HTC One X10 arrives: 2-day battery, 16MP camera, fingerprint sensor and more

Following a leak yesterday, the HTC One X10 smartphone has been officially launched. The handset brings with it a sleek, familiar design, as well as fairly notable features, including a fingerprint sensor for biometric security, a super-wide-angle lens on the front-facing camera, and a large battery boasting two-day battery life. Info about availability is still scarce, but all the features … Continue reading

Rape Survivor Listens As Judge Praises Former Mormon Bishop Who Abused Her

A sexual assault survivor was forced to hear a judge call her convicted rapist “an extraordinarily good man” before sentencing him to prison this week.

Utah Judge Thomas Low allegedly held back tears as he sung the praises of Keith Vallejo, a former bishop of the Church of Latter Day Saints found guilty of sexually abusing two women in separate incidents dating back to at least 2013, reports local news channel KUTV.

“The court had no doubt that Mr. Vallejo is an extraordinarily good man,” Low told the courtroom Wednesday moments before sentencing Vallejo. “But great men, sometimes do bad things.”

Julia Kirby, who was 19 years old when her brother-in-law assaulted her, said she was appalled by Low’s decision to offer a glowing character assessment of Vallejo.

“That judge shouldn’t have done that,” Kirby told KUTV. “For him to say that in a court room in front the victim who was abused and raped by this man, that he is a great person, to me was unacceptable and unprofessional.”

Low faced backlash in February for allowing Vallejo, 43, to remain free until his sentencing after he was convicted of first-degree felony of object rape and 10 second-degree felonies of forcible sexual abuse. Low reversed the decision on March 30 and Vallejo has been in jail since then.

The majority of people who are committing sexual crimes usually on the outside seem like pretty decent people. This is strategic and intentional on the part of the offender.
Kristen Houser, National Sexual Violence Research Center

The former Mormon bishop has maintained his innocence throughout the trial and refused to admit guilt on Friday.

“The justice system is funny,” Vallejo told the courtroom Friday, according to The Salt Lake Tribune. “The whole thing is geared to bullying you into confessing. The whole thing is geared to push you into pleading.”

Kristen Houser, the chief public affairs officer for the National Sexual Violence Research Center, said the judge’s choice of words could “definitely leave the wrong impact” on a rape victim.

“A blanket statement that ‘you’re a wonderful person’ is not appropriate for somebody whose being sentenced for sexually assaulting two girls,” Houser said. “These are things that people consider when they’re wondering whether or not it’s worth it to report [their assault] to the police.”

Houser said the judge’s comments could serve to highlight the common myth that people who appear to be “upstanding citizens” can’t be sexual predators.

“The majority of people who are committing sexual crimes usually on the outside seem like pretty decent people,” Houser said. “This is strategic and intentional on the part of the offender. They hide behind these reputations.”

“We often see people who are upstanding citizens, who are doing tremendous things for their community, in secret are doing horrible, destructive things,” she added. “None of us think we hang out with monsters.”

Low eventually sentenced Vallejo to concurrent terms of one to 15 years in prison for second-degree felonies and five years to life for the rape conviction. 

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This Couple's Love Story Inspired A Heartfelt (And Funky) Music Video

An impassioned fan letter inspired electro-pop trio A R I Z O N A to cast a real-life Michigan couple in the music video for “Electric Touch,” the first single from the band’s hotly anticipated debut album, “GALLERY.” 

According to singer-songwriter Zachary Hannah, he and bandmates Nathan Esquite and David Labuguen received an email from fan Hailee Ritcey prior to a performance in Seattle earlier this year. In it, Ritcey explained how the band’s music helped her and her girlfriend of four years, Carly, navigate challenges they’d experienced as a same-sex couple.  

“We had some on and off moments… coming out was just part of the struggle,” she wrote in the email. “We had to learn what a serious relationship was about. We are strong now.” 

Hannah, who hails from New Jersey, told HuffPost that Ritcey had asked the band to dedicate a song to her girlfriend at a recent Seattle concert. But the guys were “so touched” by the couple’s story, they decided to film the women as they explored Seattle and the city’s waterfront for the new video instead. They also incorporated segments from Ritcey’s original email to punctuate the song’s more tender moments.

A R I Z O N A hopes viewers ultimately see “Electric Touch” as a simple love story rather than a political statement of any kind. Of course, Hannah said the band was aware that featuring a same-sex couple in their music video would resonate on a deeper level with their audience “because of what’s going on” in the U.S. politically.

“I don’t think we gave much thought to trying to hit a mark with it,” he said. “[But] to see the world now that doles out so much hate and misunderstanding to communities, especially the [LGBTQ] community, is disheartening. It doesn’t have to be this big, misunderstood concept ― that people love each other no matter who they are.”  

According to press notes, Ritcey has felt “so much love” in the wake of the video’s release. Calling “Electric Touch” an “incredible opportunity” for her and her girlfriend, she added, “I knew it was a long shot to even get a response, but then they took it one step further.”

“Electric Touch” kicks off a busy spring for A R I Z O N A, with “GALLERY” set to hit retailers May 19. The men are also in the midst of a national tour, with upcoming concerts slated for New York, Chicago and Los Angeles, among other cities. 

Hannah hopes “GALLERY” is reflective of the band’s multicultural backgrounds. “As long as it’s honest to us, and as long as we feel it really resonates well with us, we put it out into the world,” he said. He went on to note that he was proud of the response “Electric Touch” has generated so far. “If we can do something that can influence someone’s way of thinking or help them through something, I think that’s the biggest goal,” he said. “If this has done that in even a small way, that’s good for us.”  

For the latest in LGBTQ entertainment, check out the Queer Voices newsletter. 

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Jewish Activists Arrested Protesting For Justice During Passover Week

Six Jewish activists were arrested in New York City on Thursday during a Passover protest meant to call attention to policing practices that they believe target immigrants and communities of color.

The six activists ― all associated with the progressive Jewish group Jews for Racial and Economic Justice ― were charged with disorderly conduct after sitting in a crosswalk in downtown Manhattan and refusing to leave, an NYPD detective confirmed to The Huffington Post. They were released Thursday evening. 

The protestors were part of a Passover “Seder in the Streets” rally attended by hundreds of Jewish New Yorkers, along with Muslim, South Asian, and other community leaders. The activists called on New York City’s Mayor Bill de Blasio to end the city’s “broken windows” approach towards policing and “give New Yorkers a real Sanctuary City,” according to a press release.

JFREJ member Yehudah Webster, who was arrested on Thursday, said in a statement, “Passover is not only a time to remember our journey as Jews from captivity to freedom, but also a time be reminded of our obligation to make sure we all get free, we all find sanctuary.” 

After a press conference on the steps of City Hall, the protestors participated in a seder, a ritual meal that retells the story of the ancient Israelites’ journey from slavery to freedom. 

As part of the holiday, Jewish families have a tradition of hiding a piece of flat bread, or matzah, for children to find. The JFREJ seder put a twist on that custom ― children in the audience were asked to find the “Mayor’s moral courage” as represented by a performer wearing a matzah-encrusted crown.  

New York City’s Mayor de Blasio has promised to fight President Donald Trump’s executive order blocking federal funds for sanctuary cities, a term used to identify cities that don’t always comply with federal immigration detention demands. But de Blasio been criticized for supporting “broken windows” approach to local policing, which some advocates believe put undocumented immigrants at risk.

The idea behind “broken windows” policing is that cracking down on minor offenses ― such as jumping the turnstile to get on the subway or selling fruit on the street without a license ― will help prevent more serious crimes. But rights groups claim this policy unfairly targets immigrants and can lead to deportations, since information about the arrested individuals is shared with the Federal Bureau of Investigation and Immigration and Enforcement Control.

New York City’s Mayor Bill de Blasio has said that while broken windows policing has its problems, it is still the “right approach.” 

The Huffington Post reached out to the mayor’s office for comment, but has not heard back.

Along with demanding an end to that policy, the group also called for the passage of the Right To Know Act, which would create new guidelines for how police interact with people they approach on the street.

JFREJ member Dania Rajendra, one of the protestors arrested on Thursday, said that her family’s history inspired her activism for undocumented immigrants today.

“My dad was an immigrant … New York is the place where my past and immediate ancestors ceased to wander, and made a home ― an option that should be available to all all New Yorkers,” Rajendra said in a statement. “Right now too many New Yorkers are neither free nor safe in their own neighborhoods, workplaces, and places of worship and therefore my own Jewish liberation is incomplete.”

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When Tiny Girls Terrify Grown Men

This column originally appeared in Emily Peck’s newsletter, a weekly email that looks at the convergence of women, economics, business and politics. Sign up here

Look, it’s obviously the height of absurdity to be afraid of little girls. Yet, here we are. Earlier this week, the sculptor behind the 11-foot bronze bull, a symbol of the virile finance industry and an institution on Wall Street for decades, held a press conference to complain about a 4-foot statue of a little girl recently placed nearby.

The “Fearless Girl” statue was installed facing off against Arturo Di Modica’s bull last month, as part of a publicity stunt by a massive financial institution.

The little girl ― posed with her hands on her hips ― was only supposed to be there for like a day, but she became so popular that she got an extension from the city of New York.

Di Modica is freaking out about the girl statue’s “threat.” He’s gotten himself a lawyer. He said “Fearless Girl” is an insult to his work.

Because of “Fearless Girl,” Di Modica’s lawyer, Norman Siegel, said at the press conference, the bull “no longer carries a positive, optimistic message.” The little girl has  “transformed” the giant muscular bronze bull into “a negative force and a threat,” he said.

I suggest Messrs. Di Modica and Siegel stay away from local playgrounds, the American Girls store and Hannah Anderson shops during sales season.

What’s really scary

Men who shoot their wives and girlfriends. They are scary. And threatening.

Like Cedric Anderson, who shot and killed his wife and an 8-year-old child in a San Bernadino, California, classroom where she was teaching on Monday

Every day, three women, on average, are killed by men ― usually a husband or boyfriend, according to reporting by my colleague, Melissa Jeltsen. In fact, more than half of all shootings in the U.S. in which at least four people died involved domestic violence. Many of the victims were children.

But yeah, let’s do extreme vetting and bomb Middle Eastern countries to feel safe. Gun control seems ridic, amiright?

The absolute terror of a pretty woman

I’ve enjoyed many of Michael Lewis’s books ― Moneyball, Liar’s Poker, The Big Short, etc. So I was surprised how much I did not like this essay he wrote in the 1990s. It’s about how his wife is beautiful and how he finds that threatening. Living in the shadow of her hotness is a “weird degradation,” he wrote back then.

You can read more here

Read more:

 

 

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The San Bernardino Shooter’s Christianity Revealed A Huge Double Standard

In the days following a tragic shooting inside a California elementary school that left two victims and the suspect dead, news reports helped draw a clearer picture about alleged gunman, Cedric Anderson.

It seems Anderson was a husband and a father who was active in his community. News outlets have pored over his history of making violent threats against women.

But one aspect of Anderson’s life that hasn’t been the subject of much debate ― and rightly so ― is his faith. And the reason for that is a religious double standard that’s become too consequential not to talk about.

Anderson was a devout Christian. And a very vocal one at that. What happened in San Bernardino was a tragedy in every way, first and foremost. There’s no justifying this kind of violence, no matter the religion of the perpetrator.

That being said, it’s also worth noting how coverage of the attack demonstrates the position of privilege that the Christian faith enjoys in this country.

Anderson’s public Facebook feed, which has been turned into a memorial account, is filled with long, sermon-like posts praising God, warning Christians to prepare for the Final Judgment, and sharing fiery passages from a book in the Bible that predicts the end of the world. 

He would often share Facebook posts from a Christian life coach. It seems he was also a fan of Pastor Rick Warren, a popular Christian author and senior pastor of Saddleback Church, an evangelical megachurch with multiple branches in California. 

Anderson was described as a pastor who would sometimes preach on the radio. Najee Ali, a community activist who knew Anderson, told The Los Angeles Times that the shooter was a “deeply religious man.” 

But despite the religious fervor Anderson demonstrated before going on his killing spree, there were no calls for Christian organizations and leaders to publicly condemn the attack. There were no attempts to dig through the Bible for verses that tell of the abuse and subjugation of women (even though these verses certainly exist). President Donald Trump hasn’t linked the shooting to radical Christian terrorism ― in fact, he hasn’t mentioned the shooting on Twitter at all.

On the other hand, Trump found the time to tweet about another tragic attack in San Bernardino ― the 2015 massacre caused by Syed Rizwan Farook and his wife Tashfeen Malik, which claimed the lives of 14 people. 

A few days later, the then-presidential candidate called for a “total” ban on Muslims entering the United States. After issuing a modified version of the ban as an executive order, the Trump administration has repeatedly pointed to the 2015 San Bernardino shooting to justify the president’s actions. 

Because Christianity is familiar and widespread in America, it is easier for people to separate the violent ideology of Christians like Dylann Roof, Robert Doggart, Scott Roeder, and Robert Dear, from the prayerful and peaceful nature of the vast majority, and to point to other factors that may have contributed to the suspect’s state of mind. When violence is perpetrated by Christians in America, the default is to believe that religious identity is just a part of the whole story, and not a sign of extremism.

When violence is perpetrated by Christians in America, the default is to believe that religious identity is just a part of the whole story, and not a sign of extremism.

But this default isn’t always available to other religious groups, such as American Muslims. 

America’s double standard on violence committed by Muslims and Christians has been documented by The Public Religion Research Institute. In a report released at the end of 2015, 75 percent of people surveyed said that self-described Christians who commit acts of violence in the name of Christianity aren’t really Christian. On the other hand, only 50 percent say the same about Muslims who commit acts of violence in the name of Islam.

The double standard was most evident in white evangelical Protestants, the religious group most likely to have voted for Trump. Only 11 percent said that Christians who commit violence in the name of religion are really Christian. In contrast, 45 percent believed that Muslims who commit violence in the name of religion are really Muslim.

This bias comes out in how white evangelicals think about policies that affect religious minorities. Many approved of Trump’s travel ban (76 percent) and say they are “very concerned” about extremism happening in the name of Islam in the United States (69 percent). 

This despite the fact that, as HuffPost’s Melissa Jeltsen reports, there have been 71 deaths due to extremist attacks on U.S. soil from 2005 to 2015. In contrast, women are killed by their intimate partners in America nearly every day. 

This bias also comes out in the way media outlets report on violence.

Take the 2015 attack in San Bernardino for example. After that tragedy, reporters from several news networks crowded into the couple’s apartment. On live television, they pointed out objects in the home that were signs of Farook and Malik’s Muslim faith ― a Quran, a tapestry with Arabic writing, a prayer rug

In response, American Muslims began tweeting out photos of their homes with the hashtag #MuslimApartment. The organizers said this hashtag highlighted the “disgusting fetishization and fascination” reporters had with commonplace items that many American Muslims may have in their homes.

Yes, Farook and Malik were extremists. But these religious items are not in themselves evidence of extremism. Like Bibles, rosaries, and prayer journals, these objects are just examples of how people connect with their faith.

It’s important to call out these double standards because they are the biases that lead toward policies that unfairly target and dehumanize religious minorities. 

In the end, does it matter that Cedric Anderson identified as a Christian? Absolutely not. His religious fervor, however sincere it may have been, does not reflect the fervor that inspires Christians around the world to care for the poor and homeless, fight for the rights of the marginalized, stand up for immigrants and refugees, and fulfill the Biblical command to take care of the earth.

It’s a matter of giving that same grace to Muslims, atheists, and people of other faiths and none.

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A Bar Named 'Coup' Is Helping Charities Fight Back In Trump's America

One bar is doing its best to reverse some of the damage that’s already been done by Trump’s administration.

Coup, short for “coup d’état,” opens today in Manhattan and plans to donate 100 percent of its profits to charity. It’s the brainchild of restauranteur Ravi DeRossi. He conceptualized the bar ― and its mission ― after President Trump was elected in November. DeRossi told The Huffington Post that at the time, he felt angry, hurt and betrayed. 

“I didn’t go into work for a couple days,” DeRossi told HuffPost on Friday. When he finally did get out of his bed and into some of the restaurants he owns (like Death & Company, Mother of Pearl and Cienfuegos), DeRossi found that most of New York ― and his employees ― felt the same way he did. His bartenders and staff, some of whom are immigrants, were upset and worried. Some wondered if they were going to lose their health insurance.

One night in January, DeRossi finally figured out just how he was going to fight the current administration. Over drinks with his business partner, Sother Teague, Teague told him about a charity salon in Houston, Texas called Okra (Organized Kollaboration on Restaurant Affairs). According to Okra’s website, every time patrons buy a drink, they can cast a vote for one of four local charities. At the end of each month, the charity with the most votes get the next month of proceeds. Thus, the idea for Coup was born.

“We decided 100 percent of the profits were going to be donated to organizations that are either being defunded by the current administration or organizations that need money to fight the current administration,” DeRossi said. 

When customers order a drink, they’ll get a token to place in one of six jars. The jars are labeled with causes (tonight you’ll find Planned Parenthood, the ACLU and Human Rights Watch) that will rotate between 30 to 40 different organizations. Gratuity is included with the purchase of a drink, but if you’d still like to tip, it will also go to charity. Special guest bartenders will man one bar and choose a charity (or charities) of their choice, while the other bar will be run by house bartenders. 

The drink menu is unlike what you’d find at other bars DeRossi owns, featuring traditional cocktails, mocktails and beer, wine and champagne offerings. DeRossi said the menu was specifically designed to make anyone and everyone feel welcome (including those not in the craft cocktail space). 

Coup is located near Astor Place, in the space formerly occupied by DeRossi’s now-closed restaurant, Bergen Hill. Though he and his partners are calling it a pop up, the restaurateur said Coup will be open “as long as the current administration is in power.” 

“If and when that changes, we’ll decide at that point what we’ll do,” he said.

Coup opens Friday, April 14 and is located at 64 Cooper Square

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Delta Now Pays Up To $9,950 If You Volunteer To Switch Flights

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Delta Air Lines is making a dramatic change in the wake of United’s PR disaster, in which a man was violently dragged off a plane after refusing to accept approximately $800 in exchange for his seat. 

HuffPost has obtained a company memo from Delta (who declined to comment) that has raised the maximum dollar amount its employees can offer to passengers who voluntarily surrender their seats on oversold flights

Under Delta’s former caps, customer service agents could offer up to $800 in compensation to passengers who volunteered to switch planes, and employees with higher titles could offer up to $1,350. Today, those limits were upped to $2,000 and $9,950 respectively.

(A brief explainer: If an airline realizes its flight is oversold, it will offer passengers compensation to try and get them to switch flights voluntarily. By now, we know this wasn’t exactly the setup for United’s fiasco: Employees simply needed to take a passenger’s spot. But still, experts say the situation may have been avoided had crew members offered more money to the booted passenger. Delta’s new dollar amounts are likely designed to make that possible in the future.)

The Delta memo outlines protocol for gate agents who solicit passengers to swap from oversold flights. If not enough passengers volunteer at the gate, the memo says, customer service agents should offer up to $2,000 in compensation. If that doesn’t work, they should call in a manager who’s allowed to offer more.

“If not enough volunteers were solicited via self-service, make the scripted oversold flight gate announcement to solicit more volunteers. … Solicit up to $2,000 regardless of domestic or international travel,” the memo reads. “If a higher amount is required to prevent an involuntary denied boarding, contact a PSA/OSM. PSA/OSMs can issue a maximum $9,950 Domestic/International.”

The new rule empowers staff to give more money in an attempt to avoid intense situations, which could mean more money for you on your next trip. Win-win. 

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'I Am Heath Ledger' Focuses On The Actor's Life, Not His Death

Heath was the most alive human and if it wasn’t on the edge, it didn’t interest him. If there wasn’t some type of risk involved, he had no time for it. He went all the way out with the time that he had. He went all the way to the edge.

That quote by musician Ben Harper opens “I Am Heath Ledger,” the new documentary premiering at the Tribeca Film Festival April 23 and airing on Spike TV next month. 

Harper joins Heath Ledger’s closest friends and family members in the heartwarming project, directed by Adrian Buitenhuis and Derik Murray. The film compiles interviews with the likes of Ledger’s parents and colleagues, including Naomi Watts, Ang Lee, Matt Amato and Djimon Hounsou, among the actor’s own photos and footage, which he shot throughout his 28 years. In a way, Ledger himself is a director of his own documentary. 

“There were always cameras around,” Ledger’s former girlfriend and model Christina Cauchi says in the film. “I mean, he was documenting everything and he was just surrounded by all of those moments he was in, but then he’d be capturing the next moment and the next moment and the next moment. It didn’t stop, it never stopped.” 

“It wasn’t just to film us or film what we were doing, he was creating something, straightaway,” Ledger’s best friend Trevor DiCarlo explains. 

Ledger’s death in January 2008 took the world by storm, considering his illustrious career and reputation in Hollywood. At the time of his passing, Ledger was shooting “The Imaginarium of Doctor Parnassus” and was set to debut his unforgettable work as The Joker in “The Dark Knight,” which went on to win him a posthumous Oscar for Best Supporting Actor. 

But Ledger was so much more than just an actor, as the film comes to show.

He was a son. He was a director. He was a brother. He was a chess player. He was a friend. He was a photographer. He was a father. He was a music lover. And most importantly, he was an influencer. 

“Some people are just bigger than the world has room for,” Harper says of Ledger, with Lee later adding, “He was a person so talented, even God envied him.” 

Below, eight things we learned while watching “I Am Heath Ledger.” 

 

Mel Gibson was his first teacher. 

When Ledger booked the role of Gabriel Martin, Mel Gibson’s son, in “The Patriot,” it was a dream come true for the Australian actor.

“It was a huge production. It was a little terrifying,” DiCarlo says of the 2000 movie. “You can tell he wanted to do a good job, he was still learning.” 

Ledger’s agent, Steve Alexander, admits that he had a slight “crisis of confidence” and was struggling on set, but soon took note of the lessons he was learning from Gibson. 

“He’s standing across from his idol,” Alexander says. “Acting with Mel Gibson for a young Aussie kid was a lot. [But] Mel was great and really generous with him and took him under his wing and was amazing.” 

“Mel really taught him how to come in and out of a character,” DiCarlo adds.

 

 

Fame scared him. 

Although Ledger always knew he wanted to be an actor, once “A Knight’s Tale” really put him on the map, he became a bit overwhelmed by all the attention.

He was “mortified, and he felt owned,” his friend and director Matt Amato says. 

“He kind of almost pulled out of every movie he ended up doing [over fear he’d fail],” Alexander admits, adding that Ledger followed through with his career because he enjoyed the art of the craft.

 

He housed a lot of Australian actors when they came to Los Angeles. 

Ledger apparently was everybody’s buddy, putting up dozens of Australian actors at the start of their careers, including Martin Henderson, Rose Byrne and Joel Edgerton. 

“The Australian thing, to me, was, ‘Yeah, come one, come all!’” Naomi Watts, who dated Ledger from 2002 to 2004, jokes in the film. 

“You’ve flown around the world. Staying in LA somewhere for a couple of months? That cost a lot, and I had nothing going on work-wise. Nothing,” actor Ben Mendelsohn, who stayed at Ledger’s place, explains.

Ledger would apparently throw parties and DJ on the turntables all night. 

“People would stay a long time, sometimes a bit longer than necessary,” Watts says. “With him, it was just [having] friends to hang out with and share the journey. He was very big on sharing his success.”

 

He might’ve, sort of, inspired “Entourage.” 

At one of these house parties, Mendelsohn spotted “Entourage” star Adrian Grenier, and swears he was doing research for the HBO show by getting a glimpse into Ledger’s posse.

“Heath’s place in LA was a renowned sort of pre-’Entourage’ entourage house,” Mendelsohn says, explaining the time Grenier showed up at the house. “I often fancy that he was doing a bit of research on a functioning entourage, because Heath wasn’t there so ‘Vinny,’ as it were, would have been away making a film.” 

 

He almost played Spider-Man. 

After “Monster’s Ball,” people viewed Ledger in a different way, as more of a “dramatic actor,” Alexander said. 

“When I read ‘Spiderman,’ I talked to him about it and it was almost immediate that he said, ‘That makes no sense for me. I can’t possibly be Peter Parker,’” Alexander explains. “He was looking, always, for something that was going to be truly challenging … ways that he could disappear into a character and be almost recognizable.” 

The role obviously went to Toby Maguire. 

 

He was an impressive chess player.

Ledger played chess “every day,” according to Amato, who says they would often face-off in matches or play online if they weren’t together.

“I always felt that he was five moves in front of me,” Ledger’s dad, Kim, says of his son’s chess skills. “By the time he was 10 or 11 or so, it was pretty hard to actually beat him. Heath was trying to achieve a grand master status, and was only a few points away from achieving his goal.”  

Ledger, who directed a few music videos, was set to make his feature-length directorial debut on “The Queen’s Gambit,” about a young chess player addicted to drugs. The film was reportedly going to star Ellen Page, and was scheduled to begin shooting in late 2008. 

“He understood that story inside and out … he had something to say. He had the ability to communicate his ideas, he could translate into film,” cinematographer Ed Lachman says in the doc. 

 

Bon Iver wrote a song based on Heath’s life. 

When he found out Ledger died, Amato was shooting Bon Iver’s music video “The Wolves (Act I & II).” 

“I just held him for the longest time,” Bon Iver’s Justin Vernon says. “This person that I had just met just lost somebody so important to them ― it was no longer about making a Bon Iver music video anymore. This was now our chance to be there with Matt as he grieved. It was a three-day wake.” 

After the experience, Vernon began writing down lyrics “on some of these visions Matt would kind of tell me about Heath growing up in Australia.” 

“The words ended up being the first song on [my self-titled album], and I called it ‘Perth.’” 

The mostly instrumental song features the lyrics, “Still alive for you, love.” 

 

There are misconceptions about his death.  

The film discusses Ledger’s sleeping problems at length. Almost everyone interviewed admits that he had a hard time resting his mind, soaking up every second of each day. His email was even “illberunningaround@[insert].com.”

At the time of his death, Ledger was having trouble sleeping and was sick with pneumonia. The prescribed medications mixed with sleeping pills are what caused his accidental overdose.

“It’s still hard when people talk about it and people have preconceived ideas surrounding that period of time. But that’s what people do. They come up with their version of it that makes it convenient,” Alexander says. “The truth is, he was super happy and loving life and he struggled with some demons but he wasn’t wanting to go anywhere but forward.”

“I guess we’re no different from anyone else who loses a child or loses somebody suddenly. The only difference being we had to live our feelings out in the public eye,” his mom, Sally, says, with sister Kate adding, “The world did find out before we did. It will haunt me for the rest of my life.” 

 

I Am Heath Ledger” airs on Spike TV May 17 at 10 p.m. ET. 

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