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Tarantino Rides Again: The 'Hateful Eight' Premieres

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The eight gunslingers in Quentin Tarantino's The Hateful Eight really are hateful, so why do we like watching them so much, and so long -- 3-and-a-half hours -- give or take, including an overture and intermission. Not only can't you take your eyes off them, you want to catch every word of Quentin Tarantino's clever script. Utilizing the tropes of Westerns -- he claims The Good, the Bad and the Ugly was a big influence -- Tarantino's Western borders on horror, as the eight come together in a cabin in a snowstorm. Act I features a stagecoach: John Ruth (Kurt Russell), a bounty hunter, wants to bring his charge, Daisy Domergue (Jennifer Jason Leigh), to Red Rock for hanging, and for the reward. Another bounty hunter, Major Marquis Warren (Samuel L. Jackson), wants a ride. He wisely advises, better to bring her in dead. Driving past a Christ on the Cross, this company arrives at a storm hounded pit stop, and the rest of the bearded group: Bruce Dern, Tim Roth, Demian Bichir, Michael Madsen and Walton Goggins. You might say, after watching these mesmerizing events, for these men crucifixion might be a blessing.

In olden days people attended movies as if they were events, dressing up and planning for a fine night out. The thought of cramming in those viewings, a commercial accommodation, was anathema. In the grand tradition, The Weinstein Company hosted a special screening at the Ziegfeld this week: a popcorn and soda night, plus Raisinettes and Skittles felt old-school, but the after party at The Rainbow Room was anything but. The actors occupied a spacious corner, with family and friends. A Tarantino regular, Michael Madsen, held court with his sister Virginia Madsen, a star of Joy having its own stellar premiere this week. Kurt Russell attended the premiere with Goldie Hawn. The Fool for Love duo, Nina Arianda and Sam Rockwell paid their respects.

Channing Tatum is in the movie too, new to the Tarantino posse. He hung back with Bill Paxton. Of course the Foxcatcher and Magic Mike star makes a charming addition to the Hateful fold, and outside before getting into his giant black SUV he posed for selfies with fans. But back at the Rainbow Room, the dance party was getting started, with Finding Neverland's Laura Michelle Kelly twirling about in a red gown.

A version of this post also appears on Gossip Central.

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Il Divo's Urs Buhler Makes First Visit to the Holy Land Before Christmas

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Photo: Hillel Maeir, TPS / Il Divo's Urs Buhler overlooking the Old City of Jerusalem last Wednesday, December 16.

Il Divo's Urs Buhler recently visited Israel, touring the country's major cities and sites. The Swiss tenor, who has performed all over the world with Il Divo, the international pop/opera crossover quartet with millions of fans across the globe, had never before visited the Holy Land.

"It's been absolutely fascinating being here for this short amount of time," Buhler told Tazpit Press Service in an interview last Wednesday of his four-day visit from December 14-17.

Buhler particularly enjoyed visiting Jerusalem, which he said was unlike any other city in the world. "You can find similar beach cities like Tel Aviv but Jerusalem is completely different."

"I cannot imagine another city in the world where there is so much going on, so much diversity, and such stark contrasts between religions and ideologies," Buhler said.

"I haven't felt unsafe for a second," Buhler noted, in light of city's current security situation . "I'm really happy to be here and I'm enjoying every moment."

"I'm not really practicing religion these days, but even if you're not spiritual, there's something truly amazing about this city. It cannot be a coincidence that the largest part of the world population sees this city as the epicenter of the world's religions," he told TPS.

Buhler grew up Catholic in his native Switzerland and explained that as a child, he would sing biblical texts in the church choir and later on, as a classical singer. Church music became a major part of his solo career before he joined Il Divo. "I got to visit all these biblical settings in Israel that I've sung about throughout my career. To actually be on the Mount of Olives and the Garden of Gethsemane was unreal."

"I should have visited Israel 20 years ago - being here adds a completely different dimension to everything I've done in my artistic life as a classical singer," said Buhler, who has been performing with Il Divo since the band was first formed by British TV talent judge and music producer, Simon Cowell, 12 years ago.

"I believe that anyone who is religious, should come here - it will change everyone's spiritual experience of their religion," he commented.

During the visit, Buhler also managed to pack in an Enrique Iglesias concert, who performed in Tel Aviv on Wednesday night, December 16. The classical singer, who is a resident of Andorra, also visited Jerusalem, Yad Vashem, the Dead Sea, Tel Aviv, Jaffa and Zichron Yaakov in the north.

The Israel Ministry of Tourism helped to organize the trip for Buhler, together with Traci Szymanski, a Hollywood executive who works in the entertainment industry in Los Angeles, and has brought many celebrities and music stars to Israel.

"I would love to perform here with Il Divo," said Buhler, who pointed out to Caesarea or Jerusalem's Sultan Pool as potential venues. "This country has the perfect backdrop for our kind of music and audiences."

"It's always been a goal of Il Divo to perform before an Israeli audience and I can't wait to do so in the future!"

The Armani-clad multinational male quartet sings operatic renditions of pop songs, which have sold over 30 million albums worldwide. Il Divo's new album 'Amor & Pasion' was recently released in November.

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The Best Albums of 2015: Did Your Favorite Make the List?

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This year, traditional songwriting went head-to-head with algorithm-based formulas, leaving our brains confused about what makes a good song (and what constitutes the concept of an album). Should we love something just because it's hummable and memorable (i.e. anything by The Weekend)? Or should we expect more out of a song (like when Adele shows us greatness)? Is there room for both approaches? With songwriting teams, collaborations and the ubiquitous melodies of super Swede Max Martin all over the charts in 2015, it was difficult to sift through the barrage. The top choices, however, perfected old sounds in new ways. Below, our roundup of 2015's best albums:

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1. Alabama Shakes / Sound & Color
This mature, genre-bending collection from Brittany Howard and bandmates is further proof that the group deserves the hype it has generated since its formation in 2009. Seeing the Shakes perform the album live in Muscle Shoals this past August was an out-of-body experience. Don't call this blues or rock. It's otherworldly.

Standout Track:
"Gimme All Your Love"

2. Adele / 25
Seriously, what is there to say? We can't get enough of the voice, the authenticity, the songwriting brilliance (even if she shares credits on every track, her style shines through). As great as 25 is, we can't wait for the next album. Will it be 28? Just imagine if she came up with a recording of universal healing a la Marvin Gaye's What's Going On? Adele, we're in it with you for the long haul!

Standout Track:
"Million Years Ago"

3. Leon Bridges / Coming Home
It's too bad Bridges's songs are often labeled as "retro" simply because they use traditional vocal styles and instruments. This Texas-by-way-of-Atlanta singer is only 26, but he brings six decades of style together in songs that tell the story of love and life in the South. Hot sounds!

Standout Track:
"River"

4. Duran Duran / Paper Gods
This is the best surprise of the year: a completely relevant, danceable, addictively tuneful album by Duran Duran that feels 100% like it belongs in 2015. Although the group has had moments in and out of the spotlight since its heyday in the 1980s, its songwriting has never stopped evolving. This is fun, with depth.

Standout Track:
"The Universe Alone"

5. Jason Isbell / Something More Than Free
This Drive-By Truckers alum has outgrown his role as a fixture on the scene in both Athens, Georgia and The Shoals area in his home state of Alabama: he's going worldwide. Here, Isbell toes the line of Americana, but sounds more like a roots-rock poet than a country buff. With expert production by rising star Dave Cobb, this record makes us think about the fleeting moments in our own lives.

Standout Track:
"24 Frames"

6. Florence and the Machine / How Big, How Blue, How Beautiful
A gorgeous, sweeping album from Florence Welch, How Big blends the best of current pop stylings with the expansiveness of rock opera. Sunnier than her previous outings and with plenty of singalong moments, this one is not to be missed.

Standout Track:
"Queen of Peace"

7. Soundtrack from the Broadway musical, Hamilton
Who could write a musical about Alexander Hamilton and make it a smash hit? Apparently only Lin-Manuel Miranda, who penned the book and the music for this Broadway play that attempts to bring hip-hop and history together onstage like no other show before it. The soundtrack stands alone as the first to make it to the #1 spot on Billboard's Rap Albums chart.

Standout Track:
"Who Lives, Who Dies, Who Tells Your Story"

8. Ryan Adams / 1989
Taylor Swift's lyrics go through dark twists in the mouth of Ryan Adams, whose remake of 1989 is infinitely more listenable than hers, at least to the guitar-bass-drums crowd. Sounding like a slacker Springsteen for the Starbucks generation, Adams turns lightweight girl pop into anthemic nerd rock. We keep pushing play.

Standout Track:
"All You Had to Do Was Stay"

9. Kendrick Lamar / To Pimp A Butterfly
Although unable to break away from the hip-hop stereotypes (in which women are still referred to as b****es), Lamar gets kudos for his lyrical prowess. especially when he mashes up his personal journey with the life of a character from Alex Haley's Roots.

Standout Track:
(WARNING: EXPLICIT)
"King Kunta"

10. The Weekend / Beauty Behind the Madness
The songs seem to reference partying and addiction, but the swinging rhythms and happy melodies make us want to hear every line in these stories about late nights and hazy mornings. In the end, we're rooting for singer Abel Tesfaye to come clean, yet his struggling never sounded so good.

Standout Track:
"In the Night"


Also amazing this year:

Noel Gallagher / Chasing Yesterday
Standout Track:
"The Dying of the Light"

Glen Hansard / Didn't He Ramble
Standout Track:
"Grace Beneath the Pines"

Jon Regen / Stop Time
Standout Track:
"Walk on Water"


Paul Weller / Saturn's Pattern

Standout Track:
"I'm Where I Should Be"

Which were your favorites? Comment below!

(Photo of Alabama Shakes: Liza Agsalud / Wikimedia Commons)

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Winchester Mystery House puts a paranormal twist on the holidays with its "Spirit of Christmas" event

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Are you looking to do something a little different to do this holiday season?

If so ... Well, given that one of the more popular tales to tell this time of year (i.e., Charles Dickens' "A Christmas Carol") is just loaded with ghosts, maybe you'd be up for a visit to one of America's most haunted homes?

To be specific, the Winchester Mystery House in San Jose, California. Which -- earlier this month -- kicked off a brand-new "Spirit of Christmas" event that allows people to tour its infamous 160-room Victorian mansion and gives them a glimpse of what the holidays would have been like back in the Gilded Age.

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For those of you who don't know the sad story behind of the Winchester Mystery House, it all basically swirls around one Sarah Lockwood Pardee. Born in 1840, Sarah was the daughter of a wealthy carriage manufacturer from New Haven, CT. As they used to say, Ms. Pardee married well. In 1862, Sarah became the bride of William Wirt Winchester. Who was the son of Oliver Fisher Winchester, the Lieutenant Governor of Connecticut and manufacturer of the Winchester repeating rifle. Which was this hugely popular firearm that -- according to legend (as well as the slogan that Winchester used in all of its advertising) was "The Gun That Won the West."

So you'd think -- with the melding of these two wealthy family -- Sarah & William would then go on to live long happy lives. But that wasn't the case. Following the death of their infant daughter Annie in 1866, Mrs. Winchester fell into a deep depression that she never fully recovered from. Then -- when Sarah lost William to tuberculosis in March of 1981 -- she decided to find out why exactly her should-have-been-charmed life was filled instead with owe.

So -- following the popular custom of that time -- Mrs. Winchester reached out to a spiritualist. Who then told her this fantastic tale about how all of the bad things that had ever befallen her family could be traced back to the Winchester repeating rifle. To be specific: It was all of the Native Americans & Civil War soldiers that had been killed by this easy-to-use firearm that were now targeting the Winchester family from the spirit realm. According to this Boston-based medium, it was these thousands of vengeful ghosts that had caused Annie & Williams' untimely deaths. More to the point, this spiritualist supposedly suggested that all these restless spirits had now set their sights on Sarah.

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So what could be done to prevent Mrs. Winchester from sharing Annie & Williams' fate? This medium from Boston had a bizarre suggestion. Sarah was to first move west and then attempt to appease these vengeful spirits by building a great house for them. According to this spiritualist, as long as construction continued, the ghosts who wandered the halls of Mrs. Winchester's home wouldn't then go after her.

Fearing that her eternal soul was stake, Sarah followed this Boston medium's advice to the letter. She first moved from Connecticut to California. And then -- in 1884 -- Mrs. Winchester purchased an unfinished farmhouse just three miles outside of San Jose. And over the next 38 years, with the help of hundreds of workmen & artisans, Sarah transformed this eight-room home into a seven-story mansion.

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At the time of Mrs. Winchester's death in September of 1922, this structure sprawled across six acres. And among its 160 rooms were 13 bathrooms & six kitchens that were then connected by 47 stairways.

And ever since this house first opened to the public back in 1923, fans of the occult have flocked to this place. Eager to hear the tales that Mrs. Winchester's neighbors would tell about the bells that would first toll at midnight (i.e., the witching hour) and then 2 a.m. (i.e., the time when spirits must traditionally depart from the mortal realm).

Of course, with a back-story like this, it's easy to understand why this Victorian mansion has become a super-popular Halloween take-in with visitors to the San Jose area. But Walter Magnuson -- the recently installed General Manager of Winchester Mystery House LLC -- wondered if it might also be possible to make this paranormal showplace a must-see during another holiday season. Like -- say -- Christmas.

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"I came to this position earlier this year after having spent the past five years at the Disneyland Resort. Which is actually kind of fitting, given that the Happiest Place on Earth has some very strong ties to the Winchester Mystery House," Magnuson explained during a recent phone interview. "Most people don't know this. But when Walt Disney was first considering adding a haunted house to Disneyland back in the mid-1950s, he sent Ken Anderson, one of his key Imagineers, up to San Jose to take a look at the Winchester Mystery House. Ken came up here for a long weekend, wandered through the mansion, observed a number of tour groups and then filed his report in 1958."

Ken Anderson submitted to Walt Disney two pages of notes on the Winchester House, from the size of the tour group (maximum of 20), the mix of adults and children (roughly four times the number of adults to children), the maximum/minimum entrance and exit time in each area (25 seconds to 60 seconds), the maximum/minimum time the guide spoke in each area (32 seconds to three and a half minutes), as well as a variety of notes like "average group well behaved" and "rooms are all empty-nothing to touch."

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Mind you, this was back when Walt thought that Disneyland's Haunted Mansion was going to be a walk-thru attraction. Which is why the Winchester Mystery House -- given its paranormal legacy as well as this building's ability to accommodate multiple tour groups at the exact same time -- seemed like the ideal template to this theme park's proposed spook house attraction.

"Mind you, Anderson didn't just wind-up borrowing the way that the Winchester Mystery House pulses tour groups through the building and its grounds," adds Magnuson. "If you were to compare the grand ballroom at Disneyland's Haunted Mansion with the grand ballroom that we've got here at the house, you'd see that these two spaces have pretty similar design," Walter continued."

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And given that Disneyland's Haunted Mansion has proven to be a pretty flexible structure (EX: This attraction's annual transformation into "Haunted Mansion Holiday." Which is when the characters from Tim Burton's "The Nightmare Before Christmas" take up residence in Disneyland's haunted house from the first week of September through the first week of January), Magnuson wondered what might happen if the Winchester Mystery House experienced the same sort of seasonal overlay.

So Walter rallied the troops at the mansion, many of who have worked at this fabled San Jose area attraction for decades now. And in just a few short weeks, they were able to cover the Winchester Mystery House with over a 100,000 twinkling lights and thousands of feet of festive garland. Inside the house itself, over 20 designer Christmas trees featuring nearly a thousand ornaments have been set up in various rooms. And as people tour through the building, they'll then encounter joyous carolers, holiday revelers from the Victorian era, even St. Nicholas himself.

Of course, given that the Winchester Mystery House has 47 different fireplaces, one has to wonder how St. Nick chooses the chimney that he's then going to go down. But that's probably a question that should be answered in a future HuffPost piece.

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"We even predict hourly snowfall during our 'Spirit of Christmas' evening events," added Tim O'Day, Director of Marketing & Communications at Winchester. "This beautiful snowfall occurrence in our Central Gardens replicates actual rare snowfalls that fell on the Winchester estate and the fruit orchards of the Santa Clara Valley back in the late 1880s and mid-1890s."

The inaugural presentation of "The Spirit of Christmas" continues at the Winchester Mystery House on December 20, 26 & 27.

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Aisle View: Tevye, Back on the Roof

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Danny Burstein in Fiddler on the Roof. Photo: Joan Marcus

Fiddler on the Roof is back on Broadway, and--wonder of wonders--it's the best Fiddler we've seen since the original. Not coincidentally, Danny Burstein makes a majestical Tevye; as touching and humorous as the best of them, but with tender humanity shining through.

The most memorable Tevyes have been oversized creatures, trapped in struggles with their existence and their God. Burstein gives a performance in that mold, yes, but he adds something. This Tevye, unlike others we've seen, is a father. While he holds his own against his shrewish Golde (Jessica Hecht), Burstein's Tevye is forever beholden to his daughters; they need only dart an imploring glance and he will always, or almost always, succumb. This is a more human Tevye than we're accustomed to. While it might not be authentic paternal behavior for Anatevka in 1905 or even America when the show opened in 1964, it adds a dimension--always present in the written material (see "Sunrise, Sunset")--which enhances the show's emotional power.

That original production was a marvel, with a score by Jerry Bock and Sheldon Harnick at the height of their craft; a sturdy and effective book by Joseph Stein; and an overall cauldron of creativity forged by Jerome Robbins. Hal Prince's production of Fiddler ran through 1972, closing at the same Broadway that is housing the new version. (Eyewitness note: at the 2,845th performance on July 21, 1971--the night Fiddler pushed past Hello, Dolly! as Broadway's longest-running musical--Prince threw a grand party on the Broadway stage following the performance, serving Nathan's franks and fries.)

Fiddler has gone on to become one of the world's most cherished and produced musicals, with countless professional and amateur productions and four Broadway revivals. The first three--starring Zero Mostel (the first Tevye) in 1976, Herschel Bernardi (considered by some to be the best of the original Tevyes) in 1981, and Topol (who starred in the 1971 film version) in 1990--were close recreations, staged by Robbins albeit with much of the work delegated to assistants. As such, these revivals recaptured the inner spark of Fiddler but little of the freshness of the original. The stars, on their part, were not rediscovering the text; they were doing what they'd done before, and enhancing their impersonations with new laughs.

The most recent Fiddler, David Leveaux's 2004 revival starring Alfred Molina, gave us what some called the anti-Fiddler; while some of the Robbins choreography was retained, the production seemed to purposefully reject the charms of Anatevka. Now we have another "new" Fiddler, directed by Bartlett Sher. There have been many non-Robbins stagings of the show over the years, of course; only the most high profile productions were required to--or could afford to--recreate the original. Until Robbins died in 1998, though, his was the only version the creators would permit on Broadway.
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Melanie Moore, Alexandra Silber and Samantha Massell
in
Fiddler on the Roof. Photo: Joan Marcus

Sher has garnered a reputation for masterful musical revivals, i.e. his Lincoln Center Theater productions of South Pacific and the still-running The King and I. In between, he directed a gripping revival of Clifford Odets' Golden Boy; Burstein, his current Tevye, gave a crowd-pleasing performance as Luther Billis in South Pacific and a stunning one as the trainer Tokio in Golden Boy. Burstein as Tevye--he previously played Mendel, the Rabbi's son, in a production headed by Theodore Bikel--is thus an obvious choice for Sher, and one that turns out magically well.

Fiddler continues Sher's streak with revivals of musical classics. (His original musicals, Women on the Verge of a Nervous Breakdown and The Bridges of Madison County, were beset by numerous problems--including the directorial concepts.) Here, he has decided to start from a new canvas, wiping away memories of Robbins; but he has simultaneously shown respect to the material. (Sher was raised a Catholic, although at fifteen he learned that his father was Jewish.)

He has made one significant, though non-textual, change: this Fiddler starts and ends with Burstein, in a red, hooded jacket looking more or less like a contemporary wanderer searching the windswept Russian plain for vestiges of the vanished village of his ancestors. Not part of the script, but no harm done; and it does forge something of a link with present-day audiences. In 1964, this was not some ancient memory; a significant number of theatergoers had actually fled places like Anatevka, my own grandfather included. Three generations later this is a tale of long ago; at the same time, the story told in Fiddler is dismayingly reflected in current events. The image of Burstein in the red anorak, thus, has special resonance.

Otherwise, one might notice extra focus on Tevye's eldest daughters Tzeitel (Alexandra Silber), Hodel (Samantha Massell) and Chava (Melanie Moore), and Tevye's relationship with Motel and Perchik as well. Among other touches, there is a wonderful moment near the finale when the unfriendly butcher Lazar Wolf--a gruff but engaging Adam Dannheisser--surreptitiously slips some banknotes among Tevye's belongings as the emigration begins.

The legendary Robbins choreography has been replaced by the work of Israeli choreographer Hofesh Schechter. The new dances are lively and evocative; one gets the impression of curved hands, curved legs and curved bodies blown awry by the tempest. While the results are more than satisfactory, Shechter has been unable to approximate Robbins' awe-inspiring staging of "Sabbath Prayer" or the wild fury of "Tevye's "Dream." For that matter, Sher and music director Ted Sperling--who did masterful work on Sher's South Pacific, The King and I and The Light in the Piazza--have made a change to the first section of "Matchmaker, Matchmaker." Given that the already-in-love Tzeitel dreads the approach of Yente the Matchmaker, the first refrain has been altered to reflect her sense of foreboding. This makes sense in terms of the text, but tempers the energy of the show by removing what was a joyous high point of the first half-hour.
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Jessica Hecht and Danny Burstein in Fiddler on the Roof.
Photo: Joan Marcus

The company is generally strong, although Burstein is in a class by himself. Hecht--an artful comic actress who made a memorable Bea in the 2010 Liev Schreiber/Scarlett Johannson View from the Bridge--is perfectly fine in the role, but she is not the foil for Tevye that some predecessors have been (starting with Maria Karnilova). The three above-mentioned eldest daughters do well, especially Massell with her delivery of "Far from the Home I Love." There is also fine work from the sons-in-law Adam Kantor (Motel), Ben Rappaport (Perchik) and Nick Rehberger (Fyedka). Sher's customary design team--Michael Yeargan (sets), Catherine Zuber (costumes) and Donald Holder (lights)--provides a wonderful physical production with superb visual detail. The men's boots, even, are so artfully distressed that they look like they've been working the fields and trudging through the snow for decades.

So here we have a new Fiddler which should thrill audiences who are getting their first look at the iconic favorite, while at the same time reinforcing the wonders of Bock & Harnick's classic for old friends and fans. And Danny Burstein is right up there with the best of the Tevyes.
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Fiddler on the Roof opened December 20, 2015 at the Broadway Theatre

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"Long Island Medium" Theresa Caputo -- "You Can't Put A Price On What I Am Able To Give People"

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You don't need to be as gifted as "Long Island Medium" Theresa Caputo to see that the gift has is a true blessing to the people she touches. She is able to touch the lives of people all across the country with both her books and her speaking tours, and still is able to support husband Larry and her kids, Larry and Victoria in all of their various adventures. Theresa sat down for a super deep chat with us about how she feels to have this gift, what it's like to change lives every day, and if she would ever take a spin on the "Dancing With The Stars" dance floor (hint: she blushed).


You have to tell us, because everyone is dying to know; what are the holidays like at the Caputo household?
Craziness of course! It's the crazy Caputo household, just with Christmas stuff hanging up all over the place. (LOL)! It's really awesome, family is everything to us. We enjoy, embrace and really celebrate the holiday season.

With your unique gift, you probably make many days throughout the year feel like a holiday to other people, bringing closure and understanding to them in terms of people who have passed. Now that you are a nationally known television personality, do you feel the gravity of the public profile you now hold?
You know, that's a hard question because I'm just me. This is me, this is who I am. I don't consider this a job, I consider it just "me" really. It's an honor and a privilege. I think that now, more people are open to it. It gives them a sense of peace and of connection to their own loved ones that have passed.

If you are say, at Barnes and Noble and you are being helped by one of the associates for example, what makes you get "that feeling" about someone yo are interacting with?
Well if I am in Barnes and Noble for example, and I someone is helping me with "You Can't Make This Stuff Up" or "There's More To Life Than This" (Theresa's best selling book titles) I may feel something. If someone died of say, a heart attack, I may feel a little shortness in breath, but I will definitely wait; I'm not working. If they give it to me again, then I will say that the spirit has presented the opportunity. Someone may say that they are having a hard time saying that they maybe lost their father, it really seems that sometimes I am presented with the opportunity to say something. If someone pushes me enough and gives me that opportunity, than I will just say something and explain who I am, and then tell them I am sensing something and feeling it.

It is harder know though, because people know who I am. I am much more guarded now when I go out, because its not just seeing and sensing souls and feelings, but now, people come up to me and I immediately start talking to their dead relatives. It's definitely a little different a little harder for me now.

Is it hard for you to be that public figure that you have now become? This is probably the absolute last thing that you expected.
I definitely did not; this is the last thing that I expected. I thought I was going to film a couple of shows and I would go on with my life. I didn't think I would be touring on a tour bus doing live shows every night and changing thousands of peoples lives. It is hard, but I have the most amazing fans. When I see people out there, they just want to take a picture and they are so wonderful. They always tell me to not stop doing what I'm doing, or that they love the show, or that reading my books has really helped them. That's the amazing thing, and the phenomenal thing about the actual show is that you may not get read at the live show, but what you will get to experience is absolutely life changing.

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Do you think there are people who you may read who may have a harder time dealing with what you may reveal to them? There has to be an enormous amount of responsibility on your shoulders, not the people you are speaking with, but with the spirits that you are communicating with.
You know, I just have to tell you something. This interview right now is absolutely amazing, i have to thank you. You are asking questions that are not only respectful to me, but to the souls who have died. I really feel like you get it!

I really don't think people get it something. This isn't about me, it's about giving a voice to the people that have died. It's about closure and peace. I never realized that when I found out that I had this gift, my first though was "why would someone want to go to a medium"? I didn't understand it. I come from a very strong faith family and a very spiritual family. I never and haven't gone through or experienced what my clients have gone through; I couldn't imagine it . So yes, it is a huge responsibility; when I step out on that stage, it's hard for me. I can feel all of these people in this arena or theatre, they want to hear from their loved ones. They are crazing that peace and that comfort. I don't like to use the word "closure" because when we lose a loved one, I don't think theres ever really full closure, you always miss that person. With the experience of connecting with your loved ones gives you it lets you know that they are ok.

I think that we spend enough time in our lives going through negative things, so I make sure that all of my messages that I deliver are going to be positive and are gong to help someone. It may help someone to hear it and the messages that they do hear, they are not expecting them. They need to hear them though, and it may help them attending a wedding, or going to a celebration here in the physical world.

The feeling of giving someone such a peace of mind in their lives must be earth shattering for you.
You know, it really is. A woman attended the live show a couple weeks ago and I ran into her at the mall the next day. She told me that she had lost her son twelve years ago, and what I was able to give her in five minutes, no one was able to do anything like that for her in twelve years. You absolutely cannot put a price on that.



You know have a platform to make serious differences in people's lives. Your children, Larry and Victoria, and your husband Larry definitely show a well rounded and fun loving side to you and the Caputo clan. Do you think you would ever take a spin on the dance floor of "Dancing With The Stars" or hit the boardroom on "Celebrity Apprentice"?
I don't know, I don't consider myself a celebrity LOL! But I don't know, if they asked me, maybe? I guess I would definitely consider it.

If you took your whole life right now, with your books, you live shows, and your family, what one word would sum it up?
Amazing.

www.theresacaputo.com

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Nicole Polizzi -- I Loved My "Jersey Shore" Life, But I Love This Life So Much More

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She's come a long way from the Seaside Heights boardwalk. Nicole Polizzi has let "Snookie" take a backseat, and now with the release of her fifth book "Strong Is The New Sexy", she is entering into a new phase of her life, kind of a "Mother Earth With Attitude". Nicole spoke with us about looking back on the "Jersey Shore" days, balancing two children, a husband, and her new show with Jenni Farley, "#MomsWithAttitude", and where the rumors of her joining "The Real Housewives Of New Jersey" came from once and for all.



Your new book "Strong Is The New Sexy" is absolutely amazing, and it's your fifth one! How much has your writing experiences changed since your first book?
Thank you! You know, I really loved writing "Baby Bumps" because it was a story of my pregnancy, and I really enjoyed doing it in a journal style. Once I put it together, it really sounded like me. I wanted to do another book like that but one about how I've really changed as a person, but still myself at the same time. Just bettering myself, trying to lose weight, dealing with bullying and haters, things like that. This book is essentially my story, but it's also a story that can hopefully empower women and also men. It's a very powerful and inspirational book.




Many people will say that "Jersey isn't like that" and the antics from your time on "Jersey Shore" weren't true to the Garden State. How do you respond to those claims?
What are they talking about?; it's totally like that!

You've come into a total renaissance since the days in Seaside Heights. Does it seem like those days were a complete different time?
You know, it really does, it feels like that was my other life. You know how people are reincarnated? It's really like that was my past life. At that time though, and during that craziness, that was me. It was awesome, and I loved every minute of it, and would do it all over again. At the same time though, I love who I am now and I feel like everything that has happened up until now has made me into the person that I am right now. I loved that life, but I definitely love this life more.

How are your gorgeous children?
The kids are great, thanks! Lorenzo is three, Giovanna just turned one. It's definitely a handful.

Think you are done with having kids?
Oh no! I definitely want two more. I've always pictured myself with four kids, four is my lucky number also. I'm going to wait a little longer though, it's so crazy now, I want to wait so Lorenzo and Giovanna are a little bit older and they can help out (LOL)!


(Former "Jersey Shore" cast member Jenny "J-Wow" Farley just got married and the pictures were absolutely gorgeous! She announced at her wedding reception that she's pregnant right?
Jenny did a gorgeous job with her wedding! She found out that she's having a boy and she's really excited!

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You both have a new digital show titled "#MomsWithAttitude". Definitely a different platform for you both wouldn't you say?
You know, we did seasons of both "Jersey Shore" and "Snooki & J-Wow" and that was ten seasons of television reality. We wanted to do something different, and it really looks like everything is turning digital now, especially for mothers. I mean, when do moms exactly get to sit down and watch a television show? They're catching up on their phones when their kids are napping, quick stuff like that. We thought it would be great to team up, as moms, with Awesomeness and do "Awestruck" which is all about millennial moms. You can find it on YouTube, it's clips that are around ten minutes. It's just perfect for where we are right now in our lives.

You are so busy and have so many different things going on. What do you think it the toughest thing for a mom to do in today's world.
You know, I'm pretty good with my schedule when it comes to things, and I am so busy at work. I try to stay positive, but i really would love to do a stay at home mom with my kids. It's nice once in a while, you know to be home. Then, then I may have to travel for work for say, a week. It's a nice break. At the end of the day though, I am doing all of this for my kids, so I have to suck up and do it. If I had a choice though, I would definitely stay home with my kids.


How do you continue to make your marriage a priority while working and raising two kids? Is the balancing hard that difficult?
It's tough but we do the best we can. I mean, I can't tell you the last time Giovanni and I went on a date. Between working and filming a show together, it's hard to get away from work and be a couple without the kids. We have been struggling to find the time, but we do make it a priority.


There was so much talk about you becoming a cast member of Bravo's "The Real Housewives Of New Jersey". Once and for all, where did that rumor start and can you finally put it to rest? Are you joining the cast?
You know, I think that all started on my podcast. My best friend Joey ("Snookie and J-Wow" cast member Joey Canasta) do a podcast on PodcastOne and I think we were talking about it as a topic. I asked Joey what his "Housewife quote" would be, and all of a sudden it turned into me becoming a cast member on "The Real Housewives Of New Jersey". I mean, I never spoke to Andy (Cohen), he never asked me, it really just came out of nowhere. I think someone just made it up out of my podcast, I was never approached to do the show and I was never asked, Even if I was asked to be a "Housewife", that's not something I want to do right now. I'm only 27, and I'm working on so many other project. Maybe plans can change when I'm around forty or something, but right now, I'm in my prime! You never know what could happen in the future though, we'll see.

You did "Dancing With The Stars" and you looked like you had an absolute blast!
It was the best experience ever! I mean it was tough work, but I am so glad I did it! I made a lifelong friend, (pro-dancer) Sasha (Farber) is one of my best friends. You have to train for six hours a day, and it's super tough. Anyone you speak with that has done it will tell you that, it really is hard.

If you had to take your whole life, you new show, you husband, your children, everything and you had to wrap it up into one word, what would that word be?
Blessed; definitely

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Director László Nemes on his Searing Holocaust Film "Son of Saul"

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2015-12-20-1450577271-6827676-sonofsaul21600x900cdefault.jpgFirst-time director László Nemes co-wrote and directed "Son of Saul," a critically acclaimed film about Saul, a Hungarian prisoner in an unnamed Nazi death camp. He has been assigned to work as a sonderkommando, helping to escort new arrivals into the gas chamber, sorting through their clothes and possessions, scrubbing the floor, and removing the bodies, which the Nazis contemptuously refer to as "pieces." When a boy briefly survives the gas chambers, Saul, with increasing desperation, tries to provide this one "piece" with a decent burial. The film was an award-winner at Cannes, and its critical acclaim includes many end-of-the year nominations and awards from film critics and a Golden Globe nomination.

In an interview, Nemes spoke about the unique camerawork that keeps the audience intimately connected to Saul as he moves through the horror of the camp. We see through his eyes, so some of the worst horrors are glimpsed only at the edges of the frame. And we spoke about the lessons we still need to learn from the history of bigotry and genocide.

From my point of view, the film immerses the viewer and communicates in a very visceral way the experience of the individual in the concentration camp and it gives an intuitive sense of what limitations the individual had to face in the extermination process and what the Holocaust was like. That is important because the Holocaust became, in our common knowledge, a sort of abstract thing devoid of all meaning; it just became like the Titanic, a sort of myth. But understanding the individual and how really to feel something in the position of the individual is something that we never understood, never felt and that's why I made this film. I didn't want to make an intellectual film; I didn't want to make a film based on the distance and the sense of escape that's all films of fiction established with all their strategies aimed at reassuring the audience. I wanted to, on the contrary, to say something about the core of the nature of this human hell that is not that remote from us in time and in civilization or perspective, it is not that remote. We are living in a world of dreams and we might wake up in the nightmare if we don't fathom or try to understand the potential evil lying within human nature.


Nemes said that much of the history we know about the Holocaust focuses on those who survived, partly because it is human nature to look for stories that show resilience and partly because so much of what we know comes from the stories of those who did survive. He did not want to make this a story of survival. "People want to hear true stories because seeing a true story, there is an identification with the survivor. How many stories are lost for one that remains? How many that we are not aware of? So that's very important."

Saul takes terrible risks for what many people would consider a lost cause, some prayers over the grave of a child who may or may not be related to him. Nemes acknowledged the connection to Antigone, Sophocles' tragic play about the daughter of Oedipus, who dies trying to provide a religious burial ceremony for her brother. He said that in both Antigone's case and Saul's, more than the individuals are being murdered; their culture is being destroyed.

What's striking is that this is a place not only where people were killed but also where people were burnt and in a way it was a process to erase their history as if they never had a past. That is something that is for me, very important. Saul gives a history to this child, gives a story so that there is something very universal or very human in this.




Nemes did a great deal of research in the journals of the sonderkommandos.

They are the so-called scrolls of Auschwitz that are really not widely known actually but they should be known. They never made it to the canons of the Holocaust literature although they are primary sources of incredible force and insight. They show the present very clearly to the reader to give the impression of being there; to be present during the assimilation process and described in great detail what's going on in the crematorium. And then there is the canon by the Hungarian doctor Miklós Nyiszli who came back after the war, he was a survivor and also the testimonies after the war by members of the sonderkommando. So we went into great detail of their everyday lives to know what their lives were about and we used that as much as possible. But then we had to write the films so we didn't want to make a documentary film; it had to be a feature film. But it is grounded in historic reality as possible.

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Why Is Jessica Jones Important?

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Lindsay Tessier was first. Her pitch about Marvel's Jessica Jones arrived three days after the series had gone live. Then came Charley Reid's. Next, Laura Bogart's. The proposed story ideas continued to pour in about what made the show unprecedented, how it was resonating, what it meant to watch it.

While I field a number of pitches related to television and pop culture as an editor at The Establishment. . . I'd never encountered a phenomenon like this before; this show was clearly doing something unique.

Created by Melissa Rosenberg for Netflix, Jessica Jones is based on the Marvel Comics character of the same name (originally crafted by Brian Michael Bendis and Michael Gaydos)--a lead character not only notable for being a woman in the notoriously male-focused hero-verse, but one who openly grapples with life in the wake of trauma. Jessica Jones is both hero and antihero, a PTSD-plagued private investigator and sexual assault survivor using cheap whiskey and acerbic smarts to cope after her grievous entanglements with the insidious, mind-controlling villain Kilgrave.

Jones is moody, cutting, distant, very clearly troubled--but therein lies her power. Though she literally possesses superhuman strength, above all--as every one of the women who pitched stories on the series attested--she is an honest, realistic representation of an abuse survivor attempting to navigate the world.

Finally.

In honor of the complicated, multidimensional hero, we've assembled our own Avengers-esque team of writers to weigh in. We posed a simple but potent question: Why is Jessica Jones important?

Here are their answers.

***


The Creation of Abusers: Analyzed and Explored
By: Laura Bogart

Jessica Jones doesn't just break new ground, it punches through the center of the earth itself and comes out on the other side of the atmosphere. The show uses the grandiosity and symbolic power of superhero stories to articulate truths about surviving abuse, and about the nature of abuse itself--including how people become abusers.

Kilgrave's powers are a metaphor for male privilege: he can, easily and with impunity, bend the world to his whims. Kilgrave is a product of our "boy-gets-girl" world where, as Arthur Chu says, "instead of seeing women as, you know, people, protagonists of their own stories just like we are of ours, men are taught that women are things to 'earn,' to 'win.'" He deploys those powers, that privilege, to keep his coterie of sexual playthings because he believes it's his right--he's genuinely, gob-smackingly shocked when Jessica says that he raped her, because according to our culture, a rape culture to its core, women don't have any real agency, anyway. As if this cauldron of influences wasn't toxic enough, we add Kilgrave's parents, who, in experimenting on him as a child, taught him that bodily autonomy and consent are negligible.

That video of Kilgave as a pre-teen test subject, howling in agony as he's injected with chemicals, is more than a moment of sympathy for the devil, it's a guided tour of the hot place he comes from. Jessica Jones is in her own fresh Hell, drowning her shame in whiskey and hiding away from anyone who wants to help her. But there is also rage, the flames that crackle and spit inside her until they find release. Jessica tries to be strong in her broken places, to be valiant for the Kilgrave survivors who aren't as (literally) empowered as she is--and yet, when she is tasked with forcing her employer's recalcitrant wife to sign divorce papers, she tosses the woman to the subway tracks like a stuffed doll. Jessica is loosened with drink, venting her own helplessness out on a woman who has had the liberty of exerting her own will.

In the end, Jessica pulls the woman off the tracks. She is not Kilgrave; she is better than her own sad past and the dark side of her powers. And yet, for a moment, it was so easy, so inevitable, to do unto others, to break her need upon someone else's body. This understanding gives Jessica Jones its pathos and nuance, making it one of the finest, truest depictions of abuse ever on-screen.

***

The Truth of Violator/Victim Dynamics
By: Tasha Williams

The episode "AKA WWJD?" includes some of the most powerful moments of the entire Jessica Jones series. In one particularly raw scene, Jessica confronts Kilgrave for not only enslaving her mind--as he did to his other victims--but for also physically raping her. Kilgrave's splenetic response, typical of an oppressor, enrages her even more, but she doesn't back down:

Kilgrave: What part of staying in five-star hotels, eating in all the best places, doing whatever the hell you wanted, is rape?

Jessica: The part where I didn't want to do any of it! Not only did you physically rape me, but you violated every cell in my body and every thought in my goddamn head.

Kilgrave: That's not what I was trying to do.

Jessica: It doesn't matter what you were trying to do. You raped me, again and again and again.

Kilgrave: How was I supposed to know?! Huh?! I never know if someone is doing what they want or what I tell them to!

Jessica: Oh, poor you.

Kilgrave: You have no idea, do you? I have to painstakingly choose every word I say. I once told a man to go screw himself. Can you even imagine? I didn't have this. A home, loving parents, a family.

Jessica: You blame bad parenting? My parents died! You don't see me raping anyone!

Kilgrave: I hate that word.


This exchange makes for groundbreaking storytelling because 1) it exposes the hilt of the debate over consensual sex vs. rape, and 2) it reveals the authentic dynamics of a violator and victim confrontation.

To match our fully realized superhero, this series gives us a fleshed out villain whose toxic, predatory personality is as ominous as his superpowers. Kilgrave's initial obfuscation tactic, claiming Jessica was wooed by a luxurious lifestyle and thus, not raped, evokes the psychological techniques of a street pimp. His rants throughout this scene indicate he believes his intent, thoughts, and desires subordinate his victims' humanity. Jessica, our superhero, no longer under mind control--supernatural or otherwise--rejects this notion and adamantly refuses to let her rapist evade responsibility.

It is here we witness her true strength. And, in Kilgrave's final comeback--characteristic of a true sociopath--we also see that, in the end, he just hates labels.

***


The Incredible Fallout from Intimate Violence
By: Charley Reid

I was discussing Jessica Jones with a friend when I made the assertion that the show is more accurately compared to NBC's Hannibal than to Daredevil, the only other tonally-similar part of the Marvel Cinematic Universe. He agreed, saying that although there is more overall violence in Daredevil, the violence in Jessica Jones simply feels more painful, more visceral. He was communicating the very basis of my comparison--intimacy. The more intimate the violence, the more powerful it is, and Jessica Jones perfectly illustrates this phenomenon.

I would go so far as to say that Jessica Jones succeeds largely due to how well it captures the human cost of intimate violence. This is a theme underutilized in most other depictions of violence in mainstream cinema and television, which tend to focus more on degrees of brutality--ranging from large-scale destruction in The Avengers, to the revenge-inspired violence of Taken, which is up-close and personal but not intimate.

When accurately depicted on screen, the escalation of violence through intimacy works incredibly well (other examples include the Hannibal Lecter franchise, and most of Quentin Tarantino's work) because it mirrors real life; violence that violates, like sexual assault and rape, asserts control by exploiting deeply-ingrained power dynamics. Jessica Jones takes these power dynamics and personifies them in the form of the villain Kilgrave.

Some assert that this sets up the plot as a rape-revenge story, but that would imply that the primary motivation for the main character's actions is revenge; this is not the case. Jones initially tries very hard to avoid getting tangled up in Kilgrave's web of death--itself a natural product of intimate and painful childhood violence--once it interrupts the life of anonymity she has manufactured in order to avoid him. What finally compels her to fight against him is the desire to save Hope, the latest victim of Kilgrave's poisonous words. Her anger at Kilgrave fuels her need to save the people he hurts.

The themes of sexual assault and rape are intended to cast the struggle between Jessica Jones and Kilgrave in terms of intimacy, particularly the human collateral that happens as a result of intimacy being weaponized. The fact that every action that Kilgrave and Jessica Jones take in their battle to destroy one another results in more and more death around them, is an apt analogy for the human cost of intimate violence, how it affects every part of a person's life--most pointedly the lives of the ones they love.

***


An Unflinching Examination of Life after Trauma
By: Lindsay Tessier

"Birch Street, Higgins Drive, Cobalt Lane."

These words are spoken in the first episode of Jessica Jones and become a recurring mantra throughout the show. We hear Jessica repeating them every time she has a or panic attack. We eventually learn she's reciting the street names around her childhood home, a grounding technique she learned from a therapist.

It's a coping strategy so familiar to me that the first time I heard it, I started to cry.

Besides our penchant for leather jackets and owning the same Egon Schiele poster, Jessica and I have a few more things in common: we're both sexual assault survivors and we've both been diagnosed with Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder.

It's obvious from the start that Jessica is a trauma survivor. She has flashbacks and nightmares. She pushes away everyone she cares about. She's racked with guilt, has some serious anger management issues, and drinks a staggering amount of cheap whiskey to deal with it all.

Watching the show was like looking into a mirror of my past. Over time my PTSD symptoms have lessened, but they're never fully gone. Major life changes, anniversaries, news stories can all make them rush back.

What makes Jessica Jones unique is its focus on the aftermath of violence. It's what Jessica calls "life before Kilgrave" and "life after Kilgrave"--the struggle to reconcile who you were pre-trauma with who you are post-trauma. It's a concept I'm intimately familiar with, and that the show explores with great sensitivity.

Jessica wrestles with the same questions all trauma survivors do: How do you put your life back together after it falls apart? How do you move on? Does it get better? When exactly does it get better? How do I survive this?

The show refuses to shy away from the reality of life after trauma. We experience the flashbacks, insomnia, anger, binges, depression, guilt, and fear that are part and parcel of Jessica's PTSD. It doesn't pay lip service to these issues--abandoning them after an episode or two--but explores them throughout the whole series.

Jessica Jones is a show about the scars trauma leaves behind. It's about inner strength and resilience. It's about the very real, hard, and messy work survivors do every day in order to heal and move forward with their lives.

It's powerful to see a superhero (even, or maybe especially, an anti hero like Jessica Jones) battling PTSD. Our brains are wired to respond to stories. Watching characters work through experiences similar to our own can be incredibly cathartic. It can even help us process and understand our own reactions to trauma.

We're rooting for Jessica, but we're also rooting for ourselves.

I'm so grateful it exists. Jessica Jones is exactly the hero I wanted her to be.

***


This is What an Abusive Relationship Actually Looks Like
By: Debbie Weingarten

In the dream, he is chasing me with a hunting rifle. I can't see him, but I know he's there. I'm running across a dark field, full of gopher holes and places to twist my ankle. The sloping field is familiar--it's where we walked attempting to jumpstart my labor, where my goats used to graze.

I want to be clear--my abuser never chased me with a gun. The dreams are intersections of real and imagined--a representation of the what-ifs and the anxiety that has bloomed since leaving my abusive relationship. The memories are non sequitur; they come in flashes that I feel in the deepest part of my chest. The smell of cilantro nearly makes me drop to my knees with grief.

When I wake up from the gun dream, my three-year-old son is cuddled next to me. The bed is warm. I recenter there in the dark. I breathe. I tap below my collarbone in a butterfly hug. My EMDR therapist has helped me to visualize a safe place to go when I am triggered.

Dogwood, I whisper to myself again and again, recalling another field 2,000 miles away and days spent lying on blankets in the sun. This is where I go.

It surprises me to see Jessica Jones doing this, too. "Birch Street, Higgins Drive, Cobalt Lane," she repeats to herself countless times throughout the series. She's strong enough to stop a moving car, but we also see her rocking back and forth in her apartment, staving off flashbacks of Kilgrave, her abuser. Jones is complex, imperfect, actively surviving and managing her PTSD. The entire show radiates with the one-step-forward-two-steps-back pattern that seems so common among survivors, as well as the confusion and self-doubt that comes from having been in a relationship with an abuser. It all feels so real, so familiar.

Though the atrocities committed by Kilgrave range from simple manipulations to actual homicide, his character depicts the profile of a pathological narcissist or a sociopath to a tee. He lacks any shred of empathy, is solely concerned about gaining power and sucking energy from others, and has the ability to convince anyone to do his bidding. He hops from apartment to penthouse, verbally and physically abusing people, demanding that his needs be met, and disposing of his victims after they've served their purpose.

Psychological abuse ensures that a victim experiences strong inner reverberations and harmful messages that linger long after the relationship has ended. As is the case in real life, Kilgrave's disorder creates a trail of traumatized victims floundering in his wake, desperately replaying the abuse to make sense of it.

Admittedly, there are moments of Jessica Jones that are hard for me to watch. Overall, the show is intense, gritty, dark. There's blood and physical abuse and chase scenes reminiscent of my dream in the field. It should absolutely come with a gigantic trigger warning.

But I am grateful for this show--for the strength of the characters, for the writers who have not shied away from a real portrayal of trauma, and for the mantras that consistently present in the conversations between Kilgrave's victims: You're not crazy. It's not your fault.

This piece originally appeared on The Establishment, a brand new multimedia site funded and run by women.

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Childhood's End Syfy Mini-Series Is Watchable at Best

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Based on the 1953 sci-fi novel by Arthur C. Clarke, also known for 2001: A Space Odyssey, Syfy's Childhood's End is worth watching. Yet by choosing to leave out some Clarke elements, also left out some brilliance.

Helmed by Nick Hurran and written by Matthew Graham, the three night six hour mini-series, or a tad over four hours without commercials, opens as a scene begins with astrophysicist Milo Rodricks (Osy Ikhile) on a post-apocalyptic Earth. He's speaking to a floating silver spherical device the size of a softball, recording both his image and words, as he speaks of being the last human being. Among the parting words, he says, "I got a favor to ask. Don't forget us. We may have many faults, but we don't deserve to be forgotten." Such is the opening of part one, titled, "The Overlords." All which gets your attention. Yet if one has read the book, like I have shortly after knowing about the mini-series debut, the scene gives away the goods way too early.

The next scene goes back to the year 2016 when the world is suddenly in the grip of fear and awe. Planes in flight all over the world are settling down safely to the earth as gently as feathers. All happening, as 40 massive ships appear over major cities around the world. Followed by, the sudden dramatic appearances of a deceased loved one, a husband, wife, child or another family relative, all over the world whom are speaking in their own native language, saying, "My name is Karellen. I'm the supervisor for Earth. There's no need to be afraid." All were not actually resurrected, just appearances the Overlord's had used, similar to the sci-fi film Contact, when the alien appears to SETI scientist Eleanor Arroway (Jodie Foster) in the form of her late father.

The opening words were repeated by the departed loved ones, followed by the promise that war, famine, inequality, will all be things of the past. Suffering will end, replaced by happiness and safety. Human life will continue as before, minus one thing. Injustice. After all that, the soft spoken words concludes, "We're not conquerors. We're enablers. We're going to help you change. I know it's frightening, but you are no longer alone." Then all the appearances are gone.

Suddenly after, while military forces all over the world were still on alert as other citizens were still fearful, the beginnings of dramatic sociological change had commenced all over the world. Israeli's and Palestinians came together in peace, after the wall that separated Israel from the Gaza Strip came down. And North Korea and South Korea also united as a peaceful nation.

Be that as it may, whether one was for or against the arrival of the Overlords, all were curious as to why they haven't revealed themselves. Yet before even attempting to explain his rational to the masses, Karellen chooses among all the citizens of earth, Ricky Stormgren (Mike Vogel), a Missouri farmer, to be his spokesperson. In the book, the character is U.N. Secretary General Rikki Stormgren of Finland. Even so, the mini-series character adaptation still works.

Yet what doesn't work in the mini-series, is the time length in which the Overlords agree to finally reveal themselves after their arrival to the people of earth. In the mini-series, Karellen explains that to be fifteen years. In the book, it is fifty. And if you've ever read the book about what the Overlords actually look like, then you'll well know that the human race is going to need those extra thirty-five years. Which, is a testament to the British author's brilliance.

Forty to fifty years represents two generations of people, fifty more fully. Though fifteen years is an appreciable amount of time, it's still not enough. Not nearly, especially after one sees what the Overlords actually look like.

Near the end of part one, a great crowd gathers after fifteen years had passed. Excitement and suspense is in the air, before eventually the voice of Karellen, played by actor Charles Dance of HBO's Game of Thrones and the film The Imitation Game, asks that two children meet him after he walks down the arrival ramp. They do so, and gleefully at that. He then walks down to meet the children, both a boy and a girl who are not fearful in the slightest. And the world sees, before he says, "There's no need to be afraid."

And there he is, very tall, with deep red skin, leathery wings, a long barbed tail, large horns that curl back from his head, and hooves for feet. In the book, the Overlords are supposedly about nine feet tall. So when you have aliens all looking like the devil taller even than NBA legend seven footer Shaquille O'Neal, then you know the human race is gonna need those fifty years. In Clarke's book, during those fifty years, the human race had been acclimated during what's called the golden age of man. Basically, while experiencing what could be called utopia on earth, the Overlords planned for the psychological readjustment of the human race. So much so, that only a few people fainted amongst the large crowd in the book. Syfy's Childhood's End mini-series adaptation should have stuck to the fifty.

Furthermore, why were the Overlord's Rashaverak, Thanthalteresco, and Vindarten omitted from the mini-series? The book Childhood's End is not Tom Clancy size, as both the hardcover and paperback are barely over 200 pages. Only one other Overlord appears besides Karellen, one who greets Milo Rodricks, who had snuck on board their ship, to finally arrive at the Overlord planet in part three. Though in the book the Overlord's name is Vindarten, who then shows the astrophysicist, named Jan Rodricks in the book, the impressive museum housing all the artifacts and alien life the Overlords had collected during their stellar travels.

Of the three Overlord's besides Karellen in the book, both Rashaverak and Thanthalteresco, called simply 'The Inspector' by the inhabitants of New Athens because it was hard to say his name, would also have added brilliance to the mini-series. As powerful as the Overlord's are, the one area of human culture that was beyond even their comprehension, were those delving into the paranormal for recreation or otherwise. The couple George and Jean Greggson are invited to a celebrity party held by Rupert Boyce. Rashaverak, anthropologist of the Overlords, is also invited, for Boyce had already granted the alien to read his large volumes of paranormal books.

The party whines down hours later, leaving eight. Rashaverak is invited with the six around the table to partake in an Ouija board session. The alien declines, wishing to observe, as the wife of one of the six takes notes. Silly questions are first asked during the session, until it is the astrophysicist Jan Rodricks turn, who asks, "Which star is the Overlord's sun?" And that's when Rashaverak leaned forward, as the answer is eventually given as NGS 549672, causing Jean Greggson to faint. Obviously, the Overlord reported the finding to Karellen, for that sphere of activity posed a possible threat to the Overmind, a being of pure intelligence and energy, who will one day take all the world's children age ten or below to be assimilated. That which, the Overlord's, as midwives, had kept such knowledge from humanity, until it was too late.

In part one of the mini-series, Ricky Stormgren is abducted by Hugo Wainwright (Colm Meaney), a media magnate and head of The Freedom League, whose members were hostile to the Overlords from the start. After Stormgren tells of the many social benefits, Wainwright says, "I'd rather the world went down the toilet under our control than flourish under theirs."

Given the current state of concerns over geo-politics, climate change and terrorism, one can't judge too harshly the decision made by a weary humanity in Childhood's End, wanting to finally thrive as a race, than to strive. Yet not condoning his methods, Wainwright was right. Better to strive while holding onto humanity apart from the Overlords, than thrive yet later lose in the end.

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The Man Behind The Compound

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Photo Credit: Jimmy Giambrome

Real creative people need true creative studios to work. The legendary Andy Warhol had one called The Factory, and it was where he made the magic happen. The Factory was a meeting place for artists and musicians alike. Individuals like Lou Reed, Bob Dylan, Mick Jagger, and Salvador Dalí were regulars. But for some reason these days there seems to be less people taking advantage of creative spaces. Places where energy can flow to allow and even enhance creativity. One such place the concept is lacking is hip-hop. Though all artists work in studios the concept has downsized to small rooms anywhere a mic can fit. That is not the case with The Compound in the Bronx though. Started by DJ Set-Free, The Compound is a new age creative art studio. And it is where the biggest names in the genre are collaborating to bring the fans true innovation.

It was a Wednesday evening this past September in a marijuana smoke filled room when I met DJ Set Free. We were there for a private listening session of the new project "Hate Me Now" by acclaimed Harlem rapper Dave East. East is an artist signed to the label Mass Appeal, owned by iconic rapper Nas. When I walked into the studio East's manager Wayno greeted me after seeing me through a crowd. Almost immediately after he gave me an enthusiastic introduction to DJ Set Free. Despite being in a room full of important people it seemed I was getting introduced to the one who held the most weight.

Set Free is an inconspicuous man by most standards. Standing at six feet tall, you might not pick him out in a crowd of people from the hip hop industry to be as accomplished as he is. He does not wear any flashy jewelry, or go out of his way to be in designer clothes as many do. But he definitely comes off as someone who is comfortable in his own skin.

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Photo Credit: Jimmy Giambrome

After the introduction I exchanged contact info with Set Free, and asked him to tell me a bit more about himself. That is when he told me about his background as a DJ as well as owning a creative art studio in the Bronx called The Compound. Just the idea itself intrigued me because I haven't heard about anything like it so I kept asking him questions about it. Feeling how interested I was by the idea of this place he invited me to come check it out when I had some free time.

The idea for The Compound came to him after years of being in the music industry. He noticed that creative people seemed to box themselves into specific spaces. For instance, in music studios you never saw graphic designers working. Or photographers did not seem to be part of the music making process. Everyone had their own stations. But he envisioned a place where everybody would work together. And in that space feed off the collective creative juices flowing in a room to put together the best product possible.

When you first walk into The Compound you can't help but get a strange feeling. The entire place is a juxtaposition of different things you would never imagine goes together. Try to imagine what would happen if you put together the brains of Pharrell and Kanye West. And then you asked them to design a place they would enjoy working in. In one corner you see a Louis Vuitton basketball that costs $3,000, and in the next you see a wall of Star Wars memorabilia. Then you turn your head and see a recording booth right next to a signed Kevin Garnett jersey over a wall of toys. There are boxes of clothes and shoes all over the floor from every brand you can think of. At one point while Set Free and I were talking he was opening some of his mail. It was an entire box full of Ethika men's boxers.

Of course it makes sense that all these brands would send him things though. He has celebrities, influencers, and tastemakers in there at all times of day. Sometimes people go there to work, other times to think, and sometimes just to get away from everything.

The people who go by there are heavy hitters by every standard. Stars like Swizz Beatz and his wife Alicia Keys are regulars there. Hip hop legend Jadakiss stops by there all the time as well. Other frequenters include Rich Homie Quan, Mos Def, Young Guru, Stalley, and The Underachievers. In fact, while sitting there with Set Free he received a phone call from the former Roc-A-Fella artist Freeway. He was just calling to say his health was better after a recent scare he had with his kidneys.

As of today, The Compound is not backed by any corporate partnerships. Set Free and his team have led the massive success of this place alone. While quiet on immediate details Set Free did say there was plans for expansion in the future.

By definition, innovation is bringing together two things you may have not thought had anything in common. Then using them to solve something else. That is what The Compound does. It brings together the amalgamation of opposed things. And those things make up different essences of creativity, something we are lacking in these days. Everything is about following others and intense vanity. It is clear The Compound will help push people's minds to the next level. And with someone like DJ Set Free spearheading it there is no doubt that it will do anything except take off.

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Photo Credit: Jimmy Giambrome

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Why the Non-Star Wars Fan Should See 'The Force Awakens'

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Photo Credit: JPG Photography

This is a note to all of us boyfriends, girlfriends, husbands, wives, partners, best friends, parents and children of Star Wars fans. Look, I'm not an avid fan. My husband, however, can name every random planet from the movies, and knows what AT-AT abbreviates. He sees Star Wars as almost a religion, and up until this point, I've been a supportive bystander. I gave him a Star Wars grooms cake. We had a Star Wars-themed Christmas party. But I never really GOT it. I never really felt impassioned, enthralled, and beyond loyal to a series of movies that seemed to be, let's be honest, a little antiquated and predictable (bear with me).

Then tonight I realized I felt that way because I have never seen the movies FOR THE FIRST TIME. Yes, we watched the trilogy the minute we got engaged (it was a pre-requisite to walking down the aisle for him) but by that time I had heard all about the movies, practically knew the plot without seeing the films, and especially was well-acquainted with the big "twist" at the end of The Empire Strikes Back. Which is why this movie, the new Star Wars: The Force Awakens, was so special and wonderful for me.

Listen, skeptics, when someone important to you asks you to go to the new Star Wars film with them, avoid rolling your eyes and making an excuse not to go. Because this movie, in the brilliant way that its written and filmed, allows you to enter the Star Wars world of your loved one, while falling in love with it yourself. It allows you to share this die-hard loyalty that seemed so crazy eight minutes before the film began. This new film not only "awakens" the love of Star Wars for the existing enthusiast, but it impacts the newbie in the same way. It lets you share that world with your companion, gripping their hand tightly and sitting on the edge of you seat with the rest of the theater.

What I loved most about the film is that my husband and I were sharing something he loved so intensely together for the first time. He didn't know what was going to happen any more than I, and I found myself clapping wildly when Harrison Ford appears onscreen just as much as he. The movie intertwines some of the original cast with new ones, and in this way it breathes new life into the entire franchise. I think JJ Abrams did an incredible job of developing new characters, and I especially loved the presence of female characters on both sides. The characters are simple, not distracting, and the plots are clever. I really identified with the lead character's struggle to find him or herself (I told you, no spoilers) much the way that I think so many fell in love with Luke's finding himself in the original. The movie is visually stunning (I saw it in IMAX 3D) and it definitely made me wish for more.

And at the end credits, whether you loved it or hated it (my bet is you will love it) it will give you a new appreciation for the love of the "force", and most importantly of your partner in crime sitting next to you. After all, we're all Jedis at heart, it just takes an "awakening" to realize it.

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Collaboration Now

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"Collaboration" is the catch word that is bandied about when describing the show business industry. We thrive on lunches, conference calls and writers' rooms. You would think with all of these partnerships this would be the happiest place on earth, a community of calm where executives and creatives share suggestions throughout their eight-hour workday. The reality is that the glamour of Hollywood often falls within the sixty plus hour workweek. As for calm, let's just say we thrive in an excitable industry.

The concept of collaboration is nothing new. The act of war is a collaboration as is the art of peace. At its core, collaboration is when a group of people come together to achieve a common goal. Think NASA or the World Series Champion Kansas City Royals, both have mastered the art of collaboration to achieve great feats in their own specific fields. As social beings, people are drawn to collaborate. It is part of who we are. We are social and curious. We are wired to create. Collaboration is the backbone of Facebook, Google, and democracy.

After spending six years encouraging challenged teens to find their own personal narratives and somewhat away from big budget productions, I was invited to participate in a bold new filmmaking experiment that partnered film creatives from all over the world into a single movie. This was a collaborative experiment that could prove enormously ingenious or fall flat on its nose. Via the web, an international group of filmmakers were gathered to conceive a fictional story, then write, produce and assemble the film through post production, all while relying on the internet to merge us together as a collaborative team. As a director and writer, I have been touched by the legendary Frank Capra's career who lived by the belief: "One man, one film". This virtual production was about as far from Capra's ideal as the moon is from the stars (those in the sky). Yet we were eager, hungry and determined. This was the birth of www.Collabfeature.com, a film production movement where multiple filmmakers from around the world band together on a single story, from inception through fruition.

For the first of my three films in this model our process looked like an internet chess match. One person would make a move, then this decision would go to committee where we would discuss. From the home office in Michigan, our team was given options that would decide our future assignments. Flow charts were arranged that mapped out story structure, character arcs, the McGuffin, and a series of viable endings. We were creating a jigsaw puzzle with twenty-five different players, all creative storytellers with their own opinions on how the narrative should move forward. Conversations ensued. We cooperated. We collaborated.

As for production, Frank Capra would have been proud. Each segment was produced independently. We were manufacturing our own puzzle pieces. But once we wrapped, it was back to the Collabfeature machine, testing our segments in the whole, questioning whether our cumulative vision looked as good on screen as it did in our collective minds.

My takeaway is that structure, when administered properly, can hone in even the most outlandish of ideas. And that is what is important, as far as I can tell, is to create an encouraging environment that fosters ideas without quelling creativity. Yes, when amassing a group of twenty-five plus film directors on a single production the chatter tends to get loud, yet with the right organization and mindset this experiment is a very viable model and, very possibly, will be repeated and improved upon globally as the narrative of collaborative filmmaking grows to epidemic proportion.

Was the accomplishment successful? The overwhelming response is, yes. In fact, we have already achieved festival awards and are listed in the Guinness Book of World Records for having the most directors on a feature film, a feat that I am sure will be conquered in no time. What's more important, however, was how this group of creatives were able to overcome distance, a variety of cultures, language gaps and hands-on experience to virtually assemble, through cyberspace, a creative narrative. Our journey was one of trust, respect, and accommodation as we proved that Hollywood is now a global sound stage. If a group of highly opinionated filmmakers from all over the world are able to collaborate on one single production, I believe that almost anything is possible.

As distant landscapes become more accessible through advanced storytelling technology, I have faith that exceedingly more creatives will collaborate with those who were once geographically and financially restricted. Whether these partners become tagged as collaborators or some other title in the production's end credits will be the decision of those at the top of the pyramid. After-all, even the best committees have a chairman. What I feel is important is to grasp that the deciding factor remains creativity, passion, and persistence, regardless of the process.

Now that the invisible wall of distance has fallen, the only thing separating the accomplished artists from the outlandish dreamers is the decision to move forward. Happy collaborating.

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'The Force Awakens' Fuels 'Stars Wars' Powerful Legacy of Black Men

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I first saw the original Stars Wars trilogy when was I six years old as a little black boy amazed by a galaxy far, far away, but growing up black and nerdy meant paying more attention to the issue race played in the films. Although the lack of black people in the Star Wars universe is a gaping black hole, each trilogy has had iconic roles for black men.

Prior to the premiere of the new film The Force Awakens, MSNBC host Melissa Harris Perry claimed that Star Wars is racist. She critiqued the original trilogy as a white supremacist takedown of black manhood, declaring that Darth Vader is portrayed as a black man when he's "terrible and bad," and "used to cut off the white man's hand." She then argues that once Darth Vader claims his son and returns to the light he is revealed to be white. Any true Star Wars fan or blerd (black nerd) would say that this is a straw man argument.

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A stronger claim could be made against the character Jar Jar Binks, whose buffoonery in the first prequel, The Phantom Menace, is practically an alien version of blackface. While it may be impossible to redeem Binks' characterization of blackness, the character will not make any future appearances in the new films. Editing out Binks shows how the film creators and producers actually value the opinions of the POC fanboy community and recognized what made the character problematic and not just annoying.

But black men have played pivotal roles throughout the original and prequel film series, beginning with Billy Dee Williams' character Lando Calrissian who first appeared in the Empire Strikes Back. Although he is portrayed as a shuck and jive smooth talker, a common trope for black characters in the '70s, his character is redeemed in the final film when he aids in the rescue of Han Solo and helps destroy the second death star.

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While the first film trilogy was ripe with diverse alien species, the inclusion of a complicated yet loveable character like Calrissian made the film relatable for fans of color. At times Calrissian feels like a token character, but his presence is important in establishing black representation in sci-fi cinema.

The prequel films gave fans an ideal hero to look up to that happened to be a person of color -- Samuel L. Jackson's Mace Windu. In light of Anakin Skywalker being a protagonist with questionable morals, Jackson's character is both a badass hero and a voice of reason. To date he is the only black jedi with a speaking role in the entire film series. (Warning, minor spoilers to follow).

In the newest movie, John Boyega successfully carries the legacy left by Jackson and Williams. As Michael Cavna from the Washington Post points out, the narrative slightly follows the plot of Mark Twain's legendary novel, "The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn," of a young boy on a quest with a runaway slave.

Boyega's character, a Stormtrooper named Finn, flees from the First Order, effectively a plantation master, and is considered a fugitive. Smugglers Chewbacca and Han Solo take on abolitionist roles and aid Finn to finding safety. There's also the film's implied interracial romance between Daisy Ridley's character, Rey, and Finn. The final battle between the First Order and the Rebellion has such a strong parallel to the American Confederate War that it seems obvious the film was created as part of a larger racial backdrop.

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J.J. Abrams intentionally cast Boyega as Finn, in an effort to help the lack of diversity in previous installments. Finn has become the black hero that audiences of color so desperately need. This is especially true given that reality for black men and women is just as dangerous, if not more so, than life in a fantasy universe. One small example is the racist trolling online from fans that have attacked Boyega, and even threatened to boycott the film.

"I just don't get it. You guys got every single alien in this movie imaginable to man," Boyega said, addressing the issue in the New York Times. " Yet what you want to do is fixate on another human being's color. You need to go back to school and unlearn what you have learned. I think Yoda said that, or Obi-Wan."

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Thankfully, Boyega isn't just the token that his predecessors played before him, there are several black actors in this latest Star Wars installment, albeit extras or supporting characters. But black people have been seen, and most definitely heard, Lupita Nyongo and James Earl Jones, throughout the entire series.

Still race relations in space are not light-speed ahead of our own challenges in the real world. The I hope that more diversity is able to shine in the follow-up films -- fingers crossed there will at least be one black female human character.

One thing is clear, the force is definitely woke.

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

A-Sides with Jon Chattman: Young Rising Sons & The Mosers Represent Garden State Well; Zack Biss is "Brand New"

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New Jersey isn't just about "The Boss," Bon Jovi, and Fort Lee lane closures. There are a ton of great bands (and great things) to come out of the Garden State, and I've got two more reasons to forget all the turnpike traffic and focus on the positives. Young Rising Sons and The Mosers are both going to bust out in 2016. It's not an empty statement. It's just a fact. Good music is good music, and good music often finds a home in many ear canals eventually.

Young Rising Sons have already gotten a taste of success. Their hit alt-rock-pop single "High" (off their self-titled debut EP) got them plenty of notice last year - leading to radio airplay and bill shares with everyone from Bleachers to The 1975. This year was another standout in that they released another EP - The Kids Will Be Fine this fall, and shared a stage with The Kooks, and respectively co-headlined shows with Halsey and Hunter Hunted. Fittingly for this column, they also play shows with The Mosers. Let's talk about them shall we?

The Mosers are basically a gritty, punk,pop, rock band that have drawn comparisons to Weezer - I kind of disagree unless you drown Rivers Cuomo with whiskey. To me, the band sound is utterly original and their lyrics come packed with a whole lot of grit. Take their first single "Cold-Hearted Girl," for example, and you'll hear what I mean. The band will be touring most of next year, and have earned props for their debut Ticonderoga. Tonight (Dec. 21), they'll play Webster Hall in New York City with Oh Honey. Happy Holidays, ears!

Anyway, both Young Rising Sons and The Mosers stopped by Primary Wave for respective A-Sides (YRS interview only) earlier this month. Watch it, and you're welcome. Oh, and go New Jersey. It's your birthday. We gonna party like it's your - oh never mind. That was just dumb. Watch on anyway and forgive me.

Young Rising Sons Interview


The Mosers - "Cold Hearted Girl"


To watch another exclusive performance from The Mosers as well as an interview, visit thisisasides.com.

"Bonus Jonas"
Like the bands above, Zack Biss has started galloping ahead of the music pack. With over 56,000 followers on Twitter and quite a following in his native Nashville, the singer/songwriter is hitting all the right notes (oh what cheese Mr. Chattman) with his crafty originals and catchy covers. Say that three times fast. Anyway, the musician, who has opened for The Goo Goo Dolls, sat down for an A-Sides chat in Music City and performed his single "Brand New" at Lover's Circle. Enjoy the video, which was shot by Andrew Thorpe and arranged by Jake Luttrell.



Watch the interview with Biss here.

A-Sides' "Delve Into Twelve" Countdown
Each week A-Sides unleashes its top 12 tracks of the week AKA the "Delve Into Twelve" based on the following contributing factors: songs I'm playing out that particular week (no matter when they were released -- think overlooked songs, unreleased tracks and old favorites), songs various publicists are trying to get me to listen to that I did and dug a bunch, song posts and trends I've noticed on my friends' Facebook walls and, most importantly: what my toddler is currently enjoying thoroughly with an assist from my infant.



About A-Sides with Jon Chattman: Jon Chattman's music series features celebrities and artists (established or not) from all genres performing a track, and discussing what it means to them. This informal series focuses on the artist making art in a low-threatening, extremely informal (sometime humorous) way. No bells, no whistles -- just the music performed in a random, low-key setting followed by an unrehearsed chat. In an industry where everything often gets overblown and over manufactured, Jon strives for a refreshing change. Artists featured on the series include Imagine Dragons, Melissa Etheridge, Air Supply, Joe Perry, Alice Cooper, fun, Bleachers, Charli XCX, Marina and the Diamonds and Bastille.

Stay Connected:
http://ThisIsASides.com
https://www.facebook.com/ThisIsASides
http://www.twitter.com/thisisasides

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Star Wars: You Have Failed Me for the Last Time

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I was three years old when the original Star Wars was released in theaters. I have loved Star Wars since seeing Darth Vader for the first time, blanketed by stormtroopers and walking over the bodies of rebel soldiers who failed to share his appreciation of the dark side of the force. The Empire Strikes Back is my favorite movie, and I think the best movie of all-time. Yoda, Boba Fett, Han Solo frozen in carbonite and Luke learning the truth about Darth Vader are just part of what makes this such a great film. Return of the Jedi couldn't and didn't live up to either of the first two films but in hindsight was a really good film.

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A moment of full confession, I have watched all three original films in a theater in one day, I attended a Star Wars Celebration in Indianapolis, and in the early '90s, I owned a business, Darkside Collectibles, that only sold vintage Star Wars collectibles. I loved everything about Star Wars and with the news of the impending prequels, I welcomed the renaissance of Star Wars. Enough has been written about how poor these films lived up or didn't live up to the Star Wars legacy, so I don't need to go into great detail. Darth Maul, for me, was the biggest let down of the entire prequels. He could've been such a great villain but like most everything in the prequels unceremoniously falls flat to a premature death. The over-bearing use of CGI didn't create a galaxy far, far, away but served to choke the life out of a universe as a Star Wars fan I thought I knew.

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The stain on the original Star Wars trilogy that were the prequels was now a decade old, and I was willing to forgive the Star Wars universe for these transgressions. Disney had purchased the franchise from George Lucas and hired J.J. Abrams to direct what I hoped to be a return to the ways of the force I so enjoyed as a child. My expectations were tempered by having to live through the prequels, but Abrams and Disney presented me with a new hope. I was in line at my local Target at midnight when the new Star Wars toys were released. It wasn't the toys I needed, I only bought my son a Jango Fett Lego set, but I needed to be surrounded by the excitement of the return of the good Star Wars. In November, I purchased the Darth Vader edition PS4 so that I could play Battlefront. It was as if Star Wars was back for good.

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Tickets for The Force Awakens went on sale in October and I like so many fans faithful to the force were there when the cyber line opened. For two months I counted down the days until I could see Han, Luke, and Leia again. From the trailers, it was apparent that the real Star Wars had been awakened. I had slipped and read a possible spoiler when they were filming and was prepared for the worst. Despite the possibility of part of my childhood dying, I was still more than excited to see what had happened thirty years after Return of the Jedi.

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Kylo Ren had more possibilities than Darth Maul. More of a chance to be a really good bad guy if there is such a thing. He worships Darth Vader, so my expectations were that he was going to be the second coming of Lord Vader himself. The Force Awakens for me was a two and a half hour let down to the realization that Star Wars will never be as good as it was in the Empire Strikes Back, maybe not even Return of the Jedi. The latest attempt to resurrect the once great franchise tells the same story that was told in 1977 with less compelling characters.

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Despite being trained by Luke Skywalker, Kylo Ren is taken to the mat by a former-stormtrooper and a scavenger, neither of which have any formal training much less seen a lightsaber before their encounter. Poe Dameron's attempt at comedy, when confronted by Ren, was neither funny nor appropriate. Would Darth Vader have been treated with such callous disregard? I think Poe would've quickly found himself on the business end of a force-choke likely ending his days of performing stand-up at the cantina on Jakku. There's no mystery to who Kylo Ren is because he willingly sheds his mask. The mystery of his origin is also not left up to the imagination. Both take out much of the anticipation of the next film for me. I was excited to see Captain Phasma. The same excitement I had when I saw the Snowtroopers in Empire Strikes Back and the Emperor's Royal Guard in Return of the Jedi. Her voice and demeanor in the film are simply wrong and detract from what could've been a great character. Supreme Leader Snoke looks like something from an episode of Scooby-Doo and General Hux is maybe the most unnecessary character of the entire film. Neither Snoke, Ren, or Hux command the respect that Darth Vader or the Emperor did and because of that the First Order is a water-downed version of the Empire.

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There are good parts to The Force Awakens, making it better than any of the prequels so many fans loathed. For one, there is no Jar Jar Binks. Rey and Finn are particularly strong and likable characters. They carry the film to a height that the First Order couldn't do on its own. BB-8 is a great character and the decision to give Chewbacca more of a "speaking" role adds to his lovability. The little interaction we have with C3PO is true to his smart, yet oblivious to the world character that make him a comforting presence to old Star Wars fans. The end of the film is less than inspiring and instead of leaving me wanting more makes me think there should've been more. Not another film more but more to the current film. The most telling part for me if The Force Awakens had succeeded in living up to the Star Wars legacy was if my two sons (nine and sixteen) not only liked the film but couldn't stop talking or dreaming about what could happen next. Neither one found the film to be anything other than disappointing. They weren't alone. As a lifelong Star Wars fan, I found The Force Awakens to be unfulfilling, uninspiring, and a poor retread of a nearly forty-year-old story.

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Adele, You Had Me At Hello!

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Those who know me and know my love for music and pop culture are shocked to hear these words come out of me ... I've just recently got into Adele.

Sure, I've heard her music from 19 and 21 and I've seen her gobble up all the awards, but I've never actually sat down and listened to her work or bought a song.

And then there was Hello.

I was impossible to miss the hype, that's for sure. When I jumped to watch her two performances on SNL then I just had to download. 25 sat on my iPhone for a bit until I took my next flight. It's been love at first listen ever since...she truly had me at Hello.

Here she sings When We Were Young, her second performance on SNL.

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She started out BIG, right from the start! Before she even performed, SNL was quick to point out that Adele is the one thing we can all agree on! In this clip, she even saves Thanksgiving.

Her numbers are off the charts; that alone is enough to make her a pop icon. But for me her success comes in how she's infiltrated our pop culture, seemingly popping up in every corner in multiple facets with new music. Not many performers are able to do that, especially so quickly.

I fell in love with her when she sang with Jimmy Fallon in the class room. Click here to see that little ditty.

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What I love most are her lyrical arrangements. As a writer, I can appreciate the craft of crafting lyrics and weaving a story. Hers make for great reinterpretations from other singers, like this acapella group from New York City who I think did an amazing reinterpretation (and fast!).

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Nothing says you've made it to icon status like a parody, and this one has been running social circles for the last few days and has most ROTFLMAO.

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I'm not sure what took me so long to get into the music, but I'm certainly glad that I did. I've now downloaded all three albums, which should last me until the next installment.

Can anyone say 29?

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Top Viral Videos and Digital Stars of 2015 (VIDEO)

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It's that time again! What's Trending and video intelligence firm Tubular Labs have released our 4th annual list of the 'Top Viral Videos and Stars of 2015.' For the first time, the list includes trending videos on different platforms such as Vine, Facebook and Instagram.

With the help of YouTube parody star Bart Baker, we take you through the viral video highlights of 2015; what made you laugh, cry, cringe and think. The videos on this list had to break through the video clutter and get people talking and sharing on social. And this year, the list covers a range of new categories, from Top Instagram and Vine videos to Celebrity Meeting Fan video to Statement of the Year video.

And the winners are...

Viner of the Year: KingBach
27.3 million cross-platform followers
14.5 million Vine followers
In 2015:
▪ 152 Vines
▪ 2.2 billion views
▪ Most watched Vine: https://vine.co/v/OTBMavBrEiV (57M Loops)

Most Viewed Viner of 2015: Lele Pons
10 million Vine followers
In 2015:
▪ 199 vines
▪ 3.1 billion views
▪ Most watched Vine: https://vine.co/v/OLu2tpPF0Lw (39M Loops)

Most shared Vine:

Most Viewed: Paris Stadium Blasts (11/13/15)
169.3 million views on Vine
390K cross platform engagements

Most Engaged: Duck Army (8/30/15)
138 million views on Vine
2 million cross platform engagements

Instagram Star:

Celebrity: Taylor Swift
217.1 million cross-platform followers
57.2 million Instagram followers
In 2015
▪ 76 Instagram videos
▪ 264.8 million Instagram video views
▪ Most watched Instagram video: https://www.instagram.com/p/76-loRDvL-/ (6.2M views)

Influencer: Dan Bilzerian
25.1 million cross-platform followers
14.3 million Instagram followers
In 2015
▪ 59 Instagram videos
▪ 26.1 million views
▪ Most watched Instagram video: https://www.instagram.com/p/5ITsTfoDmY/ (NSFW) (2M views)

Brand: National Geographic
91.3 million cross-platform followers
37.8 million Instagram followers
In 2015
▪ 77 Instagram videos
▪ 74.4 million views
▪ Most watched Instagram video: https://www.instagram.com/p/7iB2khIVSh/ (2.5M views)

Most shared instagram video of the year: Taylor Swift dances with Dylan (9/21/15)
6.2 million views
2 million cross-platform engagements

Video Brand of the year

Overall: Buzzfeed Video
18 million cross-platform followers
In 2015
▪ 3,161 videos
▪ 7.1 billion views
▪ Most watched video: https://www.facebook.com/video.php?v=1716156491858559 (81.3M views)

Celebrity: Ellen DeGeneres
111 million cross-platform followers
In 2015
▪ 2,024 videos
▪ 2.9 billion views
▪ Most watched video: https://www.facebook.com/video.php?v=10153897769757240 (74.3M views)

Comedy Sketch of the Year: Buzzfeed's Puppyhood
81.3 million views on Facebook, 8 million on YouTube
3 million cross-platform engagements

Movie trailer of the year: Star Wars: The Force Awakens (10/19/15)
68 million views on YouTube
201M Cross-Platform Video Views
5.9M Cross-Platform engagements

Facebook page/star of the year: Cristiano Ronaldo
186.4 million followers
108 million Facebook followers
In 2015
▪ 32 Facebook videos
▪ 158.4 million views
▪ Most watched video: https://www.facebook.com/video.php?v=10153589305572164 (44.9M views)

Facebook video of the year: Baked Apple Roses (10/5/15) (also overall top food video cross-platform)
222 million views
7.8 million cross-platform engagements

Interview of the year: French father & son (11/16/15)
42 million views
1.6 million cross-platform engagements

Viral game of the year: Pie in the face (4/20/15)
175.4 million views
4.5 million engagements

Top video posted by a celebrity: Dog costume - Tyrese Gibson (11/19/15)
154.9 million views
6 million engagements

Cutest baby video: This is why moms never get work done (2/18/15)
152.8 million views
5.4 million engagements

Celebrity meeting fan video: "Captain Jack Sparrow" at hospital (7/9/15)
134.1 million views
2.9 million cross-platform engagements

"Happy tears" video: Welcome back, troops (12/31/14)
127.4 million views
4 million cross-platform engagements

Fail of the Year: Mini basketball fail (7/6/15)
84.3 million views
882K cross-platform engagements

Family vlogger video: Dead Husband Walking - Eh Bee Family (8/18/15)
125.9 million views
3.3 million cross-platform engagements

Animal video of the year: Unlikely Friends - Android Ad (2/8/15)
178.8 million views
5.4 million cross-platform engagements

Funniest TV blooper reel: America's Funniest Home Videos - Ice Bucket bloopers (3/17/15)
187.9 million views
4.9 cross-platform engagements

Viral Trend of the Year: The Dress
73 million views on the original Tumblr post
The Dress was referenced on Twitter over 10 million times in one week.
About 20,000 different videos about The Dress were posted across various platforms

YouTube star of the year: PewDiePie
62.1 million cross-platform followers
40.7 million YT followers
In 2015
▪ 577 YT videos
▪ 2.4 billion views
▪ Most watched video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VhjCMsWrfrk&feature=youtu.be (22.9M views)

Music video of the year: See You Again - Wiz Khalifa for Fast & Furious 7 (4/6/15)
1.2 billion views
9.3 million cross-platform engagements

Top children's video: The Ball Pit Show - learning colors (6/23/15)
225.9 million views
147K cross-platform engagements

International video / Inspiring video: Security camera / homeless guy (8/28/15)
190.3 million views
8.4 million cross-platform engagements

Prank of the year: Crazy Plastic Ball Prank (1/18/15)
55.9 million views
773K engagements

Music video parody of the year: Uptown Funk parody (1/31/15)
25.9 million views
279K cross-platform engagements

Most discussed YouTube topic of the year: Minecraft
4.2 million videos
32.3 billion views
997K creators

Cover of the Year: Megan Trainor's Lips Are Movin (1/21/15)
56.6 million views
325K cross-platform engagements

Wedding Proposal of the Year: 365 Day Wedding Proposal (1/18/15)
26.1 million views
63K cross-platform engagements

Statement Video of the Year: Self-Esteem - Drawing Hearts (9/9/15)
123.3 million views
3.3 million engagements

Originally posted by Christine Linnell on WhatsTrending.com

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Penelope Wilton Breaks Down Isobel and Violet as the Elder Stateswomen of 'Downton Abbey'

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Among many other things, the end of Downton Abbey this March will wrap up one of TV's most charming buddy relationships, between Maggie Smith's Dowager Countess Violet and Penelope Wilton's Isobel Crawley.

Wilton says she'll miss it, too - and while she's at it, she would also like it to be remembered for its substance, not just its entertainment value.

Fans have come to cherish the friendship, despite its comparatively modest amount of screen time, because what began as a beautifully played verbal duel between Isobel and Violet has been enriched by a deep and growing mutual respect and affection.

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Violet (above left) comes to their exchanges as the aristocrat, conscious and protective of her social status and that of her class. She sees most change, accurately, as the enemy of the world in which she lives.

Isobel (above right) comes from the distant fringes of royalty and identifies more with the folks outside the gates of Downton.

The tone for the relationship was established early and underscored by an enduring exchange from the fourth episode of season one.

"You are quite wonderful, the way you see room for improvement wherever you look," Violet says to Isobel. "I never knew such reforming zeal."

Replies Isobel, "I take that as a compliment."

Violet turns her head slightly and murmurs, "I must have said it wrong."

The relationship has subsequently followed a long and winding road, paved with droll one-liners. Yet at the same time the two women have become regular companions and even semi-confidantes - a rapport that accelerated after the death of Isobel's son Matthew (Dan Stevens) at the end of season three.

"She became much closer to Violet at that point," says Wilton. "Violet was someone she found she could turn to after Matthew's death."

Still, it's not all tea and crumpets here. The upcoming season six, which launches Jan. 3 on PBS, starts with a situation that puts Isobel and Violet at direct odds and doesn't make either one clearly right or wrong.

"It would be boring if Isobel were saintly all the time," says Wilton. "She can be quite sharp, and I like that. It makes her human."

Much of the nuance in the relationship between Isobel and Violet has from the beginning been conveyed wordlessly, confirming that both veteran actors are skilled at body language and subtle or not-so-subtle expressions.

Toward that end, says Wilton, she and Smith have tried to play their scenes spontaneously.

"We didn't rehearse them," she says. "That seemed a better way to see what we were getting at."

And what they were getting at was not, she says, just comic relief or incidental interludes between the real stories. If they didn't exactly form a Greek chorus, they helped the audience take a step back and see the unfolding events of the show in a larger context.

"I hope people see that our characters aren't just delivering witty remarks to cheer things up," says Wilton. "Violet and I are the older generation, so our characters have the perceptions of experience. We're commentating on what's going on."

Beyond that, Isobel herself represents one side in the show's most critical tug-of-war: whether the Old Britain of lavish aristocratic estates would endure or a new order incorporating the middle and working classes would gradually assume much of the ruling power.

Isobel's views are progressive and more democratic than those held by most of the Crawley family. She champions women's rights, for example, though she doesn't march in the streets.

"I felt Isobel would lead the drive toward where the country was going," says Wilton. "She brought a European view to things."

Wilton, who has appeared in hundreds of television, movie and stage productions over a career that spans more than four decades, notes that her Downton role was "the longest thing I've ever done on television."

She's fine with that.

"I've very much liked it," she says. "When you work with the same group of people this long, you develop a shorthand. And everyone is familiar with the quality of [Julian Fellowes'] writing. You don't change the writing.

"I'm delighted to have been associated with it."

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10 Gifts That Television Gave Us in 2015

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As the annual holiday march of the reruns takes over television for the next two weeks, we should remind ourselves that TV has never saved its gifts for the end of the year.

It spreads them out, which is exactly the right way to do it. So in that spirit, let's pause a moment to recall some of the shows, and one individual, whose aim in 2015 was true.

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The shows aren't necessarily the year's best, though some are. But they all offered a level of delight, fun, truth, insight or sheer entertainment that reminded us why, no matter how much we grumble about it, most of us watch television.

In no order except alphabetical:

1. American Crime. ABC's anthology series started with a disturbing, uncomfortable drama about crime and race. It featured terrific performances by Felicity Huffman and Timothy Hutton, and to the great credit of ABC, the series was renewed despite modest ratings.

2. Blindspot. Jaimie Alexander climbed out of the duffel bag in Times Square, put some clothes on and became the toughest chick on prime-time TV. NBC gets another psychological action-thriller right.

3. Downton Abbey. Entering its sixth and final season next month, Downton has drawn the inevitable backlash. It's lost its edge, it's too soapy, it's run its course. There's a simple answer to those criticisms: They are all untrue.

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4. Empire. One of those rare soaps, like Dallas or Desperate Housewives, where things all just came together. The reasons include Taraji P.Henson and Terrence Howard (above) plus the very smart decision to use legitimate music. Empire may not last 10 years, but it made this year brighter, and not just for Fox.

5. Fargo. Where True Detective stumbled in its second season, FX's unique crime saga Fargo hardly missed a step with a strong new story set in the same North Country. Credit writer Noah Hawley with walking the line between keeping the aura and making the story fresh.

6. Grantchester. One of the quietest and best new PBS series as the network enters the post-Downton Abbey era. Grantchester revolves around a small-town clergyman who helps solve crimes, and it succeeds by giving us charming characters who say interesting things. What a concept.

7. Mad Men. There's still some murmuring about the final scene, where Don Draper seemed on the brink of an epiphany that would lead him to create the famous Coca-Cola "I'd Like To Teach the World To Sing" spot. But hey, what better ending for a man who had advertising ink running through his veins? There haven't been many more memorable ads, or many better shows in TV history.

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8. Mark Rylance in Wolf Hall. Rylance (above) played Thomas Cromwell in this PBS adaptation of the best-selling book. A Shakespearian institution in the U.K., he gave a master class here in the power of underacting - speaking whole chapters with the lift of an eyebrow.

9. Power. One of the big, tense and raw shows that Starz has been betting on lately. It might look like the other show about a rich, successful and shady black family, but while it doesn't do soap quite as lavishly as Empire, it handles some other issues even better.

10. Unreal. It might seem impossible for a show to send up reality TV, which has already lurched through every barrier. Unreal found away to do it, thanks largely to a superb performance by Shiri Appleby as a producer who utilizes some of her own neuroses in creating reality TV winners.

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

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