'Community' May Just Get A Second Chance, Thanks To Hulu

Class is back in session!

“Community” was canceled earlier this month, but now Sony Pictures and Hulu are reportedly in talks to bring the cult comedy back, according to The Hollywood Reporter. Sony Pictures Television’s co-president Jamie Erlicht has been very vocal about his feelings for the show ever since news of the cancellation broke, saying that Sony “fights for the shows it believes in,” and one of those shows is “Community.”

No deal has been reported yet, but the news has received a lot of social media praise:

Someone who isn’t as optimistic is showrunner Dan Harmon. MTV reports that in a recent blog post, Harmon wrote that he was feeling “eh” about “Community” actually coming back; however, he also added that he wouldn’t be the reason that the canceled show gets re-canceled.

Stay tuned, “Community” fans. #SixSeasonsAndAMovie may happen after all.

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How Taking 1950s Pin-up Photos Made Me Love My Age

I’m creeping up on 50. It used to be that 50 was the time we transformed into the Crypt Keeper. Now, it simply seems like the beginning of an exciting new chapter.

Last week, in celebration of my mid-life marker, I got to be a Bombshell. I’ve always wanted to be a Bombshell and am grateful to chocolate and french bread for making it all possible.

Like a lot of women, I always have my eye on what I consider to be my five extra pounds.

I live in Los Angeles, which may explain how I hound those five pounds when they would really like to help fill me out. They keep throwing up their hands and yelling, “Just move to freakin’ Kansas already, because we could use some extra company.”

Stinking L.A., man. It’ll mess with your curves.

I’m currently working on a project called Love Your Body Now: Healing Body Image Issues Through Fine Art Nudes.

In a doctor-heal-thyself moment I flew to Boulder, Colorado to meet with my project partner, photographer Beth Sanders, so she could make me as beautiful as humanly possible, then photograph me for time and all eternity as a 1950s pin-up girl.

I didn’t know if I could pull it off, but once you’re creeping up on 50 you just say, “If not now? When?” You also begin to quote Risky Business: “What the f*ck! Because ‘What the F*ck’, brings freedom. Freedom brings opportunity, opportunity makes your future!”

Beth sent me off to a makeup artist who spackled and painted and glued my face until I looked better than I ever knew I could.

Then it was off to Beth’s studio in a barn on a sprawling farm where weddings and such-like events occur where I squeezed into my vintage-inspired swimsuits and midlife crisis red stilettos and struck a pose or two.

I’m thrilled with the results. Being me, I see some flaws, but I also see a lush, laughing, lovely woman enjoying life. And a big part of my big smiles came from posing for a lean, laughing, lovely woman who looked through her approving lens at me and only saw Beauty.

Ladies and gents of midlife, what do you do to celebrate your age? Also, if you’d like to keep up with my age-flouting shenanigans sign up for my free updates by CLICKING HERE.

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Fiery Anti-Immigration GOP Nominee Dan Patrick Shifts Tone To Appeal To Hispanic Voters

State Sen. Dan Patrick’s victory over incumbent David Dewhurst in the Republican runoff for lieutenant governor on Tuesday night came as no surprise.

And while the conciliatory tone that marked his victory speech — in which he pledged to make inroads with Hispanics — sounded nothing like the fiery immigration rhetoric voters are accustomed to, political observers say it’s an approach Patrick will have to take in a general election battle against Leticia Van de Putte, a Latina state senator from San Antonio.

“Before you can get someone’s vote, you have to respect them enough to go talk with them and explain who you are,” Patrick said Tuesday after election returns showed he had overwhelmingly defeated Dewhurst. “It won’t be overnight, but it’s going to start tomorrow morning.”

Patrick’s race against Van de Putte, who has criticized the Houston senator for calling the influx of undocumented immigrants from Mexico an “illegal invasion,” could serve as a test case for both parties to gauge their outreach and appeal to an increasingly crucial voting bloc.

The state’s Republican Party — which continues to inch farther right with every primary — is attempting to find its footing among Hispanics, who have so far tended to identify with the Democratic Party. Meanwhile, Democrats are turning their attention toward voter turnout. They believe Hispanics, who are expected to make up a plurality of the state population by 2020, hold the key to making Democrats competitive in this dark red state.

During the primary and runoff elections, immigration and border security were staples of Patrick’s stump speeches and debate appearances. But he drew fire from both Democrats and Republicans for his “illegal invasion” comments, and has also been quoted saying that undocumented immigrants bring “third-world diseases” like leprosy and tuberculosis into the U.S.

Van de Putte has called Patrick’s comments inappropriate and accused him of being out of touch with Hispanic voters. Following his runoff win on Tuesday, she said it was time for “politicians like Dan Patrick put their toxic rhetoric to rest.”

While some Hispanic Republicans have said they will cross over to vote for Van de Putte instead of Patrick in the general election, Hector De Leon, chairman of the Associated Republicans of Texas, predicted Patrick will recover from criticism about his remarks because the state is so reliably Republican.

But De Leon, who has referred to Patrick’s “illegal invasion” remark as “thinly veiled racism,” added that Patrick’s success among Hispanic voters will depend on his ability to turn his “good words” on Tuesday “into good deeds” in the next six months.

He also said Patrick’s outreach efforts could be “too little, too late” if Van de Putte is able to raise enough money to build a narrative about him across the state. Since jumping into the race in November, she has not raised the kind of campaign cash her opponent has — though she didn’t have an expensive primary battle like Patrick did. In January, the last time both candidates filed a campaign finance report, Patrick had raised three times as much money as Van de Putte.

Mark Jones, chairman of Rice University’s political science department, said Patrick’s remarks on Tuesday were a “crucial first step” toward redefining himself to the Hispanic electorate in the general election. 

“Patrick has certainly lost some Hispanic voters and some more moderate Anglo voters, but he doesn’t want to lose any more,” Jones said.

Patrick gave voters a glimpse of this shift in tone in April during an immigration debate with San Antonio Mayor Julián Castro. During the debate, which was broadcast on the Spanish-language channel Univision, Patrick avoided engaging in the hard-edged rhetoric he’s been called out on.

The Patrick campaign did not respond to a request for comment, but following the debate in April, Patrick consultant Allen Blakemore said the senator had not changed his tone on immigration.

Democrats largely remain skeptical; Patrick opposes a pathway to citizenship for undocumented immigrants and allowing undocumented students to pay in-state tuition rates to attend public universities. Van de Putte has been a vocal supporter of in-state tuition for undocumented students and has talked about the need for comprehensive immigration reform.

Emmanuel Garcia, communications director for the Texas Democratic Party, said that Patrick’s “anti-immigrant rhetoric” helped him win the Republican nomination in the runoff, but that he now has to face Latino voters in the general election.

“Patrick can’t try to tear down the Latino community and attack our families and then expect to have our support,” Garcia said. “Does he think he can just disrespect us and then be welcomed at our home? That’s not the way things work.”

When it comes to the electoral future of both parties, the lieutenant governor’s race could ultimately prove to be an indicator. And what works in the short term — like Patrick’s rhetoric on immigration during the primary and the runoff — is often futile in a general election.

“I can certainly appreciate and understand that there will be folks who aren’t going to be very forgiving,” De Leon said. “What may be good politics today may not be good politics for the next election cycle.”

Disclosure: Rice University is a corporate sponsor of The Texas Tribune. A complete list of Texas Tribune donors and sponsors can be viewed here.

This article originally appeared in The Texas Tribune at http://www.texastribune.org/2014/05/29/lt-gov-race-hispanic-voters-become-focus/.

Drones Deliver Champagne To Guests At $10,000-Per-Night California Hotel

It’s a bird! It’s a plane! It’s a… drone of champagne! Because duhh that’s what happens in California.

Guests who book the Alexandrite Suite at Sausalito’s Casa Madrona Hotel may now order a drone of champagne to their two-tier private deck overlooking the San Francisco skyline.

The little octo-copter zips through the cloudless California sky and plunks up to three bottles on your deck, elminating the need to answer the door or rummage for a room service tip.

The drone service is free, but you’ll have to pay for the bottles of bubbly–and the $10,000-per-night suite. Drone service is also available to guests who book the entire Casa Madrona mansion for $25,000 per night.

Hotel officials say they’re looking into miniature drones that will deliver cookies and other niblets, presumably for the plebeians in their less expensive rooms. Huzzah!

Going up…

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Linda Ronstadt Inducted Into Rock and Roll Hall of Fame (Video)

“I think that all of us girl singers that started out after Linda became very famous, in a way, wanted to be her and wanted to sound like her, and then we had to say ‘we can’t,’ so we have to find our own inner Linda,” noted Hall of Fame Inductee Stevie Nicks backstage at the 2014 Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Induction Ceremony in NYC. Ronstadt’s indisputable gift and mastery of disparate musical styles — she is the only artist to win a Grammy Award in the categories of pop, country, Mexican American and Tropical Latin — reflects her approach to singing: she was always looking for the best song, regardless of category. Those songs resonate as powerfully today as they did then, a fact underscored by the once-in-a-lifetime medley of her songs performed by Nicks, Sheryl Crow, Glenn Frey, Emmylou Harris and Carrie Underwood. “I mean she really is the kind of person that I feel like we all strive for our careers to be like,” said Underwood.

These clips with Stevie Nicks, Carrie Underwood and Glenn Frey backstage at the Ceremony reveal the impact Linda Ronstadt’s music had on some of the most-celebrated artists of the past 40 years.

This blog post is part of a series produced by Huffington Post and the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and Museum celebrating the 2014 Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Induction Ceremony and the new Inductee exhibit opening at the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and Museum in Cleveland, Ohio, on May 31, 2014. Tune in to HBO on Saturday, May 31, 2014 to watch the 2014 Induction Ceremony.

Robert De Niro Opens Up About His Gay Father In A New HBO Documentary

Actor Robert De Niro opens up about his gay father in a new HBO documentary, “Remembering the Artist: Robert De Niro, Sr.,” which airs June 9.

“We were not the type of father and son who played baseball together, as you can surmise,” the 70-year-old star told Out magazine’s Jerry Portwood ahead of the documentary’s June 9 HBO premiere. “But we had a connection. I wasn’t with him a lot, because my mother and he were separated and divorced. As I say in the documentary, I looked after him in certain ways.”

Of his father’s sexuality, he added, “I wish we had spoken about it much more. My mother didn’t want to talk about things in general, and you’re not interested when you’re a certain age.”

“Again, for my kids, I want them to stop and take a moment and realize that you sometimes have to do things now instead of later, because later may be 20 years from now — and that’s too late,” he concluded.

Read Out magazine’s full interview with De Niro here.

Pelosi and Kerry Capitulate on Benghazi Hearings to Win the Long Game

Nancy Pelosi and John Kerry just blinked. After resisting Republican calls for yet another investigation into the 2012 attack on the US Consulate in Benghazi, and after resisting calls for the Secretary of State to testify, they have both suddenly folded.

A full scale capitulation.

Or is it?

Within the world of rhetoric there is a little known but highly effective strategy called the Concession Ploy. In a nutshell, this means deliberately conceding defeat in one battle so that you can win a bigger battle, and hopefully the war along with it.

Political minds might suggest that the Republican interest in further enquiries into the tragic events at Benghazi has one primary goal — to hinder Hilary Clinton as she moves toward a likely presidential bid. If you subscribe to this view, then the primary objective of the GOP enquiries is a preemptive strike at candidate Clinton.

She’s a powerful target to aim for, and the Democrat’s reluctance to co-operate with Benghazi committees is consistent with an attempt to deny the GOP the oxygen of publicity — to smother those enquiries before they can gain traction.

What has changed? The emergence of not one, but two GOP enquiries.

Hilary Clinton is a potent target for the Republicans. Within the ranks of Democrats, there can be none more strategic — not even the president, who is now in his second and final term. The temptation of such a target appears to have proved too much for Rep. Darrel Issa, chair of the House Oversight Committee.

Imagine if you will, one of those expensive hunting retreats. A jeep-full of disciplined executive guns all train themselves onto a single target as their jeep bounces across the savannah. Should the target present itself in full sight, then there is a good chance of a kill.

That was the scenario presenting itself while the GOP had a single high-profile investigative committee chasing down Hilary Clinton, and the Dems were having none of it.

Now however, we have not one jeep, but two. Two jeeps full of eager guns racing along and all equally eager for the glory. One jeep contains John Boehner’s House Select Committee on Benghazi, while the jeep jostling alongside it is none other than Darrell Issa’s House Oversight Committee.

It doesn’t take much of a stretch to imagine what would happen should multiple targets appear in-between the gun-sights of both jeeps. Carnage is a likely outcome, but with the carnage being the results of the occupants of those jeeps accidentally shooting each other rather than the prey.

Suddenly the Dems appear co-operative, as first Mrs Pelosi appoints a full panel to Mr Boehner’s committee whilst the Secretary of State agrees to appear before Mr. Issa’s.

The thought process may seem Machiavellian, but from a communications stand-point would make sense. At the very least, these apparent concessions from the Dems will create smoke. In the best outcome however, they could create a great deal more: Cross-fire.

Politicians are competitive beasts, and John Boehner and Darrell Issa are competitive, with Mr Issa being particularly so.

In the ideal outcome for the Dems, the two committees not only seek to win the kill, but in doing so, deliberately undermine each other. In this scenario, the Democrats take the moral high-ground for full and transparent co-operation, while the Republicans take it in turn to disprove each other’s committee findings.

As with so much in effective communications strategy, the outcome will depend most upon who can keep their eyes on the bigger prize, and remembering that sometimes appearing to concede public defeat on the smaller battles is the surest way to win the war.

Silent No More: Why #YesAllWomen Needs More Than 140 Characters

“If I can’t have you, girls, I will destroy you. You denied me a happy life and in turn, I will deny all of you life. It’s only fair.” — Elliot Rodger

On Friday night, a 22-year-old man from Santa Barbara, California named Elliot Rodger went on an anti-woman shooting spree he deemed “The Day of Retribution” in order to punish those women who deigned to rebuff his sexual advances.

Not long after his senseless massacre, #YesAllWomen was born on Twitter.

Within a day, over a million victims of abuse bravely spoke of their experiences in hopes of giving another woman the courage to do the same.

Make no mistake, #YesAllWomen is much more than a hashtag. It is a movement. It tells the stories we keep buried within ourselves. It is a call to break the silence.

A deafening silence that men like Elliot Rodger know nothing about. For in the words of Maya Angelou, “There is no greater agony than bearing an untold story inside of you.”

So to you Elliot Rodger and to every man who holds pieces of you within him, #YesAllWomen have something to say…

We didn’t mean yes when we screamed no and we weren’t “asking for it” when we wore our favorite dress. Never again will we hold our heads in shame as you yell profanities at us or allow you to determine our worth. And while #YesAllWomen know #NotAllMen are like you, all women are affected and tormented by misogyny.

I, for one, hope that this conversation continues far past the 140-character limit twitter allows until there is nothing left to talk about. Until these crimes no longer exist.

Until I can run in the park alone without fear of being attacked, until I am treated as an equal and my kindness isn’t perceived as an advance. Until I am never again grabbed at while attempting to pump my gas in broad daylight or questioned for how I got that raise at work. Until there’s never another professor who tells me my dress is distracting him after class or ex-husband who says I made him push me around. Until I am never again bullied into silence over a secret that wasn’t mine to keep and wasn’t worthy of being kept.

May we continue to talk, no matter how uncomfortable it may get, no matter how scary, may we strive — no insist — on teaching our sons what it means to be real men so that our daughters are free to be real women. The kind who are brave enough to have a voice. To say yes when they mean yes, and no when they mean no. To know without a shadow of a doubt that they are just as worthy of respect as any man. May they demand it, may they know it, may they give it.

So to women everywhere… let #YesAllWomen give rise to your voice, let it be the conversation that makes a world with #NoAbuse a reality.

GOP Hits Jason Carter For Wanting To Do Something Most Georgians Also Want

Republicans looking to boost one of their incumbents, Georgia Gov. Nathan Deal, are making a calculation that they can tarnish his Democratic opponent by attacking him for supporting a policy that many Georgians appear to favor.

The Republican Governors Association released its first ad in the Georgia gubernatorial race Thursday, hitting state Sen. Jason Carter for supporting an expansion of Medicaid in the state under the Affordable Care Act. The Atlanta Journal-Constitution reports that the more than $500,000 ad buy will run statewide.

“We know Obamacare is making health care coverage more expensive,” the ad’s narrator says. “Costing us jobs. And forcing people to pay for things they don’t want or need. So why would Jason Carter say expanding Obamacare ‘should be on the table’? We don’t want more Obamacare.”

Deal justified his decision to not accept the Medicaid expansion by arguing it would be too costly, though an estimated 650,000 low-income Georgians could have gained health coverage.

Polls have shown a majority of Georgians support expanding Medicaid, so the ad’s choice of the term “Obamacare” instead of “Medicaid” may have been a deliberate one.

The association previously had used the same rhetoric to attack South Carolina Democratic gubernatorial candidate Vincent Sheheen for supporting the Medicaid expansion, even though several of the association’s members, including Chairman and New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, decided to adopt the expansion in their states.

RGB Shades: Really Good at Blinding

A couple of years ago we featured Garrett Mace’s LED Matrix Shades, which are sunglasses that have rows of programmable LEDs instead of lenses. You can get a pair of those from Garrett’s online store, but you might want to wait for his RGB Shades. They’re just like the LED Matrix Shades except they have RGB LEDs.

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The RGB Shades’ hinges are actually made of substrate as well. Garrett came up with the design because the 3D-printed hinges in the LED Matrix Shades were harder to assemble and took a long time to mass-produce.

Here’s Hack A Day’s interview with Garrett at the 2014 Maker Faire:

Call Yeezus and head to Garrett’s website for more on his shades.

[via Hack A Day]