YouTube Adds Darude Sandstorm Button To Every Video

youtube_darudeSo you want to know what it’s like to be a DJ? YouTube has just given users the perfect opportunity to try out your mixing/remixing skills on every possible video you can think of. The catch? The only “sample” you get are clips of Darude’s classic Sandstorm track. This is very obviously an April Fool’s joke by YouTube but it’s still entertaining nonetheless.

As you can see in the screenshot above, there is now a tiny “music” button at the bottom right corner of the video’s controls. Pressing it will play a clip from Darude’s Sandstorm track. Based on our extensive testing of the feature, it seems that parts of the song will chosen at random so it’s not like you will get to listen to the song in its entirety.

It’s rather amusing and well like we said, if you’ve always wanted to be a DJ and wonder what it might be like to remix songs or test out your mixing skills as you move from one song to the next, perhaps this button could come in handy! You could also apply it to videos to change the mood from what might be a romantic love scene to a scene where it feels like the participants are part of an electronic dance music video.

youtube_searchThey have also changed the search suggestions so that no matter what you search for on YouTube, it will always ask you if you meant to search for “Darude – Sandstorm by Darude”. So if you have yet to take it for a spin, go ahead and hop on over to YouTube’s page and check it out!

YouTube Adds Darude Sandstorm Button To Every Video

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79-year-old Cross-country Skier Finds Solace in 50-kilometer Alaska Race

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FAIRBANKS — I spent the better part of Saturday trying to catch up with Alan Delamere. The 79-year-old skier and engineer completed the 50-kilometer Sonot Kkaazoot ski race in less than five hours.

He skied from downtown Fairbanks on the Chena River to the top of Birch Hill and back in 4 hours, 48 minutes, 12 seconds. He has 18 years on me, which doesn’t explain why I was 5 minutes behind him, except he is an athlete and I’m just somebody who likes to ski.

The 31-mile course begins in downtown Fairbanks and winds its way along the Chena to the top of Birch Hill and back. He crossed the finish line still moving like a lad of 40 or 50. A bit stiff, perhaps, but not out of breath or ready for a rocking chair.

A year ago, he did the 40-kilometer race, but later he was mad at himself for skipping the longer course and taking the easy way out. He didn’t do that this year. He said that tracking his time per kilometer helps him stay sharp as the hours pass and limits the distraction of daydreams.

He turns 80 in the fall and hopes to return to do the full 50-K race again in 2016. It’s not a stretch to say he is to long-distance skiing what Norman Vaughan was to long-distance dog mushing. This is not a stunt or an aberration with him. Delamere has long been the senior skier at the Sonot, a race with a long history of support from the Nordic Ski Club of Fairbanks, Denali State Bank and Fort Wainwright.

“We’ve all got our own different characteristics and mental approach to things,” he said. As for advice to others, he said, “Listen to your body. If your body tells you that you should not be doing it, then fine. Don’t.”

READ MORE AT ALASKA DISPATCH NEWS

Seahawks' Bruce Irvin Jokingly Apologizes On Twitter For Drunk Driving, Because April Fool's

Welcome to April Fool’s Day, everyone. First up, we have Seahawks linebacker Bruce Irvin, who took to Twitter Wednesday morning to “apologize” for getting behind the wheel after he “had a few drinks”:

But he was only kidding! Get it? Drunk driving, DUI’s — excellent topics for the Seahawks player to be joking about.

But it looks like the player unsurprisingly faced some swift criticism, for which he told people to “relax.”

Irvin, 27, was previously suspended by the NFL for four games at the beginning of the 2013 season for violating the league’s performance-enhancing substance policy. The Seahawk’s 2012 first-round draft pick took to Twitter that time as well to apologize, however, that of course was not an April Fool’s joke.

Requests for comment to the NFL and Seattle Seahawks were not immediately returned.

Enchanting Vintage Photographs Of Frida Kahlo Perfectly Capture The Surrealist Queen

Her paintings blend tales of personal torment with surreal visions mined from the the wild subconscious. Somewhere between self-portraits and visual mythologies, Frida Kahlo’s artworks depict a subject with an ever-shifting identity. Slipping from a jungle queen to a nursing infant, a wounded deer to a bed-ridden bride, Kahlo as subject was defined by fluidity, flexibility and imagination.

Kahlo as artist was just as adaptable, and just as bewitching. Known and worshipped for her exotic beauty and otherworldly style, Kahlo didn’t just create artwork on her flattened canvases, but on her own person as well. An exhibition at Throckmorton Fine Art, entitled “Mirror Mirror… Frida Kahlo Photographs,” depicts the multifaceted beauty of the rebellious artist, as captured by a variety of 20 influential 20th-century photographers.

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Nickolas Muray image of Frida With Fawn, 1939 gelatin silver print

“Frida Kahlo’s father was a photographer, and as a girl, she saw her looks in his photographs of her before she discovered mirrors, which became the inseparable companions that provided her with a sense of self,” Kahlo expert Salomon Grimberg explained in a statement. “As much, if not more than any movie star in Mexico, Kahlo was photographed and her photos nurtured the limelight around her.”

It’s fitting to imagine Kahlo deflecting her reflection in favor of a photographic replica, as if she herself were always already an artwork. The stunning photographs, captured by Andre Breton, Dora Maar, Lola Alvarez Bravo, Imogene Cunningham and Peter Juley, among others, capture a more peaceful, joyous angle of Kahlo than the ones often immortalized in paint. In one image she feeds ducks in the garden of La Casa Azul, the iconic, blue Mexico City house in which Kahlo was born and passed away. In a second image she laughs hysterically alongside friend Chavela Vargas, and in a third she puckers up her lips to kiss a baby fawn. The selection also features images captured by Gisele Freund, including some of the final photographs of Kahlo before her death at 47 years old.

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Gisele Freund photographs of Frida Kahlo in the garden of La Casa Azul

The dreamy snapshots depict a rose-tinted version of Kahlo’s life, showcasing the real yet avoiding the wretched trauma and physical anguish often stirring within her. Kahlo contracted polio as a child, which left her legs severely weakened. Then, at 18 years old, she broke her pelvis and spine in a tram accident, leading to years battling painkiller addiction and enduring trying operations. Her physical frailty contributed as well to infertility, an abortion and a string of miscarriages.

Kahlo channeled her internal suffering into gruesome canvases, providing her inner psyche adequate space to spill out. And as such, on the outside, Kahlo appeared, as evident in the photographs below, resilient and astoundingly beautiful. “Frida Kahlo’s life and art has inspired the world for decades,” Spencer Throckmorton of Throckmorton Fine Art said. “In many ways she was a champion at overcoming a life of personal tragedy and disappointment. Many of her paintings are self-portraits which enable us to see just how she used her talents to portray her experiences handling challenges that might have consumed those with less determination. Her ability to rise above so many obstacles has left an indelible mark, and is perhaps her greatest achievement.”

The photography exhibition runs in conjunction with other Frida-centric art happenings taking place this spring, including “Diego Rivera and Frida Kahlo in Detroit” at the Detroit Institute of Arts and “Frida Kahlo: Art, Garden, Life,” at the New York Botanical Garden, which will feature a recreation of the Casa Azul. “Mirror Mirror… Frida Kahlo Photographs” will be on view at Throckmorton Fine Art in New York from May 21 to September 12, 2015. In the meantime, fall in love with Frida all over again in the images below.

Stephen Curry's Crossover Dropped Chris Paul To The Floor Last Night And The Internet Went Nuts

R.I.P., Chris Paul’s ego.

The Los Angeles Clippers point guard’s confidence was killed Tuesday by Stephen Curry of the Golden State Warriors, who dropped Paul to the floor with a crossover so deadly it should be deemed illegal in the state of California.

Oh. My. Lord. (Source: Streamable)

Seriously, look how much space Curry created between the two of them:

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They should place this photo in the dictionary next to the word “embarrassment.” (Source: Streamable)

And it looks ten times worse in slow motion:

Curry’s ability to drop one of the league’s best point guards to the floor like a child playing amongst men in your local gym is all the more impressive considering a new set of advanced metrics recently deemed Paul the best perimeter defender in the NBA.

Of course, none of that matters now. I mean, did you see the bench reaction?

Not to mention the reaction from the rest of Paul’s professional colleagues:

The Internet being the Internet, Paul’s fall to the floor was soon chopped up and thrown into a number of, uh, similar hypothetical situations.

Like Chris Paul on a skateboard:

Or Chris Paul in roller skates:

Or Chris Paul in a cypher:

Or this:

Or these:

Seriously, you know it’s bad when one of the best players in the NBA feels the need to admit defeat against one of his fiercest rivals.

Like, even to the other team:

The Warriors won the game too, but who cares about that at a time like this.

Mel B Talks 'Girl Power' In 2015: 'As Women We Do Have Voices' To Challenge 'Male-Dominated World'

Melanie Brown and the Spice Girls brought “Girl Power” into the zeitgeist almost two decades ago, but the dictum holds just as much weight for the pop star in 2015.

“We live in a very male-dominated, [male]-driven world. But, you know, as women, we do have voices,” she told HuffPost Live’s Caroline Modarressy-Tehrani on Tuesday. “The more that we talk about it, the more we feel good about ourselves, for ourselves. That’s a good way forward.”

Women can accomplish that by channeling “the best version” of themselves by their own standards and prioritizing themselves over the judgement of others, Brown said. As discussions surrounding sexism and gender equality evolve and change, Mel B shows how the essence of “Girl Power” remains the same.

“I think fundamentally as a woman, you want to be the best version of you that you can possibly be. Forget any outside influences,” Brown advised. “You have to do it for yourself, inside-out first.”

Beyond the individual level, the performer and television presenter encourages women to band with fellow female leaders to promote female empowerment on a larger scale. “Women [are] pioneering a lot of stuff here and there,” Brown affirmed. “I think if you see a woman in power that you want to support, jump on board. Why not? As long as it’s something you strive to be a part of.”

We strive to be part of a permanent Spice Girls reunion. Just sayin’.

Watch more from Scary Spice’s conversation with HuffPost Live here.

Sign up here for Live Today, HuffPost Live’s morning email that will let you know the newsmakers, celebrities and politicians joining us that day and give you the best clips from the day before!

The Battle for Marriage Equality Is Still Being Fought in the Lower Courts

When it comes to the fight for marriage equality, all eyes are on the Supreme Court and what it will do this June. But that doesn’t mean there’s nothing happening in the lower courts in the meantime. Last week, a district court judge in Texas blocked the federal government from enforcing a rule that would grant Family and Medical Leave Act (“FMLA”) benefits to same-sex spouses. The decision is clearly wrong, no matter what the Supreme Court does this June, but it’s still a good reminder of why a Supreme Court decision recognizing a right to marriage equality is so important.

The FMLA is a federal law that allows certain employees to take a specified amount of unpaid leave if a family member, including a spouse, is ill. This is a big deal, because it means your employer can’t fire you for taking time off to care for your spouse, and you get to keep your health insurance while you’re out. The FMLA defines the term “spouse” to mean “a husband or wife, as the case may be,” and the Obama Administration has promulgated a regulation that would determine whether an employee’s partner qualifies as a “spouse” based on the state where the employee entered into the marriage. (The regulation had previously defined that term based on the state where the employee lives.) The point of the change was to extend federal benefits under the FMLA to same-sex couples who are validly married, but whose marriage isn’t recognized in the state where they live.

Texas and three other states (Arkansas, Louisiana, and Nebraska), four of the roughly dozen states in which same-sex couples still can’t marry, challenged the rule in court, asking the court to block its implementation on the ground that it “attempts to override State law” by requiring “state employers to grant FMLA spousal care benefits to individuals in relationships not recognized as marriage in the Plaintiff States.” And in an Orwellian twist, the states claimed support from a Supreme Court decision that actually makes clear why they should lose: United States v. Windsor.

In 2013, in Windsor, the Supreme Court held unconstitutional the provision of the federal Defense of Marriage Act that defined marriage to be between a man and a woman for purposes of federal law. The Court didn’t decide whether states can prohibit same-sex marriage–that’s what the Court will be deciding this June–but it did decide that the federal law prohibiting the provision of federal benefits to same-sex couples validly married under state law could not stand.

According to the states challenging the rule, Windsor supports their claim that validly married same-sex couples can’t receive FMLA benefits in their states because “the Court disapproved of federal interference with State marriage law” and “reaffirmed the States’ authority to define and regulate marriage.” As an initial matter, that’s not correct. In fact, Windsor‘s a big reason why the Supreme Court in June should, and likely will, say that no state can deny same-sex couples the right to marry. Indeed, numerous lower courts have already relied on Windsor to strike down same-sex marriage bans.

Further, this account of Windsor also misunderstands why that case is relevant to the new FMLA rule. Thanks to Windsor, same-sex couples validly married under state law are entitled to the more than 1,000 federal rights and benefits that are available to all other married couples. All the new FMLA rule does is provide that federal benefits–not state benefits–are available to all same-sex couples who are validly married, regardless of whether the state in which they’re currently living recognizes their marriage. As the government explained in its brief, the rule “provides that an employee validly married in one state is treated as having a ‘spouse’ for the limited federal purpose of FMLA leave . . . . The rule does not purport to dictate what marriages are to be recognized under any state’s law, including the law of Texas.” In other words, Texas can determine benefits under Texas law, and the federal government can determine benefits under federal law.

The Texas district court disagreed, crediting the states’ claim that the federal government was trying to “force states defining marriages traditionally to afford benefits in accordance with the marriage laws of states defining marriage to include same-sex marriages,” and temporarily blocked implementation of the law. (Earlier this week, the federal government asked the court to hold a hearing where it will argue that the rule should not have been blocked.) Of course, if the Supreme Court in June holds, as the Constitution requires, that states can’t prohibit same-sex marriage, this district court ruling won’t matter. But that doesn’t mean people should ignore it now, because it matters a great deal in the meantime.

First, it surely matters to those validly married gay men and lesbians living in those states affected by the court’s ruling (specifically, Texas, Arkansas, Louisiana, and Nebraska). Without this new rule, they won’t be entitled to receive FMLA benefits if their spouse is sick; they could lose their job and their health insurance, simply because they want to do what anyone would want to do in that situation–care for their loved one–something that a similarly situated married heterosexual employee can do under federal law.

Second, it underscores why it is so important that the Supreme Court recognize a right to marriage equality this June. To some, debates about marriage equality are better left to the political process. In his opinion last fall allowing same-sex marriage bans to stand, federal Judge Jeffrey Sutton suggested that, if left to the people to decide, they might “meet today’s challenge admirably and settle the issue in a productive way,” noting that “[i]n just eleven years, nineteen States and a conspicuous District, accounting for nearly forty-five percent of the population, have exercised their sovereign powers to expand [the] definition of marriage.”

Judge Sutton’s approach is wrong as a legal matter–under our Constitution, fundamental constitutional principles aren’t subject to popular vote–and it’s also wrong for another reason: it ignores the significant resistance that exists in those states that have not yet recognized same-sex marriage. (It’s perhaps worth noting that eight of the roughly dozen states that still prohibit same-sex marriage were among the 16 states that still prohibited interracial marriage in 1967, when the Supreme Court held that restriction on marriage equality unconstitutional.) This new ruling out of Texas illustrates that resistance, denying validly married same-sex couples the benefits under federal law to which they are clearly entitled.

Some people may never give up trying to deny others the right to marry until the Supreme Court tells them they have to. Fortunately, that’s what the Constitution requires the Court to do this June.

This piece is also crossposted at CAC’s Text and History blog.

The Redesigned Townhouse for Maximum Privacy and Convenience

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Fantasy meets reality.

The seclusion of a private residence with the amenities of a full-service building may be the most desirable living situation in the constantly active and congested New York City. This exclusive buyer’s dreams are now becoming tangible with the addition of townhouses adjacent to the multi-unit service-packed building in residential new developments.

A common obstacle of townhouse living is the necessity for the owner to maintain the home’s appearance in addition to the lack of conveniences suited for the city lifestyle, including a doorman to accept packages when no one is home. While the buyer of a townhouse is likely to be in a similarly priced market as those searching in full-service buildings, as the average sales price for a Manhattan townhouse was $5,888,837 at the close of 2014, they are faced with the inability to secure both the privacy and services desired.

However, developers of luxury new construction are responding to this demand with a new style of residential building.

For example, Robert A.M. Stern’s building at 20 East End Avenue has 43 units and three townhouses built into its base. 10 Sullivan, a new condominium in Soho, includes four townhouses around the corner from the main tower, each containing at least four bedrooms, a basement, and two areas of private outdoor space. While townhouses offer privacy for tenants, they often provide even more square footage and bedrooms than in an individual building unit, which seems to be in high demand in today’s market.

Developers building in Brooklyn are also responding to the demand for private living without the required upkeep of an entire house. Brownstones, commonly found in the highly residential neighborhoods of Park Slope, Cobble Hill and Carol Gardens in the outer borough, are being converted into condominiums, allotting only one or two floors of the larger townhouse to each buyer. Residents are granted a semi-private living situation with more solitude than found in a standard coop or condo, for a more cost-efficient price than purchasing an entire townhouse.

With high demand for a more suburban home packed with conveniences suited for a city lifestyle, it will be exciting to see the innovations developers bring to the market.

85 Years After Infamous Lynching, Another Noose Stirs Tension In Indiana Town

When his boss tossed the noose into his hands, Mikel Neal, a black firefighter in Marion, Ind., had two thoughts.

First, was this a threat? And, second, how would Neal tell his wife about this bizarre act, with its eerie echoes of Marion’s dark past?

Jeb Bush Pressed Pension Officials On Behalf of Donor's Firm

Jeb Bush received the request from one of his campaign contributors, a man who made his living managing money: Could the then-governor of Florida make an introduction to state pension overseers? The donor was angling to gain some of the state’s investment for his private fund.