It's been two weeks since Zayn Malik broke up with Perrie Edwards , but considering the singers had dated for three years and were engaged to be married, we imagine the wound is still pretty fresh. At first, Perrie managed to put on a brave face , but given how many sad breakup ballads she croons along with the rest of Little Mix, it was only a matter of time before her emotions got the best of her on stage. Fortunately, the rest of the group rallied around her for support. It's good to have shoulders to cry on, Perrie, but it's more important to remember that judging from Zayn's recent Twitter activity , you dodged a serious douche bullet.
When Caitlyn Jenner covered Vanity Fair back in June, the response on social media was overwhelmingly positive. With the release of her first photo as Cait (previously referred to only as “her”), Jenner became the most famous transgender individual on the planet. It’s hard to think of another magazine photo that represented such monumental progress for a downtrodden sector of society. Unfortunately, with progress comes vocal opposition from those who are threatened by change. Caitlyn was mocked and threatened by thousands social media messages. Now, one artist has turned all of that hate into something beautiful: British artist Conor Collins took thousands of death threats and other bigoted messages posted for Caitlyn online and used them to recreate her iconic VF photo. “When I saw these I wanted to show them because it is a reality of what trans people experience every day,” Collins tells The Hollywood Reporter. “It was horrible having to research and write the tweets onto the canvas…For every person who sees it another person is shown the persecution and real danger trans people face. I don’t know if Caitlyn has seen it herself yet though, would be interesting to see what she thought about it if she did.” As with Caitlyn’s coming out , the response to Collins’ has been mostly positive, but has also generated some negative responses: “Trans people are people’s brothers, sisters, children, friends, mothers and fathers,” says Collins. “I hope Caitlyn and her program may help people realize that.” Several fans of Collins’ work have tweeted photos of it to Caitlyn in hopes that she’ll share how the project made her feel. View Slideshow: Caitlyn Jenner Photos: So Long, Bruce!
You might think that the first Republican primary debate couldn't possibly get any funnier, but the folks at Bad Lip Reading are about to prove you wrong. Yes, they've given you bad lip reads of the NFL and the priceless comedy of the Redneck Avengers , but now the BLR crew is taking on its easiest target yet: Trump. Gone are the ridiculous attacks on Rosie O'Donnell . Instead, we get Trump's true feelings on tuna melts and more information than we'd like about what they do to his digestive tract. There's also talk of dead mice on crescent rolls, Chris Christie's views on potatoes (He likes 'em!) and Rand Paul's thoughts on frozen babies. Actually, that last one might be a topic the candidates actually touched on in the real debate. We're not sure; we tend to briefly lose consciousness after listening to the Donald speak.