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Thursday, April 30, 2015

David Letterman Thought The New "Late Show" Host Could've Been Black Or A Woman

“That would have made sense to me,” he told the New York Times about finding his replacement.

Theo Wargo / Getty Images

David Letterman will be stepping down from his 22-year hosting gig on CBS' The Late Show on May 20, and in a candid interview with the New York Times, he revealed he thought a black person or a woman should've taken over for him.

"I thought, Well, maybe this will be a good opportunity to put a black person on, and it would be a good opportunity to put a woman," Letterman said before noting he was not consulted. "There are certainly a lot of very funny women that have television shows everywhere. So that would have made sense to me as well." When reached for comment by BuzzFeed News as to which female comedian he would've liked to have take over, Letterman's rep had nothing to add.

Of course, Stephen Colbert was chosen as Letterman's successor, and Larry Wilmore took over Colbert's Comedy Central slot following Jon Stewart's The Daily Show. Stewart, who announced in February he would be stepping down from The Daily Show, was replaced with Trevor Noah, a black comedian from South Africa.

Though Stewart has not said where he is going next, and his announcement came months after Colbert was picked, Letterman also said he thought Stewart should've been asked to fill his shoes. "I always thought Stewart would have been a good choice," Letterman said. "And then Stephen."

BuzzFeed News' request for comment from Stewart and Colbert were not immediately answered.


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#motivational #quote "Only as high as I reach can I grow, only as far as I seek can I go, only as deep as I look can I see, only as much as I dream can I be." - Karen Ravn http://ow.ly/2Y5l6o

#motivational #quote "Only as high as I reach can I grow, only as far as I seek can I go, only as deep as I look can I see, only as much as I dream can I be." - Karen Ravn http://ow.ly/2Y5l6o
by Sudip Das

May 01, 2015 at 05:37AM
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#funny "You grow up the day you have your first real laugh -- at yourself." - Ethel Barrymore http://ow.ly/2Y5hGf

#funny "You grow up the day you have your first real laugh -- at yourself." - Ethel Barrymore http://ow.ly/2Y5hGf
by Sudip Das

May 01, 2015 at 05:34AM
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"The Revengers: Era Of Robon" Plot Spoilers!

In case you couldn’t wait to see it in the theaters this weekend, here is the entire plot. ALL SPOILERS!

Revengers: Era of Robon

Revengers: Era of Robon

It has been two years since the destruction of Rochester, NY at the hands of space-whales. The Revengers have gone their separate ways.

Chris Ritter / Vladislav+Ociacia / Via Thinkstock

Tommy Skarn AKA Metal Man

Tommy Skarn AKA Metal Man

Tommy Skarn has fallen off the wagon and is partying a lot. His new cereal, "Silver Spoonz" is earning billions worldwide, but it's all going towards the lawyers who work around the clock to keep the IRS off his back.

The only time he dons his Metal Man costume is when he appears in commercials for "Silver Spoonz"

Dan Meth / Fabian19 / Via BuzzFeed / Thinkstock

Robon

Robon

Skarn has created a robot called 'Robon' to handle any further threats to the earth.
He has programmed Robon to speak in the voice of Andrew McCarthy.

Vladislav+Ociacia / Andrew Peña / Via Thinkstock / BuzzFeed

Stan Ronker AKA Corporal USA

Stan Ronker AKA Corporal USA

Corporal USA is living incognito in Rehoboth Beach, Delaware. He's living in a kind of weird Airbnb situation and writing a collection of short stories based on the events of the first Revengers movie.

Lana_Stem / Chris Ritter / Via Thinkstock


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How Hodor Are You?

Hodor?


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24 Times Chris Evans Sniffed A Fart On The Red Carpet

Did you smell that? Because Chris Evans did.

"Oh sweet Jesus. What is that ungodly stench?"

"Oh sweet Jesus. What is that ungodly stench?"

Jason Merritt / Getty Images

"Someone either shit their pants or a garbage truck full of diapers just caught on fire."

"Someone either shit their pants or a garbage truck full of diapers just caught on fire."

Frazer Harrison / Getty Images

"Oh my god, it's stinging my eyes."

"Oh my god, it's stinging my eyes."

Frazer Harrison / Getty Images

"Ugh, it's so...dense."

"Ugh, it's so...dense."

Martin Bureau / Getty Images


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Congress Schools Education Apps On Student Privacy

A new bill would provide K–12 students with robust data privacy protections.

Christopher Furlong / Getty Images

As public schools scramble to answer calls for educational innovation with tablet programs and online learning systems, lawmakers on both sides of the aisle are growing increasingly concerned about the privacy risks such tools pose to students.

On Wednesday, Rep. Jared Polis, a Democrat from Colorado, and Rep. Luke Messer, a Republican from Indiana, introduced the Student Digital Privacy and Parental Rights Act, legislation that would update the privacy protections afforded to students as the schools they attend embrace digital education. Specifically, the bill prohibits education companies from selling student data to third parties or using it for noneducational purposes. Also forbidden: targeted advertising.

"Digital student records, learning apps, electronic testing, and classroom tablets all mean that an enormous amount of information is being collected on students, from the day they enter kindergarten to the moment they graduate or enter the workforce," Rep. Polis said. "Students and parents have every right to expect that the millions of data points collected on them every day are safeguarded in a responsible way."

The student data privacy bill is intended to do just that. Not only does it ensure that ed-tech companies disclose the types of K–12 student data they collect and how it is used, it also requires them to enforce strong data protections and to notify the Federal Trade Commission and any affected parties in the event of a security breach.

"Every day, students turn over hoards of data without adequate privacy safeguards," Khaliah Barnes, director of the Student Privacy Project at the Electronic Privacy Information Center, told BuzzFeed News. "And many companies are churning profits from students' information and otherwise taking and using student information out of context."

Though critical of the weaker privacy protections in earlier drafts of the bill, Barnes now supports it. She said the bill as it is currently written empowers parents and educators, and offers strong protections against data mining.

"Both sides of the aisle can agree that student information is not for sale," Barnes said. "Students should have the freedom to learn in the classroom without the fear that every click, everything that they write is used in a way that they did not intend."

While many states have student data privacy laws, the Student Digital Privacy and Parental Rights Act would create a federal baseline to support the patchwork of state law. Supporters hope the bill will serve as a precursor to future legislation that will extend privacy protections to all students, not just K–12.


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Big Insurer Expands Coverage For Telemedicine

It just got easier for 1 million UnitedHealthcare members to see the doctor from the comfort of home.

Doctor on Demand

UnitedHealthcare, the largest health insurance carrier in the United States, is widening its footprint in telemedicine.

On Thursday, the company began offering insurance coverage for telemedicine services to a larger subset of subscribers, allowing 1 million people to receive virtual medical help from Doctor on Demand, the NowClinic, and Amwell. For a maximum copay of $50 per visit, eligible subscribers can chat with a physician through their smartphones, tablets, or computers.

United's announcement is a victory for the emerging industry. Patients with short-term issues like sinus infections, skin rashes, and pinkeye — not emergency situations or chronic conditions — can now turn to the 1,400 or so physicians behind Doctor on Demand, the venture-backed startup co-founded by Dr. Phil. If patients report their conditions are continuing or worsening, Doctor on Demand will refer them to an in-person physician, said CEO and co-founder Adam Jackson.

"Every Doctor on Demand visit is preventing a more expensive in-office visit," he told BuzzFeed News.

With the nation facing an estimated shortage of 45,000 primary care physicians over the next decade, United's move is timely and recognizes the growing popularity of seeking health advice from the comfort of your home. Worldwide, the number of patients using telehealth services is expected to hit 7 million in 2018, 20 times the number in 2013, according to projections by IHS Technology.

One of the biggest hurdles slowing telemedicine's adoption has been insurance coverage. Medicare and Medicaid have historically treated an online doctor's consultation as different from an in-person visit, sometimes paying for telehealth visits when a patient lives in a rural area. And while some states like California support the practice, others, like Texas, are moving to restrict it.

United's announcement makes telemedicine services now available to people in self-funded employer health plans, and will expand next year to people with employer-sponsored insurance and individual plans. (Some United members have already been covered for NowClinic visits.) In total, by Jan. 1, 2016, the number of members with access will reach about 20 million, United said.


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Carey Mulligan's Dreamy New Feminist Costume Drama Romance

Matthias Schoenaerts and Carey Mulligan in Far From the Madding Crowd.

Fox Searchlight Pictures

Bathsheba Everdene doesn't need a husband.

This is an unusual quality for the heroine of a costume drama, a type of character who's traditionally consumed with the idea of marriage, out of societal obligation or duty, out of love or a desire for financial security (or both, the ideal happy ending). It's the only fundamental life decision most of these fictional women are allowed. And though Thomas Vinterberg's adaptation of Thomas Hardy's Far From the Madding Crowd is a familiar swirl of corsets and countryside sunsets, its protagonist, played with glowing vivacity by Carey Mulligan, is bracingly atypical.

Turning down an early suitor, shepherd Gabriel Oak, played by the broad-shouldered Belgian actor Matthias Schoenaerts, she tells him with gentle firmness, "I'd hate to be some man's property," which isn't so much a proto-feminist decree as a genuine concern.

Alex Bailey / Fox Searchlight Pictures

Bathsheba loves her freedom — the joy she takes in it exudes from every part of her being as she goes out riding, leaning back in the saddle to watch the low-hanging branches pass overhead, her hair in the sort of braid also favored by the dystopian YA character who's her namesake. And thanks to an unexpected inheritance, she has the means to preserve that freedom, even as Gabriel's circumstances change for the worse, and he eventually ends up in her employ at the farm she's taken over.

Vinterberg and screenwriter David Nicholls have given Hardy's novel a sumptuous restyling — their movie's handsome the way an antique cabinet might be handsome, all careful detailing and quality craftsmanship. It's lusciously romantic, which only makes its quiet radicalism more pleasurable. In this version, Bathsheba, the book's famously headstrong and haughty heroine, looks totally reasonable in her desires to go her own way, to restore her family's farm to its past glory, and to have relationships based on genuine feelings rather than compulsion or convenience. It's just that the 19th century keeps getting in her way.

The other local farmers stare when Bathsheba and her companion arrive to sell their grain, and she has to fight to be treated equally and get the same prices her uncle had. As an impulsive prank, she sends a valentine to stolid neighboring landowner William Boldwood (Michael Sheen), leading him to persistently court her, and though he's a sensible choice for a spouse, she doesn't actually want him.

Alex Bailey / Fox Searchlight Pictures

The men in Bathsheba's life keep offering to protect and provide for her — they're always offering to buy her pianos — but, as she points out, she already has a piano, as well as a farm in which to house it, and she isn't looking for someone to swaddle her in comfort.

It's no wonder that when Francis Troy (Tom Sturridge) comes into her life, with his soldier's uniform, his swagger, and all his promises of trouble, Bathsheba tumbles into his arms despite her better instincts (and Gabriel's advice), overwhelmed by pure, uncomplicated human desire. Except, of course, when marriage is involved in acting on that desire, it gets considerably more complicated.

Bathsheba is independent, but that doesn't mean she wants only to be alone, and Mulligan signals the character's awareness of and pleasure in male attention in every curl of her lips at the end of a playful conversation. Still, the movie doesn't lay blame for the drama that unfolds at her feet. She may be impetuous and flirtatious, and she makes mistakes, but she doesn't make anyone fall in love with her — that's something they do on their own. She's an unsettling force, but not a destructive one, and it's the men who are undone by her defying of social mores and expectations.

Alex Bailey / Fox Searchlight Pictures

The movie places the swoonier love story aspects of Far From the Madding Crowd in the forefront, but it also, more interestingly, surfaces its coming-of-age qualities. Bathsheba teases Gabriel about having to be tamed when he first proposes, but it's more that she's not in a place to appreciate his steadfast faithfulness at that point — that she needs to do some living on her own first.

"It is difficult for a woman to define her feelings in language which is chiefly made by men to express theirs," she tells William when deflecting his proposal. Vinterberg's movie portrays its main character's internal experiences and emotional journey, rather than seeing her through the eyes of the men who pursue her, as some confounding object of desire.


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Can You Guess The Gaming Console By Its Color Scheme?

You should be able to if you’re a true gamer.

LINK: Thumbnail image from William Warby.


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Should You Date Thorin Or Bard From "The Hobbit?"

Team Dwarf or Team Human?


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The Cast Of "The Avengers" Hilariously Tried To Guess Each Other's Biceps

Bicep game: Strong

The cast of The Avengers recently sat down with MTV's Josh Horowitz to play a game of "Whose Bicep Is It Anyway?"

instagram.com / Via Instagram

They started off strong with Captain America's guns.

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Then things got a lil' cheeky with Black Widow's toned arms.

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And everyone wanted to lay claim to these ironclad muscles...

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23 Times Tumblr Had Jokes About "Game Of Thrones"

The internet is a beautiful place.

This fitting card.

This truth about Sansa.

This confession from Tywin Lannister.

These television show mashups.


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An Important Field Guide To The Leading Men Of Marvel

Gotta get our pretty faces in order, here. Presented by BuzzFeed BFF.

Initially I forgot Paul Rudd and Don Cheadle. I'm sorry. Both my life and this guide were briefly incomplete.

You should follow us if you want to yell at me for forgetting Paul Rudd and Don Cheadle.


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Here's How Old Microsoft Thinks The Characters From "Harry Potter" Are

Remember the time Fred and George tried an age potion? It’s kind of like that.

Ron Weasley

Ron Weasley

Warner Bros.

Luna Lovegood

Luna Lovegood

Warner Bros.

Minerva McGonagall

Minerva McGonagall

Warner Bros.


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Which "Back To The Future" Era Do You Belong In?

Great Scott!

Maritsa Patrinos / BuzzFeed / Creative Commons / Via Flickr: mclot

Thumbnail image: Universal Pictures / http://bit.ly/1I1C1Iv


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32 Intensely Real Moments From "Dragon Ball Z"

So intense. In celebration of the newly announced sequel, Dragon Ball Super.

FUNimation / dragonball-world.tumblr.com


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Lawmakers Challenge FBI On Surveillance Backdoors, Encryption

Congress pushes back against the FBI’s calls for backdoors to encrypted smartphone data.

Maxkabakov / Getty Images

Days after the House of Representatives passed two cybersecurity bills designed to protect Americans from criminal data breaches, lawmakers heard arguments over surveillance "backdoors" that would allow the FBI and other government agencies access to encrypted data.

The FBI has recently criticized the strong level of encryption Google, Apple, and other tech companies use to protect user data. Last fall, FBI Director James B. Comey told an audience at the Brookings Institute, "We have the legal authority to intercept and access communications and information pursuant to court order, but we often lack the technical ability to do so." On Wednesday, an Oversight and Government Reform subcommittee examined the FBI's requests for a mandate that would require some tech companies to build into their products backdoors that would facilitate surveillance by law enforcement.

Some in law enforcement insist robust data encryption can hinder criminal investigations and even pose a threat to national security.

During the Wednesday hearing, Daniel Conley, a Boston district attorney, said data encryption can place an "impenetrable barrier around evidence." In his testimony, he attacked Apple and Google for unintentionally providing a safe space in which criminals can operate.

"When corporate interests place crucial evidence beyond the legitimate reach of our courts, they are in fact granting those who rape, defraud, assault or even kill a profound legal advantage over victims in society," Conley said.

Rep. Ted Lieu, a California Democrat, disagreed. "Creating a pathway to decryption only for good guys is technologically stupid," he said.

Lieu took exception to Conley's argument, pointing out the threat to civil liberties allowing law enforcement backdoor access to private data presents. "Apple and Google don't have coercive power, district attorneys do, the FBI does, the [National Security Agency] does," he said. "And to me its very simple to draw the privacy balance when it comes to law enforcement and privacy: Just follow the damn Constitution."

This focus on a citizen's reasonable right to privacy and apprehension toward mandated backdoors was a bipartisan concern. Texas Republican and Subcommittee Chairman William Hurd said, "As a former CIA officer, I understand and appreciate the need and desire for law enforcement to access digital information in a timely manner. However, I also understand the protections afforded to Americans provided by the Constitution."

Amy Hess, the FBI's executive assistant director for the science and technology branch, defended the use of backdoors for criminal investigations, but noted that they must be implemented thoughtfully and securely.

"What we are asking for is not to lower [encryption] standards by developing some type of lawful intercept or lawful access capability," Hess told the committee. "But rather to come up with way that we may be able to implement, perhaps, multiple keys or some other way to be able to securely access the information or be provided with the information."

When asked by Committee Chairman Jason Chaffetz, R-Utah, Hess did not specify whether the Justice Department considers geolocation data content or metadata, which informs the constitutionality of data searches. She declined also to state in public the circumstances necessary for federal law enforcement to collect location data without a warrant, distinctions that animate unresolved constitutional questions of government power and surveillance technology.

Three tech and policy cryptology experts argued that backdoors necessarily introduce security vulnerabilities. Mathew Blaze, professor of computer and information science at the University of Pennsylvania, said mandated backdoors are technically challenging and can enable exploits by bad actors. Jon Potter, president of the Application Developers Alliance, argued that backdoors invite foreign powers to develop their own workarounds and stifle business opportunities for American companies abroad. And Kevin Bankston, policy director of New America's Open Technology Institute, suggested that mandated backdoors won't do much to decrease threats to public safety.

"The ultimate question isn't what will make law enforcement's job easier in some investigations," Bankston said. "The ultimate question is what will prevent more crime."

Though Hess and Conley framed the need for backdoors as a grand, law-and-order tension between privacy and security, personal liberty, and national security, the other three witnesses argued that encryption is a useful tool — for government agencies and for the rest of society.

The bipartisan committee members' skepticism toward calls for surveillance backdoors echoes earlier efforts by Congress to halt similar measures, like February's Secure Data Act. Increasing the use of encryption and urging American companies to do so was one of the official recommendations offered by President Obama's Review Group, a panel tasked with evaluating the NSA's surveillance programs in the wake of Edward Snowden's disclosures in 2013. During Wednesday's hearing, it was clear the committee had taken that recommendation to heart.

Said Chaffetz, "Do we allow the 99% of Americans who are good, honest, decent, hardworking, patriotic people to have encrypted phones, or do we need to leave a backdoor open and create vulnerability for all of them?"


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Goldman Sachs Makes Its First Big Investment In Bitcoin

Goldman is co-leading a $50 million financing round in Circle Internet Financial, a bitcoin wallet company. The investment lends some Wall Street credibility to the bitcoin world.

Mark Lennihan / AP

An effort to make bitcoin go mainstream just got some muscle from Wall Street.

Goldman Sachs has co-led a $50 million financing round in Circle Internet Financial, a bitcoin payments startup, according to an announcement Wednesday night. The deal, Goldman's first strategic investment related to bitcoin, lends some buttoned-up credibility to an industry often seen as the province of anarchic techies.

Circle, which was started in 2013 by Jeremy Allaire, is among a small number of tech startups trying to introduce bitcoin to the broader public. The company — which offers a digital wallet that lets people store bitcoins, send them to each other, and pay for things at retailers that accept the digital currency — has received backing from some big names in tech, like the venture capitalist Jim Breyer.

As it tries to expand its appeal, Circle also announced on Wednesday that it would go beyond bitcoin and allow users to hold regular old dollars. That will put the young company into competition with the likes of Venmo, which is part of PayPal, and other money transfer and payment services.

Goldman, for its part, didn't offer much in the way of explanation for its bet on Circle. Tom Jessop, the Goldman managing director who worked on the deal, said in a prepared statement that he thought Circle's "product vision and exceptional management team present a compelling opportunity in the digital payments space."

"As the financial services industry continues to become more digital and open, we see significant opportunities in companies and solutions that have the promise to transform global markets through technical innovation," he said.

Mark Lennihan / AP

The group at Goldman that made the investment, known as Principal Strategic Investments, tends to buy stakes in financial technology companies. It has previously invested, for example, in Motif, an upstart online broker, and the data company Markit.

Linking up with Circle brings Goldman closer to a technology that its own research group has described as cutting-edge. In a report in March, Goldman analysts said bitcoin and other new payment technologies "have the opportunity to disrupt traditional in-person money transfer services provided by Western Union and many large banks."

Goldman led the investment alongside IDG Capital Partners, a venture capital firm based in China. Circle said it was hoping to use IDG's expertise to develop a way for people to convert Chinese currency into dollars through bitcoin.

For all of Circle's big ambitions, though, bitcoin remains confined to a niche, even after a burst of publicity in 2013. Bitcoin evangelists describe a possible future where money moves seamlessly across borders, bypassing the traditional bank channels, but that future has yet to materialize.

These evangelists also point out the advantages for merchants that accept bitcoin as a form of payment, including lower transaction costs than for credit cards. Some merchants have signed on, including Expedia and Dell, but they are a relative few.

By accepting dollars, Circle is hoping to attract people who have been spooked by bitcoin's volatility over the past few years. The company says that users with dollars in their accounts will be able to make payments over the bitcoin network, since Circle will automatically convert the dollars to bitcoin and back again.

"This way, customers can choose to view bitcoin not as a new currency to replace the dollar, but as an internet payment network that enables secure, instant, global and nearly free payments," the company said.

A number of bitcoin-related companies have attracted investment capital over the last year or so. Coinbase, a bitcoin payments and exchange company, has received more than $100 million from the New York Stock Exchange and other investors. The brothers Cameron and Tyler Winklevoss, major fans of bitcoin, have sought to create an exchange for the virtual currency.

Circle wouldn't disclose its number of users or its valuation in its financing round. Allaire, the CEO, would say only that the user count was a "six-figure number," which could be as low as 100,000.

Circle doesn't have any meaningful net revenue, Allaire said. But he added, "We have plenty of cash."


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23 Zombie Faces Every Socially Awkward Person Will Deeply Relate To

More like The Awkward Dead.

When you wave at a coworker but they don't see you.

When you wave at a coworker but they don't see you.

AMC

When you see an acquaintance in public and accidentally make eye contact with them.

When you see an acquaintance in public and accidentally make eye contact with them.

AMC

And then immediately look away and sit in tortured silence for the next two minutes about whether to go say hi or not.

And then immediately look away and sit in tortured silence for the next two minutes about whether to go say hi or not.

AMC

When you realize you just used up all your go-to small talk topics.

When you realize you just used up all your go-to small talk topics.

AMC


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Can You Guess The “Harry Potter” Character By These Emojis?

Do You-Know-Who? Warning: spoilers.


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You Can Actually Attend The School Of Wizardry Now

Get your wands ready.

Claus Raasted, Liveform, and Rollespils Fabrikken have made it possible to have a full-on wizarding experience at a CASTLE IN POLAND.

vimeo.com

Their LARP (live-action role-playing) Indiegogo campaign has already raised nearly 300% of its goal for the four-day event.

Their LARP (live-action role-playing) Indiegogo campaign has already raised nearly 300% of its goal for the four-day event.

That means WIZARDRY ABOUNDS.

indiegogo.com

"Students" are sorted into one of five houses, then live and go to class in and around the fairy-tale castle in Czocha, Poland.

"Students" are sorted into one of five houses, then live and go to class in and around the fairy-tale castle in Czocha, Poland.

indiegogo.com

And this isn't some lackluster event with a few creatures and potions here and there. The School of Wizardry has a whole scenography team that designs every inch of the space — from the candles down to the potions.

And this isn't some lackluster event with a few creatures and potions here and there. The School of Wizardry has a whole scenography team that designs every inch of the space — from the candles down to the potions.

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This Dad Reenacted Every Animation From "Super Smash Bros" And Crushed It

Simply perfection.

YouTuber Nick Luciano has filmed his dad beautifully reenacting character animations from Super Smash Bros.

youtube.com

He nailed Luigi.

He nailed Luigi.

youtube.com

He got Donkey Kong and Diddy Kong down to a tee.

He got Donkey Kong and Diddy Kong down to a tee.

youtube.com

And he completely knocked his Princess Peach out of the park.

And he completely knocked his Princess Peach out of the park.

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An Amazing Sims User Recreated The Burrow From "Harry Potter"

And it even has garden gnomes.

A wonderful and magical Sims player has recreated The Burrow in the game.

A wonderful and magical Sims player has recreated The Burrow in the game.

simsrepublic.blogspot.co.uk

simsrepublic.blogspot.co.uk

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The ABCs Of "Harry Potter"

T is for THE BURROW DIDNT HAVE TO BURN DOWN YOU SADISTIC SCREENWRITERS.

A is for Albus

A is for Albus

The man that we put our complete and utter trust in. Even though it turned out he was keeping literally everything from us.

Warner Bros.

B is for the Burrow

B is for the Burrow

WHICH DID NOT NEED TO BE SET ON FIRE.

Warner Bros.

C is for Celestina Warbeck

C is for Celestina Warbeck

Because, let's be real, we all want to jam out to "A Cauldron Full Of Hot, Strong Love".

Warner Bros.

D is for Diagon Alley

D is for Diagon Alley

The most magical place in all of London.

Warner Bros.


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Chris Evans Scared The Crap Out Of Scarlett Johansson On "Ellen"

“SCARLETT!”

Scarlett Johansson dropped by The Ellen Degeneres Show to wrap up The Avengers: Age of Ultron press tour.

Scarlett Johansson dropped by The Ellen Degeneres Show to wrap up The Avengers: Age of Ultron press tour.

Warner Bros. Television Distribution / Via ellentube.com

She and Ellen were chatting about her co-stars...

She and Ellen were chatting about her co-stars...

Warner Bros. Television Distribution / Via ellentube.com

And of course Chris Evans' name came up.

And of course Chris Evans' name came up.

Warner Bros. Television Distribution / Via ellentube.com

And because this is Ellen, Chris snuck out during the segment...

And because this is Ellen, Chris snuck out during the segment...

Warner Bros. Television Distribution / Via ellentube.com


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The Marvel Universe Is Ending And Here's What You Should Know

The Marvel Universe we’ve known since 1962 will be destroyed in this summer’s huge Secret Wars event, and will be recreated later this year. Here’s how that came to be, including MASSIVE SPOILERS for some of the best Marvel comics in years.

Secret Wars is Marvel Comics' huge event for the summer of 2015.

Secret Wars is Marvel Comics' huge event for the summer of 2015.

The company does "events" all the time, but this one is much bigger than the rest in that it will involve the destruction of the Marvel Universe as it has existed since 1961. And when the story is over, there will be a new Marvel Universe in its place.

Alex Ross/Marvel

Though the story of Secret Wars will be told in a flagship 8-issue miniseries by writer Jonathan Hickman and artist Esad Ribic, it's much bigger than that.

Though the story of Secret Wars will be told in a flagship 8-issue miniseries by writer Jonathan Hickman and artist Esad Ribic, it's much bigger than that.

Pretty much the entire Marvel line will be replaced by miniseries featuring alternate versions of Marvel's characters on Battleworld, a version of Earth featuring elements of many of the most popular Marvel stories of all time.

But let's come back to Battleworld in a little bit. For the moment, let's focus on how the Marvel Universe is about to be destroyed in Secret Wars.

Alex Ross/Marvel

Marvel


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The ABCs Of "Harry Potter"

T is for THE BURROW DIDNT HAVE TO BURN DOWN YOU SADISTIC SCREENWRITERS.

A is for Albus

A is for Albus

The man that we put our complete and utter trust in. Even though it turned out he was keeping literally everything from us.

Warner Bros.

B is for the Burrow

B is for the Burrow

WHICH DID NOT NEED TO BE SET ON FIRE.

Warner Bros.

C is for Celestina Warbeck

C is for Celestina Warbeck

Because, let's be real, we all want to jam out to "A Cauldron Full Of Hot, Strong Love".

Warner Bros.

D is for Diagon Alley

D is for Diagon Alley

The most magical place in all of London.

Warner Bros.


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