t for them. When you leave, you leave everything behind—your finances, your diplomas, everything; nothing is transferable. You come with nothing, and you’re piss-poor.” She remembers Ukraine fondly. “I had a great childhood there,” she says. “A fantastic one. It was incredibly safe. We only had two channels on television so kids didn’t stay home and watch TV, and we ran around the neighborhood, climbed trees, played cops and robbers. It was really amazing.” Upon arriving in the U.S., Kunis’s parents settled in Southern California and enrolled their daughter in a weekly acting class with the intention that she could learn English and mix with American kids. Kunis describes it as “basically having a babysitter for six hours.” But, this being Los Angeles, one day a Hollywood manager drove past, saw a bunch of cute kids, and decided to investigate further. “It’s such a bizarre thing to try and explain,” Kunis says. “It’s not like any little kids can or cannot act. It’s a matter of if you’re cute or if you’re not cute. That’s all it comes down to.” Kunis was cute, and after a class showcase, her parents found themselves fielding calls from agencies wanting to represent her. “The whole thing is absurd, very fake,” she says. “My parents were like, ‘We work full time. We don’t have the time 
or money to do this. Our kid needs to go to school.’ So they told me to make the decision and I ended up picking 
my manager, Susan, who had stopped by that day. When they asked me why, I had no idea. I just had a good vibe about her.” Shortly afterward, Kunis was cast in a spec commercial for a camping Barbie that was never produced (“I hated Barbies! I’d rather run around with my brother and his friends climbing trees and banging my knees—I wore a skirt or a dress while doing it, but still”), and, just like that, at nine years old, she was a working actress.

“My parents were so completely against me doing it,” she says. They were the opposite of what all the parents are in this industry. They never went to set, ever. They would be like, ‘Please be a kid, go to college.’” Kunis saw acting as just an after-school activity, not the beginning of a career. “It was just play-pretend,” she says, tucking her legs up onto the bench. “Trust me, I did not have a clue what I was doing. It wasn’t a job for me, I didn’t think anything other than a teacher, a doctor, a lawyer, a fireman, or a policeman was a legitimate job because when you’re little those are the things you see. It wasn’t until I was 20 that I thought I could actually make it a career.” Her manager, Susan Curtis, is still her manager now and Kunis speaks to her multiple times a day. “Her family and my family are entwined at this point,” she says. “They travel together, they’re best friends. She is my family.”

When she was 14, Kunis auditioned for a new sitcom on FOX called That ’70s Show about a group of teenagers living in the fictional suburban town of Point Place, Wisconsin, in the late ’70s. In order to audition, actors had to be 18 years old or legally emancipated, and it’s an oft-repeated rumor that Kunis, who was neither, staged some kind of elaborate deception to get the part. “It’s exaggerated,” Kunis says. “Here’s the truth: I was 14 when I auditioned and, yes, you had to be 18 or legally emancipated and when they asked if I was legally emancipated I was like, ‘Sure, sure.’ I just played along with it. But by the third audition, they knew. Because I had to sign the contract and I specified that I needed a studio teacher and they were like, ‘Why?’ and I was like, ‘By the way, I’m still 14; I’m still in high school.’” The show, which was on air for eight seasons, was a slow-burning hit, with each of the other five “teenage” leads—Ashton Kutcher, Laura Prepon, Wilmer Valderrama, Topher Grace, and Danny Masterson going on to achieve further success when it eventually ended. Kunis was perfectly cast as the pretty, spoiled Jackie Burkhart, who starts off the first season as immature and obnoxious but gradually becomes more thoughtful, dating all the boys apart from Eric (Grace) in the process. “I went through everything on that show,” Kunis says. “I went through puberty. I celebrated my 16th birthday and my 21st birthday on it. My entire life was on that show. But the beauty of it was that after work I would go home and have a normal life. My life was never around the industry. I could hang out with my best friends—who are now a teacher and a dentist—I went to school, I went to work, and we finished at the same time so we could hang out afterwards.” In her breaks (the show shot on a schedule of three weeks on, one week off, then two weeks on, one week off) Kunis attended school at Fairfax High in L.A. Considering her peers were the show’s target audience, things were a little strange in the classroom. “It was weird, yes,” she says. “But I promised my parents I would go to school, so I did.”

During hiatuses, Kunis took parts in a handful of films, including American Psycho II (which went straight to video), Tony N’ Tina’s Wedding, and Krippendorf’s Tribe, in which an anthropologist has his family pretend they’re a lost tribe from New Guinea in order to cover up the fact he’s spent all of his grant money. Slightly better was After Sex, Eric Amadio’s 2007 indie comedy which examines modern day relationships and intimacy through the stories of nine couples talking immediately after intercourse (Kunis’s partner is Zoë Saldana, her roommate). The movies were commercial and critical failures, and, understandably, Kunis doesn’t really want to dwell on them now. “We don’t need to discuss those!” she says, laughing. “I just did films because they were going to be fun! I never thought about it for a long career. At the age of 16, I was just like, ‘I wanna go to college and do something else.’ I don’t regret them, because I wouldn’t be where I am without doing those. I don’t regret anything I’ve ever done. Even the dumbest shit I’ve done in my life—and believe you me, I’ve done some really dumb shit—I don’t regret doing it. I’m not talking about projects, but just the stupid things that a kid does, that a teenager does, that a person in their twenties does. I did everything. I was never a bad kid, but I did things that weren’t necessarily good, or smart decisions. But I did learn from them. My parents always said to learn from other people’s mistakes, but I always seem to have only learned from my own.”

In 2000, she landed a role she still has today, when she took over from Lacey Chabert as the voice of Meg Griffin, the daughter of the dysfunctional Peter and Lois Griffin, on Seth MacFarlane’s wildly popular animated FOX show Family Guy. “It’s the greatest gig ever,” Kunis says of the part. “I go in once a month, and I record for about two hours. I’m so proud of it; I got so lucky doing that show. Unbeknownst to me when I started doing it, it is actually brilliant. I’d never heard of it, so I had no idea. Then I saw it and was like, ‘Oh my God, this show’s so scandalous!’” And as if That ’70s Show hadn’t garnered Kunis enough pothead fans, Family Guy has ensured her legions more. “It’s the greatest fanbase ever, but weird,” Kunis says. “They’re all fucking stoners! It’s the largest fanbase of anything I’ve done, I hope it never goes off the air.” She pauses to sip the last of the iced coffee from her cup. “It’s such a fun job! Everybody knows that. Every actor wants an animated job.”

 

The check paid, we head back out onto the sidewalk into the late-afternoon sun. Kunis is staring intently at a seemingly innocuous man on the opposite side of the street who is wearing a blue shirt, shorts, and carrying a black bag. “You see that guy?” she says, gesturing at him. “Watch him. He’s going to walk behind that bus and come out of the other side with a camera and take our picture.” Sure enough, as we pass the bus, the guy pops out and takes our picture (they’re online a few hours later). “It’s anybody now,” she says, walking more briskly back to the hotel as the guy tracks us on the other side of the street, still trying to be covert. “And anybody can tip them off. I don’t want to be the actress who complains about it, but yeah, it’s annoying. I don’t like it and I don’t feel like I ask for it either, so I don’t think it’s fair.” Kunis says she was shocked by the aggression of the paparazzi in New York, where she was recently filming Friends with Benefits, opposite Justin Timberlake. The film, directed by Will Gluck (Easy A), opens next summer and tells the story of two best friends who decide to start sleeping together, no strings attached. “I’ve never seen people in my life with so little respect,” she says. “I’m not saying paparazzi in L.A. have any respect, but at least there’s a distance being kept”—she nods her head at our new friend, who is currently pretending to examine something in a shop window on the other side of the street. “When we were filming on the street in New York it was pure and utter insanity.” 

We arrive back at the hotel and head over to the valet—Kunis is going home now, to get her costume ready for a Halloween party the following evening. “My happiness has never depended upon this industry or this career,” she says, pushing some hair behind her ear. “It never has, and it never will. This industry just blows in general; it’s a rough thing to get into, let alone sustain. Who you are should never be dependent on what you do, because then your happiness is dependent upon something that’s very unpredictable—intangible, almost.” She gives me a hug, and tries to pay the valet, who waives the charge. She thanks him, shoots me a quick smile, then puts her head down and walks briskly to her large, black car. Popping out from behind a bush, the guy with the camera takes a few final shots. 

Catching Up With 'Jupiter Ascending' Star Douglas Booth

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There was a lot of God talk in Darren Aronofsky’s Noah, one of the films Douglas Booth appeared in last year. Some believed; others didn’t. But let it be known: If a higher power does exist, she sculpted Booth as a movie star. Sitting here in downtown Chicago on an early winter afternoon, in a crisp leather jacket, shorn stubble, and black fedora propped ever so slightly atop his flowing brown mane, the 22-year-old British actor can’t help but exude the required charisma and charm.

“You can feel it slowly spreading,” says Booth, coyly speaking of his rank as one of Hollywood’s fastest rising stars. The young actor appears as the spaceship-manning Titus in the new Wachowski siblings sci-fi epic Jupiter Ascending this month, a role that will be followed by his part in the much-awaited film adaptation of the Jane Austen/Seth Grahame-Smith mash-up Pride and Prejudice and Zombies later this year. Despite the lighthearted nature of the latter project (Booth imagines dreaming up the concept of the film with his friends over beers and exclaiming, “What a badass idea!”) there’s a professorial nature to the way he discusses his craft. Surveying the purposefully distressed-looking room at Soho House Chicago, he muses, “As an actor you’ve got relationships with everything. Whether it be people or your space around you—you have to create that.”

Booth sees himself as an architect, one who visualizes a scene when in his trailer, sets it to his subconscious, and moves forward. He’s taken the same methodical approach to his career: The son of a painter mother and shipping consultant father, Booth began acting at age 16, slowly carving out what has become an enviable path. In just over five years, following lead roles in smaller U.K. films, like 2010’s Boy George biopic Worried About the Boy and 2013’s Carlo Carlei adaptation of Romeo and Juliet, he began landing supporting roles in bigger films like Noah, and last September’s The Riot Club. The young actor is now fully immersed in the chaotic life of a burgeoning movie star. “You have to accept that that is going to be a version of your life,” he says wistfully of his newfound fame and status as a tabloid staple, having been linked to the likes of Taylor Swift and Miley Cyrus. “But you can carve out your own version of normality.” Still, Booth knows things are only ramping up. “I feel like I’m at the very baby point of my career,” he asserts. “I’m still learning and discovering. I’ll be learning till the day I die.”

supermarket: wide-brimmed hats

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Wide-brim hats have garnered a lot of attention lately, due in large part to the rise of festival fashion and, of course, Pharrell. Still, despite the thousands of options currently available, finding a wide-brim hat that's both flattering and stylish is a challenge. The trick is to find the perfect width: If the brim is too small, it will look like your middle school-era fedora; if it's too wide, you may look like you're at the Kentucky Derby. With that being said, click through the gallery to find 10 editor-approved hats.

go behind the scenes at ewan mcgregor's cover shoot

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Ewan McGregor has been around the world on a motorcycle and traveled to a galaxy far, far away on the big screen, so we considered ourselves lucky to get hang with the adventurous Scottish actor when he posed for the cover of the February issue of NYLON Guys. McGregor, who can currently be seen in the Johnny Depp-starring comedy Mortdecai, sat down with us during the shoot for this behind-the-scenes video to talk about some of the music he's currently into, working with Depp, and one of his more memorable red-carpet outfits. Check it out below. 

the top 20 most romantic u.s. cities

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Valentine's Day is on the horizon, which means that lovers are picking out sappy Hallmark cards and planning lavish romantic dates. But where in the greater United States is Cupid hiding out? Well, Amazon has released its annual list of the Top 20 Most Romantic Cities in the U.S., so you might just find the cherub's arrow.

The concept of the "most romantic" city is interesting in and of itself, but the results are even more interesting (read: surprising). Knoxville, Tennessee has been declared the most romantic city in the U.S., followed by Miami. (Maybe South Beach partygoers are finding love among all the revelry?)

You would think that New York's brutal winter (and the fact that the city never sleeps) would cause residents to search for a cuddle buddy, but the city (which is the most populated in the U.S.) didn't make its way onto the list. Our question: Does this mean that love only blossoms in warmer weather? 

Amazon.com composed this list by analyzing sales data from cities with more than 100,000 residents. The online seller then charted their purchases of steamy romance novels, erotic fiction like Fifty Shades of Grey, rom-coms, and romantic music (like that of Miguel and Barry White), as well as sexual wellness products.

Check out the full list below to see where we assume Valentine's Day will be most celebrated and embraced. Even though you might not live in one of these love bug cities, remember—you can still spread the lovey dovey vibes wherever you are. That, or you can have a new-to-Netflix night in with all your single best friends.

1. Knoxville, TN
2. Miami, FL
3. Orlando, FL
4. Alexandria, VA
5. Vancouver, WA
6. Cincinnati, OH
7. Dayton, OH
8. Columbia, SC
9. Round Rock, TX
10. Murfreesboro, TN
11. Las Vegas, NV
12. Pittsburgh, PA
13. Everett, WA
14. Broken Arrow, OK
15. Springfield, MO
16. Salem, OR
17. Billings, MT
18. Wilmington, NC
19. Gainesville, FL
20. Erie, PA

 


8@8: your morning scoop

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Today is...

National Chopsticks Day! Now order some takeout and dig in.

News of the Day:

+ Lactose-intolerants, vegans, and dairy alternative-lovers rejoice: as of February 17, you will be able to get coconut milk in your drink at Starbucks. Does that mean almond milk is on the horizon? DOES IT?!?!??

+ It turns out your delicate, minimalist Instagram feed may not be as unique and special as you think it is. A new blog called The Kinspiracy is here to document the redundant yet aesthetically pleasing photos taking over your Insta feed.

+ New York-based W Hotel are taking full advantage of the dating app phenomenon by offering their Valentine's Day-timed "Swipe Right" package. Don't ask. Just give in.  

The Mindy Project may have lost Adam Pally as Dr. Peter Prentice, but it's about to get some exciting guest stars: Orange is the New Black star Laverne Cox and another yet-to-be-announced celebrity who, according to Mindy Kaling, is the "single biggest, most exciting guest star" the show has had, will make appearences soon. Amal Clooney, anyone?

If you're looking for the perfect Valentine's Day gift, you always have the option of snagging your beau a special limited-edition Christian Grey teddy bear. Nothing says "sexy" like handmade plush animals, right?

Deal of the Day:

Just in time for Valentine's Day, get a free pair of heart-shaped sunglasses with a $100 purchase from Hello Holiday.

GIF of the Day:

 

15 feminist tumblrs you have to follow

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Over the past couple of years, Tumblr has transformed from a place that seemed to be exclusively for fandoms, wayward youths, and memes into a site where ideas are shared and information spread. This has led to the rise of social-justice bloggers and a general increase in thoughtful reblogs and favorites. For teens without informational sex-ed classes and people who didn’t have the opportunity to take a gender studies class, Tumblr can be a virtual classroom. It can also be the place for memes like Texts from Hillary and Feminist Ryan Gosling to flourish. Either way, the blogging platform has become a welcoming feminist space that we’ve embraced.

To add some gender-inclusive goodness to your Dashboard, check out the 15 feminist Tumblrs that we can’t get enough of. You’ll be reblogging in no time.

1. Ladies Against Humanity

There’s nothing like a game of Cards Against Humanity to show you how truly terrible your friends, family, and acquaintances are, bonding you together forever. Now the card game has been made even better, thanks to a feminist twist. With cards like “unnecessarily gendered teas” and “that guy in your gender studies class who’s just ‘playing the devil’s advocate.’” This game hits close to home in the most hilarious way possible.

2. Saved By the bell hooks

Bayside High just got a whole lot more socially aware. Created by community organizer and artist Liz Laribee, “Saved by the bell hooks” combines the intersectional feminist theories of bell hooks with screenshots of our favorite ‘90s high school-center show, Saved By the Bell. The result: a charmingly nostalgic blog that also helps to explain some fundamental feminist theories.

3. Planned Parenthood

If your high school sex-ed class was decidedly lacking (whose wasn’t?), never fear: Planned Parenthood is here, and their Tumblr is filled with all the reproductive health, sex, and advocacy information you could ever need. You can even submit a question for their Tumblr team to answer and live chat with a health educator for emergencies.

4. I’m Not a Misandrist, But

In the style of the (hopefully dying down) trend of celebrities using the phrase, “I’m not a feminist, but…” this funny Tumblr has turned the tables to mock both anti-feminists and those who see feminism as some sort of radical misandry. One of our favorite posts: “I’m not a misandrist but what is the problem with men? All I said was 'You’re pretty smart for a boy.' I complimented him and he just flipped out on me.” Too real.

5. Notorious RBG

Resident badass of the Supreme Court Ruth Bader Ginsburg (author of that 35-page dissent in the Hobby Lobby contraception case) never fails to inspire us. This blog has transformed the 81-year-old justice into a pop-culture-inspired powerhouse, increasing her popularity among a younger crowd and spreading awareness about these important Supreme Court decisions. The best part: Ginsburg’s grandchildren showed her the now-infamous meme.

6. Femsplain

Filled with clever illustrations (including a T-shirt that says “Donut Touch Me”), “Femsplain” is a blog community for anyone who identifies as a woman. In addition to following the Tumblr, you can also support the community by donating to its Kickstarter to help the site grow and hire more paid writers.

7. Lady Parts

Whether you’re an aspiring actress, film aficionado, or just happen to see movies/TV shows/commercials every so often it’s clear that the roles available for women in the entertainment industry are dramatically limited. “Lady Parts” calls bullshit on casting listings and points out some hilarious yet sobering role descriptions, such as “Naked girl huddle[d] in the corner, shivering, and rubbing trash on herself. Compensation: Volunteer.” Cool.

8. The Daily Feminist

“The Daily Feminist” is a must if you’re looking to fill your Dashboard with body-positive, sex-positive, inclusionary feminist quotes and phrases. The creators explain, “This blog is attempting to focus in on the way that women are treated in this society. This includes women of color, queer women, and literally everyone who identifies as a woman regardless of biology.” That’s an ideology we can all use a healthy dose of.

9. Meninist Problems

If you didn’t know whether to laugh, cry, or propel yourself off the face of the Earth when you discovered the #meninist trend on the Internet, we’re there with you. Thanks to “Meninist Problems,” we now understand the real issues that (privileged, white, heterosexual, cisgendered) men face every day on account of their gender. For example, “meninist problem #684 when you have to pay for dinner with the extra income you get for doing the same job as woman in your field.” The struggle is so real.

10. Yik Yak Sexism

YikYak has been rising in popularity amongst college students and 20-somethings everywhere as an anonymous, location-based version of Twitter. However, there’s something about anonymity that allows misogyny to flourish—an unfortunate fact that this blog highlights and scolds by posting screenshots of offensive Yaks. Example: “It’s pathetic how women get special treatment.” And the amazing response: “If I had a dollar for everytime I heard that I’d have 75 cents.” Boom.

12. The Consent Awareness Project

Through photography, artwork, and speech, the Consent Awareness Project advocates for social change in response to rape culture and sexual assault. The nonprofit’s Tumblr accepts submissions of photos that feature the word “no” as a way to spread awareness of its mission. In addition, TCAP also shares information, art, and other campaigns about ending rape culture and sexual violence on its Tumblr.

13. Beyoncé Voters

After Fox News host Jesse Watters decided to call young, single, female voters “Beyoncé Voters” who “depend on government because they’re not depending on their husbands,” this Tumblr came into being to show just what political issues young women actually care about—through Beyoncé quotes and photos of women in politics. Birth control? Health care? Yes, these are issues that we’d like to have a say on. Because if you liked it then you shoulda put a (Nuva)ring on it.

14. Facts About Feminism

It’s important to know our statistics—like how full-time female employees make $0.75 for every dollar that their male colleagues make for the same job. But since there is so much more information out there that proves that gender (as well as race and sexuality) inequality exist today, “Facts About Feminism” delivers followers statistics on sexism from legitimate sources as well as some inspirational posts in a simple, colorful format.

15. Pizza Feminism

The only thing stronger than our desire for pizza is our desire for equal rights and opportunities. So “Pizza Feminism” is just a combination of our two favorite things, basically. The Tumblr superimposes pizza-fied quotes from our favorite famous feminists over photos of cheesy, perfect pizza for a result that’s both delicious-looking and socially aware. Just remember: “No one can make you feel inferior without your pizza.” - Eleanor Roosevelt.

ryan gosling might be starring in 'beauty and the beast'

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After starring in dark films like Drive, The Place Beyond the Pines, and Blue Valentine, designated nice guy and new dad Ryan Gosling may be starring in a (gasp!) kid-friendly film. According to various tweets, from Comicbook.com and Superhero Feed, Gosling has been offered the lead role in the new live-action Beauty and the Beast adaptation. 

It's not hard to see why he'd be Disney's top choice to play the Beast. He can sure as hell can act and sing. And while he may be one of the most attractive humans to ever grace our humble planet Earth, he apparently isn't considered to be actually good looking by Hollywood standards. As the actor told Company a few years back, his average looks were what landed him his breakout role in the sappiest rom-com ever, The Notebook. "The director, Nick Cassavetes, called me to meet him at his house," Gosling said. "When I got there, he was standing in his back yard, and he looked at me and said, 'I want you to play this role because you're not like the other young actors out there in Hollywood. You're not handsome, you're not cool, you're just a regular guy who looks a bit nuts.'"

If Gosling chooses to accept the role, he will star opposite Emma Watson, who was recently confirmed to play Belle. The film itself has had a tumultuous start: In 2012, Guillermo Del Toro attempted to remake the '91 classic, but then pulled out as director. (He remains a producer.) So far, only Watson has been officially cast.

get a first look at marvel's all-female avengers team

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For years, we have watched Marvel’s male dominated cast (Captain America, Thor, Iron Man, etc.) take over the screens with their bulging muscles and testosterone. And it was entertaining, but something huge was missing: strong, intelligent women. Granted, Black Widow, Storm, and Ms. Marvel all kick ass, but these limited female perspectives don't compare to the vast numbers of male superheroes. That’s where A-Force, Marvel Comics' all-female Avengers team, comes in.

In this ultimate girl gang of superheroes, She-Hulk, Dazzler, Medusa, Nico Minoru, and a new heroine named Singularity will kick some serious ass all while keeping their ladylike cool.

A-Force will star in a new monthly series called Secret Wars, written by G. Willow Wilson and Marguerite K Bennett. The series will launch in May. As Wilson told Mashable, the team is “composed of very different characters—from disparate parts of the Marvel U, with very different power sets, identities and ideologies. They’ll have to come together to answer some big questions: what would you sacrifice to succeed? What is being a hero worth?”

Marvel has been finally taking more of an interest in featuring strong heroines. Last September, Marvel announced that a woman Thor would be taking over the hammer. Although it’s the 15th team to feature all women, the recent announcements can ultimately transform comic culture to become more inclusive of women, allowing for a larger female fan base.

Now young girls may finally have their own superheroes to idolize. Marvel, can we join A-Force as the pink-haired badass that fights crime on the daily?? It would be our dream come true.

the best parts from mila kunis' reddit ama

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There are very few people are capable of delighting us the way Mila Kunis does. Whether she's saying sassy things, talking about her favorite cocktails, or just shooting the shit with a nervous BBC reporter, she's always surprising us. So, to no one's surprise, her Reddit AMA was full of wonderful revelations that made us wish we were BFFs with Kunis (our '11 interview with her just wasn't enough). We've compiled some of our favorites below. Prepare to gush. 

Mila and Ashton's daughter, the adorable Wyatt Isabelle Kutcher, was the most life-changing experience of her life. "I am proud to be a stay-at-home mom," she wrote. "I have no desire to be in front of the camera. I find her to be the most challenging job I've had. The amount of love that you have, the type of love that you have, changes, the way you look at the world changes... everything has changed, because of her. I want an eco-friendly car, I want to compost everything, because I want the world to be better for her. And you have the opportunity to make a really great child for the world. Or a really great human being." In case you're wondering, Wyatt will be raised to speak Russian and English and Ashton is also taking Russian lessons.

The person who made her laugh the hardest while working (ever) was Wilder Valderrama on That '70s Show. And at the time of That '70s Show, Kunis didn't think about the show's success. "You know, at 14 years old, you don't really contemplate success and that aspect of work, you kinda do things because it's fun to do," she wrote. "We had an amazing crew and cast, and I had the best 8 years of my life on the show. It's not something you can force, it's either something that happens or doesn't. Yeah!"

There are two people that both Ashton and Mila have kissed: Natalie Portman and Zoe Saldana. Kunis on Portman: "she's a lovely kisser, very polite."

If you want to win Kunis' heart, you have to be funny. Like most women, she believes the most attractive quality is a sense of humor. If you have this and you want to take her on a pizza date, take note: "I genuinely love an all-veggie pizza. I don't love pepperoni, not a fan, and I don't like all-cheese. So for me, veggie or a short-rib pizza that a place near has that I love," she said. "I really like BBQ Chicken, but I know that's sacrilege. And I really like super-thin, burnt-burnt-burnt crust. Like extra crispy."

The Jupiter Ascending star is a huge nerd that used to play World of Warcraft. "I played a LOT," she said. "I was in a guild, I led raids, I was a pretty badass mage. I had multiple characters. I was a frostmage, I think, by the time I stopped playing? But no, I stopped playing when everyone started having children. I was level 70, I quit at level 70, before the expansion pack." Bummer.

She, like just about everyone else, loves Game of Thrones. She said about her Jupiter Ascending co-star: "Sean Bean was great! Huge fan of Game of Thrones! So bummed Ned Stark got murdered! So happy to work with Ned Stark! He's the chillest person ever. He's like... just a normal British guy whom you can just shoot the shit with."

In case you were wondering if Channing Tatum is just as dreamy in real life as he is on screen, Kunis is here to help: "JUST AS DREAMY. Just as dreamy, ladies. Just as dreamy." Also related, this is how Ashton Kutcher smells: "He smells like a man. A real man! But he smells like a man. He does not wear cologne. But he makes sure he showers. Never offending. He has a very good natural smell about him, yeah."

Mila watches The Bachelor and loves it. "I guess the only thing I have to watch is The Bachelor?" she said. "But that's so depressing. It's the first season I'm ever watching it. But it's so addictive. I mean, it's unbelievably addicting. In all 15 seasons or so they've done this, I've never sat down to watch it. But now - oh my god, these women are crazy!" Agreed.

Kunis, whose first language is Russian, dreams in English. But that didn't happen until later in life. "When I learned to speak English fluently, my dreams changed to English," she wrote. "Strange, right?"

Kunis used to have two different colored eyes. "After my surgery, I have a glass lens that was put in my eye," she said. "I now have the same color eyes!"

If she could tell her 14-year-old self anything, it would "to relax and not rush it."

If she could create and teach her own college course, it would be "How to be an awesome, badass chick who knows how to take apart & put together a gun blindfolded, make a four-course meal, and parallel park the shit out of a car." We'd sign up for that.

"I love cereal that tastes like cardboard," said Kunis. "Yes, I know it's weird. My morning cereal is Chex, Almond Milk, and then I put in a bunch of berries - without fail!"

Meg Griffin (Family Guy) is more misunderstood that Jackie Burkhart (That '70s Show) because, in Kunis' words, "Jackie was fine. Jackie got around. Meg? Not so much."

mac is launching a cinderella collection

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Disney's upcoming Cinderella remake is exciting in its own right. Add a limited-edition MAC collab to that, and you've got a recipe for around-the-block lines and lipsticks that are sure to sell out within seconds. 

The collection is a brilliant idea: For many of us, at least around here, the desire to transform into a magical princess will never truly die. Of course, we have to balance that desire with the realities of our day jobs and other adult responsibilities, so all too often we find ourselves putting our inner princess on the back burner (cue the tiny violins). This glittery sparkle-party of a makeup line will allow us to be princesses on the sly: To the rest of the world, it's just purple nail polish. But you know that it's Evil Step Mother. And your pretty pink lip gloss? It's a Glass Slipper, duh.

In short, we've been waiting for this collaboration for our entire lives. We just didn't know it. 

Check out images of the full line on Allure.com. It's launching online February 26 and will be in stores March 5. (via Allure)

insta files friday: rad nylon editors

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We'd like to think we're your go-to destination for the newest bands, fantasty-fulfilling fashion, and all those rad beauty looks that you have been meaning to try. And that our website is the place you can find out about all the weird, amazing happenings on the internet—from that baddass new superhero girl gang to Beyoncé's new Fifty Shades of Grey remixes. And while you may know some of our editors, we thought we'd formally introduce ourselves via our favorite social media platform, Instagram.

Click through the gallery to check out our Instagrams. Then follow us and drop a line introducing yourself!


the 15 best grammy looks of all time

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As most of us with computers already know, awards season is underway—and the Grammys are right around the corner (this weekend, to be exact). One of the best parts of the entire show has to be the preliminary red carpet arrivals. At this point, we feel like we've seen it all, but who knows what can happen? This Sunday, as the 57th Annual Grammy Awards floods our social media feeds with the best (and worst) of music, our eyes will be on the fashion. 

So in a fit of nostalgic rage, we've decided to look back on some of our favorite red-carpet glam moments from Grammys past to get us ready for the big show.

Click through our slideshow and let us know if you agree! See you Sunday.

jennifer lawrence poses naked with a snake

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Jennifer Lawrence sees Rihanna's shark photos and raises her one very large snake: Her shoot for Vanity Fair's March issue features a Columbian red-tail boa constrictor and not much else. It's a direct reference to Nastassja Kinski's iconic 1981 naked Vogue shoot with a snake, only considerably more Jennifer Lawrence-y (that's an art term for casual, found-art that prefers to eat burgers than, say, crudites).

You know what this is? This is that scene at the end of Wayne's World where Cassandra is trying to do her shoot and the snake falls asleep because it is such a bad idea for a video. That's what this moment is: Un-rock-and-roll. Which is okay, Jennifer Lawrence doesn't have to be rock-and-roll, she just has to be herself. That snake, however, is a different story. In order to drape so casually over her naked body, we assume the snake friend had to focus on its breathing and not on the fact that it skipped breakfast.

And, though we do not claim to speak for or even identify as an anaconda, we do believe it would want some if it got those particular buns. Hun?

photo by Patrick Demarchelier for Vanity Fair

 

why you need to see the new 'poltergeist' reboot

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Before we get into the new Poltergeist remake, let’s start off with a little Paranormal 101. Of the cornucopia of supernatural entities gracing the earth’s various spheres of consciousness, one of the most ubiquitous is the ghost. But of course, as with any label, there are so many different shades of ghost (dare I say 50?). Some linger like a broken memory, trapped in limbo between the terrestrial planes and the astral; others harbor more insidious intentions, resisting their ascent into the light, growing ever more envious and scornful of the living. Among this maleficent collection of specters floats the poltergeist, an entity that seeks nothing but to tear shit up. Picture flying furniture, exploding closets, clothes and trinkets strewn about, glowing orbs swirling about gaping portals into other dimensions (lol kinda sounds like my mess of a bedroom).

Back to the Poltergeist remake...

I don't know about you, but when I heard that this seminal horror film was going to get a reboot, something seemed amiss. A perpetual stream of young, creative people spill into L.A. on the daily (so surely there’s no shortage of new and inventive ideas for blockbuster movies). Unfortunately, the proliferation of reboots speaks only to the nature of the industry: prospective films with built-in audiences and marketing campaigns get greenlit while inventive screenplays are ignored and undervalued. With this in mind, I watch the trailer for the Poltergeist remake. 

The exquisitely crafted original featured Steven Spielberg at the helm and revolved around the paranormal abduction of a young girl, Carol Anne Freeling, from her suburban California family. As her existence is love, life, and purity manifest, her effervescent life force attracts the entities that haunt her house away from the salvation of the Light. Part of what made Poltergeist so seismic in the first place was that it helped set so many precedents in the horror genre, from little girls tinkering with TVs to investigating paranormal activity with home videos. So how could the reboot of such a legendary film transcend the genre it helped craft? 

There is only so much one can glean from the trailer, but there are definitely some glimmers of hope. Or is that just the orb in my room?   

THE SETTING 

The reboot is smart to retain the setting of the original: pre-fabricated suburban neighborhoods of assembly-line sameness. In general, when we imagine a haunted house, we think of decrepit creaking doors, dusty, cobweb-laced stairwells: a creepy old mansion. Thus, there’s a sort of comfort in the sterility of newness. No one has lived here before, and thus no one has died here before! We should be safe! But alas and alack—if there’s a will, there’s a way. 

THE CLOWN

Clowns never seem to herald much positivity in cinema, and all I can say is that I positively snapped my laptop shut at the sickening sight of reboot clown. The original clown  iconically catalyzes the climax, so it’s exciting to see that in the trailer, reboot clown partakes in new and exciting scenarios. Ultimately, a respectful reboot maintains the essence of the original while reinterpreting it through a fresh perspective. 

THE TECHNOLOGY 

Situating a reboot in a time period that differs from the original creates an opportunity to re-appropriate the role of technology. For example, the entities that abduct little Carrie Anne in the original communicate with her via television frequencies, which was surely terrifying as most households in '82 America held seemingly innocuous tv sets. However, as we see in the reboot trailer of 2015, a paranormal distortion ripples across the screen of a smartphone. This is arguably even worse, seeing as that I’m not so keen on opening a void in the pocket of my favorite jeans. Is that a ghost in your pocket or are you just happy to see me? Sheesh! 

TANGINA

Okay, this is where I can’t help but get my panties in a bunch. The exceptionally cast Tangina, the diminutive medium who fearlessly leads the Freeling family against forces (un)seen is replaced in the reboot by an Irish priest! Since religion wasn’t much of a player in 1982, it’ll surely be interesting to see how the mysticism of the Church will play into this otherworldly discourse, but I just can’t shake the feeling that I’ll sense the void left by Tangina’s mousy yet comforting presence.

All in all, this reboot descends from a legacy of greatness (may or may not be excluding the Poltergeist sequels, but still…), so it’s worth checking out—if only to see how it avoids the tempestuous portal to reboot hell.       

 

freebie friday: win a $150 gift card from nik stone

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Have you ever had those moments where you feel like your outfit is almost awesome, but not quite there? Whether the skirt is too precious, the shirt too casual, or the colors too predictable—it's impossible to ignore. In those moments, we need tough, sleek accessory pieces to take an acceptable outfit and turn it completely badass. That's where Nik Stone comes in.

Jelena Nik, founder of Nik Stone, credits the inspiration behind her rugged jewelry line to her late father, who had been a civil engineer. The steely, solid silver accessories combine the industrial nature of her father's craft with a chic rocker aesthetic, making them the perfect additions to toughen up any look. It's designed, as Jelena Nik says, "for those who are not afraid to set themselves apart."

Nik Stone is looking gift a lucky NYLON reader with a $150 gift card to their treasure trove of insanely cool pieces. All you have to do is sign up in the form below and follow @NikStoneLA on Instagram.

Enter below to win.

See our Official Rules here.

Jennifer Lawrence & Chris Pratt Are Teaming Up, Maybe

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Well, it was only a matter of time. Jennifer Lawrence and Chris Pratt are in talks to co-star in Passengers, a sci-fi romance from The Imitation Game director Morten Tyldum. The film is set aboard a spacecraft transporting the last remaining bits of civilization to their new planet, when one man (Pratt) awakens from his cryogenic sleep a touch early. When loneliness sets in, he decides to wake up a female passenger to keep him company. Obviously he picks the one that looks like J-Law

But don't start drooling over potential Star-Lord-Katniss zero gravity make outs just yet. According to The Wrap, Lawrence's stacked schedule is preventing her from signing on the dotted line. If the dream pairing does materialize, it would be a major coup for a project that's long been stuck in development hell. Lawrence and Pratt are both coming off monster years — Mockingjay and Guardians of The Galaxy were by far the highest grossing movies of 2014 — so teaming them up is a no-brainer. And who better to sell your movie than the two most likable movie stars on the planet? Just think of the memes.  On the other hand, we're not sure the world (and by world we mean the Internet) could handle a Pratt/Lawrence press tour. But there's only one way to way find out. Sign that contract, and sign it now. 

 

 

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