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Pariah Writer/Director Dee Rees on Coming Out, Awards Season, and Pitching ‘Dallas Meets The Wire’

Writer/director Dee Rees has spent six years with Pariah , a film she wrote as a full-length script in 2005, then recalibrated as a short subject in ’07, and finally re-adapted as a feature film that premiered at this year’s Sundance Film Festival. Pariah concerns a teenager named Alike (Independent Spirit Award nominee Adepero Oduye), an expressive girl who only encounters more identity issues as she tries establishing herself as an out lesbian. Though Rees came out as a lesbian in her 20s, she feels a deep connection to Alike — especially in her resistance to “butch” and “femme” labels. Movieline caught up with Rees to discuss Pariah ‘s wonderful story, the visibility of the LGBT coming out experience in 2011, and Rees’s unexpected connection to Dallas . Since Pariah ’s genesis as a short film years ago, there’s been a lot more visibility about the coming-out experience. Did you find it necessary to tailor the movie to the burgeoning sense of awareness about the topic? When I first wrote the script in ’05, I had a sense of who Alike was and where she was going, so there was no pressure to change it because I wanted to stay true to her and what her experience was. I didn’t want to make Alike’s experience vary from anyone else’s experience or make it topical. I just let it be what it was and just trustd that if we’re honest about the character and honest about the world, that it would be relevant no matter when it came out. It’s funny because some people along the way have said, “Is this an issue anymore? Is being gay cool now?” And it’s like, no. It’s not OK now, and it’s not “cool.” Although people’s experiences of coming out are changing and it’s becoming much more visible, that’s not necessarily everyone’s experience. It was about remaining true to the character and what this story was. I’m glad to see that coming out is relevant and people are aware of it, but I definitely didn’t feel compelled to make it fit anything. You’ve said that you came out in your 20s, but you wrote about the coming-out experience of a teenage girl. How did you find the inspiration for her character? It was just my own coming-out experience sort of transposed onto a 17-year-old. I chose to make her 17 because it’s such a higher-stakes age; figuring stuff out that young, it’s going to be higher because you’re still dependent on your parents and so much is still uncertain about you. You don’t know what you’re going to be. For her to make that discovery at that age, it makes her more interesting. For me, it’s also inspired by being in New York and being among out teenagers, which is something I’d never seen in Nashville, Tennessee. I barely saw out adults. To see out teenagers who were not only out, but out in the streets was inspiring for me. It made me wonder, “Even if I had known at 17, would I have that courage to be the person in the film?” – this woman who was trying to live in two worlds. Do you have particular favorite teenager characters from movies? No, not really! I just like Alike because she’s imperfect. Initially she isn’t courageous. In teen movies, we see characters who get to say exactly what’s on their mind and say what they want and thumb their nose in the face of adult authority. For Alike, I wanted someone who didn’t feel quite comfortable – someone who’s not so self-possessed, not so self-assured, and is figuring things out. Pariah ’s lead actress Adepero Oduye just earned an Independent Spirit Award nomination. Can you describe watching her on set? What did she bring to the character? Watching her on set was an experience of watching her inner life. Adepero is so expressive and yet so subtle. It was great to watch changes going on in her eyes and going on in her body language and behavior – those unspoken things. I felt like I was watching her internalize the characters’ feelings. She was really in that moment. She was really feeling what Alike was feeling. The feeling like she wanted to cry, feeling like she wanted to laugh – the changes were literally visceral. They were changing her, moving through her body. Getting to watch somebody unfold on camera is like watching a flower open. Amazing. In recent years, we’ve seen more in the media about gay men’s coming out experiences than lesbians’. Do you think Pariah highlights the specificity of a woman’s coming-out? I think Pariah highlights that there’s this gray area within the gay or lesbian community. Sometimes there’s a pressure to check a box, to either be hard and be butch or be feminine and wear heels. Alike’s neither of those things, so there’s a gray area. And her coming-out experience is different because she’s coming into a different space. Alike’s not figuring out if she’s gay – she knows she loves women, that’s not her question. It’s more “How [do I] be in the world?” The first half hour isn’t “Am I gay?” It’s, “Laura’s telling me I should be butch. Mom’s telling me I should be femme.” Versus other coming out experiences, like… when she’s wearing the club clothes, that’s not really her. When she changes into this different thing for Mom, she’s not that either. We don’t see her changing from her true self into another self – she’s neither of things she’s taking on or off. We don’t know who she is. She doesn’t really want to be this butch lesbian. She just wants to be Alike. You’ve been talking about this project everywhere for years and years. You’re the Carmen Sandiego of the indie film circuit. Which was the best kids’ game show ever! Indeed! What have you gained from spending so much time introducing the film to festival audiences? Specifically from being on tour with the film, I’ve gained a huge connection with audiences – an affirmation that we told the story truthfully. To your point, we weren’t writing it based on what people were saying or what was going on in the world. We stayed in a cocoon and wrote this thing. When we finished, we didn’t know how people would respond. But people felt we told a story and were honest with the experience, so we gained a feeling of affirmation. And personally, having gone from a point where when I was coming out and I was not quite sure the world that the world would accept me for who I have, or not quite sure that I could be loved or find love, and going to this press tour and seeing audiences embrace the film and saying, “We love you,” Pariah basically gave me the courage to be who I am. I came out behind the shield of this film. This tour has been this amazing wash of affirmation and love. It makes me feel good about audiences. They’re smart and progressive and open. They’re willing to see stories beyond themselves, images that don’t exactly look like them. It restored my faith in cinemagoers. They are hungering for good stories and are willing to step outside their experience to get them. Lastly, what do you have coming up? I imagine your new projects differ from Pariah because this movie is so emotional. One project coming up is called Large Print , a spec script I did, which is about a 50-something insurance adjuster who is recently divorced and lately incontinent, and has to redefine happiness for herself. Though she’s 56, it’s still a coming-of-age story. It’s going to be an emotional film because she’s played life by the rules and nothing’s turned out the way she’s expected. The other film I’m writing is called Bolo , a thriller set in the south. It’s also about, “What is home?” What if where you grew up changes? How do you accept that? Though it has more of a genre element, it goes back to these human things. I’m working on a TV series with HBO and Viola Davis about corruption in education, which will be cool. I’m working on another TV series called Reveal set in Nashville. It’s Dallas meets The Wire , about a city going through an identity crisis. I continue to be drawn to characters, and characters that are flawed especially. I love exploring flawed people trying to make their way. Did you just say “ Dallas meets The Wire ?” Yeah! Do you know how exciting that is? Ha! We’ll see! Dallas was the soap growing up. All my aunts gathered around the TV. We should not have been the target audience for Dallas . Pariah debuts in limited U.S. release December 28. Follow Louis Virtel on Twitter . Follow Movieline on Twitter .

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Pariah Writer/Director Dee Rees on Coming Out, Awards Season, and Pitching ‘Dallas Meets The Wire’

E-Mail My Heart (Justin Bieber Video) with lyrics

A Video I Made for Justin Bieber using the song “E-Mail My Heart” by Britney Spears. Lyrics: Forever… It’s been hours since that day, since you went away And all I do is check the screen to see if you’re okay You don’t answer when I phone, guess you want to be left alone So I’m sending you my heart, my soul And this is what I’ll… I’m sorry, oh so sorry Can’t you give me one more chance? To make it all up to you E-mail my heart and say our love will never die, and I, I know you’re out there and I know that you still care E-mail me back and say our love will stay alive Forever, e-mail my heart I can see you in my mind, comin’ on the line And opening this letter that I’ve sent a hundred times Here’s a picture of us two, I look so good on you And can’t you please forgive me for the hurt I put you through I’m sorry, oh so sorry Can’t you give me one more chance? To make it all up to you E-mail my heart and say our love will never die, and I, I know you’re out there and I know that you still care E-mail me back and say our love will stay alive Forever, e-mail my heart I’m sorry, oh so sorry Can’t you give me one more chance? To make it all up to E-mail my heart and say our love will never die, and I, I know you’re out there and I know that you still care E-mail me back and say our love will stay alive Forever, e-mail my heart Won’t you say, won’t you say… E-mail my heart http://www.youtube.com/v/nh0mEW98yp0?version=3&f=videos&app=youtube_gdata View original post here: E-Mail My Heart (Justin Bieber Video) with lyrics

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E-Mail My Heart (Justin Bieber Video) with lyrics

‘X Factor’ Finale Features Guest Duets

R. Kelly, Avril Lavigne and Alanis Morissette join contestants on their final night of performances. By Adam Graham Josh Krajcik, Chris Rene and Melanie Amaro on “The X Factor” Wednesday Photo: Ray Mickshaw / FOX At the outset of Wednesday’s (December 21) 90-minute “The X Factor” performance finale, which pitted three singers — Josh Krajcik, Chris Rene and Melanie Amaro — against one another for a $5 million recording contract, judge Simon Cowell predicted, “I think this is going to be the closest final we’ve ever had.” By the end of the penultimate show, Cowell made it clear who had his vote to win, and unsurprisingly, it was the singer he mentored in the race, Melanie Amaro. Following Amaro’s second song, a rendition of Beyonc

‘Dragon Tattoo’ ‘Impossible To Leave Behind,’ Rooney Mara Says

‘It’s attached to your head and your body,’ actress tells MTV News By Jocelyn Vena, with reporting by Josh Horowitz Rooney Mara Photo: MTV News It took a lot of work for Rooney Mara to become the tattooed Lisbeth Salander. For David Fincher’s big-screen adaptation of Stieg Larsson’s bestselling “The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo,” the actress didn’t just have to think like the famed fictional hacker: It was a process to get into not just the mind, but also the body of the 24-year-old character — and Rooney’s transformation into the broken and abused Lisbeth lingered with her long after shooting the film. When MTV News asked if she carried herself differently while playing the character, Mara explained, “I think that I probably did. It’s hard to look at yourself in that way. I think it’ll be easier for me to really see that years from now. It’s impossible to leave it behind whenever it’s attached to your head and your body. But when you work 16 hours a day, there isn’t really time to do anything else but go home and go to sleep.” Playing Lisbeth certainly comes with a unique skill set that goes far beyond just understanding her dark backstory. Given Lisbeth’s penchant for computer hacking, motorcycles and physical activity, it comes as no surprise that Mara had to undergo some intense training for the physically and emotionally demanding role, one that had already been imagined once before by Noomi Rapace in a 2009 film version of the novels. “That’s my favorite thing about my job is that your education never really stops,” Mara shared. “I feel like I went to school: I had motorcycle class from 9 to 11, and then I went to dialect class, and then I had skateboarding, and then I had computer training, and then I had kickboxing. I just feel like I learned so much. And that’s kind of the most incredible part about my job is I got to acquire all these skills that I never really wanted or needed, but now I have them.” Whatever Mara did seems to have worked. Her performance is garnering her and the film some high critical praise . The flick opened Tuesday (December 20), and also features Daniel Craig, Stellan Skarsg

Ashley Tisdale Tweets Her Panties of the Day

I hate on Ashley Tisdale every fucking time I see her pictures because she’s ugly….or at least got an ugly face by Hollywood standards, and guess what….she’s in Hollywood…and instead of accepting it and walking around in a mask like me, she’s got this attitude that she’s all that…maybe it is cuz of her fame, her money, or all the attention and affirmations her team have put on her all these years, leading to confidence and delusions….which is enough reason to hate a bitch, no matter how hard she works out…..she’s just bullshit…..but then she goes ahead and posts her panties on twitter…and that’s a fucking win in my mind….finally.

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Ashley Tisdale Tweets Her Panties of the Day

Hilary Duff’s Pregnant Booty of the DAy

READY TO DROP PORN’S NEVER BEEN ACTIVE IN MY MIND….seriously I am normally scared of pregnancy and the concept of mutants growing inside a bitch…but Hilary Duff changed that – maybe my biological clock is clicking like a 30 year old single woman…..or maybe her big fat ass is something I want to burry my face in in hopes of discovering some lost world like I’m Indiana Jones or some shit….or a lot of shit…i figure pregnant chicks have nasty shit…all that eating for 2… Here are the pics…

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Hilary Duff’s Pregnant Booty of the DAy

John Leguizamo Pushes Boundaries In MTV’s ‘Pioneers’ Speaker Series

‘I’m coming into the party, I’m going to be somebody and you can’t stop me,’ actor says of his career pursuits. By Kara Warner, with reporting by Sway Calloway John Leguizamo Photo: MTV News Triple-threat talent John Leguizamo has made a career out of pushing boundaries, not being afraid to speak his mind and never taking no for an answer. As such, we were proud to have him as part of our MTV Pioneers Speaker Series, where he sat down with MTV News’ Sway Calloway to talk about breaking the mold, not being typecast and what success means to him over a career that has included roles in film, television and on Broadway . One of his many groundbreaking roles was the beloved character Chi-Chi from “To Wong Fu, Thanks for Everything! Julie Newmar,” a role to which Leguizamo said he gave 100 percent. “I just went all out. I wanted awards and sh–, so I wasn’t playing,” he joked about his motivations for taking on the character. “I was going to take no prisoners. I was on a vegetarian no-protein [diet], so all my muscles would disappear. I stopped training, I would just run like crazy. In the movie, they were great, we did a lot of research. We went to all the drag queen clubs, like Escuelita, which used to exist here [in New York City], with all the Latin drag queens, and we had a godmother drag queen who would put us through the paces every day,” he recalled of his transformation with co-stars Patrick Swayze and Wesley Snipes. “We worked every day for hours and hours every day until we could get it perfectly drag queen-like.” When asked about how he approached being a minority and how that affected his decisions, Leguizamo said that you have to know what you want and go for it. “You’ve got to be thoughtful about your career. When you’re a minority — and I don’t really even like that word anymore because we’re not as minority as we used to be — you have to think about what you’re saying and what you’re leaving behind. When I was a little kid, we didn’t see [ourselves] on TV or anywhere. It was weird because you didn’t feel like you were a part of the American fiber,” he recalled. “Latin people, we have a 45 to 50 percent dropout rate in this country, and I understand that. It’s a tragedy and shouldn’t be happening, but you understand it. You don’t feel connected in that positive way that your people and you are going to make it, and ‘this is your chance and this is your opportunity,’ no, you feel like you’re not really a part of it. “You have to crash into the party even if you’re not invited,” he said, indicating that those who have dreams of “making it” have to carve out their own career paths. “I was going to be that guy, I didn’t care I wasn’t invited. ‘I’m coming into the party, I’m going to be somebody and you can’t stop me.’ ”

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John Leguizamo Pushes Boundaries In MTV’s ‘Pioneers’ Speaker Series

Fan Helps 76ers on Twitter, Earns Job With Team

Two NBA fans took it upon themselves to help out their favorite team on Twitter last week, only to receive a legally threatening email from the Philadelphia 76ers. By the end of the ordeal, though, the fans ended up with box seats to the Philadelphia 76ers’ home opener, season tickets … and a job with the team for one. How in the world did that happen? The 76ers launched a fan voting contest last week to choose a new team mascot between three finalists. But the team failed to get the nominees on social media. Helpfully, Jerry Rizzo, 23, and friend Hunter Coleman, 22, went ahead and registered Twitter accounts for two finalists, @PhilEMoose and @BFranklinDogg. They began tweeting from the accounts trying to help promote the contest. On Friday, however, they received an official email requesting that they hand over the accounts, “pleasantly without the use of lawyers or anything like that.” Rizzo, a communications graduate and self-described “social media sponge,” gave up the accounts in exchange for box seats and tickets … but it gets better. Saturday, 76ers CEO Adam Aron left Rizzo a voicemail asking Rizzo to call him back. He set up an interview that ultimately led to him being offered a job. In the end, he was rewarded for his entrepreneurial sprit with a full-time social media position with the team – “about as close as it gets” to the perfect gig. Continue reading the whole story about this lucky 76ers fan and his Tweets …

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Fan Helps 76ers on Twitter, Earns Job With Team

Simon Cowell Rejects Marcus Canty as Viable X Factor Contender

With Rachel Crow fans still still buzzing over Nicole Scherzinger’s decision to send the most recent elimination episode to a deadlock, resulting in the ousting of this cute contestant, Simon Cowell has now taken it upon himself to anger Marcus Canty supporters. Speaking to reporters this week, the judge scarcely even acknowledged the singer as an X Factor contender, despite his presence in the final four, saying: “I think it’s quite clear that it’s down to three people now. And it’s Melanie, Josh and Chris.” Canty, of course, has been stuck in the bottom two for three consecutive Thursdays, but he remains hopeful that he can pull an upset. “For me to think for one second in my mind that I don’t deserve to be here will be killing myself,” he says. “This is my dream too. No matter what people think, I’m up here. This is my dream. And that’s why I keep fighting to make it to the top.” That certainly is the right attitude. Who do you think will win The X Factor?

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Simon Cowell Rejects Marcus Canty as Viable X Factor Contender

Lindsay Lohan’s Great Tits in a Bikini in Hawaii of the Day

I’m a Lohan fan….but there is no doubt in my mind that her tits are fake, despite all the arguments I get about them, like I haven’t been running a titty site for the last decade and have no idea what a fake tit looks like, cuz when you have an experimental surgeon, tear drop shaped implants, this is what happens…She’s been 60 pounds and still busty….and there’s nothing wrong with that or with implants…I just like speaking truth. There is also no doubt that she went to Hawaii timed properly for when the Playboy mag dropped, to follow up with bikini pics, with hired paparazzi, because bitch is on a comeback, and despite her ignoring me, welcome fucking back Lohan…. To See the Rest of the Pics GO

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Lindsay Lohan’s Great Tits in a Bikini in Hawaii of the Day