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we went to psychic school

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“Go ahead and join the bubble.” Reverend Natalie Villeda, director of the Berkeley Psychic Institute (BPI), is beaming at me. With her raven tresses, artsy dress, and high-heeled boots, the stylish Salvadorian-Sicilian has already somewhat shaken my faith in my inner third eye. 

Despite a lifelong intuitiveness, I mistakenly envisioned “Reverend Natalie” as a tunic-clad, middle-aged white woman, and BPI as an incense-infused hippie temple. Clearly my perceptive powers need some fine-tuning.

I’m on the mezzanine floor of an office building, and the 36-year-old Villeda is an intrepid, modern beauty. She gestures toward a circle of office chairs, where students—black, white, Asian, Latino, college-aged, middle-aged—are “grounding,” eyes closed, palms up. I take a seat, knocking into every single chair with my backpack, and assume the bubble position. (Hands cupped or flat? What if my eyes are open justatinycrack?) 

Tonight, my spirit has boarded a school bus, waving goodbye to its formative years. I’m the awkward new student in BPI’s “psychic kindergarten.”

“Do you want an aura healing?” Clairvoyant Program grad Lealah Johnson asks, approaching my chair. I nod. No one’s ever offered to heal my aura. 

Johnson, a graceful woman, with long braids and gold sequined shoes, is part of the family behind Marcus Books, the nation’s oldest continuously black-owned bookstore. As a child, she experienced energies of which she never spoke, afraid no one would believe her. When her older brother was murdered, Johnson’s mother helped the family heal by tenderly speaking of her brother’s spirit. This helped Johnson find a voice for her own experiences—eventually leading her to the BPI.

A dance teacher by day, she floats her hands like languid birds around my body. “There’s purple energy in your left shoulder,” she says. “Three people at your job are all working on the same projects, and it’s frustrating.” My left shoulder is killing me, and exactly three people at my writing job are sorting out assignments. I’m still processing that nugget when Johnson calmly asserts a truth of my recent relationship. I have to admit, her hands are sifting across my auric braille with impressive clarity.

Perhaps not everyone can read with Johnson’s conviction, but the BPI asserts that all regular folks have some inner psychic potential just waiting to be tapped. Is there a way to span the distance between sporadic human hunches and fine-tuned seeing? I’m here to find out. 

Meditating

“Connect your grounding cord from your first chakra to the center of the earth,” instructs Villeda. “Your cord can be something funny; maybe a high-heeled shoe.” 

She’s been cracking jokes all night, helping the meditation class (around 10 of us, including several online students) move through seriousness with “the tool of amusement.” It turns out psychic kindergarten is not the name for the program, but rather an umbrella concept. Hilarity rules.

I sprout a unicorn horn where a tail would be, and plunge it into the earth. We drop people and events down our cords to ground them (“I’m dropping all my ex-boyfriends down!” exclaims one woman). We also imagine ourselves on the roof, while we simultaneously eat crackers. The feeling of seeing one’s self from afar, while mustering the coordination to be the one chewing, is fascinating. We then pull “golden suns” down into our bodies to restore our energy, and I feel strangely lighter post-class. 

Meditation may be more socially acceptable now than it was in 1973, when Lewis S. Bostwick founded BPI, as an extension of the Church of the Divine Man. Everyone and their grandma does yoga these days. But what does meditation have to do with psychic training? 

“BPI meditation is a lot like taking a shower every day,” says Villeda, who has been learning and teaching at the institute for 17 years. “Your aura, your energetic self, collects grime, layers of stuff that does not belong to you.” 

For this reason, the BPI treats its meditation course as a 101 prerequisite for new students. Like a windshield, when the aura is clean, it’s easier to see.

Reading

I decide it would be a disservice to my aura not to give it a two-hour reading by the Institute’s Clairvoyant Program grads. When I approach Villeda to inquire, she says, “Just show up on Monday at 8 p.m. They already know you’re coming.” 

They already know I’m coming? She smiles. 

It’s true, the readers are waiting for me, with a paper chart and crayons. Reverend Chihiro Shiningstar, originally from Japan, is wearing a bright orange scarf and equally bright orange hair flair. Ana Maria Himede Martinez, originally from El Salvador and soon to be 60, is wearing a clustered string of small pearls. 

They spend two hours tag-team-sensing my inherent psychic abilities, coloring the layers of my aura—literally, on the paper—and telling me about my past lives. I am challenged (Maybe my pragmatic intuition is higher than 61 percent?), and entertained (“That part of your aura is supposed to be forest green!” Martinez laughs, because she can only find a brown crayon).

I’m also fascinated. A past life, read by Shiningstar, contains so many specific themes of the life I’m currently living that tears well up. “You can come back any time, if the world seems strange,” says Martinez. “Even just to say hi to us!” 

My heart swells. 

Healing

I dress for healing class, another entry-level course that follows meditation, in a hoodie with bright gold lettering: I woke up like this. Johnson is the first person I see when I enter the BPI, and her shirt is emblazoned with similar block letters: Free your mind. Amusement!

“Fashion is a huge part of my life. It’s a part of my creativity,” says Johnson. “That doesn’t stop because I spend four hours a day meditating. I still want to wear heels and put on some lipstick.”

Reverend Chihiro is teaching tonight’s class, and when we create our grounding cord, she reminds us, “If anything is bothering you, just shake your butt!” Again, I’m impressed by the array of students, from a middle-aged black man to a young white woman attending online from New York. (Students from as far away as Japan and Germany have virtually studied at the BPI.)

I’ve missed the beginning of the series, where students were assigned their “healing masters.” I therefore participate by being the object of healings. Shiningstar demonstrates a chakra healing on me, and, no joke, I feel a prickle moving up my body, in tandem with her hands. She stops for a long time at my forehead, the third eye. “Deep cleaning,” she explains.

After class, with fresh chakras and a sparkling aura, I strut to my car. It’s 10:15pm,  and I’ve been up since six, but psychic kindergarten infuses you with energy. It also makes you ravenously hungry. I strut past Trader Joe’s with dismay. It closed at 10. 

Seeing

I’m unprepared for my next class: advanced clairvoyance. BPI’s Clairvoyant Program is one year for students 37 and younger, two years for those 38 and over, with 15 to 25 hours of work per week. According to Villeda, the age split is due to increased “layers around pictures” (I understand this as ingrained patterns) that happen over time. 

Aside from enrolling in meditation, there are no pre-requisites for what feels like BPI’s most unique offering: this veritable psychic college. Students I speak to are clear: Constantly grounding and clearing, developing the confidence to believe in and say what you see, and filtering through all your own B.S. during the process is serious work. No one receives a pass to Berkeley in “Psychic Idol” auditions. Clairvoyant students are there because they want to be. 

After grounding in a group, we “blow roses” infused with things we want to de-energize, exploding them (I make sure to detonate mine with movie-style special effects). Then, the different categories of students split off, and I’m with the advanced class. There’s a depth of vulnerability I hadn’t expected with attempting to see at that level. I try to unroll “film spools” inside the other students, but I can only conjure an Oriental rug pattern. No pictures. It’s a relief when the instructor, Glenda, tells a dark-haired woman in bright nurse scrubs to read me.

Not more than a minute or two in—something happens. My reader’s “second chakra is lighting up,” and Glenda tells her she “doesn’t have to look” at whatever she has seen in me. 

After class, I pull my car into a row of nighttime lovers and curfew-busting teens at the Berkeley Pier. I’m starving, but I only have a stupid peanut butter sandwich and grapes. What did she see? Did I do something wrong? The sandwich is dry; I shove whole grapes inside of it as my thoughts spin. Eventually, I look down—I have built an entire grape layer. This jelly is made of 100 percent fruit. No, really, I mean 100 percent of the fruit. 

Later, I will tell Johnson and another student how I ended my advanced clairvoyance class parked at the Berkeley Pier, facing doubts, and ultimately laughing to the point of tears over a peanut butter and grape sandwich. 

They will independently have the same two-word response: psychic kindergarten. 

Intuition may be ubiquitous, but it seems that at the advanced levels of training, moving forward involves the kind of dedication of a master artist or athlete. Which isn’t simple. However, with an eclectic community, a 42-year-old curriculum, and a lot of laughter, it seems possible. 

A fluorescent yellow poster hangs on the wall of BPI. The top reads, “Are you ready for the Clairvoyant Program?” The rest of the poster is blank. At the end of my week, I’m convinced that this one unassuming poster says it all.


gigi hadid shuts down rumor that she was doing drugs in this video

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If you follow Cody Simpson on Snapchat, you may have seen a short video that he posted while partying poolside at the Victoria's Secret PINK Ultimate Spring Break Bash in Miami. And, if you looked closely, you might have seen his girlfriend, Instagram (and reality TV) famous model Gigi Hadid do a little dance, then put her face on top of a table, and bounce back up again. There a few reasons why someone would put their nose against a flat surface, but the most obvious that comes to mind is that Hadid might have been snorting drugs. 


Please note: The video takes a while to load

The model, who counts Kendall Jenner and Selena Gomez as best friends, took to Twitter to defend herself. In a series of tweets, Hadid stated that she was working the event (which, she was) and as a role model, she would never do drugs. We have spoken with Hadid on multiple ocassions—about the release of the Pirelli Calendar and her beauty secrets—and while we cannot definitively say whether or not she would do drugs (reminder: everyone technically can), we can say that it does seem out of character, and therefore unlikely.  

(via Gawker)

8@8: your morning scoop

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Today is...
St. Patrick's Day! Curious to know how this holiday came about? We've got you covered.

News of the Day:

+ Zoolander 2's star-studded cameo list just won't stop. It looks like Kanye and Kim will be making an appearance, in addition to other big names like Anna Wintour and Karlie Kloss. Sounds like the movie will be nothing short of fierce.

+ The Vaccines have announced their third album, due out May 26. It will be the band's first album recorded in the U.S. and they have got many tour dates lined up over the next few months.

+ Dolce and Gabbana is in hot water after the fashion duo made some highly controversial statements on gay adoption. Figures like Elton John, Courtney Love, and Victoria Beckham fought back with a #BoycottDolceGabbana hashtag.

+ Disney's live-action Beauty and the Beast is set to be released March 17, 2017. A little far away, too be sure, but we can cheer up knowing that Emma Thompson has been perfectly casted as Mrs. Potts.

It seems Rihanna is set to take over everything, and we don't hate it. She is the first black woman to be the brand ambassador of Dior. It appears 2015 is shaping up to be a pretty good year for RiRi.

Deal of the Day:
Get lucky with 20% off full priced items at ASOS with the code GRAND.

Advice of the Day:
"I don’t want to sound like preposterously idealistic, but I would like in my lifetime, to experience a world where women, all kind of women can connect and support each other." - Laurie Simmons

GIF of the Day:
 

lorde sent the bullied 'x factor' contestant a very sweet message

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Ever since British singer Natalia Kills and her husband Willy Moon tore into X Factor contestant Joe Irvine/destroyed their careers on the New Zealand version of the show, support for the contestant has been pouring in on social media. The latest to offer up words of encouragement is fellow New Zealander Lorde, who proved why she's the best by sending Irvine a handwritten note, and a positive message, in cupcake form. In case you have trouble reading Lorde's handwriting (you shouldn't since it, like her, is flawless) we've transcribed the note for you below. 

"Hi Joe, just wanted to say your individuality, positive energy and spirit are infectious. I think you're doing an awesome job on the show so far... I'm a performer too and I wanted to say that no matter how many people make fun of me for how I dress, move, and act, I'm being me — and that's what's important. Good luck and lots of love, Lorde."

And here is the photo of the message which Irvine posted to Twitter:

 

 

Ellie Goulding took an opposite but no less satisfying approach:

video premiere: halsey's acoustic "ghost" performance

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Lately, our former band crush Ashley Frangipane—or Halsey, as she is known professionally—has been gaining attention for her unique, captivating pop sound and touring with The Kooks and, soon, Imagine Dragons. Her debut EP, Room 93, dropped this past October, rightfully yielding high praise for its blend of a dreamy electro-pop sound with gritty and honest lyrics.

In her live performance on 1 Mic 1 Take, she performs a stripped-down version of her song "Ghost." The acoustic version emphasizes her incredible, full-bodied and slightly husky voice. Paired with the piano's minor chords, this synth-free performance adds a further urgency to the raw, emotionally-charged song. Quite honestly, it rivals the original.

Learn more about Halsey in her Nylon band crush feature, and be sure to follow her on Facebook and Twitter. (Also, her Instagram makes for some rad hair inspiration.) Then listen to the entire Room 93 EP on Spotify.

the 7 best looks from the 'insurgent' premiere

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This Friday marks the release of the latest, highly anticipated installment of the Divergent trilogy. As is always the case, those involved in the film were lucky enough to watch it early, and despite the film's gritty, no-frills nature, the cast members showed up in stunning makeup and cocktail dresses. From Shailene Woodley's slinky, slitted black halter to Suki Waterhouse's ethereal gown to Zoe Kravitz's structured metallic mini, the red carpet was filled with eye-catching looks. Click through the gallery to see our favorites.

jimmy kimmel + matthew mcconaughey made a hilarious fake commercial

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Jimmy Kimmel kicked off his five-night stand at SXSW with a gag-heavy bit starring himself and the pride of Texas, Matthew McConaughey, in a commercial for a local video store. In the streaming era, Vulcan Video is a rare bird—an independently owned movie emporium that still boasts obscure titles and an extensive VHS collection. So, in the face SXSW-style corporatization, Kimmel and McConaughey came to its rescue with these delirious ads that riff on everything from McConaughey's famous catchphrase to his legendary appearance in Texas Chainsaw Massacre: The Next Generation. It's enough to make us long for the days of browsing through sections and late fees. Also: free parking. 

kylie & kendall are launching a mobile game

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Sorry, haters: Looks like the Kardashian clan has no plan to slow their roll. You could even say that the Jenners are keeping up with the Kardashians (zing!), as Kylie and Kendall will be launching their own mobile game soon. Kendall made the official announcement on Twitter this morning:

Based on the image above, it seems like our characters will be able to take tons of polaroid selfies on the beach. As if we needed another app to download after the massive success of "Kim Kardashian: Hollywood," we're sure this one's going to cost us hours of our lives that we'll never get back. Getting advice from Kim is fun and all if your alter-ego/Internet persona wants to be an A-list trophy wife, but we'd much rather walk the runway with Kendall and participate in whatever antics Kylie gets herself into these days.

We have a lot of questions about this whole mobile game thing. Like, was this Kris' idea, did they get Kim's blessing? But what we really want to know is whether or not this be an experience worth live-blogging. For now, all we can do is stay tuned. Maybe Kourtney and Khloe will be next for the digital takeover.


isabelle fuhrman has a rad makeup collab

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Isabelle Fuhrman is not only beautiful, bright, and stylish. At 18, she’s quite an accomplished actress: You might have noticed her in Orphan, The Hunger Games, or All the Wilderness. The most recent addition to her resume? Makeup creator. 

Isabelle recently collaborated with ColourPop Cosmetics (maker of super-pigmented, high-quality products that are really affordable) to create a capsule collection called “Fetch Please.” The collection features colorful eyeshadows and neutral lipsticks, in a totable box topped with a drawing that Isabelle herself made. So, dying to know more about the makeup, we caught up with Isabelle and picked her brain. 

What’s the meaning behind the title “Fetch Please”?
"When I was little, pre-Mean Girls, I started to call my sister Fetch or Fetchy. It’s still is a nickname we have for each other. My sister used to not be the best at doing her makeup and because this box is something that can be a one-stop-shop it was almost like 'Fetch, Please do your makeup well!' It’s sort of a joke but it’s pretty catchy too."

Where did you derive your inspiration for the collection?
"A lot of my inspiration for Squint came from the makeup from Cara Delevinge's i-D magazine cover. My inspiration for Liason came from her Style.com mag cover. Those two colors are mainly for a really bold, different kind of cat-eye and they are super-pigmented so they will last all day. 
Lovey Dovey and Hunger were colors that I always thought would go together. I had been looking for a matte maroon and matte grey like that but I couldn’t find the right shade from other companies so I just made with the team at Colourpop. Just a Sip is based off of the peach eye color from Louis Vuitton’s Spring 2012 collection makeup. I loved the color and Colourpop helped me make it! It’s a good daily color that is very feminine. Squeeze, Precious, and Paramour were colors that I feel everyone needs in their makeup bag. A good pink, a great nude, and a super-bold berry color."

This collection is such a personal expression of you. What were you hoping to share with the girl who wears this makeup?
"Well, I love to play around with makeup and try new things. I think that this box is for a very confident woman who isn’t afraid to stand out and have people check out their makeup on the street. The colors are very different and the combinations are endless. It really is a kit that will be able to travel with you everywhere from a fancy dinner to a fun weekend at Coachella."

Do you have some go-to skin-care products that help keep your skin looking gorgeous?
I wash my face every morning I apply Lancer's Sheer Fluid Sun Shield SPF to my face. Then at night I wash my face with a gentle cleanser from Jurlique and then I use Caudalie Vinosource moisturizer. Whenever I go to Atlanta I see the Kathleen Denney for a facial. She’s AMAZING! And she turned me onto these amazing masks from Gunilla of SwedenLerosett and Akta that I use once in a while to keep my skin clear and healthy. 

Who are your style and beauty icons and influences?
"My mom. She is so stylish and beautiful inside and out. She has taught me so much and I am so grateful to everything she does for me. My sister too. The two of them are my best friends."

What are you up to right now? I hear it involves many piercings....
"(laughs) I’m working on a film called Hellbent and my character goes through a big transformation. I have a lot of piercings in the movie! Pretty cool for my character, Danni, but It’s weird for me to look in the mirror and see them! So different from me, it’s awesome."

Besides your sister Madeline's great music, what are you listening to these days?
"I listen to Madeline’s music A LOT! Her songs just get better and better, I can’t wait for the world to hear them. I listen to a lot of Ed Sheeran, Ben Howard, Grimes,  and Coeur De Pirate. I’ve really gotten into classical lately too. I listen to anything that makes me feel something."

What’s on the horizon for you? "Fetch Please part 2" or a film we can see you in soon?
"Maybe! I had such a great time working on Fetch Please with Colourpop. I’d love to do it again. I have a movie called Cell coming out soon and I just wrapped a romance film called One Night. I also graduate in June."

video premiere: prinze george's "upswing"

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There's a paradox to Prinze George's gleaming track "Upswing," a song that manages to lift you up with one eye towards the ground. "Upswing is a celebration of the contrasts of life," says the Brooklyn-based trio's frontwoman, Naomi Almquist. "It's about understanding life as one continuous motion, where the highs and lows are just as pivotal as the moments in between. It's a reminder to find beauty in every experience, or at the very least, wisdom."
 
It makes sense then, that the video for the latest single off the group's debut self-titled EP shows a girl diving slow-motion into a neglected pool, just as Almquist sings "But I always rise" and the song erupts into its expansive chorus. "We wanted the 'Upswing' video to be a visual that emphasizes the individual experience," Almquist says, "Illustrating the ebb and flow of life and highlighting the triumphs that ultimately result from our struggles or great leaps of faith."
 
You can catch Prinze George all week at SXSW:
 
3/17 - Austin, TX - Bungalow
3/18 - Austin, TX - Buffalo Billiards
3/19 - Austin, TX - Stay Gold
3/20 - Austin, TX - Vulcan Gas Company
3/20 - Austin, TX - Flatstock Stage (Convention 

sxsw: 11 artists you need to know

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In recent years, South By Southwest has ballooned into an extravaganza of movies, technology, commerce. But its foundation is still the music. SXSW was built on the record label showcases, sun-soaked concerts, and late-night parties that made it one of North America's biggest festivals. One of the its defining characteristics has been as a place where young acts transform themselves from borderline-unknowns or music-blog obsessions to full-blown stars. Here are our picks for the 11 acts destined to breakout this week.

meghan trainor's new video is surprisingly sexist

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Meghan Trainor is known for her retro style, but with her latest music video, "Dear Future Husband," the 21-year-old singer is giving a whole new meaning to the word "vintage." Singing about housewife duties and expectations for suitors to shower her with gifts, Trainor creates an outdated picture of what relationships should be, depicting scenarios that have more of a place in Mad Men than they do in real life. Wrapped up in a catchy pop song and vibrant music video, the message is unassumingly dangerous.

The video shows Trainor clad in her go-to twee ensembles, singing her demands for her future husband: "Take me on a date," "don't forget the flowers every anniversary," and "treat me like a lady even when I'm acting crazy." In return, the singer says that she will "be the perfect wife, buying groceries, buy-buying what you need." It's clear that the relationship Trainor creates an image of is not one where husband and wife are equals, but rather one based on antiquated, heteronormative gender roles.

Though she refers to herself as "the perfect wife," the 21-year-old does show that in practice, her definition of perfect doesn't quite match up to the stereotypical ideal—she "never learned to cook" and also works "that 9 to 5," so her future husband can't expect everything of her. But that doesn't mean that she doesn't expect him to live up to a traditional definition of chivalry—opening doors for her, buying her presents, telling her she's beautiful every night—all in exchange for "that special loving." Trainor's narrative shows that her main contribution to the relationship (if it can really be considered a relationship) is her sexual favors, which can easily be withheld if he doesn't meet her demands—as if he's the only one who would benefit from sex. 

While the singer's demands for her relationships show her own effort to establish her standards, they really evaporate any sense of equality and further engrain traditional dating and relationship roles into the listener's mind. It's a stark contrast to Taylor Swift poking fun at "crazy women" stereotypes in "Blank Space" and Beyoncé singing about self empowerment in "***Flawless." At best, this video is cringe-worthy. The worst case scenario, though, is that this song could easily prove to anyone who is misinformed about feminism that the best relationships are the ones in which men bestow gifts on women and women are housewives.

Regardless of her intentions, Trainor's video, with its over-the-top aesthetics and cheeky acting, does not come across as a sarcastic statement about traditional relationships, but rather an earnest, misguided call for a return to the dating sensibilities of years past. When speaking to TIME about her album last October, she said that songs like "Dear Future Husband" were her way of pushing against today's hookup culture, saying, "I hope people can hear my songs and know I’m a badass girl and I deserve a good guy to take me out on a date." Perhaps the demand-laden song was meant as a way to encourage girls to see their own self-worth, but the result falls flat. It's possible to show women that they have value that's independent of how men see them—but this doesn't even come close to doing that. 

When Trainor powered onto the pop charts in the summer of 2014 with her body-loving anthem, "All About That Bass," reactions were a mix of pleasant surprise that diverse body types were suddenly becoming embrace in popular music and disappointment that this new preference for curves was still presented in the male gaze. "Dear Future Husband" makes it clear that Trainor's message leaves women in their stereotypical, traditional gender roles and fails to make any progress from the outdated dating norms of the 1950s. And when a message like that is cloaked in a radio-ready pop song, it becomes all the more easy for it to dangerously permeate society. 

 

azealia banks does not hold back in this playboy interview

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Throughout her career, Azealia Banks has made it her trademark to spark controversy, whether on social media or during interviews. Most of the time her outspokeness has overshadowed her music, which is a shame since she put out one of last year's best rap albums. Banks' latest head-turning remarks come from her sprawling Playboy cover story where, unlike most of the women who cover Playboy, Banks touched upon issues of race, the music industry, religion, and sexuality. 

The pull quote making the most noise on the Internet today comes at the expense of who Banks referes to as "fat white Americans":

"I hate everything about this country. Like, I hate fat white Americans. All the people who are crunched into the middle of America, the real fat and meat of America, are these racist conservative white people who live on their farms. Those little teenage girls who work at Kmart and have a racist grandma—that’s really America."

Banks, who grew up in Harlem, has been vocal about race relations in the past, most notably when talking about the music industry. She started a social media war with Iggy Azalea over accusations that the rapper was reappropriating black culture without a proper understanding of it. She didn't mention Azalea in the interview, but did mention some other of her peers and their relation to American culture:

"The race thing always comes up, but I want to get there being very black and proud and boisterous about it. You get what I mean? A lot of times when you’re a black woman and you’re proud, that’s why people don’t like you. In American society, the game is to be a nonthreatening black person. That’s why you have Pharrell or Kendrick Lamar saying, 'How can we expect people to respect us if we don’t respect ourselves?' He’s playing that nonthreatening black man s---, and that gets all the white soccer moms going, 'We love him.'"

And as if she was predicting the backlash she'd be getting for this interview, she compared how people react to her comments to how they react to someone like Lorde's. Banks suggested it all comes down to race: "Lorde can run her mouth [on Twitter] and talk s--- about all these other bitches, but y’all aren’t saying she’s angry," she said. "If I have something to say, I get pushed into the corner."

She also dropped a pretty great metaphor on atheism and the existence of God: 

"I don’t understand how someone could be an atheist. Think about God as software, right? If you were to look at God’s face, your head would explode. Because your head is a calculator, and the amount of information that would be embedded in his face would fit only on a Google-size data center. Your head cannot handle that much information. Stop looking for God."

You can read the rest of the interview here. It's well worth it. 



8 instagram-worthy brunch recipes

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While Instagram may be filled with photos of sunsets, outfits of the day, and hot people doing things, there may be no Instagram topic as pervasive as #brunch. Sunday morning feeds become rife with cool latte art, Eggs Benedict, and trendy cafes—but you don't have to spend big bucks to have a brunch that photographs beautifully. In fact, many of our favorite food bloggers' morning meals look (and taste) even better than our $20 prix fixe, and you can make them in the comfort of your own home (read: while still wearing your pajamas).

Whether you prefer a savory egg dish or are a sucker for sweet pancakes and crepes, these eight recipes are guaranteed to get your day started off on the right foot and make your Instagram look even better. Break out the frying pan and find some natural light for the most picturesque brunch ever.

Pinch of Yum's Poached Egg Avocado Toast


Photo via Lindsay Ostrom, Pinch of Yum.

Avocado toast is an Insta-brunch classic: It's vibrant, easy-to-make, and always hits the spot when you need something savory. Pinch of Yum breaks down how to create the perfect poached egg to make your avo toast better than ever. Just add some Parmesan and parsley to top off the open-faced sandwich and you'll be good to go.

Half Baked Harvest's Lemon Ricotta-Stuffed French Toast Crepes


Photo via Tieghan Gerard, Half Baked Harvest.

This French brunch is so decadent that it could also double as dessert. Half Baked Harvest soaks basic crepes in milk, eggs, cinnamon, and sugar before cooking for a French toast-inspired twist. A dollop of homemade coconut whipped cream and juicy, vanilla-stewed strawberries makes this meal picture perfect.

A Couple Cooks' White Pizza With Pecorino, Scallions, and Egg


Photo via Alex Overhiser, A Couple Cooks

Eating cold leftover pizza for breakfast may be one of our guilty pleasures, but that doesn't mean that getting our morning pizza fix can't be a little more gourmet. A Couple of Cooks makes a simple dish with just pizza dough, scallions, eggs, and cheese. To get your brunch on the table in no time, make the dough in advance.

Minimalist Baker's Gluten-Free Breakfast Tostadas


Photo via Dana Shultz, Minimalist Baker.

Brunch can be a sad affair if you're gluten-free, as countless pancakes, waffles, and breads are deemed inedible. Never fear: Minimalist Baker has concocted a mouthwateringly delicious tostada recipe that's crazy easy to make. Plenty of vegetables make this a brunch that won't leave you feeling bogged down all day.

Cooking Classy's Nutella-Stuffed French Toast With Macerated Strawberries


Photo via Jaclyn Bell, Cooking Classy.

Sandwiches are one of those perfect foods that tastes good for lunch or dinner, and magically, even better for breakfast. This isn't your classic savory breakfast sandwich though: Cooking Classy stuffs indulgent French toast with Nutella to create the sweetest sammie ever. Dust with some powdered sugar and serve with sugary strawberries to make an even more decadent meal.

Cookin' Canuck's Poached Eggs Over Salmon and Avocado


Photo via Dara Michalski, Cookin' Canuck.

Poached eggs are one of the most impressive brunch foods you can make just because this cooking method takes some practice. But once you've got the hang of it, you'll be making your eggs nice and yolky all the time. Cookin' Canuck serves a freshly poached egg on top of arugula, avocado, and salmon for a light, refreshing brunch.

Baker by Nature's Greek Yogurt Confetti Pancakes


Photo via Ashley Manila, Baker By Nature.

If you're struggling to resist the urge to whip up a Funfetti cake for brunch, here's the healthier option. Baker by Nature makes confetti-speckled pancakes with Greek yogurt for a soft, fluffy consistency that doesn't sacrifice flavor for nutrition. Drizzle on some maple syrup for a final touch of sweetness and serve with plenty of fresh fruit.

Fork and Bean's Southwestern Parsnip Hash


Photo via Cara Reed, Fork and Beans.

There's nothing quite like a cast iron skillet to create a picturesque brunch that's also deceptively good for you. Fork and Beans shreds parsnips to create a starchy base for this hearty meal, while black beans, tomatoes, and avocado add some Mexican-inspired flavor. This protein-packed brunch will keep you fueled all day long.

new behind-the-scenes 'game of thrones' clips are here

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With the season five premiere of Game of Thrones just a few weeks away, HBO has released five new videos that tease what lies ahead for our favorite citizens (and exiles) of Westeros. A new promo video shows crowds in combat, Jon Snow looking stressed out (can you blame him?), Cersi power-walking through the palace, Arya wielding a sword, and Tyrion drinking with the Master of Whispers. Additional videos give an exclusive behind-the-scenes look into the creation of this season’s costumes, props, and sets. Altogether, they're almost as good as an actual new episode. Almost. 

Take a look at the latest to satisfy your GoT craving. Game of Thrones premieres on Sunday, April 12, at 9pm on HBO—though you probably didn't need us to tell you that. 


toronto's sacha chapin makes music for (ex) lovers

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Listening to Sasha Chapin’s debut album, Golden Ticket, is a lot like opening a bag of chips. Maybe you had no intention of finishing the whole thing, but before you’ve had enough it’s all gone—again. The Toronto singer and songwriter creates tiny morsels of tenderly crafted pop music which highlight everything bitter and sweet about relationships with the austerity that only pop music can provide. 

Over 13 tracks, Chapin takes listeners back to the after-parties you don’t remember being at, text messages sent too impulsively, and tables for one, but he does it all with the uninhibited enthusiasm of someone who just found a five dollar bill in their spring jacket. On "Number One Dad," he sings, “You’re like my favorite song/I don’t know all the words/but I can sing along” and wistfully captures the naivety and charm of romance while simultaneously offering us all a line to scare first dates away with.

Chapin’s catchy and charming melodramatic songs are bed-headed conversations that orbit the delirium of love, but it’s not just ex-girlfriends that he has on his mind, so we checked in with him to hear about his nervous breakdown, procrastination, and well, inevitably ex-girlfriends.

What were you doing before you started playing music?
I was writing a novel. I was doing that for two or three years and then I had a nervous breakdown and needed something else to do, so I started writing songs.

Did themes that you were exploring as an author carry over into songwriting?
I’ve always been interested in fiction that explores interior life as much as events within drama. But my fiction was mostly concerned with displaying my intelligence to strangers, lots of long verbose passages. Kind of like cotton candy, just all bundled together. Songwriting has really allowed me to resist the impulse to be so verbose and grandiose because there are fewer syllables.

It’s funny you say that because your songs are very short and concise, by pop standards.
I think the brevity of my songs has a lot to do with insecurity. I don’t want to bore people. I like a lot of short music, Guided by Voices, early Beatles stuff, but I’m also at a point with my songwriting where when I stumble upon a good hook or a really nice structure, I don’t want to mess it up.

Can you trace your desire to make music back to a particular song or moment?
It was a party in high school. I was stoned lying on the couch, and Sgt. Peppers was on the stereo like it is at a high school party. There are two sections to the Sgt. Peppers theme: track one, and the reprise at the end. There’s this one line where there’s a variation on the theme. Instead of singing “Sgt. Peppers lonely heart clubs band” they sing “Sgt. Pepper’s one and only heart clubs band” and there’s this beautiful fluidity to the melody right at that moment. Something really shocked me about the melody of that, how it seemed so intuitive and primitive yet obviously a product of tremendously intelligent craft. Right after my nervous breakdown I spent a lot of time wandering around at night listening to my favorite pop music, my comfort music, and listened to that track over and over again. Even just that one line, trying to absorb what went into that moment.

How do you procrastinate?
I go on my computer and tell myself I’m going to learn about something serious and then I end up looking at pictures of my ex-girlfriends.

What’s something people are surprised to hear you’re really good at?
People are surprised to hear I’m a bit of a jock. I have a workout I do with a sledgehammer every morning. I put on reggae and swing a sledgehammer around, that’s how my day starts. Like so many things in my life it started with a chance encounter on the internet.

If you could be paid in anything other than cash what would it be?
I had my earwax removed at the doctor the other day and it felt amazing, so I’m going to go with periodic ear waxing.

What band would you choose to support you on tour?
She’s way above my pay grade, but Sharon Van Etten.

What would be the ideal setting for someone to listen to your album in?
Someone told me they used my album as make-out music the other day and that’s about the most flattering thing I’ve ever heard. I guess the same way I listen to music, walking around at 3am, trying to fill your mind with something just to get through the moments. Or while eating handfuls of food from the fridge. Moments of comfort that have a shameful element to them.

The name of your album, Golden Ticket, reminded me of Charlie and the Chocolate Factory and exclusivity, but what does it mean to you?
I had a long list of potential album titles and my friends, who are generally smarter than me, talked me out of every single one of them. Some were Mental Health Album and Avoid Situations, which is a HorseEbooks tweet I really liked. I think one theme that occurs a lot on the album is relationships that are a bit too loving, a bit too intoxicating, and a bit unbalanced. That’s an idea that resonates a lot with me, overindulgence, something being so good that it overwhelms your farsightedness and any boundaries you thought you had. So that can be a chocolate bar, or it could be a person.

Stream or purchase Golden Ticket on Sasha’s bandcamp page.

spring's prettiest jumpsuits are here

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There are few things more wonderful in this life than putting on a single item of clothing and having it function as an entire outfit. It's not quite warm enough to break out our throw-on-and-go dresses, so the next best thing? A jumpsuit, of course—all the benefits of a dress without letting the wind in. 

The prettiest one-pieces of the season have wide legs, loud patterns, and make a statement. Click through for what we're coveting. 

eminem's daughter hailie is officially grown up

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Before there was Suri Cruise, Blue Ivy, and North West, there was the enigmatic Hailie Jade Scott Mathers. The subject of just about every early aughts Eminem song, we felt like we knew everything about Hailie—and, in a way, we did. But as Eminem began to wax poetic about his addictions and inner demons, Hailie moved out of the public eye and was able to live her own independent life—as any young girl should. But now, an image the 19-year-old uploaded to Twitter has gone viral.

The self-taken photo shows the blonde teenager smiling. And while there isn't much else to the photo, it's just nice to see a former semi-famous kid doing well. She recently graduated from high school with a 3.9 GPA and was named homecoming queen her senior year. She is currently attending Michigan State University. In a school newsletter, she named her parents as the people who were "Most Influential In [Her] Lifetime," writing, "My mother and father are because they have pushed me to be the person I am and have given me all the support to achieve what I have." Well, it's fair to say that she's grown up to be a sweet, independent woman—like we always hoped she'd be.


photo via @haiilie_scott Twitter

(via E!)

check out the trailer for miley cyrus' bangerz tour dvd

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Miley Cyrus' 2014 Bangerz world tour could have easily been renamed the Bonkerz tour—that's how out of control it looked. And we mean that in the best way possible. A live embodiment of her Disney-on-acid makeover, Miley's stage show featured a tongue slide, a giant monument to her beloved late dog Floyd, and dancing everything. Those are just some of the things you glimpse in the new trailer for the Bangerz Tour DVD, out March 24. We're not sure what's more surprising: that this thing looks like so much fun, or that people still make DVDs. 

8@8: your morning scoop

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Today is...

National Oatmeal Cookie Day! Get snacking.

News of the Day:

+ If you've ever felt the desire to groom Drake's eyebrows, now you can with the "Drizzy Eyebrow Pluck Makeup Spa" app. Talk about zero to 100.

+ The second Game of Thrones mixtape is here, and you can stream and download it for free. Featuring songs from Estelle, Snoop Dogg, and Ty Dolla $ign, this playlist will hold us over until season five.

+ Robert Downey Jr. is having fun experimenting with some (very short) film shorts. The actor made nine color-themed shorts, all about half a minute long.

+ The first episode of Community season six is ready to stream on Yahoo.

+ George R. R. Martin has announced that he is skipping San Diego Comic Con this year to focus on writing the next book in the Songs of Ice and Fire series, Winds of Winter, which currently does not yet have a release date.

Deal of the Day:

Donate your gently-worn bras to Journelle until March 31 to benefit their Free the Girls partnership, which helps women who have been the victims of human trafficking. Bonus: you'll also get 20% off a new bra.

Advice of the Day:

"I think women are way stronger than they know, or sometimes they do know but they don’t always feel like being strong. Sometimes, you’re like, ‘Can I get a pass?’" - Rihanna

GIF of the Day:

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