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Angelina Jolie At The Kid's Choice Awards: "Different Is Good"


Justin Timberlake's Beautiful iHeartRadio Speech Will Make You Feel Things

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“Your critics do not count. Their words will fade. You won’t.”

Justin Timberlake was honored with the much-deserved iHeartRadio Innovator award last night, and the humble, brilliant man inspired us all yet again with his acceptance speech.

Justin Timberlake was honored with the much-deserved iHeartRadio Innovator award last night, and the humble, brilliant man inspired us all yet again with his acceptance speech.

Kevin Winter

He started out talking about being labeled "different" growing up:

He started out talking about being labeled "different" growing up:

NBC

And how thankful he was for his mom teaching him that being different actually was a great thing:

And how thankful he was for his mom teaching him that being different actually was a great thing:

❤️ ?

NBC

Timberlake then went on to share some quotes that have stuck with him since he was a teen:

Timberlake then went on to share some quotes that have stuck with him since he was a teen:

NBC


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Vote In Hot Guy March Madness Round 3

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We’re down to the Sultry 16. Who will advance to the Enticing Eight?

Matt Bellassai's BuzzFeed BFF Hot Guy March Madness is down to 16 hot guys! The Round of 32 saw some blowouts and some tough battles.

Matt Bellassai's BuzzFeed BFF Hot Guy March Madness is down to 16 hot guys! The Round of 32 saw some blowouts and some tough battles.

If your first name is "Chris" or your last name is "Hemsworth," congratulations! You advanced! Now it's time to cut the field to eight hot guys. Voting for this round ends Tuesday, March 31 at 11:59 pm ET. Choose wisely!

Matt Bellassai / BuzzFeed BFF / Via Facebook: BFF


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18 Things You Might Not Know About Death Cab For Cutie

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David J. Bertozzi / BuzzFeed

If you grew up in the early '00s and had a love for the emo/indie rock/Warped Tour music era, there's a big chance you became a Death Cab for Cutie fan. The band, which has been playing for nearly 20 years now, is releasing their eighth studio album, Kintsugi, the last made with former bandmate Chris Walla. With the release of their newest project, frontman Ben Gibbard and bassist Nick Harmer stopped by our New York office to answer fan questions asked by the BuzzFeed Community.

1. What are you most excited for about us listening to your new record and how does it differ from the rest of your discography?

Ben Gibbard: I mean, I'm just excited for it to be finally out in the world. We finished it in September of last year, so having to wait for this to come out, it feels like it's been forever. But yeah, we're really proud of the record. It's different because it's 12 songs, and they're all new! You've never heard them before on any other records (laughs). At this point, it's different because it's a new record. Outside of working with a new producer, it's not like we reinvented our own wheel with this, we just made a record.

2. What is your response to people who criticize bands for "changing"?

BG: Well, that's what artists do, right? I mean, artists are constantly changing and evolving, and I would rather be criticized for changing than for staying the same.

Nick Harmer: Absolutely. I wonder if they have the same criticism with aging (laughs).

BG: "You look older than you did than when I was in college."

NH: "Yeah, we're not friends any longer." I can't handle that.

BG: "I liked your record that came out when I was 17." Can I be 17 again?

NH: Forever!

David J. Bertozzi / BuzzFeed

3. How do you pick and choose which songs make it to an album versus making them a solo record, a side project, or scrapping them altogether?

BG: Well, everything I write kind of goes through the band's editing machine first, which is not a real machine. We just want the best songs to be Death Cab songs and sometimes there's a couple songs which slip through the cracks, which I think are really good but don't fit on a record, and I'll use them somewhere else. We just want the best songs that I've written in the period that we're making the record to be on the album.

Do you guys have your friends and family listen and give feedback?

BG: Yeah, of course! I played demos for my friends and my girlfriend. You can always tell when someone is being encouraging of your work and they're like, "Oh, that sounds good, that's a cool guitar thing." They want to be encouraging, but you can really tell when someone really likes something, and you don't get that reaction all the time, but hopefully you get it more than you don't get it (laughs).

4. What books would you guys recommend? Or what are your favorites?

NH: Just on the flight from Seattle I finished Kim Gordon's biography, Girl in a Band. It was great, and I've always had a lot of respect for her. You know, we were kind of reminiscing how many times we've seen Sonic Youth over the years growing up, and it was nice to get her perspective on life in New York in the '80s and being an artist here as well as a musician; it was really good. That's the first book that pops in my mind because I just finished it!

BG: I'm in the process of reading Karl Ove Knausgård's six-volume autobiography, called My Struggle. I just finished volume 1 and I just started volume 2 and it's just incredible, he's such an amazing writer. I started reading the first one because I was just like, why would I want to read a six-volume autobiography about a guy I have never met before? Oh, I know why! Because this author is a fucking amazing writer. It's really inspiring, I'm really enjoying it.

David J. Bertozzi / BuzzFeed

5. You write songs beautifully. Have you ever thought about writing a book?

BG: Uh, no. It's funny, I was talking to a writer friend of mine last weekend who had heard our record and he was really enjoying it, which was nice to hear, but he also said, "Yeah, I think writing songs is the hardest thing to do; it's like writing concise stories." And I was like, "Dude, you've written, like, 10 novels!" The idea of thinking about storytelling on that kind of scope is mind-boggling to me. It's also not my discipline, but I don't know, maybe one day I'll write my boring tell-all (laughs).

NH: Ben in a Band?

BG: Yeah, Ben in a Band!

NH: I find that really interesting in a lot of writers that the writing discipline as a whole, you find your version of writing that best expresses your means. Like, poets wouldn't write novels and novelists have a hard time writing screenplays. You know, there are some people who are able to cross over and do all versions of that effectively, but I'm always surprised when you think about writing as a whole.

David J. Bertozzi / BuzzFeed

6. Which album of yours is your favorite and why?

NH: That's a hard question, and I hate my answer, but it's going to be the new one [Kintsugi]. That feels like a really stock answer, but it's true! In this particular case, for sure. I had a great time making this album, especially because we were working with Rich Costey. I really like the songs on this album, I really like how the process came together, and certainly having Rich at the helm and working with him made me think about the dynamics of our band and how we work and how we make music in the studio together in some fresh ways, and in some ways that I haven't really examined in years. I don't know, I feel like it was the right amount of inspiring and challenging, and there was just such an energy to this experience, which is just right now making this my favorite of all the albums.

BG: I'm going to go in a different direction. I don't think it's the best record of ours, but the first one [Something About Airplanes] is still my favorite just because I remember we were in our twenties making this record on an 8-track reel machine in our house in Bellingham, not thinking that anyone would ever fucking care. Creating music, making art of any sort, it's always exciting and always inspiring when you feel like you're really hitting on something. There's something kind of magical doing it in a vacuum where you don't think anybody is ever going to hear it. I just look back on this very carefree time in our band's group but also in my life, so that will always be my favorite album. Not because I think it's the best record, but it's always my favorite.

7. How did you guys feel about Seth Cohen's obsession with your band on The O.C.? Did you feel like it skyrocketed your popularity?

BG: It was just a weird time. One day, somebody calls you on the phone, "Hey, there's this new show on Fox and they're going to use one of your songs," and it's like, Oh, it pays a little money, that's great, it will also pay the rent. And then all of a sudden, completely without —

NH: Permission or —

BG: Well, no, it wasn't like we were upset about it, it was just a strange phenomenon, like, OMG they just said our band name, and now it's happening again the next week. It's really strange to be part of this cultural phenomenon where there is a scripted show with fake people who are talking about your band, which is a very real band, like active in the world at that time. I think it certainly helped us at that time, but things were kind of changing at that point. Indie rock was reaching a much larger audience at that point due to a lot of things, and there was this cultural shift that was happening all around. I definitely think it helped, but I always think about when people are like, "Well, you're popular because you're on The O.C.," but it's like, "Well, yeah, but The O.C. isn't on the air anymore and I'm sitting here talking to BuzzFeed in 2015." So, you know, it clearly helped us, but it didn't define our career; it's a strange chapter in the book that I'm someday not going to write.

I mean, plenty of us liked you before The O.C.!

BG: At that time, it became this weird point of derision where, like, there were people who were upset because there were new people at the shows who had heard us because of The O.C. I understand that perspective, which usually happens amongst young people (because I was that age at one point), but it also kind of begs the question to, well, what is the right way to get into a band? What's the right time? Who is a bigger fan because they knew the band in 2001? "Well, I was a fan in 1998, so, oh, you must be a bigger fan than me." It's ridiculous!

David J. Bertozzi / BuzzFeed

David J. Bertozzi / BuzzFeed

8. What song is the most exciting for you to perform live?

BG: I still love playing "Transatlanticism." It's one of the reasons we still play it almost every night. I just feel like when we first broke that long outro for the song, I just remember when we were rehearsing it, I never wanted it to end. Sometimes you come across these core progressions and you're like, this is why that song is 20 minutes long, because it feels so good to play. And it still feels that good to play.

NH: What he said. That's actually one of my favorite songs as well.

9. Are there any songs that you're tired of playing?

BG: Not really. I mean, I've had friends who have been in bands who've had a big hit single and then they decide after a while that they get sick of it and they don't want to play it anymore, even though that's one of the main reasons people are coming to see them play, even now. I just feel that there's a social contract that you sign when you have a popular song, and you just have to play it when you play shows. For me, I feel like making the records is about art and doing the shows is about being an entertainer. So when you're playing a show, you can't please everyone and play everything that everyone wants to hear, but at the same time, we're not going to not play "Soul Meets Body," we're not going to not play "I Will Follow You Into the Dark." These are songs that were really big for us and they're part of the reason people are coming to shows, so why would I be a dick about it and just not play them because I'm tired of them? Thousands of people came to the show, they paid good money, they want to hear the songs they want to hear. It seems pretty cut and dry to me. There's nothing I'm tired of playing.

NH: Yeah, after, what, 80-plus songs in our back catalog at this point, anytime that there would be a song that would even approach that, we'd just cycle in something new for a show and it's like a reset. There are definitely songs we'll play every night and then thankfully you rotate through almost every night.

BG: But it's a good problem to have! I mean, to have songs that people want to hear? Like, "OMG I can't believe I have to play that song from years ago that everyone wants to hear, it's been 10 years!" That's a fucking amazing problem to have. I don't mind.

David J. Bertozzi / BuzzFeed

10. How do you find inspirations for new songs to avoid repeating yourselves?

BG: Like any creative person, just keep your eyes open and keep observing. I feel like a lot of the questions I've posed over the years are the ones I still don't have answers to. So, you know, in some ways, I'm still trying to answer a lot of the same questions that I was looking for answers to when the band started. I find life very inspiring, which is pretty fun.

NH: But it necessitates a change (laughs).

BG: Yeah, definitely.

11. Who have you listened to within the past five years that you want to collaborate with?

NH: Who do we want to collaborate with?

BG: Hmmm. On a Friday night I did a DJ set on KEXP, which is a station in Seattle, and I played a song by this guy Emitt Rhodes, who was in a garage band called The Merry-Go-Round in the '60s in California and he made a series of solo records starting in the early '70s. He made this record, when he signed a solo deal, in his garage, where he bought all the equipment and played everything himself. And now he's in his sixties, but I would really be interested to meet this guy and hear how he went about this process and kind of hear stuff he's been working on. He's just a great songwriter. I don't tend to hear a new hot artist and be like, "Oh man, I want to get that sound that that new guy has!" I want the music that we're making to be fairly timeless. You want something that'll kind of span generations, you know? So I hear a record from 1970 that feels still fresh and really vinyl to me and I wanna know that person. I wanna know how that person's creative process works, because they made something that I'm listening to now, 40 years later, and I'm still enjoying it.

NH: Same, I mean, I feel like recently I've been really inspired by just people that work completely different than the typical band arrangement with, you know, bass drums, guitars. The remix artists or producers that aren't working in the box, just on their computer in a small bedroom somewhere and just throwing all of the traditional band arrangements out the window. That's exciting just from a workflow perspective. I don't know if there's anybody specifically that pops into mind, but when we did that Codes & Keys remix EP, just giving back some of those reimaginings of our music was really inspiring in some ways, to think about cutting things up and changing things. There's just a ton of really exciting experimental things that are happening in that world. I really like that Thundercat record. He'd be an amazing guy to see how he thinks about music, how he writes music, what that process for him is like. Those kinds of artists that are sort of redefining their approach to music in a way that feels nontraditional seems exciting to me right now. So I don't know who we'd collaborate with — there's not a specific list — I think it's the longer that we play music together, tagging on to what Ben said, the process of people arriving to what they make, as you become familiar with your work process, starts to become infinitely faster when you help people arrive at the same place.

David J. Bertozzi / BuzzFeed

12. Becoming a musician must require a huge leap of faith in the beginning. What was it that made you decide to pursue music professionally? Were you scared, or did you know on some level it would work out and was right for you?

BG: I mean, we never set out to be professional musicians. All of the people that we kind of looked up to in our scene were people who had jobs at a record store and so on. I think our ambitions early on were fairly pedestrian. We were just like, "Yeah, let's make a record, maybe go on tour, maybe we'll make enough money to where we can come back and not have to work for a couple of months..." I think when we first started I was just resigned to working temp jobs as long as the band was a thing. I don't know, I don't think that being a professional musician is something that chooses you, you know. There's not a series of, you know, "If I do this then I'll get this." I find sometimes when I'll talk to people who are, like, college-aged kids, there's this kind of, they've been programmed to be like, "I want to be a doctor, so how do I do that?" Well, you go to this school and that school, do this, this, and this, and then you're a doctor. But that kind of application doesn't work for being a musician. Like, "Well, first you make a record, then you go on tour, then people pay you, then you're a professional musician!" There are no guarantees. You just have to do it because you love it. For some people there comes a time where it's like, "Maybe it's time to go to law school!" And then for other people they are able to squeak by for a while, and sometimes people are really able to hold a job for a long time. I just feel really thankful that I've fallen into the latter category. It's not because we're any more worthy or talented than anybody else, we were just in the right place at the right time and things just kind of worked out.

13. Are you flattered when someone tattoos your lyrics on their body?

BG: Totally! Absolutely, that's a huge commitment. I don't have any tattoos, because I can't make that kind of commitment myself. I do have this funny thought, though, of someone who's young and really emotional and then 20, 30 years into the future thinking, "Why did I tattoo 'Transatlanticism' on my arm? God damnit."

Have you seen any really weird ones?

NH: No, but I've seen some commitments.

BG: I've seen some really cool ones, actually, I've seen more than I would expect of the bird from Transatlanticism. It's a really beautiful piece of art that Adde Russell made, and it just translates really nicely into a tattoo. Our friend Ryan has the running people from We Have the Facts and We're Voting Yes.

NH: I've seen the rowboat.

BG: Oh yeah! I've seen the rowboat too. I think it's cool.

David J. Bertozzi / BuzzFeed

Sutton Foster Describes Her Career Milestones In 30 Seconds Or Less

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Jon Premosch / BuzzFeed

Two-time Tony Award winner Sutton Foster hung out with us at the BuzzFeed offices after screening her new series Younger with co-star Hilary Duff. The Broadway favorite took a trip down memory lane as we revisited the roles that lead up to her star turn on the new series from Sex and the City creator Darren Star.

Star Search:

Jon Premosch / BuzzFeed

Sutton Foster: Oh my gosh! I got three and a half stars. The guy who beat me got three and three quarter stars. I cried, I was 15.

Grease:

Jon Premosch / BuzzFeed

SF: It was just hard. It had to belt very high and didn’t have any training, so I got into trouble.

The Scarlet Pimpernel:

Jon Premosch / BuzzFeed

SF: During the “Madame Guillotine” number I never pinned my wig on. So I was an enraged crazy French person and my wig fell off. And then I had to pick it up. Then you’re stuck with your wig cap. There were fits of giggles. I threw it back on and it was a disaster.

Annie:

Jon Premosch / BuzzFeed

SF: I was only 19. And I learned a lot.

Les Misérables:

Jon Premosch / BuzzFeed

SF: People always ask, “What was my favorite?” I’d probably say that was it. Is that weird? I should probably pick something that was a little more… but, yeah, it was my favorite.

Thoroughly Modern Millie:

Jon Premosch / BuzzFeed

SF: It was also a incredibly joyful time, but also it was a terrifying time. I was so overwhelmed.

Little Women:

Jon Premosch / BuzzFeed

SF: It was probably the hardest thing I’ve ever done. People really love that show, but at the time it was very challenging. In many ways, hard. Vocally hard and emotionally hard. It was just a hard time.

The Flight of the Conchords:

Jon Premosch / BuzzFeed

SF: Awww, that was awesome! They came and saw The Drowsy Chaperone and didn’t know I could sing.

The Drowsy Chaperone:

Jon Premosch / BuzzFeed

SF: Yeah, I broke my wrist out of town. I was doing “Accident Waiting to Happen,” of course. I feel and broke my wrist during rehearsals. I would do “Show Off,” but I’d do the entire thing with one hand. It was ridiculous.

Young Frankenstein:

Jon Premosch / BuzzFeed

SF: Ugh… It was a hard time personally. I was going through a major breakup. So, the whole experience was colored by that.

Shrek: The Musical:

Jon Premosch / BuzzFeed

SF: That was that. Brian d’Arcy James, who played Shrek took like an hour and a half getting into makeup. For me it was less than a minute. I’d just get attacked because I had a transformation. But then I just had green makeup residue everywhere.

Law & Order: SVU:

Jon Premosch / BuzzFeed

SF: I was a lesbian activist with Kathy Griffin, so all I did was a lot of fist-pumping. That was it. And all they gave me [for makeup] was ChapStick. I was like, that’s it?

Anything Goes:

Jon Premosch / BuzzFeed

SF: Every night, I thought my face was going to explode. It never actually did, but it always felt like it was going to. It was the highlight of my career, but I’ve never experienced that excursion. Every night I thought it was going to get easier, it never did.

Sesame Street:

Jon Premosch / BuzzFeed

SF: I cried too on that. It was awesome. It was the best day ever. I loved it.

Bunheads:

Jon Premosch / BuzzFeed

SF: The best. I wouldn’t have traded — it was perfect.

Violet:

Jon Premosch / BuzzFeed

SF: It was just like a perfect experience. The people I worked with, from the show itself, the character — everything! It was very different from anything I’ve ever done.

Younger:

Jon Premosch / BuzzFeed

SF: I don’t even know how to sum it up yet. I feel like I’ve bought more facial products in the last five months than I’ve ever bought in my entire life. I can’t wait for people to see more if it.

Jon Premosch / BuzzFeed

Younger premieres on TV Land on March 31 at 10 p.m. ET/ 9 p.m. CT


Celebrities Do Their Best Justin Bieber Impression At The Bieber Roast

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We asked everyone who would talk to us on the red carpet to do their best impression of the Biebs.

Hannibal Buress

Hannibal Buress

Chris D'Elia

Chris D'Elia


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Taylor Swift Tracked Down Fans, Brought Them To Her Table At The iHeartRadio Awards

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“Taylor talked to me like she was my best friend. It’s amazing how I can play a part in her happiness when she’s always played a huge role in mine.”

And last night at the iHeartRadio Awards, she once again tracked down some of her biggest fans, inviting them back to her table to chat and snap some pictures.

And last night at the iHeartRadio Awards, she once again tracked down some of her biggest fans, inviting them back to her table to chat and snap some pictures.

Kevin Mazur Getty Images

The whirlwind experience started when two Swifties posted notes on Tumblr telling Taylor they would be attending the awards show.

The whirlwind experience started when two Swifties posted notes on Tumblr telling Taylor they would be attending the awards show.

stay-beautiful-lovex3.tumblr.com

The past few days I was on Tumblr tagging Taylor in posts saying that I was going to be at the iHeart music awards in the pit, and if she sees a girl waving obnoxiously at her, it's me. On my way to the awards I got a notification on Tumblr that she followed me, and I freaked out!!!

Via Colleen Sullivan


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13 Heartthrobs From The '90s That Liam Hemsworth Looks Like Now

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Welcome to the past, brosef!

Maybe you have (or maybe you haven't?!?!) seen Liam Hemsworth's new hair. DOES IT LOOK FAMILIAR?

Maybe you have (or maybe you haven't?!?!) seen Liam Hemsworth's new hair. DOES IT LOOK FAMILIAR?

Kevin Winter / Getty Images

Kevin Winter / Getty Images


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Michael Jackson Used To Prank Call Russell Crowe

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Chart topper and a troll.

Michael Jackson was and, basically, still is the king of pop. But some kings never grow up.

Michael Jackson was and, basically, still is the king of pop. But some kings never grow up.

Gareth Cattermole / Getty Images

In an interview with The Guardian, Russell Crowe revealed that Jackson regularly pranked called him for a couple of years.

In an interview with The Guardian, Russell Crowe revealed that Jackson regularly pranked called him for a couple of years.

Lisa Maree Williams / Getty Images

For two or three fucking years... I never met him, never shook his hand, but he found out the name I stayed in hotels under, so it didn't matter where I was, he'd ring up do this kind of thing, like you did when you were 10, you know. 'Is Mr Wall there? Is Mrs Wall there? Are there any Walls there? Then what's holding the roof up? Ha ha.' You're supposed to grow out of doing that, right?

Via theguardian.com

Childish? Sure, but it's Michael Jackson prank calling Russell Crowe! It's kind of funny.

Childish? Sure, but it's Michael Jackson prank calling Russell Crowe! It's kind of funny.

Or maybe not.

Warner Bros. / kane52630.tumblr.com


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Helen Mirren Admits She's Actually A Terrible, Terrible Person

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History’s greatest monster.

Having previously lauded Dame Helen Mirren for bringing some much needed class to the New York subway system, it's time for BuzzFeed to issue an important correction.

instagram.com

Mirren is actually a monster.

Mirren is actually a monster.

NBC / Via youtube.com

On the Tonight Show last night, Mirren opened up to Jimmy Fallon about her secret, shameful subway behavior.

On the Tonight Show last night, Mirren opened up to Jimmy Fallon about her secret, shameful subway behavior.

NBC / Via youtube.com

"I was with some friends and we were running to get the subway to go to the theater. We're running, and the train has just come in," she said.


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Madame Tussauds Now Has A "Tissue Attendant" For Their One Direction Sculptures

I Was At The Roast Of Justin Bieber, And This Is What It Was Like

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Long story really short: It was fun!

First of all, the roast was huge. Look how blurry the stage is from my seat — that's because the place was so big and I was far back.

First of all, the roast was huge. Look how blurry the stage is from my seat — that's because the place was so big and I was far back.

When I arrived at my table there were bottles of wine, apparently from a vineyard called Roast of Justin Bieber. I'm assuming it's somewhere in Napa Valley.

When I arrived at my table there were bottles of wine, apparently from a vineyard called Roast of Justin Bieber. I'm assuming it's somewhere in Napa Valley.

There were also snacks on the table including this deviled egg. (Get it? 'Cause he once egged a house and also might be related to the devil?)

There were also snacks on the table including this deviled egg. (Get it? 'Cause he once egged a house and also might be related to the devil?)

JK about that devil thing.


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22 Quotes That Will Make You Fall In Love With Ewan McGregor

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Possibly the greatest guy in Hollywood.

Ewan McGregor is that perfect mix of cool, funny, and hot. He's just a really chill guy.

Ewan McGregor is that perfect mix of cool, funny, and hot. He's just a really chill guy.

DreamWorks / deanwinchesterprays.tumblr.com

So, to celebrate his 44th birthday here are 22 quotes that will convince those of you who need a little push that Ewan is the greatest guy around.

So, to celebrate his 44th birthday here are 22 quotes that will convince those of you who need a little push that Ewan is the greatest guy around.

Fox 2000 Pictures / tumblr.com

"I've never found acting that difficult. If you ask me, it's all rather easy if you keep it simple. But as soon as you lose that original drive, it's not fun...The fear of being crap is always what makes you good, I think." - Interview Magazine

Jason Merritt / Getty Images

"I think if you can encourage people to do something, if it is to go out and explore the world and see parts of the world that you might not otherwise see, and appreciate that people’s lives are very different from ours here in Europe and in America, then I think that is a good thing to do. "


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68 Questions With Nico Tortorella

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Younger’s resident hot dude answers a round of rapid-fire questions.

David J. Bertozzi / BuzzFeed

You might have heard that Sex and the City's Darren Star has a new series. Younger, which makes its debut on TV Land tonight, features a lot of our long-standing faves — Sutton Foster, Hilary Duff — as well as a fresh new face to add to the list: Nico Tortorella. When he stopped by our NYC offices we decided to grill the show's leading man to find out what he's all about.

1. What's your favorite color?

Black.

2. What's your shoe size?

Ten and a half.

3. How tall is your hair?

It changes all the time.

4. What's your favorite pizza topping?

Pineapple.

5. Favorite word?

Fuck.

6. Favorite vegetable?

Broccoli.

7. Favorite fruit?

David J. Bertozzi / BuzzFeed


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There Actually Is An Original "Ignition" That Isn't The Remix

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I wish I didn’t know about it to be honest.

Obviously you know "Ignition (Remix)" and if you don't I feel bad for you and the life you are living.

youtube.com

Andy Dean / Getty Images

That is until NOW (or maybe earlier if you've known about this). This is the original "Ignition." NOT THE REMIX.

youtube.com


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11 Reasons You Need To Follow Blake Lively On Instagram Immediately

27 Celebrity Couples Who Prove Love Can Last A Lifetime

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If they can do it, anyone can.

The couple in 1999.

Vanina Lucchesi / Getty Images

The couple in 2015.

Justin Tallis / Getty Images


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8 Celebrity Tweets You Missed Today

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Here’s what happened today!

Kim Kontoured.

Kim Kontoured.

Bob Saget prepped.

Bob Saget prepped.

Mindy Kaling kind of sort of didn't need credit.

Mindy Kaling kind of sort of didn't need credit.

Rob Huebel spoke the truth.

Rob Huebel spoke the truth.


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15 Celebs Rocking Badass, Colorful Hair

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All the spring hairspiration you could ever need.

If you've ever dreamed of dying your hair a crazy bright color, let these celeb examples be the push you need to get that colorful ~spring makeover~ you've always wanted.

Before

Valerie Macon / Getty Images

After

AFP PHOTO / VALERIE MACON


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Kanye West And Kris Jenner Napping Together

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Two angelic souls, sleeping their way to Paris.

Here is a photo of Kanye West and Kris Jenner sleeping on board a Eurostar train to Paris.

Here is a photo of Kanye West and Kris Jenner sleeping on board a Eurostar train to Paris.

Coleman-Rayner

Now look a little closer.

Now look a little closer.

Coleman-Rayner


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