Thursday, February 28, 2013

19 People Stuck In The Friend Zone

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The "friend zone" is a place in which no one wants to be, whether it means you're holding a purse, assisting with a shopping date or, in the case of the guy above, literally letting someone walk all over you.

But being stuck in the friend zone is a common occurrence in today's society. So common, in fact, that the phrase has recently been added to Oxford English Dictionary as, "a situation in which a platonic relationship exists between two people, one of whom has an undeclared romantic or sexual interest in the other." Unfortuantely for the 19 "best friends" below, that is exactly the situation they are stuck in.

These guys go above and beyond with their friendship duties and we think any girl would be lucky to have them. Check out 19 people who are stuck in the friend zone below and let’s hope they make it out alive.


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Ben McKenzie On His Surprising 'OC' Fans

Some might think that Ben McKenzie left "The OC" behind when he swapped his wife beater and fists of fury for a police uniform and a gun. But believe it or not, McKenzie's small-screen career choices have one little thing in common: prison.


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Eliza Hurwitz: What I Did During The Oscars

When the stars were arriving on the red carpet, looking beautiful in their designer duds, I was making my own outfit change. I took off the dirty jeans and old tee-shirt I had worn all day and slipped into something a bit more comfortable, a bit more my style: a ratty pair of sweatpants and a worn-in hoodie. These two items of clothing complimented each other perfectly and I like to think my look was comparable to that of Jane Fonda: timeless.


While Jennifer Lawrence won her first Oscar, I was eating a bowl of cereal -- like a star. I had the perfect ratio of milk to cereal. This is a rare occurrence in my life, and everyone else's life, for that matter. It was a feat I am proud to have accomplished and I am sure it will not be the last time I pull it off. I'd like to thank my mother for instilling a love of cereal in me and reminding me how special I am, in terms of my cereal choices.


As the Oscars crept on and awards were being earned left and right, I was tossing and turning with indecision. Should I get more cereal or should I end the night on a positive note with my one perfect creation? If I have another bowl, perhaps I can recreate the magic. I felt just as nervous and unsure as Ang Lee before they announced he'd won best director. I opted to have one more small bowl. I remained courageous and hopeful and it paid off. I struck gold twice, just like Ang Lee!


When Ben Affleck won best picture. I was sleeping. I slept so soundly that I'd have to say my slumber was definitely award-worthy. I didn't move once and I slept with a smile on my face, due to the fact that I dreamt about buying a car on Craigslist. At first it was boring because I was just looking online, but then I really challenged myself to dream big and in the dream, I found myself the proud owner of a 2003 Jetta for only $3,200 dollars, which was a stunning victory. I'd like to thank the two bowls of cereal I had eaten before bed. Not only was I still beaming from the fact that I had created the perfect bowl, twice, but I think the sugary carbs helped me fall asleep and increased my brain activity for the night, allowing me to pull off the car deal.


Here's to the Academy Awards, or as I like to call it, a Sunday night in February where for once, I didn't regret eating all those carbs.


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Wednesday, February 27, 2013

Susan McCorkindale: Home Decor Therapy

I sat on the scrumptious white twill slipcovered sofa and my boyfriend, Chris, sat next to me, holding my hand. Bob sat across from us, holding a notepad and a pen. He didn't say anything, just kind of looked at me like, It's OK, take your time. I'll wait. I didn't know where to start, couldn't even recall how Chris and I had reached this point so quickly in our relationship. One minute we were going along, getting to know each other, dancing in the produce department at Wegmans and sickening my younger son with our public displays of affection, and the next, we were here. With issues. Issues we were about to unload on a man we just met.


I could barely look at Bob, his kind face, and his speckled brown sweater and crisp, Jerry Seinfeld-style pressed blue jeans, so I killed a few seconds staring at the gorgeous pine coffee table in front of us. It was piled high with glossy hardcover books and cream-colored candles in glistening hurricane glasses, the combined effect of which was to make you feel comfortable, at home, and ever-so-slightly envious because your home doesn't have a single item of furniture the dogs haven't turned into a chew toy. At least mine doesn't.


Of course, it was also designed to make you relax and pour your heart out which, after a really long minute, I started to do.


"There are all these guns, you know? Sniper rifles and shotguns all over the place." I offered tentatively. "Skulls, too. Deer skulls mostly, and one that belonged to a bear."


"Guns and skulls," Bob repeated, looking me right in the eyes. "Sounds scary."


"It is," I replied softly. "And there's, like, hatchets and saws and what look like leg irons hanging on the walls." I paused and glanced from Bob, who was busy writing on his notepad, back to the perfectly-appointed pine table and down at the fluffy white area rug beneath my feet. Between my 14-year-old and his friends, my knack for spilling whatever I'm eating or drinking and the dogs' unsurpassed talent for vomiting on every available surface, I wouldn't give it or the sofa sixty seconds in my house.


"Hatchets and leg irons and skulls, oh my." Bob said, smiling gently. "What else?"


"A four-foot iguana," I replied, looking at Chris. "It escaped from its cage and now, well, God knows where it is." I shuddered at the thought of that damn reptile camped out under the kitchen sink or on a shelf in the closet, just waiting to pounce on me.


"You figure it's going to get you, huh?" He said, reading my mind.


I nodded.


"I get the sense there's something else," he prodded.


What is it with these guys? I wondered. How do they always know when you're holding back? Maybe coming here wasn't the best move after all. I mean, I'm all for getting things off my chest, but this was about to become embarrassing. I took a deep breath, looked Bob right in the eyes, and said, Screw it. I'm telling him the truth. Otherwise this is a waste of time.


"Well, there's this oosik."


"Oosik?" Bob asked.


"It's um, a, you know," I stammered, wishing I could just sink into the sofa. "An organ that used to belong to a walrus."


Bob's eyes grew wide. "Wow. Poor guy probably misses it."


If he doesn't, Mrs. Walrus certainly does, I thought to myself. The freakin' thing's two feet long.


"And the newspapers," Chris offered, squeezing my hand. "You need to tell him about the newspapers,"


I hesitated. I didn't think Bob could help with that and, besides, I didn't want the man to think I was completely crazy. Chris thought otherwise though, and proceeded to confess for me. "There's a pile of newspapers she's convinced is going to attack her in the night."


"Skulls, guns, an AWOL iguana, a walrus... appendage," Bob said gently, looking up at me over the rim of his reading glasses, "and clutter. Those'll strike fear in the heart of any woman."


Ya got that right, I thought.


"Sounds like a real man cave," he continued, turning to Chris. "All that's missing is a moose head over the fireplace."


"It's an elk," I said.


"A twelve-point elk," Chris clarified.


Our new confidant didn't bat an eye. Clearly, he expected such revelations. The guy was a pro. Totally used to seeing couples like us and totally able, I hoped, to help us.


"Alright then," he replied, placing his notepad on the table and folding his hands in front of him. "Tell me, what specifically brought you here today?"


You mean beyond the mammal baculum, the weaponry and the Tower of London-like torture devices my man uses as decorative accessories?


"His Cat in the Hat couch," I whispered, flooded simultaneously with guilt at badmouthing my honey's expensive sofa, and relief at finally telling someone about the frighteningly uncomfortable, creepily curved Early Lorax-period perch smack in the center of Chris's living room. A sofa so narrow, not even little Cindy Lou Who could sit on it without falling off and breaking her little Who butt.


"Yeah," Chris added, "she says my couch looks like something Dr. Seuss designed."


"And the rug?" Bob asked, knowing exactly what I was going to say.


"Zebra skin," I responded.


He looked at Chris. "You know that's gonna have to go, too, right? Plus the sofa, a couple skulls, the guns. And I suggest putting Mr. Walrus's privates in storage, if you want her to be comfortable. Women like warmth, candles, flowers -- "


"I have plants," Chris interjected, practically pleading. "You like the plants, right?"


"You mean the two huge Venus Fly Traps flanking the fireplace?" I replied, giving him a quick kiss on the cheek. "Absolutely. They complement the elk head." I squeezed his knee. "Seriously sweetheart, you're to be congratulated. You've created the perfect man cave."


"Sounds to me like all that's missing is a pool table and a bar."


"They're in the basement." I smiled.


"Along with a wine cellar, flat screen TV, dart board, the whole shebang," Chris replied.


At that we all laughed and Bob -- patient, knowing Bob -- said the words I'd been hoping to hear since we sat down.


"OK, I can definitely help you two. Come on. We'll start with sofas, then circle back around to the other stuff." And then he grabbed his notepad, stood and added, "We've got some really beautiful chests you might like for storing the skulls, Susan, and, if you fold it up right, maybe even the rug."


Bet I could tuck the oosik in there too, I thought.


"Sound good?" Bob prompted.


"Sounds great," Chris replied standing and pulling me up with him. "You feel better now?"


"Absolutely," I replied, wrapping my arm around his waist and following Bob toward the front of the store. "You know how I love Pottery Barn."


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Stallin' Episode Three!

 

Everyone knows that the best conversations happen in the ladies' bathroom. So that's exactly where we shot our first web series, Stallin' with Dave Hill. For our third episode, Dave sat down with rising stand-up comedian and "Best Week Ever" cast member Michael Che!


Che has made a name for himself in the New York stand-up scene and was recently listed on Rolling Stone's "50 Funniest People Now". During his visit to our office bathroom set, Che talked about being a "native" New Yorker, the first time he ever did stand-up and how public restrooms are like the police ("I don't want to use it, but I like to know it's always there") among other, slightly more scatological things.


Watch Che's interview above and also be sure to check out episode one with John Hodgman and episode two with Nikki Glaser and Sara Schaefer.


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TBS Picks Up Talk Show To Follow 'Conan'

 

Comedian Pete Holmes is getting his own talk show to follow "Conan" on TBS, representatives from Turner and Conaco announced Tuesday. The currently untitled show will air at midnight beginning in the fall of 2013, and will be given an initial four-week test run.


Holmes, 33, has been a rising star in the stand-up world for several years. He was named one of Variety's Comics to Watch in 2011, and has performed stand-up on several late night talk shows. In addition to writing for sitcoms, Holmes voices characters on Comedy Central's "Ugly Americans" and is the voice of the eTrade baby in their popular commercials.


He also is the host of the popular podcast "You Made it Weird" on the Nerdist network, which features Holmes interviewing his peers in the world of comedy.


"Pete Holmes is an enormously likable performer with an agile and innovative mind," said Conan O’Brien, whose production company, Conaco, is producing the show. "I’m really looking forward to his show, and I’ve already had my son program my DVR."


Last August, Holmes hosted several test pilots for the show at O'Brien's studio, then tentatively titled "The Midnight Show with Pete Holmes."


In addition to Holmes' show, Conaco is producing "Deon Cole's Black Box," a clip show starring "Conan" writer Cole, later this year.


"The first half of my meeting with Conan was spent making sure this wasn't all part of a new TBS prank show called You Got Coned!," Holmes said in a statement. "The second half was spent expressing my sincerest enthusiasm and gratitude for this incredible dream come true."


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'New Girl' Star Thought Schmidt Would End His Career

NEW YORK — Max Greenfield, who's been nominated for an Emmy and a Golden Globe for his role as Schmidt on the Fox comedy "New Girl," says he isn't worried about being typecast.


The idea makes him laugh.


"I don't think anybody was ever gonna put me in like `Winter's Bone' anyway," the 32-year-old actor said in a recent interview. "You know what I mean? I don't think like if they were making a very dramatic, serious movie, they were gonna think, `You know, I really like Max Greenfield, but Schmidt is just ... it's too much of a THING to put him in that movie.'"


He even took the bit further.


"I don't think they're trying to put me in `Saving Private Ryan. `We're looking for Ryan. (Pauses.) Is that Schmidt?'" he said. "I'm fine. I'm getting to do everything I want to do on this show."


"New Girl" stars Zooey Deschanel as a young woman with three male roommates, played by Greenfield, Jake Johnson and Lamorne Morris.


Schmidt is a vain, oversexed ladies man with obsessive-compulsive disorder. He makes frequent references to his Jewish heritage. The character could be unlikable, but Greenfield's portrayal of Schmidt makes many viewers root for him.


Fans tweet Greenfield's lines as Schmidt while the show airs. And Greenfield garners respect from his peers.


"I wanna live in a world where the only person I see or interact with is Schmidt," actress Mindy Kaling tweeted last year. Gwyneth Paltrow wrote in her newsletter, GOOP, that she "fell in TV love" with the character. Greenfield now occasionally contributes to GOOP.


Greenfield worried before "New Girl" debuted in 2011 that viewers would dislike Schmidt.


"I thought, `There's a good chance that I'll never work again after this.' I mean, we've played him in such a way that this could go terribly wrong, and then we started to air and the response was so positive. It kind of affirmed all the things that the writers were doing, all the things that I was doing. I think it said to everyone, `We're on the same page. We can keep moving forward.' And then they just went crazy with it."


Schmidt's first name hasn't been revealed, and Greenfield hopes it never will be, unless it's done in a clever way, like if the character gets married.


"I'm just thinking of this now, but what a smart move this would be. `Will you (first name) Schmidt take ... ` and that's the moment she goes, `That's your first name?' That would be a nice moment. Under a chuppah."


___


Online:


http://www.fox.com/new-girl/


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Comedian Trolls Westboro Members

Comedian Dave Sirus likes making himself a bee in the bonnet of Westboro Baptist Church members. He's interviewed them several times as his alter ego "Brick Stone", and he's not afraid to make each encounter more awkward than the last.


This time around he caught up with them in Malibu and asked them all the tough questions, including, "Have you ever wondered how good gay sex must be if people are willing to go to hell for it?"


Via Dangerous Minds


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Ben Stiller's Returning To 'Arrested Development'

It’s neither trick nor illusion: Ben Stiller will appear on the revived "Arrested Development," EW has learned. The film star will reprise his role as Tony Wonder, rival magician to GOB (Will Arnett), in one episode during the new season of the cult comedy, which Netflix will stream in May. Exactly how he fits into the plot is being kept under wraps. But it may not be a bad idea to check the dumbwaiter.


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Tuesday, February 26, 2013

Michael Broder: Seth, Oscar, and Antiquity: The Fine (and Endangered) Art of Making Mockery

 

Seth MacFarlane's performance as host of the Oscars failed less because of racism, sexism, and homophobia than because he forgot what satire is and how it works. The same could be said of the beleaguered Onion staffer who misfired the unfortunate tweet about Quvenzhané Wallis, forcing Onion CEO Steve Hannah to issue a written apology the next morning. As Joan Walsh reminds us in Salon, MacFarlane's patter was likely vetted up a long chain of Oscar command, so his blinding display of offensive bad taste (as opposed to the kind of bad taste we genuinely enjoy) suggests that many powerful people in the entertainment industry have forgotten the basics of comic mockery. The Friars' Roast has turned into a wicker man, and the satiric genius of late-night icons like Johnny Carson and beloved fictional curmudgeons like Archie Bunker has been lost in a sea of mindless snark.


One of the lost secrets of satire is the idea of mockery from below: the idea that in order to win the sympathy of the audience and the comic right to issue scathing barbs, the satirist must make himself his own first and biggest target, not merely taking himself down a notch or two but kicking himself all the way off the ladder, either through self-deprecating humor or by creating a satiric persona that is so obviously and outrageously exaggerated that nobody could mistake its comic mockery for earnest ridicule. Oscar hosts, from Johnny Carson and Billy Crystal to Whoopi Goldberg and Ellen DeGeneres, have been masters of the self-deprecating strategy, while an Oscar host like Chris Rock exemplifies the exaggerated comic persona that is deployed to perfection nightly by Stephen Colbert.


The ancient Romans invented satire, and in fact gave us quintessential examples of both of these two major satiric strategies of deflation and exaggeration in the persons of Horace and Juvenal. Horace practiced an urbane, witty, gently mocking form of satire, poking fun at his own foibles in one breath before taking aim at a fellow Roman in the next. Juvenal, by contrast, rages with indignation at the collapse of good old-fashioned Roman morality under the weight of faithless Roman wives as well as effeminate sodomites, miserly Jews, and arrogant Africans pouring into Rome from the provinces. In fact, Juvenal's indignation was so convincing that many readers over the centuries believed his ridicule to be completely sincere; only in the 20th century did an increasing number of scholars embrace the idea of a witty and irreverent Juvenal who was more concerned with comedy than morality.


Satire, for the Romans, was a particular form of poetry that combined epic rhythms with personal musings on society, culture, and current events. The comic mockery that is so characteristic of Roman satire was not unique to the satiric genre, but could also be found in the lyrics of Catullus and the epigrams of Martial. Indeed, the satiric spirit of comic mockery has even more ancient roots among the Greeks, notably in the vulgar stage comedies of Aristophanes, the malicious lyric wit of Hipponax, and the scathing poetic invective of Archilochus. There is a direct line from this ancient pantheon to such modern satiric wits as Groucho Marx, Lucille Ball, Mel Brooks, Norman Lear, Richard Pryor, Joan Rivers, and Jon Stewart (to name just a few, and omit a truly diverse array of many just as worthy).


What all of these masters of comic mockery share is an acute sense of their own fallibility, a vulnerable core that, depending on the comedian's personal style, may be readily visible à la Horace (as in the case of Lucille Ball or Ellen DeGeneres) or hidden deep beneath a hard, seemingly impenetrable exterior à la Juvenal (Grouch Marx, Joan Rivers). It is precisely this kind of profound humility that was nowhere to be found on Oscar night, either in the onstage banter of Seth MacFarlane or in the concurrent social media conversation marked not only by the egregious Onion blunder but also by innumerable mean-spirited attacks on Anne Hathaway and Kristen Stewart.


In the 1970s, Archie Bunker was able to mount weekly attack on women, blacks, gays, Jews, and every other identifiable target of white male Christian fear, anxiety, and hatred, not just getting away with it, but becoming beloved by an entire generation of television viewers. Why? Because while Archie was racist, sexist, homophobic, anti-Semitic, and just plain hateful, All in the Family was not. Instead, the show managed to put Archie's raw invective into a satiric context that was transformative, prompting Americans to reevaluate their own views on race, class, gender, sexuality, and religion. Each and every character, from Edith the long-suffering "dingbat" wife, to Gloria the hysterical young bride, to Mike the bleeding heart liberal "meathead," to a George Jefferson who eerily mirrored the narrow-minded prejudice of Archie from across the racial divide, helped us to see the bruised and vulnerable core at the center of Archie's painfully flawed being. That is the fine art of making mockery. That is the endangered art that a once-witty Oscar needs to study and learn again.


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Dear God, Someone Please Stop Michelle Malkin

 

Michelle Malkin released a parody of First Lady Michelle Obama's "History of Mom Dancing" from "Late Night with Jimmy Fallon," except in the right-wing pundit's version, she reenacted -- get this -- the history of liberal dancing!


Take a moment to watch it. We'll be right here.


Have you watched it yet?


Okay, good. Can explain what the hell is going on here? If you know what dances called "Fly Like a Menendez" (?) or "The Diggie (Obama's spending sinkhole)" (??) mean, we would love to know.


We did, however, enjoy "The Golfing Man," as Barack Obama is the first president to have played golf, a foreign activity to Republicans.


Once and for all, Republicans have dispelled the notion that they are by and large embarrassingly bad at comedy -- albeit unintentionally. Take that, Michelle Obama!


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