Please Say These Details Of Ed Sheeran's 'Game Of Thrones' Scene Are Lies

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After hearing Ed Sheeran was going to be on “Game of Thrones” Season 7, we thought maybe we found love right where we are.

But it seems like that was not meant to be.

News of Sheeran’s “Game of Thrones” appearance was announced at South by Southwest earlier this year. The “GoT” showrunners had apparently been trying to get the singer on the show for a while because Maisie Williams, who plays Arya, is a big fan.

Now, Sheeran has reportedly shared details. 

According to various outlets, such as ScreenCrush and Watchers on the Wall, Sheeran told The Hits Radio:

I just do a scene with Maisie. I sing a song and then she goes, “Oh, that’s a nice song.”

Arya serious, dude?

If that happens, disappointment is coming.

That dialogue alone seems completely out of character for Arya. She’s got other things to worry about besides “nice” songs from likable British blokes.

One of the best parts of Season 6 was Arya seemingly reaching her final form as a revenge-thirsty assassin. The last time we saw her, she was serving Walder Frey pieces of his family in a pie. It doesn’t get more hardcore than that!

But now, she’s taking breaks to compliment Ed Sheeran? 

(Growing up is complicated.)

Our only guess is that Arya must be saying, “Oh, that’s a nice song,” in a sinister way, like she’s Bane from “The Dark Knight Rises.”

supposed Season 7 leak claims Arya would be killing more Freys. If that’s the case, perhaps she does it Red Wedding-style and the song Sheeran plays will let the Freys know shiz is about to go down.

After she finishes the Freys off, Arya will say, “Oh, that’s a nice song,” and walk away in slow-motion. Explosions will then go off behind her.

That’d be sick.

If it doesn’t happen that way, Sheeran must just play “Castle on the Hill” or something. 

You can’t blame Arya too much. That is a nice song.

”Game of Thrones” Season 7 premieres July 16.

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Political Conservatives Suddenly Embrace Free Speech On Campus

In the last few years, political conservatives have self-righteously proclaimed themselves to be fervent champions of free speech on college and university campuses. In response to the regrettable efforts of some leftist students and community members to exclude, intimidate, and silence conservative speakers ranging from Milo Yiannopoulos to Richard Spencer to Ann Coulter to Charles Murray, conservative journalists, foundations, politicians, professors, and students have joyously wrapped themselves in the flag of academic freedom and fiercely condemned those students and community members who, they insist, are undermining our nation’s profound commitment to freedom of speech.

Let me be clear from the outset: I agree wholeheartedly that the students and community members who have embraced censorship, disruption and even violence in order to deny invited speakers whose views they oppose an opportunity to speak are deeply in the wrong. Such conduct is fundamentally incompatible with the core principles of our democracy and with the central precepts of academic freedom.

But I am a bit puzzled by contemporary conservatives who suddenly and quite vigorously defend the principle of free expression. I say “suddenly” because throughout American history it has been political conservatives who have consistently been the opponents of free speech and academic freedom. That they now energetically embrace what they have always rejected inevitably lends itself to more than a bit of skepticism.

From the very founding of our nation political and religious conservatives have sought to stifle freedom of thought and expression on college and university campuses. In the early years of the 19th century, for example, freedom of inquiry in American colleges was sharply constrained by the dictates of religious doctrine as post-Enlightenment Christians increasingly took control of academic life and determined what views could and could not be expressed on campus. In that era, for example, no views deemed blasphemous or heretical were welcome or permitted.

Then, as slavery emerged as an increasingly divisive moral and political issue, colleges and universities in the South closed their minds completely on the question. When it became known, for example, that a professor at the University of North Carolina was sympathetic to the 1856 Republican presidential candidate, the students burned him in effigy and he was discharged by the board of trustees.

Several decades later, as Darwin’s theory of evolution came to be accepted within the scientific community, religious leaders of academic institutions strived to exclude proponents of Darwinism from higher education.

Then, in the closing years of the 19th century, when businessmen who had accumulated vast industrial wealth began to support universities on an unprecedented scale, they insisted that the institutions dismiss progressive scholars who questioned the legitimacy of their businesses practices. A professor at Cornell was dismissed, for example, for a pro-labor speech that annoyed a powerful benefactor, and a prominent scholar at Stanford was fired for annoying conservative donors with his views on immigration.

Soon thereafter, during World War I, patriotic zealots persecuted those who dared question the legitimacy of the war or the draft. At the University of Nebraska, for example, three professors were discharged because they had encouraged “a spirit of indifference towards the war,” and at the University of Virginia, a professor was discharged because he had made a speech predicting that the war would not make the world safe for democracy.

Similar issues arose again, with a vengeance, during the age of McCarthy. In the late 1940s and the 1950s, universities across the nation excluded those even accused of Communist sympathies. The University of Washington, for example, fired three tenured professors, the University of California dismissed thirty-one professors who refused to sign an anti-Communist oath, and Yale president Charles Seymour boasted that “there will be no witch hunts at Yale, because there will be no witches. We will not hire Communists.”

Then, in the 1950s and 1960s, professors and students at Southern colleges and universities were often fired or expelled because they expressed support for racial equality. In 1956, for example, after an Episcopal minister who supported the NAACP was invited to speak at the University of Mississippi, the University withdrew the invitation after critics complained that inviting such a speaker was “too much like coddling a viper in your own bosom.” A year later, Allen University, a private all-black college in Columbia South Carolina, was compelled by the state’s governor to fire three distinguished professors, one black and two white, for their opposition to racial segregation.

And so it goes, into the 1960s and beyond, as conservative commentators, religious leaders, educators and politicians called for the punishment of the leaders of the Free Speech Movement at Berkeley, of students demanding racial equality during the civil rights movement, of anti-Vietnam War activists at colleges and universities across the land, of students and faculty members who supported the gay rights movement, and on and on and on.

Put simply, throughout American history political and religious conservatives have followed a consistent pattern of attempting to silence free speech on campus when they objected to the ideas put forth. Now, though, they suddenly and un-self-consciously proclaim their unbounded commitment to the principle of freedom of speech ― when the speakers being silenced are Milo Yiannopoulos, Ann Coulter and Richard Spencer. How dare anyone, they now declare, silence free speech on college and university campuses? It is, they say, unthinkable!

I had a recent conversation with several very conservative advocates of free speech today in which I raised the question whether they were being perhaps a tad inconsistent. To make the point, I posed the following hypothetical:

Suppose the tables were turned, I asked. Suppose that instead of Milo Yiannopoulos, Richard Spencer, and Ann Coulter, the speakers who are being silenced today are individuals who come to campus to condemn Christian evangelicals for their “horrendous, corrupt, and deeply immoral views about the rights of women.” Suppose these speakers charged that Christian evangelicals, “spouting their ignorant and vile creed, should be condemned by all civilized persons as dangerously deranged.” And suppose then, I asked, that a group of conservative students and community members responded to such speakers by demanding that they not be invited to campus and attempting to prevent them from espousing such hateful and bigoted ideas.

Can you really tell me, I asked, that you would then be on the front-lines defending the free speech rights of such anti-Christian bigots? Would you, in that situation, be aggressively defending their freedom of speech? To their credit, they paused, and seemed to get the point.

To be a true believer in the principle of freedom of expression, one has to be just as willing to defend the right of individuals to express opinions one hates as opinions one loves. Political and religious conservatives have a long way to go before they can persuade me that their current infatuation with freedom of speech is the product of anything other than cynical political expediency and a profound lack of self-knowledge. I do welcome their support of free speech, but I hope they learn a lesson from this moment and continue to defend free speech even when their ox is being gored.

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Doctors Say Those Lists Of 'Foods For Clear Skin' Are Total Bull

We want clear, glowing skin as much as anyone else. The internet and magazines will tell you how to eat your way there with chia seeds, oily fish, mushrooms and complex carbs. 

But here’s the problem: It is not possible to directly improve your complexion through diet, according to Jon Hanifin, MD and professor of dermatology at Oregon Health and Science University School of Medicine. 

“I don’t know why anybody would be advertising foods to eat for glowing skin,” Hanifin told HuffPost. “I have a feeling that maybe this comes from people trying to sell health supplements.”

There is indeed research about the effect of food on your skin, and some of it is supportive. For example, a 2007 study in the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition found that men and women over 40 years old with higher levels of vitamin C intake had fewer wrinkles and less skin dryness.

Another study published in the journal Experimental Dermatology found that people with severe acne had lower levels of vitamin E and vitamin A than their clear-skinned control group. The study was small, just 100 participants. And yet, it’s research to run with: Suddenly we’re being told that to clear acne, we should eat sunflower seeds, which pack a punch of vitamin E in every serving. Or we’re encouraged to start eating more citrus to load up on vitamin C and become wrinkle-free. 

But dermatologists remain skeptical. 

“I think those studies are going in the right direction, I just wouldn’t let anybody go overkill,” Janellen Smith, dermatology professor at the University of California-Irvine School of Medicine told HuffPost.

“I wish I could tell you that there was some huge study that looked at [clearing up your skin] and you should eat A, B and C, but it’s not completely clear,” Smith said. 

Marie Jhin, dermatologist and author of Asian Beauty Secrets, agrees. “Diet is important for healthy skin,” Jhin told HuffPost. “However, if you have a skin condition, then just eating habits alone may not be enough. That’s when we bring in the medicines.”

Both Hanifin and Smith could not say they’ve seen a patient’s skin clear up just by changing their diet. But both dermatologists said it’s common to see significant skin damage due to diets that lack nutrients. 

Patients with a protein deficiency may have severely dry and peeling skin, according to Smith. And Hanifin recalls a patient who was working through a food allergy diagnosis, subsisting only on rice milk in the meantime. The patient suffered malnutrition so severe that by the time he met with Hanifin, he had “horrible skin problems all over.” 

“What moisturizes the skin is lots of oils and fats,” Smith said. “That’s what your body makes: A natural moisturizing factor.”

So Smith encourages people to eat a well-rounded diet of healthy fruits, vegetables, protein, fats and carbs. She also encourages regular exercise. 

“A good, natural diet is a great thing and you won’t only benefit your skin, you’ll benefit everything else. You’ll benefit your heart and your vessels and your brain,” Smith said. 

Beyond that, “Wear lots and lots of sunscreen. That’s the best you can do. The rest of it is probably a little bit genetics and probably some luck.” 

And remember that you can always head to the doctor to help manage a skin condition. 

“If you have dry skin and eczema and inflamed skin, of course there are topical things that you can use, like cortical steroids or some of the new medicines that are coming out,” Hanifin said. 

“I believe in active ingredients,” Alicia Barba, dermatologist and founder of Barba Dermatology and Barba Skin Clinic in Miami, Florida told HuffPost. “If they’re good foods, I would say eat them. But if you have a real skin condition, please do not give up on modern medicine.”

A well rounded diet and medicinal relief? Sounds good to us. 

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8 Things You Don't Need Anymore (And How To Make Money Getting Rid Of Them)

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When Less Is More Money

There’s nothing wrong with being a little sentimental, but we shouldn’t hold on to more than we need—from clothes to outdated gadgets to paperwork and receipts.

Want to streamline your life but aren’t sure where to start? Here’s a guide to what you can toss, what you should keep, and clever ways to turn your castoffs into cash.

Pitch Paperwork

Still have your 2008 tax returns? (Honestly, I only got the courage to shred mine right before I wrote this column.) Discarding old tax forms or receipts can be nerve-racking, but try not to let emotions get in the way, says Cass McCrory, author and creator of the Subtraction Project.

1. Tax returns and supporting documents
The IRS says most of us can discard tax paperwork three years after the date we filed. Uncle Sam’s time frame for an audit generally expires after that. (Keep digital scans if you want to be extra careful.)

2. Merchandise receipts
Depending on where you shopped, you might not need a receipt for a return. Target, Nordstrom, Macy’s, and other stores allow returns of many items without a receipt if they can track your purchase using your credit or debit car d, or by an email order confirmation for online purchases. Check the store policy before ditching your paperwork.

3. Warranty Receipts
For big-ticket items (like electronics or appliances) with a warranty, McCrory recommends keeping receipts and related paperwork for at least the term of the warranty, which is usually one to two years. After that, they can go in the trash.

4. Bills, pay stubs, bank statements
Unless you’re applying for a loan, like a mortgage (which requires an assortment of recent documents), you can confidently shred any statements that can be retrieved online and printed if need be.

 

Embrace Online Banking

To minimize financial paperwork and bills, sign up for electronic statements. Not only does this reduce waste, but some banks and credit unions even offer incentives, like decreased account fees, when you go green. Vanguard account holders, for example, can avoid the $20 annual service fee by signing up to receive statements and notifications online.

Living with less can help us resist the urge to splurge: A study in the Journal of Consumer Research found that being in cluttered environments decreases self-control, resulting in a greater likelihood of impulsive spending.

Earn Cash for Clutter

Your dusty ski jacket and 2010 iPad may evoke great memories, but ask yourself, “Does this item serve me today?” Will I use it within the next year? If yes, then it stays, says McCrory. But if the item has gone unused for longer than a year, it might be time to cash in. Luckily, these sites make resale a breeze:

5. Used iPhones: Gazelle.com The site will send you a prepaid shipping label, inspect the gadget, and pay you for your device. At the end of last year, an iPhone 6s in good condition fetched an average of $245.

6. Other electronics: NextWorth.com Ship GoPros, laptops, or wearable tech to NextWorth and get cash in return. Says CEO David Chen, “Even if a product is broken, it can see strong trade-in value.”

7. Designer clothing: Tradesy.com List high-fashion duds, and when you land a buyer, Tradesy will send a box and shipping label (and take a commission off the top).

8. Other clothing: ThredUp.com The site sends a bag with a prepaid shipping label; fill it with good-condition clothing and accessories, then ship it back. ThredUp lists items for you, and you earn a percentage of the sale price.

Farnoosh Torabi is a personal finance expert, the author of When She Makes More, and the host of CNBC’s Follow the Leader and the award-winning podcast So Money.

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Embrace Your Inner Geeky Gamer with This Monthly Subscription Box

Celebrate your inner geek or delve into the world of gaming in a whole new way. Loot Crate is a monthly subscription box that you’re going to want on your doorstep. It’s yours for only $20 (USD).

With Loot Crate, you can expect your monthly box to always be packed with awesome goodies from your favorite titles. Each month’s five to six gifts are curated by professional geeks so that everything you receive – whether it’s cool t-shirts, unique figures, or awesome collectibles – is fresh and relevant. Plus, each box is valued at approximately $70, so you’re definitely getting a steal!

Get fun, geeky items delivered to your doorstep. It’s yours for just $20 in the Technabob Shop.

Watch SpaceX nail Falcon 9 landing after launching US spy satellite

Today was a good day for SpaceX, because not only was its Falcon 9 rocket at the center of a military launch – a longtime goal of Elon Musk’s – but the entire mission went off without a hitch too. Well, we assume the whole thing went off without a hitch, as we don’t have many details on the mission … Continue reading

Now You Can Buy Gabby Douglas' 'Shero' Barbie Doll In Stores

Gabby Douglas’ Barbie Doll is finally available to buy in stores across the country.

The Olympic gymnast announced that Barbie was making a doll in her likeness last July right before the 2016 Rio Summer Olympics began. The doll is part of Barbie’s “Shero” line, which features other badass women like director Ava DuVernay, actress Emmy Rossum and ballerina Misty Copeland

Now, fans can buy Douglas’ new “Shero” doll in stores nationwide. 

“I’m super honored to be a part of the ‘Shero’ collection,” Douglas told HuffPost. “I hope through my partnership with Barbie that I can continue to inspire boys and girls to strive for their own dreams and their own passions.”

Douglas said she worked closely with Barbie to design the doll. 

“It’s so important in the African American community to have that doll that looks like you. For me that’s really big because it sends a positive message saying, you know what you can go out there and achieve your goals no matter what your hair looks like, no matter what color your skin is,” she told HuffPost. 

Scroll below to see more photos of Douglas’ “Shero” doll. 

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