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Vince Gilligan Signs New Deal With Sony Pictures TV

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Vince Gilligan has struck a deal with Sony Pictures TV, the production company behind "Breaking Bad," to stay in-house with the company in an exclusive multi-year deal.

The "Breaking Bad" creator became a Hollywood hot commodity when his contract with Sony TV expired earlier this year and, according to The Hollywood Reporter, it came down to two studios, Sony TV and Warner Bros vying for Gilligan. The deal was reportedly in the eight-figure range.

“Vince is an incredible writer and partner, and he shares our vision for the business and for the kinds of projects we’re passionate about. There wasn’t a world where we weren’t making this deal,” Sony TV programming president Jamie Erlicht, said in a statement.

The deal makes sense not only because of Sony and Gilligan's six-year history making "Breaking Bad" together, but also two of Gilligan's upcoming projects, "Battle Creek" and the "Breaking Bad" spinoff "Better Call Saul" are being produced by Sony as well. Though Deadline reports that those two upcoming projects are not included in the new deal.

Former Spelman Students Tell Nelly 'We Shouldn't Have To Choose Between These Issues'

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Last week, Nelly sparked a bit of controversy in his response to a group of women at Spelman college, expressing his frustration surrounding a 2004 protest of a bone marrow drive on the historically black women's campus.

But on Monday, a group of former students responded to the rapper, criticizing him for not taking responsibility for his actions and placing the blame on the students instead.

Asha Jennings, a former member of the Spelman Feminist Majority Leadership Alliance (FMLA), said the women hoped Nelly could look beyond his personal situation to understand the broader message that his video, "Tip Drill" was projecting to the community by objectifying women.

"We are a historically black, all women's institution," Jennings told Huff Post Live host, Marc Lamont Hill. "If there's anybody that has an obligation to young black girls in the community, it's us."

The planned drive was in support of the rapper's sister, Jacqueline Donahue, who later lost her battle to leukemia in 2005. Nelly said he was angry with the Spelman students for robbing him of an opportunity to save his sister's life and that the only thing he would have done differently was "kick somebody's ass."

“You [protesters] robbed me of a opportunity. Unfairly, my brother. Because we could’ve still had your conversation after I got my opportunity, but it could’ve been somebody that was coming to that bone marrow drive that day, that was possibly a match for my sister. That didn’t come because of that…”

Jennings clarified the rapper's implication that the bone marrow drive did not take place because of their protest, saying it was delayed after Nelly pulled his funding.

"Our important message was to show the African-American community we shouldn't have to choose between these issues," she said. "They are all equally as important, we can do both. And so we fought, tooth and nail in order to, before I graduated in May of 2004, put on our own bone marrow drive."

Watch the conversation in the clip above and share your thoughts in the comments section.

What if King James Moved His Throne to the Big Apple?

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This summer, Stephen A. Smith of ESPN reported that LeBron James would seriously consider joining the New York Knickerbockers after the 2014-15 season. For this to happen, the Knicks would need several things to go their way, including James to opt-in to his player option after the 2013-14 season. But today, I'm not talking about whether James will sign with the Knicks. But rather, I'm here to explain why the Miami Heat's No. Six should come play for the Knicks -- and what would happen if he did.

Let's start with what LeBron has already done at Madison Square Garden. On basketball's biggest stage, in the most famous arena in the world, James has handled the Broadway lights masterfully. In 15 performances in Manhattan, James has averaged 29.5 PPG, which is the third highest average in the past 45 years (in a minimum of 10 games).

He ranks only behind the unparalleled Michael "Air" Jordan (31.8) and Kobe Bryant (30.7). Now determining the greatest of these three legends is a debate that often gets NBA fans extremely emotional and testy, but I think we can all concur that a 28-year old James is far more valuable today than a nearly 35-year old Kobe or a 50-year old Michael Jordan.

In addition, James maintains the title as the only active player to have two 50-point games at the Garden.

This scoring ability certainly illustrates why Knicks fans in particular would want the King to move to orange and blue, but what incentive does he have to come to New York other than a few great scoring shows at an arena?

One word... legacy.

Even if he does not consistently say it, James wants to be remembered as the greatest athlete to ever play his sport. Just as Wayne Gretzky, Cassius Clay, and Babe Ruth wanted. This desire is not a selfish one, but a natural one. Athletes most closely resemble the superheroes that we all want to be on the inside. The great ones have extraordinary bodies, remain focused in the clutch, and respond well in the face of fame. If LeBron signs with the Knicks, it will be he, not Dwight Howard or Shaquille O'Neal, who will be the world's superman.

When James "decided to take [his] talents to South Beach," the Heat instantly became one of the most valuable and popular franchises in the National Basketball Association and on Earth. This is the impact that James had when he signed with Miami in 2010. If this is the effect he had on Heat, can you imagine what would happen if he brought his talents to the biggest stage of all, New York?

Just to give you a sense, the 2010 census recorded the population of Miami at approximately 400,000. New York over 8.1 million. Further, most agree that Miami's cultural significance for the rest of the world is nearly non-existent, while New York is the center of time, the center of the world, and yes, the center of basketball.

Not even factoring in culture, James's becoming a Knick could have an impact many times greater than when he signed with Miami.

If James put his pen on a New York Knicks contract, you can forget the Heat... you can forget the Lakers... you can forget the Celtics... you can forget Kobe Bryant... you can forget Miguel Cabrera... you can forget Tiger Woods... you can forget Sidney Crosby... you can forget Tom Brady... you can forget Floyd Mayweather... you can forget every other athlete in the world other than Christiano Ronaldo, and Lionel Messi.

If this happens, LeBron James, one of the greatest players to ever play the game of basketball, if not the greatest, will be forever married to the greatest, the most famous, the most glamorous city in the solar system and beyond.

Jersey sales would rise through the roof. A ticket to the Garden would cost two arms (it already costs one). Sponsors would line up outside the James household. And all this before even stepping on the court.

If he can succeed in New York, if he can handle the fame with poise and focus on bringing a long-desired title to New York, he will be remembered as the greatest basketball player in history.

The last time someone of LeBron's stardom and ability landed in New York, it was a man by the name of Alex Rodriguez. His time in a Yankee uniform has brought about personal life scandals, locker room problems, steroid accusations, boos from the fans, and post season struggles. Rodriguez has earned a ring with Yankees, but the 2009 Yankees were not his team, they were Derek Jeter's team. A-Rod played a significant part and performed throughout the year, but he was a piece, not the piece of the puzzle that made that team click.

LeBron James has the opportunity to break the streak of a Knicks team that has been deprived of a championship for over 40 years. If he can bring New York to that point of greatness, the Knicks value and influence would approach that of the Dallas Cowboys, New York Yankees, and Manchester United.

The King, only with the Knicks, only with New York, could rise to the top... Where on his throne, he would rule the world.

Rihanna Debuts Shoulder-Length Bob In New York City

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New city, new 'do?

Rihanna has been traveling the world these past few months as part of her "Diamonds" world tour and it seems once she changed her location to New York City, she felt the need to change up her look, too.

Rih posted the following photos to her Instagram account last night where she's seen sporting a shaggy bob with bangs, quite the drastic change from her previous style -- a mullet with shaved sides.





Here she is performing in New Orleans on Nov. 15:

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So ... Like it, or love it?

Courtney Love Covers 7Hollywood Alongside Karl Lagerfeld, Carine Roitfeld (PHOTOS)

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Courtney Love is still at it, working on a clothing line, killing it on Pinterest, sounding off on newbies like Katy Perry and Miley Cyrus and mulling a biopic.

She's also still posing for magazine covers and looking amazing doing it. Love is among the fashionable crew of stars posing for the new series of 7Hollywood magazine covers, alongside peers such as Karl Lagerfeld and Carine Roitfeld.

She and the rest of the industry veterans look fresher than ever... perhaps a little too fresh. Do you also sense some digital smoothing and contouring in these black and white covers?

Either way, Love proves she's still the rock goddess we know and love. And she can wear the heck out of black bra and skull jewelry with the best of them.

PHOTOS:

courtney love cover

carine

karl lagerfeld

It's been a long road, Courtney:


Want more? Be sure to check out HuffPost Style on Twitter, Facebook, Tumblr, Pinterest and Instagram at @HuffPostStyle.

Demi Lovato On Miley (And Growing Up): 'I Didn't Twerk, I Just Went To Rehab!'

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Demi Lovato was surprisingly candid -- in the best way possible -- when talking about personal friend and fellow post-Disney pop star, Miley Cyrus, on an episode of "Katie" that will air this week.

"[Miley] has such an incredible voice that is overshadowed by some of the things she is doing," Demi said, adding: "She's been one of my friends since I was 14."

When probed by Katie on whether she thought Miley's goal was attention-seeking, Dems fired back:

[Miley] knows what she's doing. People are talking about her. People are talking about her VMAs performance. Now 'twerking' I think is in the dictionary? She's a businesswoman, after all, and that's what she's doing. Like I said, power to her. I think the world kind of needs to get over the fact that she was Hannah Montana when she was 16 or whatever.


The best bit is at the end of the clip, when Demi is asked if she relates to Miley's experience growing up in the limelight:

My transition was easier because I went straight to rehab. I didn't twerk. I just went to rehab! ... Nobody knows [Miley], and nobody really knows who I am. Same with Selena and Jonas and everyone who has grown up in the public eye. We're actually adults now. I'm 21. What?! That's crazy! I'm nowhere near the same person I was when I was 15 or 16. Thank God. But I've learned a lot and I've grown up, and we're all in the process of doing that. So, go easy on us, America!


In the interview, Demi also reflects on her new book, “X Factor,” “Glee” and the recent loss of her father. The episode airs on November 19.

An Open Letter to Elton John on Enabling Eminem's Hate Speech

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Dear Sir Elton John,

There have been a lot of open letters this season, but I'm not here to criticize you for twerking up against Robin Thicke on the VMAs. I am here to talk seriously to you about a performance on another music awards show that was far more inappropriate and damaging: your 2001 performance with Eminem at the Grammys. Eminem had appropriately come under scrutiny for lyrics like, "Hate fags? The answer's yes," and you chose -- against the wishes of GLAAD and many in the LGBT community -- to perform with him, embrace him, and issue statements absolving him. Recent events have made me realize that your actions over a decade ago are even more problematic today and can't be ignored. I think you owe the gay community an apology, and it's time that you stood up and denounced Eminem's derogatory lyrics, which continue to demean us as human beings and commercialize the very attitudes that cause hate crimes.

The reason I'm bringing this up now? Eminem has released a new album that, yet again, contains violently homophobic lyrics, and his fans are citing your 2001 collaboration as proof that he can't be homophobic and therefore bears no responsibility for spreading hateful rhetoric. In his new song "Rap God" Eminem boasts to his fans, "I'll still be able to break a motherfuckin' table over the back of a couple of faggots and crack it in half." And I ask you: How is this good?

I recently got into an internationally reported debate on Twitter with another queer-identified singer/songwriter, Sia (who collaborated with Eminem on the song "Beautiful Pain," from the same album containing "Rap God"), questioning why she would participate in an album containing such homophobic lyrics. In the midst of our conversation, Eminem's fans on Twitter attacked, leveling at me (and Sia) the very words I was objecting to -- "faggot," "fag," "pussy" -- along with hate-filled lines from his songs. And they also curiously tweeted me pictures of you embracing Eminem at the Grammys in 2001 (the same year you wrote a Matthew Shepard tribute song, incidentally) and said declaratively that you are cool with Eminem's words, so I should be too. Your words and actions became Eminem's pass -- and their pass too. 

But what's also interesting was Sia's reaction to Eminem's lyrics. While she initially used justification very close to yours in 2001 -- "I know personally that he is not homophobic, but a performance artist" -- she later owned the fact that she had "a lot of anxiety" about how the lyrics of "Rap God" would affect vulnerable gay youth and their straight counterparts. I explained, "The most vulnerable kids don't necessarily recognize the difference between nuance of a 'character' vs. the celebrity saying and validating stereotypes." Sia saw the truth in what I was saying. And as a result of our lengthy interaction, she's donating her proceeds from the Eminem duet to the LGBT Center of Los Angeles. Her impressive sensitivity, understanding and desire to do the right thing renewed my respect for her.

The whole experience puts your duet with Eminem in a new light. The fact is that you are a high-profile gay man in the music industry who used your iconic status and actions to inoculate Eminem against a growing controversy in the media over what many deemed a justifiable criticism of his lyrics. After your performance the music industry followed suit in 2001, and the conversation vanished. You gave Eminem -- and arguably the entire hip-hop community ever since -- a big green light on degrading us in songs with words like "faggot." 

"Sorry, Lance [Bass], Mr. [Adam] Lambert, and [Clay] Aiken ain't gonna make it. They get so mad when I call them both faggots."
--Eminem, "Elevator," 2010

"Faggot" is quite possibly the last word Matthew Shepard heard before he was beaten unconscious and left to die. It was the last word Mark Carson heard before he was shot dead at point-blank range in Greenwich Village this summer, just like countless others who've been killed in violent hate crimes. Think about that. I can attest firsthand: When a group of misguided kids gay-bashed me with beer bottles in a gay neighborhood of New York City some years back, that was the very word they were using.

Eminem recently excused his use of "faggot" in a Rolling Stone interview, explaining, "That word, those kind of words, when I came up battle-rappin' or whatever, I never really equated those words [to actually mean "homosexual"]. ... I still look at myself the same way that I did when I was battling and broke." And, "I think people know my personal stance on things and the personas that I create in my music." But the fact is that Eminem is not that broke teenager anymore. He is a grown man -- and a privileged, straight, white celebrity worth an estimated $140 million at that. Using the word "faggot" at this point in his career should be intolerable.

And while he might say he's like a "character" in a movie, whether he believes that or not, you and I both know that music is a different medium than film. It's far more immediate. We listen to music on personal headphones pumped directly into our heads, hearts and personal worlds. Literally words in our head. It becomes a visceral part of us. Pop and hip-hop music in particular are consumed repeatedly; we might listen to our favorite song thousands of times. The lyrics and their messages become mantras. I know from my experience as a musician and DJ how much kids love to memorize all the lyrics to their favorite songs and sing along. The words bypass their sense of right or wrong and can become ingrained in them for a lifetime.

The lifespan of a huge hit or album can be decades, as I'm sure you recognize from so many of your own classics. Eminem's album featuring "Rap God," The Marshall Mathers LP 2, sold almost 800,000 copies in just its first week of sales. Now imagine all the ears that those hate-filled words are seeping into. Songs containing hate speech can echo for years, continuing to affect the psyches of those who may feel empowered by their words to justify committing violence against us or our children. The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reports that eight out of 10 LGBT students are verbally harassed in school, that one in five has been a victim of physical assault, and that gay teens are two to three times more likely to commit suicide than other teens. Eminem is a verbal abuser. And an abuser will keep on abusing until the cycle is broken -- until someone stands up and says, "No more."

"You fags think it's all a game till I walk a flock of flames off a plank, and tell me what in the fuck are you thinking."
--Eminem, "Rap God," 2013

Maybe you thought that befriending Eminem might help him change his ways. But it's been more than 12 years now, and he hasn't stopped. If Eminem indeed has gay friends, why are they enabling him? Even Boy George didn't stand by and let "Rap God" fly, tweeting at Eminem, "Fag? Is this really recovery talk or are you running your own program these days? Really unhelpful." And isn't it interesting that Eminem doesn't -- to my knowledge -- used the "N" word in his songs? Is it because his self-respecting black friends, mentors and producers have taught him lines he shouldn't cross? (And if you had a song featuring the "N" word and attributed it to a "character," shall we ask Paula Deen what would happen to your career?)

A different artist, Macklemore, illustrates another contrast: As a straight, white rapper he doesn't need to denigrate gays to show street cred, score a sizable hit or make money. With "Same Love" he showed that today's artists can instead demonstrate sensitivity and lyrically lift us up. That might just be the most authentically "hip-hop," rebellious thing someone can do. He makes Eminem look old, dated and out of touch by comparison.

Which is my point: It's 2013. Maybe Eminem hasn't "evolved" since 2001 or even since his teen rap battling days. But I want to believe that you have. There's a saying by the wise Maya Angelou: "When you know better, you do better." Unless you still support Eminem's hate speech, it's time for you to make a course correction on behalf of our community.

I pray that this request doesn't fall on deaf ears. As a father yourself, I hope your recognize that inaction on your part would be irresponsible to the young people damaged by such lyrics. And knowing the incredible work you've done on behalf of HIV/AIDS charities for decades, I think you understand the importance of standing up for imperative issues. You have the opportunity and responsibility to make a difference now. It might not be in the "character" of Eminem to do so, but I hope that it's in yours.

Sincerely yours,
Keo Nozari

Anderson vs. Alec: Who Is the Bigger Ally to the LGBT Community?

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I have been reading the reports and listening to the character assassination of Alec Baldwin for his big mouth horrifying us once again, and I ask you what is worse for the LGBT community: someone calling us a name in a moment of anger or one of our own carefully spending decades hiding in the shadows, too ashamed or scared to stand with us?

When celebrities come out late in life, they always use lots of spin to explain their actions, but it is never about anything more than fear and shame. Many people in the public eye worry that coming out may hurt their career, and rightfully so. If you prioritize your career over your truth or the fight for equal rights, that is your choice, but don't let me hear you criticizing another person for not being gay-friendly enough when you yourself chose to hide in silence while others fought bravely for your freedom and equality.

I love Anderson Cooper: his snarky little grin, his giggle, the fact that he is so squeaky-clean but loves him some Kathy Griffin. He is adorable. However, when I read about Anderson Cooper laying into Alec Baldwin for the alleged use of an anti-gay slur, I couldn't help but roll my eyes. Cooper, who finally came out of the closet just last year, did far more harm to the LGBT community by staying in the closet for all those decades than Alec Baldwin has ever done with his temper tantrums.

Baldwin, never mistaken for an angel, has a list of absurd outbreaks so long that you can't possibly still be surprised when he calls someone a name. We are talking about a person who called his own 11-year-old daughter a pig. Clearly the man has a temper.

I believe that public figures have a responsibility to live out and true lives. I have read several reports of celebrities supporting Cooper's decision to come out so late in life, and I think their words are soft. If you want to be a private person, then you should avoid a public career. For a public figure to stay in the closet, that person is silently conceding that there is something wrong with who they are.

Cooper says he stayed in the closet for his own safety. Again, that was his choice. Many others were beaten and killed for living their true lives. He made his choices, and he's received great affirmation for those choices. However, I think he's received a little too much affirmation if he thinks he's in a position to wage a war for LGBT rights against a man who supported the LGBT community long before Cooper decided it was safe enough to come out.

I came out of the closet just after high school, two decades ago. When I came out I lost almost everything I held dear. I fought for equality when it wasn't always safe to do so. I have been yelled at, spit upon, threatened, abandoned and arrested all along the way. Life is pretty good for members of the LGBT community these days, but it was very different just a handful of years ago.

Anderson Cooper never experienced any of those extremes living in the comfort of the closet while freedom and equality were tirelessly pursued by others. Alec Baldwin publicly supported equality long before Anderson Cooper, and if I had to pick an ally, it would be Alec Baldwin without reservation.

The Beautiful Sadness of Dallas Buyers Club

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Just because it's over
Doesn't mean it didn't happen
Doesn't mean it wasn't beautiful
Even with the pain.

--"Beautiful Sadness," sung by '80s chanteuse and gay favorite Jane Olivor

In the first minutes of Dallas Buyers Club, the astounding new film about the darkest years of the AIDS crisis, rodeo cowboy Ron Woodroof (a gaunt and barely recognizable Matthew McConaughey) is punched in the face. He has it coming. The self-serving crook has a lot of enemies.

2013-11-18-CreditAnneMarieFoxFocusFeatures.JPGThe blood spills from his mouth and glows a bright crimson, an almost clownish contrast to his drained, ghostly pallor -- which itself is evidence of a raging HIV infection he has yet to discover. Another gash on his forehead is a sickly collection of reds, and unlike most movies in which injuries disappear by the next scene, the wound remains. And remains. For many scenes thereafter, the blood on Woodroof's forehead is in full view, a disconcerting reminder of what lies beneath, until you wish he would just put on a bandage already.

But Dallas Buyers Club isn't interested in making the truth very pretty. A river of infected blood runs through it. So too does practically every other bodily fluid, along with bruises that won't heal and purple skin lesions and flakes of dry, reddened skin. And that's kind of beautiful. Because that's what AIDS looked like in 1985, and it's been ages since we have fully remembered it. (This movie doesn't concern itself with the modern-day notion of "living with HIV," since having the virus in those days typically meant an AIDS diagnosis and fast and efficient death.)

I had never seen AIDS shown this way in a film. And of all the movie portrayals of the disease, from Parting Glances to Precious to I Love You, Phillip Morris, nothing else has captured the ugly physicality of the disease like Dallas Buyers Club. Even the tearful hospital-bed goodbyes in Longtime Companion seem overly romanticized by comparison.

The based-on-a-true-story narrative concerns Woodroof, a hard-living cowboy and drug abuser who must face certain death and the cruelty of his redneck buddies when he tests HIV-positive. Woodroof also lives the sheltered life of a Southern homophobe, so watching him negotiate the AIDS-community terrain of queers and drag queens is fascinating viewing and provides some of the surprisingly plentiful humor in the film.

But Woodroof hasn't successfully dodged the consequences of his petty crimes for nothing. He quickly cheats the system to acquire the medication AZT, and after an eye-opening trip to Mexico, he figures out how to profit from the sale of unapproved drugs to the throngs of support-group members back home.

Along the way he allows himself a guarded friendship with a drug-addicted transgender saleswoman, Rayon (Jared Leto in an effective and quietly humble performance), and eventually accepts, to some degree, the gratitude and generosity of the many gay people around him.

Nearly everyone in the story, patients and physicians alike, is a wretched outcast, damaged by drug addiction or homophobia or loneliness or their own destructive behaviors. No one is healed, no one fully conquers their demons, and no one gets out unscathed. The fact that the filmmakers make you root for every one of them is a testament to terrific storytelling and a vexing main character you grow to love and admire.

These characters also live a world away from the more sophisticated New York City activists who populate the Oscar-nominated documentary from last year, How to Survive a Plague. In fact, the big-city AIDS battles being waged elsewhere barely register in this story about Southern vice and ingenuity. When Woodroof and his rodeo buddies first learn of the death of Rock Hudson, the actor is dismissed as a "cocksucker," except by one of them, who doesn't know who Hudson is. His buddies scoff. "Haven't you ever seen North by Northwest?" one asks.

Woodroof's entrepreneurial efforts ultimately create the Dallas Buyers Club, a real business that provided unapproved medications to very desperate people with AIDS. As someone who once used a buyer's club to purchase Compound Q and other pharmacological footnotes in HIV/AIDS history, I can attest that everything from the cheap cinder-block setup to the anxious expressions on the customers' faces felt tragically familiar.

The real villain in the story, other than the virus itself, would have to be the early, toxic drug AZT and its manufacturer. Although the film uses a fictional name for the pharmaceutical company behind AZT, let history show that AZT was produced by Burroughs Wellcome (eventually absorbed into GlaxoSmithKline), which downplayed side effects in a complicated rush to have a drug, any drug, to treat the growing pandemic.

Matthew McConaughey is a revelation. His physical transformation alone would be Oscar bait, but then there's his ability to gain our affections for such a self-serving swindler. Calling the performance free of vanity is an understatement. His harrowing depiction of living with AIDS makes the award-winning Philadelphia look about as realistic as Dark Victory. It reminds me of when we settled for scraps in Hollywood's depiction of AIDS, when any major actor brave enough to play a gay man won an Oscar.

There is a moment late in the story during which Woodroof checks himself in the mirror before an evening out. Suddenly he finds himself staring, and in the dim bathroom light he sees the undamaged face of the man he might have been. He allows the slightest expression of pride, for the things he has accomplished, for those he has helped. And then, as those of us who lived through the 1980s know so well, the face returns to a look of both hope and despair, of the beautiful sadness that always brought too many questions about the fate that was barreling toward us.

It is that face in Dallas Buyers Club, the one free of blood and injury, that is the most haunting of all.

Photo credit: Anne Marie Fox / Focus Features

Adam Levine Is People's 'Sexiest Man Alive' Of 2013

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Congrats go out to Adam Levine!

The Maroon 5 frontman and "The Voice" coach has been named People magazine's 2013 "Sexiest Man Alive." The big news was announced on tonight's (Nov. 19) episode of the Emmy-winning singing competition show.

"As a musician, you have fantasies that you want to win Grammys, but I didn't really think that this was on the table," the singer tells People of being given the prestigious title in this week's issue. "I was just amazed and stunned and it almost seemed like they were kidding, but they weren't, so that's cool."

The 34-year-old Los Angeles native has had quite the year. Not only did he tour with Maroon 5 and entertain audiences on "The Voice," Levine also got engaged to model Behati Prinsloo after admitting he didn't believe in marriage.

"I didn't think marriage was for me for a long time," he tells People. "I was ready when I was ready. That's about as simple as it could possibly be."

Levine steals the crown from 2012's winner Channing Tatum, who embraced the honor over the last year.

Check out Adam's smoldering People cover below and make sure to pick up your copy of "The Sexiest Man Alive" issue on newsstands Nov. 22.

adam levine

Katy Perry's 'Unconditionally' Video Is Here

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Katy Perry released the official video for "Unconditionally" on Tuesday night along with a note to fans:




Indeed both of those traumatic incidents happen to Perry in the "Unconditionally" video, as does a whole subplot involving an owl. (Does unconditional love feel like owls?)

katy perry unconditionally

This isn't the first set of visuals Perry put together for the hit song: In October, she released a lyric video for "Unconditionally" that also doubled as one of the best music videos of the year.

Watch the official "Unconditionally" music video above.

Meredith Vieira Falls Out Of Her Chair Giggling On 'Watch What Happens: Live' (VIDEO)

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Meredith Vieira made her "Watch What Happens: Live" debut and ... it looked like she was enjoying the open bar a little too much. She was definitely channeling the fourth hour of "Today." Fellow guest Jesse Tyler Ferguson is a funny guy, but Vieira's giggles went above and beyond appreciating his wit.

In fact, it was all so crazy that we're pretty sure we had no idea what was going on or what they were talking about for at least ten minutes. All we know is that at one point Vieira wound up on the floor, and she did a dead-on impression of a "Woo!-Girl" holding her wine tumbler. Whatever was happening, we couldn't turn our eyes away ... or get the smile off of our faces.

Vieira is just as much fun on Twitter. The former "Today" anchor admitted that she's still learning how to Tweet after sending a variety of odd messages last month, but what's there to learn. Odd is fun and memorable, too! And Vieira is going to need to stand out as she prepares to launch her new, syndicated talk show in 2014. She should probably master staying in her chair by then, though.

Tune in to "Watch What Happens: Live" every Sunday through Thursday at 11 p.m. EST on Bravo.

TV Replay scours the vast television landscape to find the most interesting, amusing, and, on a good day, amazing moments, and delivers them right to your browser.

'Sons Of Anarchy' Shocker: The Bodies Are Piling Up (VIDEO)

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With one move, Jax seemingly put the past to rest on "Sons of Anarchy." Now it's a matter of picking up the pieces and seeing what may be left of SAMCRO. And what's going on with Tara. And the case the DA is putting together against them. Okay, so there's plenty more for the club to deal with.

Still, this week's pivotal moment came as quite the surprise. The club helped the Irish bust Clay out of jail during a prisoner transport. But then, Jax and his men gunned down the Irish -- including Galen. But that was only the first part of the scenario. To complete the fiction they were trying to spin, Clay had to die, too. Clay accepted his fate like a man, and then Jax shot him. Just when we'd decided that Clay would never die on this show -- how many times has he come so very close? -- it was all over. He bled out on the floor as Gemma watched on in shock.

TV Line's Michael Ausiello called it "the craziest episode of "SOA" yet." Over at Entertainment Weekly, series creator Kurt Sutter said, "As much as people say that they want Clay dead, they don’t want Clay dead ... They want to see it be complicated … They want to see that play out even though they, in their gut, they know the guy should be dead.’”

Well now, he is dead and "Sons of Anarchy" moves on without him, Tuesdays at 10 p.m. EST on FX.

TV Replay scours the vast television landscape to find the most interesting, amusing, and, on a good day, amazing moments, and delivers them right to your browser.

'David Blaine: Real Or Magic' Sees Illusionist Visiting Celebrity Friends To Shock And Disgust Them (VIDEO)

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For his latest special, illusionist David Blaine decided to take his tricks to his famous friends. On "David Blaine: Real or Magic," he visited the likes of Katy Perry, Bryan Cranston and Aaron Paul, Ricky Gervais, Will and Jada Pinkett-Smith, and even Harrison Ford.

From shoving a screwdriver into his hand, to crazy card tricks, to eating glass and more, it was just as much fun watching the celebrity reactions as it was enjoying the tricks in the first place.

The best reaction, though, came from Ford. After watching Blaine's trick, Ford simply told him, "Get the f*ck out of my house!” Of course, it was just a knee-jerk reaction to being shocked, but it was still pretty hilarious.

Over at Rolling Stone, Gavin Edwards thought Gervais had the best reaction. Gervais watched Blaine thread a needle through his arm. "Oh, what the f*ck Seriously! This is mental," Gervais exlaimed. "This is not a trick. You’re sticking a f***ing needle through your arm. What are you doing?"

It's those reactions that Blaine told Zap2It keep him interested in his craft. "When I do magic for people ... it's almost like I live vicariously through them. I thrive off of people's reactions," he said. "I look for those kinds of moments where the person is completely unguarded and reacting as they would if there wasn't a camera."

TV Replay scours the vast television landscape to find the most interesting, amusing, and, on a good day, amazing moments, and delivers them right to your browser.

'The Mindy Project' Recruits Jenna Elfman To Help Them Combat 'Racist' Label (VIDEO)

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Schulman and Associates found themselves in the crossfire after receiving a favorable write-up from a white supremacist mommy blog on "The Mindy Project." The practice was labeled "racist," which the doctors upstairs sought to exploit so they could steal their patients. So Schulman and Associates brought in a PR specialist, played by Jenna Elfman.

“This is Priscilla Lane, the top PR consultant in the city. She knows what she’s talking about. She handled Taylor Swift’s hit-and-run," Dr. Reed told the group.

“What? I didn’t know that Taylor Swift had a ... oh!” Mindy said, realizing how good Priscilla was. But Priscilla wasn't much of a help -- in fact, she mostly just slept with Danny and then left them hanging. "If only Olivia Pope was here," Mindy lamented, before becoming the practice's "fixer" herself.

Sadly, there was no Kerry Washington cameo, but the "Scandal" star did love the name drop. Unfortunately, TV Fanatic's Chris O'Hara wasn't nearly as enthusiastic, dubbing this one of the weakest installments so far this season.

"The Mindy Project" airs Tuesdays at 9:30 p.m. EST on Fox.

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'NCIS': Ellie Bishop Fills The Ziva-Sized Hole On The Team, But She's Completely Different (VIDEO)

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On the latest episode of "NCIS," we were introduced to the "new Ziva." Granted, she's not trying to replicate the character, but NSA agent Ellie Bishop joined Gibbs' team, so she's at least replacing Ziva's physical spot on the team. Right away, she proved that she was going to keep her secrets ... and her secrets appear to be everything about her that doesn't relate to the job.

DiNozzo noted her ring and asked if she was married. Bishop responded by telling him she'd have her report to him by that night. He then took it a step back and simply asked how old she was. "I thought time was a factor around here, isn’t talking about my personal life a waste of it?" she asked him in response. Ironically, Emily Wickersham -- the actress who portrays Bishop -- is just as secretive about her personal life. We don't know how old she is, either.

TV Line's Matt Webb Mitovich liked what he saw in her debut, and so did the show's producers. "Originally booked for a three-episode look-see, [Emily] Wickersham was promoted to series regular ahead of her on-screen debut because, as show boss Gary Glasberg explained to us, he and the network brass saw in her early episodes ‘moments and scenes and a connection with our characters that we all really responded — emotional moments, fun moments, funny moments that were all there," Mitovich wrote.

Zap2it's Jean Bentley appreciated that this Ziva 2.0 wasn't a carbon copy replacement of Ziva. Instead, she's "more of the quirky savant type," which is definitely not what Ziva's like.

"NCIS" airs on Tuesdays at 8 p.m. EST on CBS.

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'The Biggest Loser': Jillian Michaels Apologizes To Her Team For Last Week's Scandal (VIDEO)

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It was a very subdued Jillian Michaels who had to sit down her team and apologize on "The Biggest Loser." Last week, it was revealed that Michaels had given her team caffeine supplements without the doctor's permission prior to the previous weigh-in. This invalidated that weigh-in, allowing "American Idol" winner Ruben Studdard back onto the Ranch, and penalized her White Team.

“I’m so sorry. I’m so sorry. Every decision I have ever made, I try to make with regards to what’s best for your health and, boy, this one certainly backfired and you guys were collateral damage," Michaels said. "You did nothing wrong. You did nothing wrong.”

But her team said that they were with her. As Jay put it, "We’ve gotta stand behind Jillian just as much as she stands behind us.” And so, they buckled down and looked forward. But was her apology sincere? Michaels hinted on Twitter that she was being used by the show's producers as a scapegoat. Was it all a ploy to bring back the show's first-ever celebrity contestant?

Whatever happened, Buddy TV's Eva Des Lauriers was glad to see Jillian doing what she does best. "Jillian often causes waves on 'The Biggest Loser,' which is why the season without her was such a snooze," she wrote.

"The Biggest Loser" continues Tuesdays at 8 p.m. EST on NBC.

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Andy Cohen Admits On 'Late Night' That He Turned Lady Gaga's Urine Into Perfume (VIDEO)

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"Watch What Happens: Live" host Andy Cohen dropped by "Late Night," and promptly freaked everyone out ... and then continued until he'd grossed them out. Cohen decided to share the sordid tale of the time Lady Gaga relieved herself backstage at "WWHL." Seems innocent enough, you say. Gaga couldn't find a bathroom, so she peed in a trashcan in her dressing room. One problem, though.

"We don’t really have dressing rooms," Cohen said. But that wasn't the end of the story. ""She can pee wherever she wants, as far as I’m concerned," Cohen said. But he further decided that Gaga's urine was "a pop culture artifact.” So he told some members of his staff to bottle it up so he could put it in the "WWHL" clubhouse. Ultimately, after realizing that urine is toxic, his team discovered that it can be transformed into perfume with some alcohol so it will keep forever. So that's what they did.

Lady Gaga was actually supportive of the idea, though she warned her fans to avoid Andy Cohen should he try to spritz them. And future guests on "WWHL" might want to be careful where they go the bathroom, unless they want to join his celebrity pee-fume collection!

Andy Cohen hosts "Watch What Happens: Live" every Sunday through Thursday at 11 p.m. EST on Bravo. "Late Night with Jimmy Fallon" airs weeknights at 12:37 a.m. EST on NBC.

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'Marvel's Agents Of S.H.I.E.L.D.' Barely Ties Into 'Thor: The Dark World' (VIDEO)

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ABC was hoping some of that "Thor: The Dark World" box office magic would filter down to "Marvel's Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D." this week. The latest episode was a follow-up to the Thor's big-screen adventures. None of the film's stars were there, which was a bummer for both Skye and May -- they agreed that Thor was "dreamy." Instead, another Asgardian had to fill those boots as the gang found themselves tracking an Asgardian staff.

"It’d be nice if for once Thor and his people sent down the God of cleaning up after yourself," Coulson complained at the top of the hour. "They probably have a magic broom for this kind of thing.”

IGN's Eric Goldman was let down by the episode, and he felt that the promotional campaign, which called it a crossover event with the film, was a lie. "After the very beginning, this episode had nothing to do with 'Thor: The Dark World,'" he noted. "They could have done this episode at any point in the season ... since it all dealt with an Asgardian item that had been on Earth for 1000 years and wasn’t at all a part of what happened in that movie.”

Over at Bustle, though, Caroline Pate said it wasn't a complete waste. "It answered the questions that a big superhero movie franchise can’t ask," she wrote. "what happens when the superheroes leave? Are there any normal Asgardians who just wanna chill?”

"Marvel's Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D." airs every Tuesday night at 8 p.m. EST on ABC.

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'New Girl': Sometimes You've Just Got To Hit Your Friend With Your Car

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We'll give Schmidt credit for one thing on "New Girl." He knows he's a slave to his impulses, and needs to be stopped from following through on horrible decisions. This week, though, Nick wasn't around to save him from himself, and so it was up to Jess. After agreeing to Coach asking Cece out, Schmidt decided he couldn't stand the idea of the two of them together. He knew he'd screwed things up with Cece, but he was still determined to ruin their date.

He was also pretty confident that Jess wasn't going to be able to stop him. He gave her the slip at a bar and was well on his way when she caught up to him. But he knew there was only one way she could truly stop him from making a terrible mistake. "Hit me with your car," he told her.

"I deserve it," Schmidt said. "I cheated on your best friend, I tried to break up you and Nick. Hit the gas ... Do it for Cece." And so she did, gently nudging him.

Of course, Schmidt completely freaked out, saying she'd ruined his "favorite utility khaki." He didn't think she'd go through with it. When the police showed up, though, Jess panicked and then she really slammed into Schmidt. At least it knocked some sense into him momentarily.

"New Girl" airs Tuesdays at 9 p.m. EST on Fox.
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