'Game Of Thrones' Season 7 Adds Former 'Harry Potter' Professor

“Game of Thrones” Season 7 is shaping up to be “Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Targaryen.”

The show seems to send its own version of Hogwarts letters to every former “Harry Potter” star they can, and now another, Jim Broadbent, is set to enroll.

Broadbent, an Oscar-winning actor, played Professor Slughorn in the “Potter” films. He’s the first new cast member announced for Season 7, and Entertainment Weekly learned it will be a “significant” role.

In the Season 6 finale, right before Sam looks at the library and basically short circuits, he’s told that the “archmaester” will discuss irregularities of his visit with him. Could this archmaester be Broadbent’s character?

A “Game of Thrones” Season 7 casting call describes one of the new roles as a “Priest” with “moral authority and gravitas.” The description continues, saying the actor should be white, use an RP (Received Pronunciation) accent, have a “characterful face” and be in his ‘60s.

Broadbent is 67.

The show is beyond the books now, so it’s really anyone’s guess, but it’s not a difficult stretch for a Hogwarts professor to now be playing a maester or a priest. Plus, Jon Snow is half-Targaryen and half-Stark. This is all just Professor Slughorn’s plan to get him in the Slug Club, right?

H/T EW

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Rob And Blac Chyna Might Out-Drama The Kardashians In New Show Promo

The relationship between Rob Kardashian and the soon-to-be Mrs. Angela Kardashian (aka Blac Chyna) was made for reality TV. 

And their upcoming show/docuseries looks like some of the best unscripted television we’ve seen on E! since, well, “Keeping Up with the Kardashians.” 

In a new promo for “Rob & Chyna” released Thursday, viewers get another taste of what’s to come. There’s Rob talking about his depression and time as a recluse, Chyna twerking in a pool, trips to the strip club and clips of the two playing with Chyna and rapper Tyga’s child, King Cairo.

Of course, there are appearances from Kris Jenner and the rest of the Kardashian kids, as well plenty of drama between Rob and Chyna. 

“Yo, who is hittin’ your phone over and over?” Rob asks his fiancée in one scene. 

“Why do you wanna keep going through my phone like you don’t trust me?” Chyna responds. 

The clip is fascinating, despite the fact that we’ve already seen some of the drama play out in social media. We’re just hoping we get the behind-the-scenes lowdown as to why Rob purged all evidence of Blac Chyna from his Instagram AND the answer to that crazy question Chyna poses at the end of the video clip. 

“You really wanna spend the rest of your life with me?” the entertainer asks while Rob stays silent. 

We’ll just have to wait and see. 

 

“Rob & Chyna” premieres Sunday, Sept. 11, at 9 p.m. on E!

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Mr. Trump's Idea Of Economic Growth Is A Ghost From The Past

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Things are starting to get interesting. As Election Day gets closer and both Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump continue to make the case for their economics agendas, the American people are starting to make up their minds on who they want handling the nation’s economy.

A few weeks ago, while in Detroit, a rare but much scripted Donald Trump stated the same old talking points that the Republican Party has been spewing since the Ronald Regan era.

Paradoxically enough, the city of Detroit is the same place where President Obama took a series of bold actions in 2008 that ended up saving the auto industry; the same set of actions that Republicans have been opposed to for years.

Not only that, but Detroit was also the same place where Democrats came together to pass legislation that ended up getting the city out of a terrible financial crisis. But once again, to the disappointment of many, Republicans refused to support the legislation.

In essence, by Mr. Trump selecting Detroit as the city to unveil his collection of failed economic policies, not only does it go to show his lack of political strategy, but it also goes to show his lack of understanding on how to properly manage our country’s economy.

So what is the Republicans’ and Mr. Trump’s secret formula? Well according to them; things such as lowering taxes for millionaires and billionaires, reducing investments on critical social programs, allowing the markets to take care of themselves, and deregulating our economy.

Truth be told, not only has this formula failed in the past but this is the same formula that got us into our recent economic disaster in 2008, before President Barack Obama was able to rescue our country from the worse recession since the Great Depression in the 1930s.

For someone who’s bankrupted casinos, manufactures his clothing lines out of the United States, and proudly claims that he is a “great businessman” after having profited by the real state market that bankrupted so many in 2008, it is clear that Mr. Trump is someone who doesn’t have the American people’s interests at heart but rather his own personal gain. Under Donald Trump, America would be nothing more than a Bush Administration all over again.

By talking to people from across the country and looking at different polls on how Americans look at the path we are currently on, it is clear that a majority of Americans are looking for a path forward that builds on President Obama’s progress.

For example, a recent Gallup poll showed that 53 percent of Americans approved of Obama’s handling of the job market. In another recent poll by CBS News and The New York Times, the numbers showed that 50 percent percent of Americans approved of Obama’s handling of the economy, with 45 percent disapproving, and the rest undecided.

With our country heading in the right direction, but with still a lot more work to be done, Hillary Clinton is the only candidate positioned to expand on Barack Obama’s outstanding job as president and the only candidate that can make sure that more Americans, no matter their gender, sexual identity, religion, or ethnicity, are able to have a fair shot at the American Dream.

On the economy, Hillary Clinton would provide additional tax cuts to the middle class and small businesses, she would work with Congress to raise the minimum wage, she would expand investments in science and innovation, and she would push to allow more women to enter the workforce, by requiring companies in the private sector to pay for family leave.

When we allow more women to enter the workforce and get paid the same amount of money than their male-counterparts, not only are we doing the right thing as a country, but we are also ensuring that our economy works better for all of us.

As the Chairman of the Republican National Committee, Reince Priebus, recently said on NBC’s Meet the Press, “I think that you have to look at people’s actions.”

The Chairman is right and we should take him by his word. If we look at Donald Trump’s actions; the numbers of businesses he has bankrupted and the amount of people he has taken advantage of, it is clear that not only is he unfit to handle our economy, but he is also clearly unfit to be President of The United States.

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Photographer Chronicles Her Husband's Depression Through Intimate Portraits

When photographer Maureen Drennan was growing up, she spent part of her time in Block Island, Rhode Island, whose landscape is characterized by foggy skies and still waters. “It was a lonely time,” she wrote in an email to The Huffington Post. “The windblown landscape on Block Island is beautiful but deserted.” 

Drennan returned to her childhood haunt again, as an adult, camera in tow, to document the landscape as a sort of self-portrait, a physical embodiment of the isolation she was experiencing in her married life.

Her husband Paul had fallen into a severe depression, leaving Maureen stumbling to understand the inner workings of her partner’s mind. Somehow, taking photos helped. “The intimacy of making the photographs together during a challenging time was restorative,” Drennan said. “Where words failed us, the pictures filled in the blanks.”

The resulting series is called “The Sea That Surrounds Us” ― a line from a love poem by Pablo Neruda. Half of the photos are of Paul, and the other half are images of Block Island, which function as portraits of Drennan’s interior state. 

Most of Drennan’s earlier photographic projects followed a familiar recipe. Enter a new community, earn their trust, slowly, through the photographic process, go from outsider to insider. “This project was vastly different from previous ones because I was focusing on my partner and our relationship; it was a subject that was obviously very close,” Drennan said. “With Paul, I was an insider who felt like an outsider.”

The hardest part of the project, Drennan explained, was actually starting it. “Paul was going through depression and I didn’t want to isolate him further by picking up the camera and photographing him,” she said. “But once I began taking pictures of him, it felt comfortable and it became part of what we did together.” Despite his discomfort being in front of the camera, Paul recognized his wife’s dedication to reading his signals, gestures and movements, and interpreting his state of mind. 

“Ultimately, we cannot truly know or understand how someone is feeling or what they are thinking, but we can watch for signs,” Drennan said. “There is a wonderful poem by Tomas Tranströmer called ‘Romanesque Arches’ that beautifully describes ‘endless vaults within us.’ The actual line is: ‘Inside you one vault after another opens endlessly. You’ll never be complete, and that’s as it should be.’”

This era in Drennan’s life, when her marriage was beset with turmoil and uncertainty, has since come to an end. The distance that once separated Maureen and Paul has been narrowed, and the difficulties they both underwent have changed shape, into deep forgiveness and appreciation.  

While photography was not the sole factor in this shift of feeling, Drennan is sure it contributed. “During this time of feeling confused, picture-making afforded me some control in the situation,” she said. “It allowed me to operate both in and outside of our relationship. Through this project I recognized how intimacy and fragility can be painful but rewarding. Vulnerability is what makes us human, what makes us beautiful.”

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Reconnecting with an Old Friend (That I Never Knew)

A friend recently re-tweeted something hilarious, something political with the right amount of snark to make me laugh out loud. The author of the original tweet was Quinn Cummings, a funny girl I knew in elementary school. Quick with a joke, she could match wits with any adult. She was mischievous and got into her share of trouble, but she was so charming that everyone liked her.

I looked up Quinn’s social media accounts to verify that it was the same person I thought it was. I hadn’t seen her since junior high, but she was unmistakable in her recent photos – same wry smile, same wise eyes. I discovered that she is prolific on Twitter, writing hilarious, keen commentary on lots of topics. The same sarcastic point-of-view is still there. She “liked” my responses to her tweets and, just like that, these old friends were reconnected.

The above story is ridiculous.

I did not go to school with Quinn Cummings. She was an actor when we were both in elementary school / junior high. The personality I remember is largely from her Academy Award-nominated role in The Goodbye Girl and her role on the television series, Family.

She has no idea who I am.

The “friend” who re-tweeted her was RuPaul, someone else that I do not know personally.

This part is not ridiculous: Quinn is a writer today, a blogger and author of some terrific memoirs. Her tweets are genuinely funny and insightful. It is also true that I felt reconnected to her — despite the fact that we lack an actual relationship.

As a gay kid, I lived and breathed movies and television to escape from the teasing and bullying in school. I was drawn to characters like the ones Quinn played. They were sassy and authentic and used sarcasm to outwit the harshest opponents.

For fans like me, there is an upside to today’s media and celebrity-obsessed culture. We follow the famous on Twitter or Facebook or Instagram and it makes us feel as if these people are our friends, that they are part of our lives. It is as if we are one step closer to folks we admire.

But … what is it like on the other side of fandom?

I decided to find out. I stalked – um, no – I contacted Quinn Cummings. I wrote to tell her of my admiration and to inform her that we were friends recently reconnected. Surprisingly, she didn’t call the police. She actually responded kindly. My inner 9-year-old was thrilled! Who am I kidding? – my fully-grown 51-year-old self was happy to have a direct line to this talented artist.

Ms. Cummings agreed to answer some questions and to provide insight into the flipside of our celebrity-obsessed culture. Here, then, are some of her responses to my questions:

DS: Do you encounter others, like me, who feel that they know you because of your work as a child actor? Is it good or, well, creepy that strangers feel this familiarity?

QC: It happens some. Mystifyingly, always when I look my worst. Bangs need trimming? Cat fur all over me? Slightly sweaty? I’ll be recognized.

(As if all of that isn’t my default setting.)

I’m happy I did something that pleases people. God knows I’ve done enough in this world which has irritated and alienated the average person. More than once I’ve had the pleasure of being told some show I was in gave comfort to a family when they were going through a hard time and who doesn’t want to think they offered some kind of solace? But when the questions come, I’ve got virtually nothing. First of all, the part people want to talk about ran about three years. I’ve spent more time growing out perms. Second, what people end up asking me is some variation of “What was that like, being you?” Well, I have no idea. I was never anyone but me. I usually just end up looking stricken and blathering before lapsing into silence.

(As if all of that isn’t my default setting.)

DS: My familiarity with your child actor days led me to discover your current work as a writer. This is the upside of social media for us regular folks. What does social media mean to you, being on the other side of this fan equation?

QC: First of all for me, Twitter is like the best video game ever. I find a Tweet, something in the news, some bit of nonsense spouted by some well-meaning ingénue or a beauty editor at VOGUE, whatever. And then I think “Okay, where’s the joke? What’s the flaw? Why is this silly?” When I find it, kapow! Won that round of Twitter and like a truffle-hunting pig off I go, rooting for more treasures in the social-media underbrush.

Which may be the least-appealing and least-profitable way anyone ever described social media. I also like cats, which makes my Instagram feed slightly more sightly.

DS: People have a preconception of you and your personality based on your work from the 1970s. How does this affect your current work?

QC: With each year, mercifully, I seem to have more people in my life who see me as a writer, as a comedy writer, as someone who comments on politics and the world at large. A few people have even apologized to me, as in “I had no idea you had been an actor. I’m so sorry!” I thank them repeatedly for not knowing that and encourage them to go back to that state of mind.

DS: Are you still in touch with Richard Dreyfuss? Just kidding – I would not ask you that question because (a) it’s insulting to you and (b) what’s the difference? So … Do you know RuPaul? Because, I assume, all celebrities know each other.

QC: I wouldn’t say I KNOW RuPaul, but I did have the absolutely pleasure of being on his podcast. You should never meet people you admire, because it’s easy to have your heart broken but I will say this; what I have been told by people who worked with, and for him in the past is that RuPaul is smart, knows exactly what he’s doing and is a pleasure to be around. I can attest to all of these things.

DS: Do you find that the queer community (of a certain age) feels particularly connected to you?

QC: I’m honored to be a part of the LGBTQ+ community in any way, shape or form. I grew up in a gay neighborhood, worked in a gay-friendly business, volunteered at APLA at 17, lived in the Castro and then moved back to Los Angeles to Silverlake. In sum, I’m more comfortable around the gay community than I am around most straight people. Maybe that’s part of what gay boys sensed in me was someone who already preferred them when everyone else was very clear they weren’t necessarily preferred. Also, I got all the best lines, and even the most miserably-closeted boy has to appreciate that. I’m oddly proud of the fact that for more than a few men who saw my work as a kid I was apparently the last heterosexual crush before they realized “Nope. Sorry. Gay.” If anyone is supposed to be the bridge to homosexuality, it seems fitting it be me.

I still have a crush – you’re fabulous. My sincere thanks to my one of my oldest “friends,” Quinn Cummings.

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That Naked Trump Statue Is For Sale, Proceeds To Benefit Immigration Advocacy Group

Remember those statues of naked Donald Trump that popped up in New York, Los Angeles, San Francisco, Cleveland and Seattle a couple of weeks ago? Of course you do. How could anyone so quickly forget those veiny, spray-tanned hulks and their unsettling lack of testicles? 

The sculptures, made by art collective Indecline, aren’t exactly the type of thing I’d personally want sprucing up my living room. But, if you’re in the market for a terrifying nude statue of a racist presidential candidate, look no further. One of Trump’s five forms is headed to auction in Los Angeles on Oct. 22 at Julien’s Auctions ― just in time to scare the s**t out of your family on Halloween! 

The statue is expected to sell for between $10,000 and $20,000 ― with a portion of the proceeds benefitting the National Immigration Forum, an immigration advocacy organization. 

This Los Angeles-based Trump statue is the only one that has not been destroyed or confiscated. New York’s statue was removed by the NYC Parks Department just hours after it appeared, due to very official park rules about un-permitted erections. Yet in LA, Matt Kennedy of La Luz de Jesus gallery rescued the statue for safekeeping. We’re both grateful and sad inside that one still exists. It’s complicated

If you want to get a glimpse of naked Trump in the flesh ― so much flesh ― it will be on display at Julien’s Auctions Westside gallery in Los Angeles from Oct. 17 –22. 

Editor’s note: Donald Trump regularly incites political violence and is a serial liar, rampant xenophobe, racist, misogynist and birther who has repeatedly pledged to ban all Muslims — 1.6 billion members of an entire religion — from entering the U.S.

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Emma Stone Dressed Like Tinsel And It Was Glorious

Emma Stone is a brilliant actress who has blessed the masses with her talent in masterpieces like “Crazy, Stupid Love,” “Birdman” and “The Help.”

But if you ask us, the most exciting thing about any Emma Stone movie is not, in fact, the movie itself.

It’s the incomparably fashionable press tour that comes along with it. 

Take, for example, the party disguised as the couture gown Stone wore to the premiere of her upcoming film “La La Land” at the Venice Film Festival on Wednesday.

The 27-year-old paired her sparkly Atelier Versace number with strappy heels, an updo and minimal jewels (who needs ‘em in that thing?). It looked just as playfully stunning from the back as it did from the front:

At the bottom:

From the side:

And up close:

Just kidding. That’s a photo of actual tinsel. Is anyone else suddenly ready for the holidays?

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Barb From ‘Stranger Things’ Is Pissed She Was Left In The Upside Down

Barb is back! 

On Wednesday night’s episode of “The Tonight Show,” the cast of “Stranger Things” appeared in a skit in which fan-favorite Barb makes a comeback. The special “deleted scene” shows the kids playing Dungeons & Dragons in the basement while Eleven, naturally, eats Eggos.

At one point, Steve Harrington (played by host Jimmy Fallon) comes down the stairs to tell the kids he has “little present” for them, and, lo and behold, it’s Barb. Fresh out of the Upside Down. Mad as hell. 

“What the f**k?! You forget about something?! You forget about old Barb? Nancy’s friend? Sitting on the diving board? TRAPPED IN THE F**KING UPSIDE DOWN FOR THE PAST TWO MONTHS!” she scolds, righteously, as the kids make up excuses.

You can watch the whole clip above. 

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Neato debuts a pair of connected robotic vacuums starting at $399

Neato, the other company that produces robot vacuums (no, the other, other company), is back with two new entries in its floor cleaning robo-servant line. The latest additions, debuting at IFA this week, continue the company’s (relatively) low-entry point and a focus on connectivity, which – in that respect, at least – leapfrogged iRobot a while back. The base-level D3 runs… Read More

Amazon Alexa might eventually make its way to PCs

z511 Move over Cortana – another voice-powered smart assistant might be on its way to Windows PCs. That’s according to a new report from CNET, which cites confirmation of talks between Amazon and Lenovo by an unnamed Lenovo executive as the source of the info. There’s no further detail on how far the talks progressed, but a PC-based presence for Alexa could have big benefits for… Read More