Wednesday, 23 July 2014

Everything You Want to Know About Living Together Before Marriage (But Are Too Afraid To Ask)

For anyone in a long-term relationship, these two statements might sound familiar:



"It's crazy to marry someone without living with them first. You need to test out the relationship!"



"If you want to marry him, don't even think about moving in. He'll have no reason to propose!"




Though opposite sentiments, both pieces of (often unsolicited) advice are strong opinions on the topic of whether you should -- or shouldn't -- live with your partner before marriage.



With an estimated 70 percent of U.S. couples cohabiting and all of the conflicting headlines out there, we looked at the growing body of research on cohabitation and the success of a subsequent marriage -- or likelihood of a marriage at all -- to explore possible answers to the question: Are you doomed to divorce or singledom if you live with a partner before marriage?*



First off, know that the fear of divorce is real.

The topics "cohabiting" and "divorce" are inextricable from one another. As it happens, one often considers both possibilities at the same time. Dr. Sharon Sassler, a professor and social demographer at Cornell University, found this to be the case in her 2011 study when she interviewed 122 people about moving in with a significant other. After evaluating their responses, Sassler noticed that two-thirds of the respondents expressed a fear of divorce, despite the fact that none of the questions specifically addressed divorce.



Even folks whose parents weren't divorced claimed they were cohabiting as a precursor to marriage in order to screen partners for divorce potential. But Sassler pointed out that most of the couples she studied did plan to eventually get married -- they just wanted to have a test run first.



But is "testing out" the relationship a bad idea?

The one problem with these test runs? When you sprint to cross one finish line, you might just accidentally keep running to the next one. This phenomenon, known by researchers as "relationship inertia," is when a couple living together ends up in a bad marriage because, hey, it's really hard to move out once you move in. Merging homes and investing in a joint living space can result in a lot of "sunk costs" that keep couples emotionally and financially invested in relationships that might have ended had the couple not cohabited.



In a 2009 study, Dr. Galena Rhoades, a Research Associate Professor at University of Denver, found that those who cohabited before marriage reported lower marriage satisfaction and more potential for divorce than couples who waited until they were engaged or married to make the big move. Through her research, Rhoades posits that the increase in cohabiting couples is resulting in marriages that simply never would have happened in a non-cohabiting society.



"It's not that everyone who moves in with their partner is going to be at risk for poor marital outcomes," Rhoades told The Huffington Post. "What we have found is that it's really the people who live with someone before they have a clear mutual commitment to getting married."



Rhoades suggested that couples who aren't sure about their relationship find ways other than cohabiting to "test out" the union. Going on a trip together or meeting each other's families are two ways to learn about your partner's daily habits, she said. Most importantly, Rhoades said that couples should have frank conversations before deciding to move in together: Matching expectations is crucial.



What about "sliding into" cohabiting?

Pamela Smock, a Professor of Sociology at the University of Michigan-Ann Arbor and Research Professor at the Population Studies Center, agrees with Rhoades that couples should discuss why they're moving in together. But Smock told The Huffington Post that it's all too common for couples to "slide into" living together -- if you're spending five, then six, then seven nights together, one day you wake up et voila, you're cohabiting.



Plus, with all of the economic benefits to consolidating homes, it's pretty easy for couples to shrug their shoulders and say, "Why not?" rather than parse out what's best for their relationship at that moment, Smock said.



"It's what we call 'unplanned cohabitation,'" Smock explained. "Whereas scholars before were thinking that people were choosing between cohabitation and marriage, we discovered that it's not a rational choice."



Studies have shown that, while small, there's an increased risk of divorce for couples who move in before making that mutual commitment. After years in the field, Smock gleaned that by making a choice to move in, both members of the relationship will be happier -- especially women.



"Women, in particular, won't be feeling like they're being led along," she said. "There are still a lot of old-fashioned thoughts out there about relationships."



Unfortunately, gender roles may still be at play.

While every person's relationship goals differ, regardless of gender, studies have found that women are more likely to see moving in together as a step towards marriage, while men don't seem to have any long-term goals by cohabiting. Plus, in the same 2006 study, Smock found that men were more likely to see the downside of cohabiting as a form of "giving up their freedom." The pitfall for women? That age-old fear: Why buy the cow if you can get the milk for free?



We may have made it through the sexual revolution, which both Smock and Rhoades credited as the precursor for the rise of cohabiting, but traditional views often exist right alongside this new type of living arrangement. A 2011 study at the University of Cologne in Germany found that women who cohabited with their partners were less happy than married women because, the researchers hypothesized, they believed they had "violated" normal behavior and were being "pitied" for failing to persuade their partners to marry them.



"We can speculate that in such societies, people tend to believe that a woman lives together with her partner out of wedlock not because she doesn't want to marry him but because he doesn't want to marry her," the researchers wrote.



But ultimately, don't let fear control your decision to move in or not.

Before you drive yourself crazy, know that there's no one-size-fits-all answer here. Relationships -- and the people in them -- are unique and ever-changing. Plus, it's such a new phenomenon that the norms are constantly shifting, too. These days, by the age of 20, one in four women between 15 and 44 will have lived with a man. By the time they're 30, three in four women will have done so.



What's more, research released this year found that, if you control for age, many of the previous studies predicting divorce for cohabiters were off the mark: Those who marry young, whether or not they were living together before marriage, have a higher chance of getting divorced. Go figure.



And with cohabitation lasting longer than ever -- 22 months on average -- it seems people are quite content carving out a new romantic path. Government studies have even found that 40 percent of cohabiting couples actually do marry within three years. "Shacking up" might just be the new step before marriage, after all.



"If you want to do a statistical model and predict who will get married, it’s people who are already living together who have the biggest chance," Smock said. "In some sense, cohabitation is supporting marriage, especially now that we find no effect on marital stability."



So whether or not you decide to live with your partner before marriage, know that it's not necessarily a direct path to divorce or eternal singledom. Hopefully, that'll make your decision a tad easier.



*In no way does this presuppose that all folks, women or men, want to (or should want to) get married. We're just addressing all of the rhetoric out there. In the end, there's no "right" thing to do (or want).



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First 'Nightcrawler' Trailer Is Jake Gyllenhaal's Lottery Ticket

Filming on Dan Gilroy's "Nightcrawler" was so intense for Jake Gyllenhaal that he was forced to get stitches in his hand after punching a mirror. That sequence is teased below in the first official trailer for the film, which HuffPost Entertainment is happy to debut. Gyllenhaal stars in the film as Lou Bloom, "a driven young man desperate for work who discovers the high-speed world of L.A. crime journalism."



"I wouldn't really call him a journalist," Gyllenhaal said of his character in an interview with Vulture last year. "I would actually consider him a cinematographer. He's a total observer, and a visual artist."



Co-starring Rene Russo and Bill Paxton (who sports a snazzy goatee), "Nightcrawler" is out in theaters on Oct. 17. The film will premiere at this year's Toronto International Film Festival in September alongside other 2014 awards hopefuls. As Gyllenhaal's Lou says in the clip, "If you want to win the lottery, you have to make the money to buy a ticket."







nightcrawler trailer
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Tuesday, 22 July 2014

This Is What Happens When You Run Into Walder Frey At A Wedding

In the "Game of Thrones" universe, Walder Frey -- a.k.a the evil mastermind behind the "Red Wedding" -- is the last person you'd want to see at someone's nuptials.



But that's exactly what happened to one wedding photographer, who posted the following picture to Reddit Monday, titled, "I was at a wedding with Walder Frey. Needless to say I was concerned."



Wedding with Walder







Turns out, "Frey" -- who is played by 72-year-old David Bradley -- was there for a happy reason: to see his very own daughter tie the knot. And according to the Redditor, "He's a great guy really!" He then offered this second picture as proof:











Still, congrats to the photog -- for making it out alive.











Keep in touch! Check out HuffPost Weddings on Facebook, Twitter and Pinterest. Sign up for our newsletter here.


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Transfer window: Club-by-club - the summer Premier League deals

If the World Cup wasn't enough to whet your footballing appetite this summer, we've got another transfer window jam-packed with Premier League sides looking to revamp their squads. Here's your club-by-club guide to all the moves.
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Stoke continue summer spending spree by signing Bojan Krkic from Barcelona on four-year deal

Stoke City manager Mark Hughes has made his fifth signing of the season by signing Barcelona forward Bojan Krkic on a four-year deal.
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5 Reasons You Should Stop Complaining About Being a Bridesmaid

Ladies, I get it: Being a bridesmaid isn't all glamor and champagne toasts. It's a big job that requires a lot of your free time, money, and changes the wedding experience altogether. We've all had those thoughts following the infamous inquiry of "Will you be my bridesmaid?" It's time we admit (and examine) them:



1. The last time you rocked an updo was senior prom -- and you wanted that to be the last time. Sure, it's understandable that a bride wants her wedding party to look polished, with their hair pulled away from their face. But you've reached an age where you (finally) have mastered the art of styling your hair that doesn't include 20 bobby pins and an entire can of L'Oreal Elnett. You don't want everyone wondering if you're headed to a beauty pageant after the ceremony with your Miss America hairdo.



...Riiiight, because everyone will be talking about your hair as your breathtaking bestie is marrying the man of her dreams right next to you.



2. There is no better justification for finally splurging on that dress you've been eyeing than your friend's wedding. Unless your friend takes that excuse away by making you a bridesmaid, requiring you to spend your splurge-dress money on the dress she has chosen for you (and her five other closest friends). If you're lucky, she'll let you choose the silhouette that fits you but honestly, when will you wear a rosy chiffon dress again?



...Maybe never. But that rosy chiffon dress is a symbol of your friendship -- out of all of the people in her life, your friend wanted you by her side when she said "I do." And maybe one day that dress will be your kid's favorite thing to wear while playing dress-up.



3. You'd rather be sitting down during the ceremony than standing up in your pastel dip-dyed heels.



...But then you might not be able to catch the tear in the groom's eye or feel the excitement as they voice their vows.



4. So many pre-wedding events, so little time. There are engagement parties, bridal shower(s), fittings, tastings, and the free time you have left is spent shopping for gifts, finding the right pair of shoes... it never ends.



...You should be thanking the bride for pulling a Super Bowl Beyoncé and reuniting the group for her big moment. Can you name the last time you and your girlfriends hung out this much?!



5. It'd be nice to spend some time with your date. Whether it's your new beau's first time meeting your whole posse or a rare night out with your husband, a wedding usually means quality time with your plus one. But between endless photo ops, wedding dress train duty, and of course, the seating arrangements at the reception, being a bridesmaid can get in the way.



...By asking you to be her bridesmaid, your girlfriend is giving you a VIP ticket to the biggest, most extravagant party she will ever throw. She wants you in the photo album she will show to her grandchildren, to sip champagne in the limo, and to be the one to tell her if she has lipstick on her teeth. (Always tell the bride if she has lipstick on her teeth.) You can dance with your date when a cheesy slow song comes on.



No matter how many times these thoughts run through your head, remember that you'll be one of the first people to see the bride in her dress, you'll have countless professional photos to choose from when you need a new Facebook picture, and most importantly, your friend will always remember you being by her side when she became a "Mrs."



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Sherri Shepherd's Estranged Husband, Lamar Sally, Adds More Drama To Divorce Battle

As television personality Sherri Shepherd continues to manage her public divorce battle with estranged husband Lamar Sally, new reports have surfaced regarding the couple's soon-to-be-born child.



According to TMZ, Sally, a television writer, is reportedly drafting legal documents in an effort to ensure that Shepherd, a former co-host of "The View," doesn't withdraw from their separation request. The request grants Sally full custody of the newborn, who is due July 28 via a surrogate. Sally's legal precaution comes following reports that Shepherd allegedly "doesn't want anything to do with the child and refuses to pay any child support," in the words of an anonymous source quoted by FOX411 this week.



Last July, 10 months prior to filing for divorce, Shepherd opened up to Hello Beautiful on the difficulties of meeting new friends and the importance of healing following a breakup.



"I don't do new friends very easily because I have a hard enough time keeping up with my old friends," Shepherd said in that interview. "You know, to really develop a friendship you need to go through things and I'm not trying to go through new things with new people."



"I get over a breakup ... with time," she continued. "You have to know time will dull everything, and I think don't get back into a new relationship until you heal. You gotta go through it to get over it. So, take time out after a breakup to know who you are and be by yourself and to be OK with being by yourself."
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Kurt Cobain And Courtney Love Rocked A Selfie Back In The Day

Kurt Cobain and Courtney Love were taking selfies way before they were called selfies.



A photo snapped by Love of the couple in front of a mirror is now making the rounds. Some outlets date the picture to Nirvana's 1992 tour in Japan, which Cobain biographer Charles R. Cross told The Huffington Post was "most likely."



"They often took selfies," Cross, author of Heavier Than Heaven: A Biography Of Kurt Cobain , told HuffPost. "They were aware at the time of their role and place in culture."



Check out the photo in tweet form from earlier this year, below:








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Robert Lewandowski scores for Bayern Munich in first pre-season appearance

Robert Lewandowski got off the mark for Bayern Munich after netting in his first appearance for the club. The Polish striker scored just after the hour in their 1-1 friendly draw against third-tier German side MSV Duisberg.
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13 Times Selena Gomez Killed It In The Beauty Department

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Pitchfork Music Festival in Photos: The Best of the Fest

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Here's Why Everyone Should See Sara Bareilles Live In Concert

On Sunday, July 20, Sara Bareilles took on Madison Square Garden in a big way. Her Little Black Dress tour had kicked off in Chicago 10 days earlier, and from the looks of it, Bareilles was having the time of her life belting out songs from her Grammy-nominated album, "The Blessed Unrest."



So, to all those guys who have broken Bareilles' heart since she burst on the scene with "Little Voice" in 2007 ... sorry, but the joke's on you.



Here are eight reasons why everyone should see Bareilles live:



She's hilarious.

sara bareilles



In between songs, Bareilles kept the audience entertained with wisecracks about everything from getting dumped to how much money she was making that night.



"You sound like a million bucks," Bareilles told the audience after her opening number. "No, literally I'm making like a million bucks tonight, it's incredible."



She actually wears a little black dress.

sara bareilles



Really! (See above.)



She drops the f-bomb a lot.

sara bareilles



With power ballads like "King Of Anything" and "Brave," we probably should have expected this, but it was still great.



"Any lovebirds out there tonight? Well, fuck you," Bareilles said before performing "I Choose You," and it was the best.



She mixes the old and the new.

sara bareilles



Unfamiliar with her newer stuff? Trust us, you'll still get to hear "Love Song" and "Gravity."



Her energy is contagious.

sara bareilles



We're pretty sure we could have shown up in the worst mood ever and left feeling great. When she wasn't banging on the piano, throwing her head back in laughter and sipping on beer, Bareilles was getting the audience on their feet to dance.



You'll probably cry.

sara bareilles



Hey, everyone needs to let it all out sometimes. When Bareilles takes on a sad song, she goes all in. Just try get to the end of her performance of "Manhattan" with dry eyes. So many feelings!



Her covers rock.

sara bareilles



Perfect cover of Sia's "Chandelier"? Check.



Her voice is mind-blowingly great.

sara bareilles



Those notes she hits are real. Even that one in "Gravity"!








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A Generation's Obligation: The Cycle of Peace

When 9/11 happened, I was in the fifth grade. I was ten. I didn't understand the weight of it. I only knew it was horrible.



For the next 13 years of my life, I would watch the aftermath and try to understand what happened. Throughout my teens, I would cringe at the report of any other threat, and as a Muslim-American say to myself, "Please, don't let it be a Muslim. Please, not again. Please, not in the name of my religion."



Later, as a young adult, while my head focused on reciting the names of all the innocent lives lost in the 9/11 attacks for a memorial ceremony, it also ached for the lives of other innocent people who were killed in our counterterrorism efforts, whose names I would never know and whose names may never be recorded.



I sometimes would think that those whose lives were horrendously cut short on 9/11 would say of the killing of innocents in our following wars, "Please, don't let it be a civilian like me. Please, not again. Please, not in the name of my death."



I'm beginning to understand that the Disease of Hatred that hit our towers that day found a way to infect people who never had that kind of hatred before. I felt that blood-hungry hatred swim around the world, poignantly charging words and aiming guns.



My generation has endured a cycle of violence. We have seen religion blamed, cultures blamed, and on all sides bloody fingers. We have felt the loss of innocent lives, near and distant. Every generation has seen their own share of violence, but there is something so tangible about the way we have access to and can impact information now. There is something about our lived experience that has the potential to overcome boundaries like never before.



Our generation is a global generation. We are clicks away from one another at all times. With this era of communication comes great privileges and greater challenges. Today, I think one of our most significant challenges is to prevent the ongoing cycles of injustice, in particular those stemming from cross-cultural violence.



To think critically about what is going on in the world and the issues that are affecting people's everyday lives, even when those people do not live beside you: this is the obligation of my generation. And there is perhaps nothing longer-standing and more relevant in this moment than the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.



As the loss of innocent lives is in the hundreds and ongoing, it is the obligation of our generation to examine the sides we take and the information we choose to take into account. A recent report (July 20) by the UN announced that 375 Palestinians have been killed, including 36 women and 83 children. Over 3,000 Palestinians have been injured, and more than 100,000 Palestinians are now displaced. More than one million have limited or no access to water or sanitation services.



The other night, I heard the announcement of the death of the first Israeli soldier as ground invasions began (the Israeli death toll recently reached 20, two civilians and the rest military). The CNN reporter ended the piece by stating that there were 60,000 Palestinian children in need of psychosocial support.



My mother's words haunt me as we watched the same newscast. "You and your brother are upset by the news, but it is not news to us," she said. "This has been going on for not only all of your lives, but all of ours, too."



I do not want to say that to my children.



I do not want to continue to watch the news, and as deaths of Palestinians are announced in this crushing offensive by Israel say, "Please, not another innocent child. Please, not again. Please, make it stop."



In this moment, the death tolls will inevitably grow if Israel's Operation Protective Edge continues. It is up to us to decide what the death tolls will mean to us, and the numbers should demonstrate what they truly are: a grave injustice to humanity.



For those who have been so shamefully silenced by this violence, we can create cycles of peace. There is a generation that has our voices not only at our mouths, but also at our fingertips. Our generation has the ability to be louder than anyone has ever been before by creating a chorus of, "Please, never again."



"Please, no more."



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TV Reporter Found Shot To Death In Honduras

TEGUCIGALPA, Honduras (AP) — The body of a television reporter was found in Honduras on Monday a day after he went missing. He had been shot twice.



National Police chief Ramon Sabillon said the body of TV reporter Herlyn Espinal was left half naked on the side of a highway. Sabillon said Espinal's family had identified the body.



Police reported one suspect had been detained.



Espinal, 32, worked for a news program on Channel 3 television in San Pedro Sula, long considered the most violent city in Honduras, which in turn is the country with the highest homicide rate in the world: 90.4 per 100,000 inhabitants.



The governmental human rights commission says 37 media workers have been slain in the Central American country over the last 10 years. A killer has been convicted in only one of those cases, a 2010 homicide.



Security Minister Arturo Corrales said it was unlikely that Espinal was killed because of his work as a journalist, calling that "the least likely" theory.



Honduran authorities have frequently argued that journalists have been killed for personal reasons. Some journalists in Honduras also hold other jobs, to make ends meet.



Espinal disappeared Sunday morning after a meal at a restaurant with friends. He parked his car in front of his mother's house and then was see getting into another vehicle with three other people inside.



"This a heavy blow for journalism, and we demand that authorities arrest and punish the killers," said Juan Mairena, the head of the Honduran journalists association.



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Here's Why Everyone Should See Sara Bareilles Live In Concert

On Sunday, July 20, Sara Bareilles took on Madison Square Garden in a big way. Her Little Black Dress tour had kicked off in Chicago 10 days earlier, and from the looks of it, Bareilles was having the time of her life belting out songs from her Grammy-nominated album, "The Blessed Unrest."



So, to all those guys who have broken Bareilles' heart since she burst on the scene with "Little Voice" in 2007 ... sorry, but the joke's on you.



Here are eight reasons why everyone should see Bareilles live:



She's hilarious.

sara bareilles



In between songs, Bareilles kept the audience entertained with wisecracks about everything from getting dumped to how much money she was making that night.



"You sound like a million bucks," Bareilles told the audience after her opening number. "No, literally I'm making like a million bucks tonight, it's incredible."



She actually wears a little black dress.

sara bareilles



Really! (See above.)



She drops the f-bomb a lot.

sara bareilles



With power ballads like "King Of Anything" and "Brave," we probably should have expected this, but it was still great.



"Any lovebirds out there tonight? Well, fuck you," Bareilles said before performing "I Choose You," and it was the best.



She mixes the old and the new.

sara bareilles



Unfamiliar with her newer stuff? Trust us, you'll still get to hear "Love Song" and "Gravity."



Her energy is contagious.

sara bareilles



We're pretty sure we could have shown up in the worst mood ever and left feeling great. When she wasn't banging on the piano, throwing her head back in laughter and sipping on beer, Bareilles was getting the audience on their feet to dance.



You'll probably cry.

sara bareilles



Hey, everyone needs to let it all out sometimes. When Bareilles takes on a sad song, she goes all in. Just try get to the end of her performance of "Manhattan" with dry eyes. So many feelings!



Her covers rock.

sara bareilles



Perfect cover of Sia's "Chandelier"? Check.



Her voice is mind-blowingly great.

sara bareilles



Those notes she hits are real. Even that one in "Gravity"!








Read More »

Giorgio Moroder Is Back, Thanks To Daft Punk

If two French robots hadn't coaxed him out of semi-retirement, Giorgio Moroder would still be practicing his swing somewhere on a Los Angeles golf course. Instead, the 74-year-old Italian composer and record producer, credited with pioneering electronic dance music and crafting space disco hits like Donna Summer's "Hot Stuff," is back on the scene as a DJ.



A few hours before his hugely anticipated headlining appearance at the Pitchfork Music Festival in Chicago on July 18, the Oscar and Grammy winner told The Huffington Post that it's the audience who inspires his energy.



"I just did a gig in France two days ago and it was incredible: 25,000 people doing whatever I wanted to do," Moroder said. "It's an experience. There are not too many people who can have that experience. Maybe the top 20 of the DJs -- and I'm by far not the top 20 -- but the feeling is incredible."



Despite the fact that he composed and produced some of the most popular songs of the past 40 years -- including Donna Summer's "Carry On," Blondie's "Call Me," Kenny Loggins' "Danger Zone" and Irene Cara's "Flashdance... What a Feeling" -- Moroder is genuinely surprised that younger fans recognize his older work.



"Amazingly, the young kids -- 20, 30 -- they know some of the songs. Some even know some of the lyrics. I don't know how, I guess it's the Internet," Moroder said. "It's quite amazing that people recognize the songs."



In the '70s and '80s, Moroder was well known behind the scenes as a producer and composer to artists like Summer, Mick Jagger and Jimmy Page, who came through his Musicland Studios in Munich.



Thanks to the track "Giorgio by Moroder" on Daft Punk's 2013 album, "Random Access Memories," in which Morodor speaks about his life over a swank instrumental, fans nowadays recognize Moroder's voice as much as they do his famously mustachioed face: Moroder said just moments earlier, en route to the Pitchfork festival site, that his driver hadn't seen his face. But when he spoke, the driver immediately asked him, "Are you Giorgio Moroder?"



"Random Access Memories" not only relaunched Moroder's career -- it catapulted Pharrell Williams to a whole new level of stardom and resuscitated the career of producer and musician Nile Rodgers, a veteran of the 1970s disco outfit Chic.



"If the Daft Punk [record] would not have come out, and without DJing, I probably would not do music. First of all, to start a new career, that's not easy," Moroder said. "That album was good for several people, me included."



Moroder was a fan of Daft Punk's 2001 song, "One More Time," but said he hadn't listened to much new music over the past decade. Now, he favors acts like David Guetta, Avicii and other radio-friendly artists -- "like what they play on KISS-FM."



"I love the EDM kind of music, the uptempo songs. The sounds are beautiful," he said, adding, "I just don't know how long it's going to last. It starts to become a little bit repetitive. But other than that, I love it."



Since he became a DJ himself a little more than a year ago, Moroder has fully embraced the digital revolution.



"I love analogue, but digital has so many good sounds and they're getting better and better," he said.



Pitchfork fest fans would tend to agree: Moroder's set went on to be the highlight of the event's opening day, no doubt earning him a few more fans who will snap up his new record, currently in the works.



"I'm preparing an album with all different kinds of artists," Moroder said. "Nothing is ready, but a lot of ideas. It's going to be a nice album."
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MasterChef Recap: OMG Faces All Around

Note: Do not read on if you have not seen Season 5, Episode 9 of FOXs "MasterChef," titled "Top 13 Compete."



Cue your movie trailer voice : the biggest, and most intimidating mystery box challenge. Ever.



Knives. Fancy Alaskan King Salmon. Gordon and Graham are cooking with them (Joe is just a restaurateur, so he'll be the judge of fanciness). I would have cheated and step by stepped the filleting with Gordon, but everyone was too busy getting cauliflower instead.



2014-07-22-509004mastercheftop13competephotoslightboxtbd.jpg



And then Elise has a panic attack. It really is the most intense mystery box challenge, ever, perhaps. She rallies and comes back to put something on the plate.



Courtney's called up and Elizabeth is a little salty: "They always call Courtney."

But Elizabeth, the "wow girl," according to Leslie, gets up there, too.

Christian was the only guy "with the balls to blacken a salmon," according to Gordon. And he's anointed King of the Kitchen for the night.



With a little tongue in cheek, the judges fill up grocery baskets and Christian has to decide what the chefs will have to cook with. They have to cook with Joe's pretentious wine-filled basket. Wine. Grana padano. Prosciutto. Aged balsamic. Chanterelle mushrooms. And then Christian gets to pick one person who has to cook in just thirty minutes. Of course, it's Courtney. She's a front runner who understands strategy. It doesn't seem so intense, because Italian the way Joe likes it can be done quickly.



Meanwhile, poor, poor Elise is giving up. Competition isn't for everyone and Gordon helps her even it out. We have other weird combos in the kitchen: Willie's tomato soup with an egg. Ahran's savory tiramisu. Cutter's nasty pizzas. Cutter: balsamic is not "black salad dressing." Courtney comes up with a pasta that Christian calls safe, but the judges are impressed with.



Gordon asks the chefs to sacrifice themselves: Elise offered herself up, as did Willie, but he was being polite. Cutter is up on the block, too. He is so stubborn and has such little technique, but Elise is the one to go. It's better for her health in the long run. I wanted to hug her, too.



My name's Gordon Ramsey, not Stevie Wonder. What were your favorite moments this week? Let me know @karenfratti or in the comments.



"MasterChef" airs Mondays at X8 p.m. ET on FOX.
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Beyonce And Jay Z Divorce Rumor Has Everyone Freaking Out

Sometimes the Internet can be a place of pure joy, filled with cuddly kittens and laughing babies. Other times, it's a place where Beyonce and Jay Z breakup rumors fester.



On Saturday, July 19, the New York Post's Page Six published a report that Beyonce and Jay Z may be on the verge of a split. The couple, who has allegedly been seeing marriage counselors, could reportedly call it quits after wrapping their On The Run tour.



“They are trying to figure out a way to split without divorcing ... This is a huge concert tour and they’ve already gotten most of the money from the promoters up front,” a supposed source told Page Six. Adding: “For just a split moment, things got real for them and she was even talking about adding to the family. But, after a while, Jay was out doing Jay and Bey was out doing Bey. They made the classic mistake of thinking a child would change everything and help to rekindle the initial fire, and it didn’t.”



Representatives for both stars were not immediately available for comment, but it doesn't take a publicist to see that these latest rumors are probably bogus.



Last year, E! News reported Beyonce was pregnant with her second child. The pregnancy rumor resurfaced in OK! Magazine in April. After Beyonce apparently removed her IV engagement tattoo, Life & Style magazine claimed Bey and Jay were heading for a "$1 billion divorce" on a May cover. In June, the gossip mill went into overdrive with cheating rumors after Beyonce changed the lyrics to "Resentment."



DĂ©jĂ  vu much?



Photos of the Carters tell a different story. On Monday, July 22, Beyonce shared an adorable snapshot of her and Jay with Blue Ivy on Instagram. The couple also looked nothing but happy in a backstage pic from their Houston show posted to Beyonce.com.



Hov and B forever.



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'American Horror Story' Season 4 Is Going Darker

Ryan Murphy's "American Horror Story" series is known for pushing boundaries and scaring the hell out of viewers, and it looks like his latest installment is preparing to pack on the weird.



FX CEO John Landgraf attended the TCAs this week and said fans of the show can expect a darker Season 4 than what they saw with "American Horror Story: Coven." “Some years it’s going to be big and bright and brash and campy the way 'Coven' is," Landgraf said. "Other years it’s going to be dark and brooding -- like 'Asylum' was. I guess I would put 'Freak Show' half-way in between the two. It’s got a little bit more humor and a little bit more camp, but its got a brooding period feel to it also."



"Freak Show" is set to premiere in October and Murphy is bringing back stars Jessica Lange, Sarah Paulson and Kathy Bates for the fourth go-around of the horror series. Taking place in Florida in the '50s, Landgraf promises the newest season has a very different look from what we've seen so far. "The characters are really distinctive, really original, some are really strange," Landgraf said, "but I think really compelling, I love what I’ve read so far.”



Speaking of strange, if this set photo of Paulson playing conjoined twins Bette and Dot is anything to go by, we think anyone worried Murphy was losing his touch when it comes to terror should just relax. He's still got it.







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Nelsan Ellis Opens Up About Luke Grimes' Alleged 'True Blood' Departure Over Gay Role

Finally someone said what we've all been thinking.



When "True Blood" star Luke Grimes reportedly quit rather than play a gay role opposite Nelsan Ellis in the cult favorite television show, the irony seemed pretty apparent. "True Blood" is without a doubt one of the queerest shows currently on television, and one couldn't help but wonder what Grimes thought he was getting himself into when he initially came on as a cast member.



Now, Ellis is opening up about his own thoughts surrounding Grimes' departure -- and he has a few choice words for the actor. When asked by New York Magazine's Vulture site if he'd had the opportunity to "talk to or bond" with Grimes, Ellis responded in part, "I didn't, but I'm completely ... I mean, I can say I'm not going to make a comment, but I just think that, you're an actor, you're an actor on a show that's "True Blood," we're all sitting there going, "You quit your job because ... really?" I'm just... I'm over him. You quit your job because you don't want to play a gay part?..."



When pushed further, Ellis elaborated on his feelings.

...You make a statement when you do something like that... If you have a child, if you have a son, and he comes out as gay, what are you going to do? If you have a daughter who comes out gay ...? You just made a statement, and it has ripple effects... I can't approach a character with judgment. I certainly can't tell my boss, "I can act what I want to act, but not what you tell me to act," especially on a show where you come in, knowing what it is... I didn't like what he did because he made a statement, and sometimes you have to take responsibility.





Grimes made headlines late last month when he left "True Blood" over reported "creative differences." However, it later came to light that he reportedly quit because the season seven script included a queer romance plot line between his character and Ellis'.



(h/t Instinct)
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