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Stephen Colbert Through The Years, From 'Second City' To 'Late Show' Appointment

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It’s official: Stephen Colbert will be replacing David Letterman on the “Late Show.

In honor of this accomplishment, let’s take a look back at some of the 49-year-old comedy legend’s career highlights -- from early commercial work to his current digs at “The Colbert Report.”


'Mad Men' Star Jessica Pare Finds Her Love For Junk Food In 'Funny Or Die' Video

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You might be seeing a bit more of Megan Draper when "Mad Men" returns for its final season.

Jessica Pare, who plays Don Draper's pretty new wife on the show, sat down for an interview with "Access Hollywood" (in a parody for Funny or Die), was introduced to hamburgers for the first time and the rest, as they say, is history. We're worried her newfound obsession with junk food might make her character on the show unrecognizable.

Apparently, actresses can eat anything, it just has to not be anything.

Chad Michael Murray On 'One Tree Hill,' His Past Success And His Future In Film

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Chad Michael Murray has been a fixture in Hollywood since the 2000s, appearing in pop culture classics like "Gilmore Girls," "Dawson's Creek" and, of course, "One Tree Hill." Plus, the brooding blonde from Buffalo stole young girls' hearts as the lead male in teenage rom-coms like "A Cinderella Story" and "Freaky Friday."

Nowadays, Murray is channeling his dark side as he plays Jacob Orr in Crackle's series "Chosen," a show which centers around characters who are a part of a secret, deadly game that will change their lives forever. "Chosen" is set to debut its third season on April 15, and Murray couldn't be more excited.

"I don’t want to be cliché, but expect the unexpected," Murray told HuffPost TV of the upcoming season. "I think all the action sequences are really punched up. We got Rose McGowan joining the cast and they really raised the stakes in every aspect of the show. You get to watch these characters really deal with the humanity with what this game would really cause a human to do."

Murray is also gearing up to release his new film "Other People's Children," in which he plays a homeless heroin addict. The 32-year-old dropped 25 pounds, taking the role to a whole new level.

But despite all the dramatic choices he's been making, does Murray still miss his days as a teen heartthrob? He revealed all about his past and future with HuffPost TV.

Tell me about your character Jacob Orr on "Chosen." Do you relate to him in any way or has this been totally different for you?
There’s always pieces of a character that are relatable to yourself. I think the way that Jacob cares, his moral compass, I think that would be very similar to mine. But as far as living in these scenarios -- it’s a very unreal scenario in a very real world -- I’m just trying to play him as real as the scenario would call for.

How’s it been working with Rose McGowan this season?
I can’t answer that because that would be a spoiler! But I would say this much, she’s wonderful and she did a great job and everyone is really happy.

What do you like about being on a series versus in a movie?
I think it just depends on the material. “Chosen’s” material, it’s just high content and it’s an opportunity to really kind of do some gut checks and discover what you have inside of you. For me, I just really love these things because it’s working with wonderful people, the crew is the best and Ben Ketai is just an incredible, incredible showrunner, creator and director. So everything from the cast, crew and director, I feel very, very blessed to be a part of it. I just like the whole thing that Ben has created in his crazy head. In his dark, dark mind.

Your beard kind of went viral for a little while last year, and you recently talked about your weight loss to play a homeless man in “Other People’s Children.” Tell me about that transformation.
It was a lot. My character P.K. is a homeless heroin addict and to really invest in that, I lost about 25 pounds and kind of watched a couple of homeless guys who just happened to be around me and stole things from them. The way that they respond to things and the ups and the downs, whether it be the different mental disorders or diseases, I wanted to just kind of segment something there and we found a way to make it gel. I get to finally see the film April 15 and, personally, I can’t wait because everything I have seen just looks incredible.

Did the role mess with your mind a little bit?
Yeah, that’s the thing. It took me about three to three-and-a-half weeks after I was done filming to kind of shake off the energy of someone who would be in that state of mind. It’s so dark and it really puts you in such a funky spot. I just didn’t feel like myself … it was bizarre and different. You just can’t get rid of that negativity and that anger that this character carries for certain things.

So that was a big departure for you. It’s weird to think that “A Cinderella Story” is going to be 10 years old this summer ...
Oh my God, don’t date me. Don’t date me!



You are prime nostalgia for a lot of people out there with “Gilmore Girls,” “Dawson’s Creek," and "One Tree Hill.” Can you reflect on those days a little bit and how is it different now in Hollywood than it was when you first got into the business.
Just for me, I’m grateful for all of it. Every single experience gave me something else to really pull from and learn from and without them and without the people who were around me, I would have never been able to figure out things as an artist. And to discover the type of person that wants to choose to do this bizarre and weird thing and really just challenge myself. So to start off, I’m just really grateful for all those.

I mean the industry itself, there’s just so much more content. You have everything from digital content now, to the about a thousand channels on the television, so there’s so much programming out there. So, those different things in the industry have changed. I think when I came here, it was an opportunity and I saw it and I grasped it and I felt good about it and I was fortunate enough to find some people who championed behind me and gave me the opportunity.

Speaking of the changes in programming, it’s funny to think that in “A Cinderella Story” it was all about texting. Do you ever think how the movie would be different 10 years later?
You know what’s funny? That hasn’t dawned on me. I guess because it's just like FaceTime and stuff like that … if you used Skype, it would be anti-climatic, don’t you think?

Of course I have to ask you, “One Tree Hill,” would you be down for a reunion?
I don’t know anything about it. Please, fill me in!



Outlets have been asking the cast members if they would ever like to have a reunion, make a movie or a little special on the CW …
Oh! Man, I don’t know. I think Mark [Schwahn] did a great job in having Lucas come back in Season 9. It was something I wanted to give the fans. I really wanted to go back and just give them a little swan song while we had that chance. But I think it ended in a really good place.

This is the first I’ve heard about any reunions, so I’d need to sit on it and think about it. But I think that we have the best fans in the world. The “One Tree Hill” fans are incredible and I’m grateful for every moment that I’ve gotten to spend with them and everything that they’ve done. They just followed for years and years and years, God, how many years has it been, 10? Ten or 11 years since that show started, so that unbelievable fan base, I admire them. And they’re still there watching all my new content and now they’re coming over to “Chosen.” I kind of like the fact that we’re all growing together.

Oh yes, I'm one of those fans. “One Tree Hill” was on during my prime teenage years.
Is that true? That’s awesome.

Yes, that was my show when I was growing up. I loved it.
Uh, oh. Well, did it change very much for you after Season 6?

Of course, the show was different without Lucas, but still great. And I’m sure you got some hate mail during that time like, “Bring back Lucas!” But you came back in the end and gave the fans what they wanted.
Yeah. I didn’t know what was going on around me, I literally disappeared for a year and went camping, backpacking, just living the life and learning and then I finally got social media right towards the tail end and I finally got to see how the fans felt. And so I was like, “You know what? I just want to go back to them.” And that’s honestly why I did it, I felt like, you know, it’s perfect and we all talked to each other and said, “Let’s just find a way to make it work.” And we made it work and it was great. So, Luke got to come back.

You must be proud that you're in all these awesome pop culture classics, and now you’re moving on to this darker stuff. It will show fans a new side of you.
Of course. Every single aspect, every single piece of it is a part of my identity and it’s helped me grow as a human being, so I always look back and I’m like, “Man, not one bad word I could ever say.” I am so grateful and I’m happy with everything that has occurred. I mean, how many people do I see consistently come up and go, “Oh my God, I love Cinderella Story!” It’s the craziest, most wonderful blessing.



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Jeremy Piven Talks Playing Ari Gold On 'Entourage'

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Jeremy Piven admitted that playing Ari Gold on "Entourage" led him to re-think his acting career in a HuffPost Live interview on Thursday.

"I've had people come up to me and literally say 'I am an a--hole because of you," he told Marc Lamont Hill in an appearance to promote his PBS series "Mr. Selfridge." "And it makes me feel terrible. It makes me feel like I want to retire.

"Ari Gold is the most reactive character that you can play," he continued. "If I'm glorifying that behavior, that's not a good thing."

Piven played the role of the bombastic and often vitriolic super-agent for eight seasons on HBO. He'll return as the infamous Gold in the much-anticipated Entourage movie, slated for a 2015 release.

Famous for his wrath, wit and work-ethic, Piven's Ari Gold imparted a vision of a Hollywood agent so vividly that the actor had to remind people he's just playing a role.

"I have heard people have actually fired their agents and I really try to tell them that it's a fictional character," Piven said of reactions to Gold. "What that is, is a combination of [writer] Doug Ellin's fantasy as to what an agent is, and an homage to [real life agent] Ari Emanuel and then me taking it and trying to flesh it out with as much humanity as possibly."

Watch Jeremy Piven's full HuffPost Live interview below:

It's National Sibling Day! Here Are The Best TV Siblings Of All Time

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It’s National Sibling Day! To celebrate, we’ve come up with a killer list of great sibling relationships throughout TV history. From fighting demons to fighting acne and everything in between, these sibling duos – and trios – have taught us all a thing or two about familial love and why having a sibling totally rocks!

Dean and Sam Winchester – "Supernatural"
The family that battles demons together stays together. Honestly, the bonds of brotherhood don’t get much stronger than our sexy Supernatural duo. They’ve dealt with psychotic killers, grim reapers and gone to hell and back -– literally -– for each other … and looked damn good doing it.

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Ross and Monica Gellar - "Friends"
From incredible dance routines to sharing their first kiss together (okay, that one’s a bit gross) Monica and Ross set the bar for awesome brother-sister relationships on TV. He was the dorky and loveable paleontologist and she was the obsessive, clean freak, mother hen of the group. At times their relationship was weird –- Monica’s unhealthy interest in Ross’s love life and their complete lack of boundaries made for some weird, funny moments -– but the Gellars were always there for each other.

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Michael Scofield and Lincoln Burrows – "Prison Break"
Nothing says sibling love like full body tattoos and elaborately planned prison breaks. When Lincoln is sent to prison and set to be executed, his brother Michael does what any of us would do –- if we were all blessed with insanely high IQ’s -– and stages a bank robbery in order to become an inmate and jailbreak them both. Being willing to eat prison food for months on end is the ultimate test of brotherly loyalty.

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Prue, Piper and Phoebe – "Charmed"
How could we not include the three most powerful witches of all time whose sole destiny is to protect the innocent from evil all while dealing with the constant threat of earthquakes and overabundance of fog that every San Francisco native must endure. The fact that they can keep their powers secret through all of the FBI and police investigations that take place during the series is reason enough to believe in magic. But what makes the Halliwell sisters (and we are not recognizing long-lost half-sister Paige because, frankly, she was just a poor substitute for Shannon Doherty’s Prue) wicked cool is that even though they each possess unique magical powers, they’re strongest when working together. Long live the “Power of Three!”

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Seth Cohen and Ryan Atwood – "The O.C."
Okay, so they aren’t actually brothers, but if we’re going to do a list of the best TV sibs of all time, there’s no way we aren’t including the street kid from Chino and his lovable geek of a sidekick. The story of Ryan and Seth is a tale as old as time -– boy from the wrong side of the tracks meets girl boy from a well-off family and they embark on a scandalous relationship that turns a tiny seaside town upside down and changes both their lives forever.

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Dan and Jenny Humphrey - "Gossip Girl"
Lonely boy Dan and sweet sister Jenny were always the outsiders at their fancy Upper East Side private school in "Gossip Girl" –- having no money and living in Brooklyn put a damper on their social life – but that didn’t stop them from trying to fit in. They dealt with “Queen B’s,” hookups, breakups and scandalous upper crust society for six seasons, and they did it all together.

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Damon and Stefan Salvatore– "The Vampire Diaries"
Our second supernatural pair on the list, the Salvatore brothers have what you might call a strained relationship -– a centuries old love triangle can cause a rift in even the strongest of brotherhoods. Thanks to their immortality, they both have the ability to hold a serious grudge, but when they’re not romantic rivals, they actually have a pretty badass bromance going on.

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Tia and Tamera Mowry– "Sister, Sister"
We don’t really need to explain why Tia and Tamera are on this list -– we’ve covered how amazing they are before -– but we will, just in case anyone has any doubts. Separated and adopted at birth and then reunited years later, these twins suffered through annoying neighbors (ROGER!) and crazy parental figures and returned to TV for a reality series years later.

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Finn Hudson and Kurt Hummel - "Glee"
We love "Glee". The singing, the dancing, the melodramatic monologues and satirical humor and, most importantly, the way it can take terrible high school experiences, put them to a musical numbers, and have any issue resolved by the end of an episode. Finn and Kurt moved in completely different circles at the beginning of the show –- Finn, a high school jock, Kurt, the flamboyantly gay choir boy -– but Glee club changed all that. When they finally became true brothers –- they’re parents married in Season 2 -– it proved what we knew all along. Music can bring anyone together.

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The Starks - "Game of Thrones"
The most honest and loyal house in the Seven Kingdoms, the Stark kids share a pretty tight bond with each other. Between losing their dad to that jerk Joffrey, leading rebellions in Westeros and venturing beyond the Wall, they’ve been separate for most of the show but that doesn’t mean we aren’t rooting for a reunion this season –- of course, with most of them now dead, it’ll be a small affair.

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Carlton, Hilary and Ashley Banks - "Fresh Prince of Bel-Air"
Carlton was a bit naïve, Hilary was just plain stupid and Ashley was a brat, but together, the Banks siblings balanced each other out. Honestly, we thought Carlton’s iconic dance just had to show up on this list somewhere.

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Buffy and Dawn Summers - "Buffy the Vampire Slayer"
One slays vampires, the other is a mystical power of living energy disguised as an ordinary teenager, together they are the ass-kicking Summer sisters. Buffy protects Dawn -– that’s literally one of her jobs -– and Dawn keeps Buffy human. Their relationship can be a bit rocky at times –- we consider demon marriages and the complete destruction of their hometown as minor bumps in the road -– but they’ll always be the best members of the Scooby Gang.

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Kaley Cuoco's See-Through Purse Is An Interesting Accessory

Think You're A Britney Fan, Bitch? Take The Quiz!

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Are you a slave 4 Britney? Think you know her inside out? Does she, oh, I don't know ... drive you crazy?

Take this quiz to find out whether you're a ride-or-die Britney fan, and check out the answers below when you're finished.

Quiz widget by



CLICK HERE FOR ANSWERS

Rob Lowe Says It's Ok to Flirt

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And who wouldn't want to flirt with him? We spoke to Rob about parenting, his marriage and what's next for him at our Mamarazzi event for his new book, Love Life, at The Paramount hotel in NYC.


'It's A Small World' Turns 50 With Sing-along

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LAKE BUENA VISTA, Fla. (AP) — The timeless Disney tune "It's a Small World" that wafts through our memories from past theme park vacations turns 50 this year, and on Thursday, Disney parks worldwide hosted a global sing-along.

At Walt Disney World Resort in Florida, a huge chorus of the song was performed in front of Cinderella Castle at Magic Kingdom by cast members and a children's choir from Central Florida Performing Arts. The kids — who didn't seem to mind belting out several takes of what some consider an earworm — sang for a live broadcast on "Good Morning America." Tributes to the song will also be held throughout the park all day, and other parks around the world also held sing-alongs.

Not that the parks are in short supply of the song on any regular day. Disney officials estimate that during a 16-hour operating day, the song is played, on average, 1,200 times.

It was written by Richard and Robert Sherman at the request of Walt Disney himself. The brothers won Academy Awards in 1965 for the music for "Mary Poppins."

The "It's a Small World" song and animatronic attraction debuted at the 1964 New York World's Fair. It was shipped to Disneyland in California then recreated at the other Disney parks. The attraction opened at the Florida park in 1971.

While some adults may complain about the infectious nature of the song, the gentle boat ride is a calm and air-conditioned respite from the crowds and heat — and little kids love it.

With its hundreds of costumed dolls, the attraction was considered high-tech back in the 1970s. It's definitely different than many of the other new theme park offerings these days. There's no 3D, no complicated storyline.

"I think 'It's a Small World,' because of the message that it brings, really does resonate with the audience," said Gary Landrum, a Walt Disney World Imagineer and archivist from California. "It was really one of the first of what became the classic Disney theme park attractions. It's a beautiful story, it's a simple story that I think the public really connects with."

On Thursday morning, Chris Pini, his wife and their two children raced to the Small World ride first thing.

"I came down here as a kid and rode this with my parents, and now I'm getting the chance to take my kids on it," he said. "It's awesome, I know it's been around here for 50 years and it's an amazing ride."

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Follow Tamara Lush on Twitter at http://twitter.com/tamaralush

Nicolas Cage And David Gordon Green Unite For 'Joe'

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NEW YORK (AP) — For the haunted, hard-living Texas ex-con of "Joe," David Gordon Green was looking for a modern-day Robert Mitchum, someone with an old-fashioned kind of rugged masculinity with an underlying innocence. He thought of Nicolas Cage.

Green wrote Cage a letter, sending along the screenplay, not knowing if or when he'd hear back. Three days later, Cage called. He had read not just the script, but the novel. Twice. The next day he took a plane to Austin, Texas, to meet with Green. "When I read 'Joe,' I understood him," Cage said in a recent interview by phone. "I thought, 'Yeah, I don't think I'm going to have to act so much in this part. I don't think I'm going to have to try experimenting with performance style. I think I can really just be and feel these lines and resonate with these lines from my memories."

"Joe," which opens in theaters Friday, makes a fitting pairing of Cage and Green. Both have made a habit of confounding moviegoers by shifting unpredictably between art house and popcorn fare, leaving some fans scratching their heads by pursuing such frightful things as action movies and comedy.

After his Oscar-winning performance in "Leaving Las Vegas," Cage turned to blockbusters like "The Rock" and "Con Air." More recently, he's been increasingly theatrical (and parodied for it) in movies like "The Bad Lieutenant: Port of Call New Orleans" and "Ghost Rider: Spirit of Vengeance." Cage says he was trying to be "break the mold of naturalistic film performance" with what he calls "Western kabuki."

"When people say things like over-the-top, I say to them, 'Well, you show me where the top is and I'll tell you whether or not I'm over it,'" says Cage. "I don't think anyone can answer where the top is."

In Green, Cage found a director who also can stretch from intimate to broad. Green's naturalistic acclaimed debut "George Washington" endeared him to the indie faithful, an association he later upended with a string of studio comedies: "Pineapple Express," ''Your Highness" (a box-office flop that Green gleefully notes is a comedy without a single joke) and "The Sitter."

"One of the things that's difficult about being a movie star, or a director for that matter, is that it's hard to be a character actor," says Green. "It's hard to not brand yourself because your name is at a pretty powerful point in the presentation of a film. So sometimes it can be difficult to disappear and challenge people's perceptions."

Larry Brown's novel "Joe," about a violent man trying to stay out of trouble and help a teenage kid in need (played by Tye Sheridan), had long had a pull on Green. His first filmmaking experience was working as a production assistant (along with "Mud" director Jeff Nichols) on a documentary about Brown, who, Green says, "wrote about characters I could touch, in worlds that I could recognize."

After Green moved to Austin, he was exploring the ramshackle towns outside the city, where he also set his last film, the road workmen drama "Prince Avalanche." Green, who was raised in Texas, shifted the Mississippi story there to make it a contemporary Western, one about a man with his own moral code and little patience for the law.

"If you just would swap out his GMC (truck) for a black horse, you'd have this man searching for redemption, this samurai looking for the perfect death," says Green.

Green, too, has chafed at the supposed rules. His first job in Los Angeles was working for a movie marketing firm that conducted test screenings for films like "American Pie" and "Ed TV." He watched the idiosyncrasies of movies get stripped away, and resolved to make films that embraced their quirks and rough edges. "Joe" features several non-professional actors.

"Sometimes I just think: Let me go make something that nobody is making," says Green. "Let me go dig up something from my guts and not concern myself with a lot of the more commercial attributes."

"Joe" became something personal for Cage, too. Though he declines to go into detail about the memories he drew from for the part, Cage had a notable run-in with some of the film's subjects — alcoholism, domestic violence — in 2011. Cage, whose wife is Alice Kim, was arrested in New Orleans for suspicion of domestic abuse battery, disturbing the peace and public intoxication. Charges were later dropped.

"Joe" has already earned both Cage and Green their best reviews in years. It's been labeled a return-to-form for both, though neither accepts a default "form."

"If anything, I think 'Joe' might remind them," says Cage of his critics. "I'm the same actor in 'Joe' as the actor in 'Spirit of Vengeance.'"

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Follow AP Film Writer Jake Coyle on Twitter at: http://twitter.com/jake_coyle

FX CEO Skewers Netflix, HBO Over 'Unfair' Practices

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FX Networks CEO John Landgraf had a lot to say about the current state of the TV business when he took both HBO and Netflix to task for what he called "unfair" practices.

The complaints flew during a lengthy interview Wednesday at FX's upfront event for advertisers which was held at 21st Century Fox’s Manhattan headquarters. Landgraf took a moment during the chat to share his frustration with Netflix over its practice of distancing itself from networks by removing graphics that would remind subscribers where a show came from.

Variety posted a recap of his thoughts about Netflix:

“We do a fair amount of business with Netflix. One of the things that bothers me about Netflix is they make darn sure when they make an original series like ‘Orange is the New Black’ or ‘House of Cards’” that is identified with the phrase “A Netflix Original Series.” Yet, he added, “they are equally staunch about totally stripping ‘AMC’ off of ‘Mad Men’ or ‘FX’ off of ‘Sons of Anarchy.’”


Landgraf’s criticism didn’t stop there. At the same event, he went after HBO for its decision to submit “True Detective” in the category of drama for Emmy considerations. He argued it's “unfair” that the series is able to bait A-list actors like Matthew McConaughey and Woody Harrelson by engaging them only for a limited series run, giving the show extra star power for award consideration.

“It’s unfair for HBO to get actors that you can’t normally get to do a series who would do a close-ended show and pack the (drama actor) category. That is patently unfair to people like (The Americans’) Matthew Rhys, who signed for seven years,” he said, according to Deadline.

HBO’s programming president told the publication last week that the network stands by its decision to run “True Detective” as a drama, arguing that the only reasons to run it as a miniseries were “cynical” and “didn’t feel like the right thing to do.”

“I don’t look at it that way," Landgraf countered at the upfront event, per Deadline. "The definition should be a miniseries has a story that ends, a series has a story that continues on."

FX chooses to categorize its popular show “American Horror Story” as a miniseries for Emmy considerations. By Landgraf’s definition, the show fits that category because the characters and story change each season.

Weed Time With Bill Maher

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Long before it was presidential to say marijuana is safer than alcohol, comedian, best-selling author, MLB Mets co-owner and progressive talk-show host Bill Maher (HBO's Real Time) was one of the brightest torches in favor of sensible marijuana policy.

With legal recreational sales in Colorado this year and a White House now talking about rescheduling marijuana to allow for research and treatment, it's as if Maher was setting the stage for what has become a fast-moving revolution in the U.S.A.

The 58-year-old advisory board member at NORML and the Marijuana Policy Project is quick to spread the credit. He recently called Willie Nelson "one of our nation's beloved founding stoners."

More than anything else, though, Maher credits time itself for America's rapid evolution on cannabis. Maher said in a lengthy conversation with The 420 Times that generations of tokers in red states and blue states have really changed our national conversation on legalization.

"Well, I mean, part of it is just generational," he said. "More and more people over time are pot smokers. I've been fond of saying that it's the one thing that unites the two parts of the country. We're such a divided country, between the red and blue and the conservative and liberal, but everybody smokes dope. Willie Nelson smokes it and Snoop Dogg smokes it. Hillbillies smoke it plenty and so do hippies. So it's sort of the ultimate purple issue."

Another reason things have advanced so fast -- in recreational states Colorado and Washington, and in the dozen or so states considering medical legalization today -- is that dire consequences in places that have legitimized cannabis never came to fruition.

"Like some of the issues where the conservatives cry wolf, once people see that there is no great downside, they realize that the wolf crying was all a bunch of bullshit," Maher says. "I mean, we saw that with gay marriage, same thing -- the world didn't end. When gay people got married, it didn't really affect your marriage. ... Medical marijuana has been around now for, oh, it's coming up on 20 years in some states. It was first passed here in '96. And the world hasn't fallen down."

Shouldn't Maher, who admitted in March that a club in Las Vegas had stopped him from sparking up, tell America I told you so?

"I would never accuse America of being quick on coming up to issues. But, over time, I think even that [marijuana decriminalization] got into their heads," Maher said. "That and also the major selling points that we've been trying to pound into people's minds for the longest time, that even the president has said -- it is less harmful than alcohol. I think Americans are finally coming around."

Maher's latest high horse is how marijuana will be the next civil rights issue, following the liberation of same-sex marriage in California and some other states. He's not saying that getting high is a God-given right (though many of our founding fathers were hardcore beer aficionados). It's more about justice.

African Americans in the nation's capital are eight times more likely to be arrested for marijuana possession than whites, although both races use the drug at the same rate. Statistics like that have already inspired the Obama administration to relax mandatory minimum sentencing for low-level drug suspects, who are overwhelmingly minorities. Often people of color are behind bars for a drug that is widely believed to be safer than booze.

"The one thing that I always compare it to is gay marriage," Maher says. "We did an editorial on this show a couple of years ago called 'Pot Is The New Gay Marriage,' and the point of it was gay marriage was, back 20 years ago, only polling at about 10 percent approval in America. Barely anybody who wasn't gay wasn't for it. Back in the '90s ... the closest thing we had to gay marriage was when Liza Minnelli married David Gest. But, the gay people and their lobbying arms were very efficient at just insisting and pounding away at the issue and not taking no for an answer. And, slowly, America did come around."

In 2010 California had its chance to come around and become the first state in the union to legalize recreational marijuana. Proposition 19 came close, but it ultimately lost 54 percent in favor to 46 percent opposed. Efforts to get a legalization initiative on the ballot this year look like a long shot, but 2016, which will see a presidential election, could be a key year. Maher, who lives in L.A., has his theory about why California, the first state to give medicinal cannabis a chance, hasn't been able to get it together for full legalization so far.

"We had it on the ballot in 2010 and it was going to pass, but not one Democrat in the state, not the Dianne Feinsteins, not the Barbara Boxers, nobody got behind it. And, of course ,that left it vulnerable and sort of just swinging in the wind. Halloween falls right before November and the evil people on the other side of the issue put out a rumor that there was marijuana in the Halloween candy. And that's all that we needed. That's how these evil politicians work. It scared people and, at the last minute, it was going to win -- and then it lost."

The comedian thinks legalization could provide a chance for Democrats, who always seem to be running toward more conservative, crime-and-punishment issues at the center, to redeem themselves and embrace a civil rights matter that Republicans might not be able to touch.

"Democrats do have to get behind it the way they -- quote, unquote -- evolved on gay marriage," Maher says. "As soon as legalization hit 51 percent approval, there was suddenly a lot of evolving. Now as far as the Republicans go, that's a much more interesting question because Republicans have an opening here with marijuana that I don't think enough of them are taking advantage of. This could be an issue that they could steal. They could own weed and greed and they could do it with a straight face. I mean, there's a lot about that issue that is in line with traditional, conservative principles, like individual liberty and, of course, taking jobs from Mexicans."

Some Republicans, including presidential hopeful Rand Paul and Orange County Congressman Dana Rohrabacher, are already on board. Rohrabacher introduced legislation this year that would require Obama's Drug Enforcement Administration agents to back off on collective crackdowns in medical states like California. On the right side of the political spectrum, this could be a states' rights issue. "I think there is that wing of the Republican Party, that Libertarian wing," Maher says.

With recreational legalization in California likely to come up again in 2016, and with a wide-open presidential race that could draw many younger voters to the polls, cannabis policy could be a huge issue in 2016.

"Rand Paul could steal the millennials away from the Democrats very easily," Maher said. "Hillary [Clinton] does not look like somebody who is very in-tune with people who are 25 years old, but Rand Paul is a generation younger. If he ran a campaign based around not getting entangled in foreign affairs and [being for] personal liberties here at home, it could go a long way to getting that kind of voting bloc."

Don't, however, start to think that Maher has switched sides. He put $1 million behind Obama in 2012, and he's quite happy with the investment, despite the slow pace of sensible marijuana policy at the White House.

"I do think it was money well spent because people may forget that, as of 2010, after the Supreme Court ruled on the Citizens United case and said money and politics was unlimited now, the playing field moved up to the million dollar level," Maher says. "I mean, in 2008, I gave to Obama the most I could give to him, $2,300. By 2012 that had moved up from basically $2,300 to infinity, which is kind of a big jump.

"I did it early in the year to make the point to my fellow liberals who do have money that if we're going to win this thing, we're going to have to get in the game on the million-dollar level. Because most of the billionaires are of course, rich Republicans. They were gonna have to get in the game. And a lot of them did, and they told me, at the Super PAC, that a number of them did it because they had been inspired by what I was trying to say. I'm glad I did it."

We had to point out to Mr. Maher that it was expensive being a political pimp. "That's right," he said.

In fact, Maher says it's time for supporters of legalization and decriminalization to get out their checkbooks and play the game. We all know the rules now. There's no ambiguity about them. Cash is going to win the day at the ballot box.

"We on the left should not unilaterally disarm," Maher says. "We should play that game. But that doesn't mean there's still not a place for the small contributor because those people can contribute directly to the candidate and, of course, there's no replacement for the ground game in politics. If you really want your candidate to win, volunteer. Get out there on election day, or before, and make calls, get people to the polls. That's how you win elections."

Maher is a true player who puts his money where his mouth is, and that includes Major League Baseball. In 2012 he invested in a piece of Mets ownership. And not just to be able to toke in the owners' box.

"I'm hopeful for the Mets this year," he says. "I think they've got a couple of key players. I think [Curtis] Granderson's going to have a big year. And Bartolo Colon, I think is a good steady influence on the pitching staff and they have very powerful pitching. I mean, when you have a pitching staff like they could have ... when they get back ... Matt Harvey, I think he can be in every game. If they get a little luck with the offense, they could just surprise some people."

We asked him about the high life of a major league owner.

"You have your own box when you're an owner," Maher said. "I mean, when I go to the games, so far I've stayed in my box. But, you can also sit right down on field level and I'm probably going to do that. I'm going to go back to an owner's meeting in June and I think they're playing the Braves that night, and I want to sit, like, really, really close to the field."

Ballclub co-owner, writer, intelligent talker, Maher is a true renaissance man for this marijuana millennium. But, unlike some decriminalization intellectuals, this guy practices what he preaches. He smokes weed. And he breaks down boundaries doing it. Important boundaries.

"I mean, I used to smoke weed in nightclubs in the '90s, and when people would come over from the club and tell me to put it out, I would say, 'I want the rapper treatment.' And they'd be like, 'Well sir ... ' And I'd be like, 'You know exactly what I'm talking about: You don't make the rappers put it out because you look at them and you go, 'Oh, well that's their culture.' And I would always say, 'Well this is my culture. Now let me smoke my weed here, just like the rappers.'

If Maher is not a founding stoner, he's certainly a contemporary cannabis statesman.

Bill Maher is performing at the Nokia Theatre L.A. Live on April 18th

Check out the free The 420 Times iPhone and iPad App on the iTunes Store and Android App available on Google Play. Follow The 420 Times on Twitter and Facebook

Beyonce's Thighs Are The Center Of New Photoshop Controversy

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Beyonce is getting plenty of attention lately, but it's not of the usual adoring kind. A photo she posted to her Tumblr page and Instagram account this week, which shows her in a bikini on a golf course at some gorgeously exotic resort, is getting a ton of heat for a possible Photoshop alteration.

According to several outlets, many people seem to think Bey altered the photo to have it look like she has a "thigh gap," or in simpler terms, as if her thighs don't touch.

Apparently, a lot of women who deal with eating disorders fixate on the "thigh gap" issue, and there are countless Tumblr blogs dedicated to the potentially unhealthy phenomenon.

The photo in question:



Jezebel observes that Beyonce's pose, or golf squat -- her bent knees, hunched back, ready to swing the club -- may make for seemingly "slimmer" legs. With her famous derriere sticking out, it would actually make sense that her body would look slightly different than if she were standing upright.

But Amelia McDonell-Parry at The Frisky notes that "Beyonce’s (extremely toned, hard-working, bad ass, Blue-birthing) body doesn’t usually have thigh gap."

"The slight wavy unevenness and a certain sharpness where there should be a natural curve indicate that the clone stamp tool was probably used to whittle down Bey’s thighs and butt area," writes McDonell-Parry.

Racked adds that Bey's Instagram followers are discussing the issue in the comments section, asking her to ax whomever did such a poor Photoshop job.

Kim Kardashian dealt with the same sort of rumors last January when a selfie she posted to Instagram looked like it might have been digitally manipulated.

The reality star called the accusations "lies" and tweeted, "It sucks when people make up surgery or Photoshop lies when I am so disciplined & work so hard! Just trying to motivate others & show anyone struggling with weight they can totally achieve whatever they want if they are dedicated!"

'A Most Wanted Man' Trailer: Philip Seymour Hoffman Was Just The Best

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"It takes a minnow to catch a barracuda, a barracuda to catch a shark." With one perfect line reading -- in a German accent no less -- the trailer for "A Most Wanted Man" reminds you what an amazing actor Philip Seymour Hoffman was before his death. "A Most Wanted Man," a spy thriller based on the novel by John le Carre, opens on July 25.

Lea Michele Lives Her Dream & Performs ‘Funny Girl' On Stage

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Lea Michele takes a break with her castmates while filming scenes for their show Glee on Thursday (April 10) in Los Angeles.

Watch Jack Bauer Kick Ass In The New '24: Live Another Day' Trailer

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Jack is back!

"24: Live Another Day," Fox's special 12-episode event, airs on May 5, and we couldn't be more excited. When the series ended four years ago, Jack Bauer (Kiefer Sutherland) was a fugitive and living on the run. Exiled from the country he loves, he's still willing to risk everything for freedom and to avert global disaster.

If the trailer is any indication, Bauer is more than ready to deliver the same nonstop action and awesome one-liners that made him the biggest badass on TV.

For instance, when he eloquently states, "Trigger an alarm, and I'll blow your head off." If that's not poetry, what is?

And if the Counter Terrorist Unit's (CTU) biggest threat to Bauer's epic reign of badassery is just the FBI agent from "Miss Congeniality" (Benjamin Bratt), then the trailer puts it best: "They don't know Jack."

"24: Live Another Day" premieres Monday, May 5, at 9:00 p.m. EDT on Fox.

We Can't Believe The Fashion Fails On This Week's Worst-Dressed List

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This week's worst-dressed list was a true lesson in what not to wear. A handful of our favorite celebrities simply ignored good sense and stepped out in some of the most bizarre outfits we've seen. However, there are definitely a few rules of thumb the ladies can takeaway from these debacles.

Coco Rocha should avoid wearing stark white at all costs; Naya Rivera should keep her belly button covered on the red carpet; Kelly Rowland needs to dress her age; and Rumer Willis really needs to coverup. Finally, although we love that Maggie Gyllenhaal is a fashion risk taker, dressing like a huge wad of toilet paper is never a good look.

Check out our picks for worst-dressed of the week, and let us know if you agree.

Naya Rivera

naya rivera
While we're definitely impressed by Naya's killer abs, there is nothing impressive about her outfit. Sadly, she looks like she just walked off the set of a horror flick in that slashed blouse and baggy capris. And her overly contoured makeup is pretty scary, too.

Maggie Gyllenhaal

maggie gyllenhaa
Why, Maggie, why? This dress literally makes the actress look like she got teepeed. Enough said.

Coco Rocha

coco rocha
Coco's porcelain complexion goes from stunning to sickly in this white-on-white getup. The supermodel looks washed-out sans her bright pink pout and red hair.

Kelly Rowland

kelly rowland
Kelly was spotted in Easter Sunday best ... circa 1986. All she was missing was a basket filled with eggs and some bunny ears. Furthermore, this outfit is way too boring and tame for one of the most beautiful stars on the planet. While her studded pumps say rockstar, that angora cardigan and floral fit-and-flare frock scream dowdy.

Rumer Willis

rumer willis
Rumer certainly has the figure to rock this revealing skin-tight dress, but that doesn't mean she should. We're tired of seeing the star look like she's working the corner -- if you know what we mean.

That Oscar Selfie Is Never Going To Go Away, Is It?

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The 2014 Oscars' signature moment is now suitable for framing. Seattle artist Debbie Faas created a painting of the star-filled Academy Awards selfie, and it's hanging on a wall in Twitter's headquarters.

Faas took to Facebook on Friday to confirm the news about her painting's new home.

"Painting Ellen's selfie was a blast," Faas wrote on her website. "I love how it turned out, and it's been a fun ride."

Twitter employees, naturally, tweeted the acquisition with a shoutout to the selfie orchestrator, Ellen DeGeneres:




Faas previously shared her work with The Huffington Post but didn't hint at its destination.

Now we know.

Twitter makes a natural home for the painting. The Samsung-sponsored selfie, a group shot including Bradley Cooper, Jennifer Lawrence and Brad Pitt, became the most-retweeted photo ever.

[h/t AdWeek]

This Is Why We Can't Help But Love Anne Hathaway

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Anne Hathaway took a break from acting to pay the kids at St. Jude Children's Research Hospital in Memphis, Tenn., a visit on Thursday, according to WREG.

But her presence wasn't the only gift she gave the kids that day.

The Oscar-winning actress also showed them an advanced screening of her new animated movie, "Rio 2," which opens in theaters Friday.

While she was there, Hathaway gave a little girl named Breanna a hug, and posed for a photo:

anne hathaway st judes

She also embraced Tyler which, of course, made his day:

anne hathaway rio 2

Check out other celebrities who have paid a visit to the patients at St. Jude Children's Research Hospital:

Julianne Hough's Abs Should Win 'Dancing With The Stars'

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Well, hello dear abs.

Julianne Hough walked the red carpet at the Kaleidoscope Ball in Los Angeles on Thursday, April 10. The former "Dancing With the Stars" pro wore a matching crop top and maxi skirt combo.

She once told Self that planks are the secret to her killer abs. But, since it's Friday, and it's not like we have to perform on "Dancing with the Stars" next week, we'll just save that workout until Monday.

julianne hough

julianne hough abs
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