Thursday, June 25, 2015

13 Of America's Best Entertainers On Comedy And Life

In Sick in the Head, Judd Apatow talks to some of the biggest names in comedy about living and working in the industry. Here’s a peek inside.

Chris Rock

Chris Rock

Stephen Lovekin / Getty Images

Jimmy Fallon

Jimmy Fallon

Jamie Mccarthy / Getty Images

Amy Schumer

Amy Schumer

Jeff Bottari / Getty Images

Harold Ramis

Harold Ramis

Bryan Bedder / Getty Images Entertainment


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All The Books Referenced On Season 3 Of “Orange Is The New Black”

Orange Is the New Black book club, anyone?

Maritsa Patrinos / BuzzFeed

Netflix


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Which Muggle From "Harry Potter" Are You?

You have nothing to fear if you have nothing to hide.

16 Ridiculous Fan Theories That'll Actually Make You Think

Muggles don’t exist, and Mr. Salt and Mrs. Pepper from “Blues Clues” have a dark, dark secret.

Mr. Salt and Mrs. Pepper from Blues Clues are living a lie.

Mr. Salt and Mrs. Pepper from Blues Clues are living a lie.

Mrs. Pepper had an affair with Cayenne, which led to the birth of baby Paprika.

As one Reddit commenter pointed out, "Cayenne is Paprika's Grandmother. It's latent genes. Don't you know how genetics work?"

Also, spices don't have genders. But still.

Nickelodeon

Professor McGonagall loves cats. A lot. Like, in that way.

Professor McGonagall loves cats. A lot. Like, in that way.

This theory is reliant on a misprint in the original edition of Prisoner of Azkaban, that changed in future editions - one that involved Crookshanks originally, but then cut him out.

"Other than a boring misprint, the only other possibility is that someone from the future is meddling with time."

The theory concludes that Professor McGonagall has a romantic vendetta against Hermoine's cat, Crookshanks, and that she uses the time-turner to seduce the cat.
We already know McGonagall can transform into a cat, so it's theorised that she would turn into a cat before any form of ~intercourse~.

It's all a bit much, really.

Warner Bros

Bane was on Batman's side the whole damn time.

Bane was on Batman's side the whole damn time.

This theory suggests that the motives of Bane in The Dark Knight Rises are misunderstood. Bane did what he did to encourage Bruce Wayne to give the figure, and idol, of "Batman" to the city of Gotham - taking out the League of Shadows along the way.

This one is actually pretty great, and possible - if you ignore the whole "Bane tries to shoot Batman in the face with a shotgun" thing.

Warner Bros.

Pigeon Man from Hey Arnold committed suicide in front of Arnold.

After Pigeon Man's coops are destroyed by vandals, he turns to the edge of the roof and seemingly "flies away". Of course, this theory surmises that this was just Arnold's imagination helping him cope with the fact he just watched a good friend kill themselves.

Side note: Hey Arnold is a ridiculously great and underrated show and you should check it out.

youtube.com


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What It Takes To Write an Epic, Genre-Bending Fantasy Best-Seller

Erika Johansen, the author of The Queen of the Tearling trilogy, talks with Roxane Gay about building fantastical worlds, playing with complex characters, and rooting for female protagonists who are tough as nails.

Erika Johansen

Victoria Webb

Roxane Gay

Jay Grabiec

The Invasion of the Tearling, the second installment in Erika Johansen's best-selling The Queen of the Tearling trilogy, was released earlier this month. Roxane Gay, author of Bad Feminist and An Untamed State, interviewed Erika about the new book and her writing in general.


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