Quantcast
Channel: BuzzFeed - Kelley L. Carter
Viewing all 147 articles
Browse latest View live

BET's "Being Mary Jane" Has Started A TV Revolution

$
0
0

The cast, creator, and a network executive talk to BuzzFeed News about their revolutionary series about a perfectly imperfect single black woman.

Gabrielle Union as Mary Jane Paul on BET's Being Mary Jane.

Daniel Mcfadden / Via BET

Four years ago, BET's massively popular scripted series Being Mary Jane wasn't even something creator Mara Brock Akil was ready to talk about out loud.

"I wasn't sure anybody was ready for it," she told BuzzFeed News, sitting at her home near Venice Beach. "It was a black female lead, [and I didn't want to] populate it with a bunch of white characters to help swallow the life of a black woman. It was going to be about her life, and it was going to have the four quadrants of her life: her love life, her work life, her family life, and her alone moments. If she's single, she's going to be alone sometimes and we need to see that. I was protective."

It was a story she couldn't trust just anyone with, but eventually, her husband, director Salim Akil, convinced her to share the details of her project with BET, where the couple had a longstanding, record-breaking history.

The network had picked up their show The Game — which The CW unceremoniously had canceled in 2009 — in syndication. And it wasn't long before executives at BET noticed that the viewership for reruns of the series, which chronicled the off-the-field lives of a professional football team and the women who love them, was at times bigger than that of its original airings on The CW. In 2011, after a long social media campaign from crushed fans, BET struck a deal to bring The Game back with new episodes, making it the network's first scripted show.

"Everybody just knew we were about to fuck it up," Brock Akil told BuzzFeed News. "Everybody was the same, and they were nice: Look, it won't be you guys … but BET has never done it before."

That experiment turned out to be a goldmine for the network: The Game brought in a record-breaking 7.7 million viewers for its Season 4 premiere. In October, the series was renewed for an impressive ninth and final season.

BET's success with the Akils opened the door for the network to take a chance on another scripted series: Brock Akil's passion project, Being Mary Jane. And the results of that risk have also been incredibly rewarding: The series premiered to more than 4 million viewers in January 2013, a number no episode of Mad Men has yet reached.

Mary Jane Paul, minus her weave.

Daniel Mcfadden / Via BET

With Being Mary Jane, the network has given Brock Akil creative freedom without asking her to compromise the level of authenticity that makes the show so relatable, it's often uncomfortable to watch. Each hour-long episode peels the layers back on a beautifully imperfect woman who is struggling to get her real life as in order as the one she projects on camera for her midday cable news talk show.

In its current second season, for example, Mary Jane Paul (Gabrielle Union) — who was inspired by once-aspiring journalist Brock Akil herself — jumped at the chance to get her eggs frozen gratis, in exchange for broadcasting her story on her cable network. In a recent episode, she looked over at her doctor after realizing the fertility treatments to freeze her eggs had gone horribly wrong…on live TV. Her lip quivered, and she immediately tried to rid her face of sheer panic, get it together, and prepare to kick it back to the folks back at the studio. But she couldn't — not before she asked the doctor these questions, dripping in desperation: What went wrong? Could I have taken my medications wrong? You said 38 isn't old, old!

Though the exact experience might not universally translate, Mary Jane's vulnerability — and subsequent anger and embarrassment — certainly resonated with audience. Social media erupted with reactions to the decisions the character had made, leading to the kind of conversation the show has regularly launched, ranging from topics like infertility to black men and suicide. And there were strong-arm conversations of her next, decidedly dumb move: aiming to get knocked up by her former lover, who was already expecting a baby by another woman (and whose sperm she stole and froze in the 2013 pilot).

Even Union is "sometimes uncomfortable" with Mary Jane's choices, but like the legions of fans Being Mary Jane has amassed, she's happy to debate the imperfect life of a woman who appears to have everything all figured out. "I'm like, Ooh. I wouldn't like her! I wouldn't be friends with her!" Union told BuzzFeed News via phone. "But … if I can have compassion for myself and for my loved ones who haven't always made the best decisions, for sure I can have compassion and empathy for my character."


View Entire List ›


After 20 Years, “Friday” Is (Still) The Most Important Film Ever Made About The Hood

$
0
0

The telling moment happened nearly every morning of the 20-day shoot some 20 years ago.

A neighbor — unhappy in spite of the $100 he was paid daily for the inconvenience of an Ice Cube movie being shot on his block — tried to disrupt the process in the most obnoxious of ways. He’d belt out Al Green tunes off-key and loudly every time director F. Gary Gray would call for action. And several times, he’d yell out to anyone within earshot, “This ain’t no real movie anyway. 'Cuz they wouldn’t be shooting it over here.”

He was incorrect, of course — Friday, the stoner comedy with a limited release and an even more limited budget, grossed more than $27 million at the box office, and had a bigger life in video and DVD rentals and purchases in the years since. But his drunken sentiment was dripping with genuineness. And it wasn’t lost on anyone.

Friday is about almost nothing — refreshing, really, after a string of movies set in South Central, Los Angeles, that focused only on strife. But in this movie, Craig (Ice Cube) gets fired on his day off — and made fun of because of it all throughout. And his best friend Smokey (Chris Tucker) is a small-time weed dealer who’d rather smoke it than distribute it. The two encounter a neighborhood filled with some over-the-top characters, and there’s laughter to be found where we hadn’t exactly seen before.

John Witherspoon

New Line Cinema / Everett Collection

“The Crips — they wear the blue, right? — they would come every day and watch us shoot,” actor John Witherspoon, who plays Craig's father in the film, recalls in an interview with BuzzFeed News. “They had bandanas over their faces, but would want us to take pictures with their kids. They were so nice to us.”

A native son was documenting their neighborhood on one of its better, less violent days, and this was noteworthy. Clearly, the pride of the L.A.-based notorious gang was undeniable; they came to set daily, engaged with the actors, and wanted their children to witness the energy building around a film almost no one wanted to make.

Friday, released on April 26, 1995, was a bona fide laugh-out-loud comedy, and was a stark departure from the work Ice Cube had done before. It was a different twist from his acting debut in 1991’s Boyz n the Hood, a film set in South Central, L.A., that was wholly inspired by the music his rap group NWA — Niggaz With Attitude, for the ill-informed — created in the 1980s. (In fact, NWA member Eazy-E’s solo debut was a track called “Boyz-n-the-Hood,” which was co-penned by Ice Cube.) Friday, which has established quite the cult-like following since its release 20 years ago this month, will screen in nearly 400 theaters for one night only: 4/20.

New Line Cinema/Everett Collection

This comedy was Ice Cube’s passion project, so much so that he paid the actors — most everyone remembers it being a payday of $5,000 apiece — out of his own pocket. This was the rapper’s chance to, in a way, mute some of the narrative that he was instrumental in giving the world. Through his music, he told street tales of everyday black and brown people living in one of L.A.’s most violent neighborhoods, and the scene was unpleasant. NWA touched on South Central street life (“Gangsta, Gangsta”), police brutality (“Fuck tha Police”), and censorship (“Express Yourself”) — and their music resonated in urban areas all across the country.

The hood and all of its faults (as presented in dramatic fashion, often with someone beloved dying violently in the end) had been a box office moneymaker: Menace II Society earned nearly $28 million in theaters, and Boyz earned almost $58 million and also was nominated for an Oscar. But in Friday — which Cube co-wrote with his longtime friend DJ Pooh — the hood wasn’t so unnerving. As bleak a place as it could be, there was much humor to be found.

“People thought how we grew up was like growing up in a war zone,” Ice Cube says in an interview with BuzzFeed News. "After movies like Boyz n the Hood, Menace II Society, and South Central came out, everybody thought the way we grew up was the worst thing ever in life. I didn’t see it that way. Of course it was rough, but we had fun with everything. We tried to laugh at things that most people would cry at.”

Cube and his writing partner found ways to create a continuous 91-minute-long joke about two dudes sitting on a porch, taking in their surroundings. In the process, they poked fun at some of the nuances that happen in the hood — the permed-out dope man selling bud from an ice cream truck, a horny, weed-smoking preacher who gets naked with a married woman while her husband’s away, and the hilarious neighborhood crackhead, a natural-born swindler. And all of the incidents — kids knocking over trash cans, ornery neighbors who don’t want you to step on their manicured lawns, and the day the resident bully got his ass beat — actually happened on the block where Cube grew up.

F. Gary Gray

New Line Cinema / Everett Collection

Gray — a noted music video director at the time — had been friends with Cube since the early '90s. Cube knew Gray was itching to do a feature film, and after collaborating on the rapper’s seminal solo video “Good Day,” a song that ironically describes in rich detail a day in South Central that goes off without a hitch, he approached the director with his idea of Friday. That 1992 music video, in some ways, was an early seed to Friday itself, playing off the idea of an unremarkable day in a neighborhood that’s so rich in conflict. “Plus nobody I know got killed in South Central, L.A. / Today was a good day,” Cube raps in what’s perhaps his most well-known hit.

“I was a young kid at the time, really looking to break into the business,” Gray says. "Cube described Friday, and that it was a story about where I grew up and where he grew up and how much fun it was — dangerous at the same time — but fun. I thought it was a great idea. We wanted to show a different side.”

From the rapper’s limited film experience at the time — Cube barely had two John Singleton movies (Boyz and Higher Learning, the latter of which was released a few months before Friday) under his belt — he was convinced that skirting the traditional Hollywood studio system was the way to go.

“We knew Hollywood had never seen this kind of comedy,” Cube says. "I was like, ‘Yo, I don’t want to [go] in there and have all these people try to explain what this is. I’d rather just go do it.'"

The rapper didn’t think a film that found comedy in shit-talking crackheads and dayside toking would get the Hollywood thumbs-up. Turns out, he was a bit off the mark. New Line Cinema — which released Menace in 1993 and a trio of House Party movies — learned of the project, and wrote a check (it ultimately cost about $3.5 million to make; Cube says they contributed about $1 million and distributed the film).

“They were like, 'We want to make this movie. How much do you all need?'” Cube recalls. “We didn’t have distribution, so we was like, ‘Yo, they’re feeling it, they’re going to let us go do the movie we want to do with no interference, and they’re going to give us the money and they’re going to put it out.’ It was a perfect match for that movie.”

DJ Pooh

New Line Cinema

New Line did have some casting suggestions. Though the rapper easily slid into the role of Craig, the still-living-at-home-with-mom-and-dad twentysomething who was fired for (maybe) stealing boxes; the studio couldn’t get behind his writing partner DJ Pooh who was to portray Smokey, saying he wasn’t experienced enough. The studio wanted a stronger name to take on Craig’s carefree best friend, the irresponsible pothead. He’d be the source of comedy for Craig, who didn’t smoke, but was stuck trying to figure out how to navigate a day in his hood.

Pooh ultimately took on a smaller role (the misfortunate Red, who is a target of Tommy “Tiny” Lister’s Deebo, the big bully), and Cube suggested that the studio hire Chris Tucker for the lead role, considering that the comic was such a fan favorite on HBO’s ‘90s stand-up series Def Comedy Jam.

“New Line was like, ‘Who?’" remembers Ice Cube. "And I was like, ‘Y’all just did a movie with him!’ They gave him a small, little part in House Party 3, and they underused him."

New Line Cinema / Everett Collection

The Tucker casting was key: He was a 22-year-old, slim, goofy rule-breaker to Cube’s straight man. In Friday, Tucker debuted his distinct higher-pitched, comedic voice, the same ones that often killed on those Def Comedy Jam stages. Peppered throughout the movie were other comedians who’d graced the HBO stage: Faizon Love, the late Bernie Mac, and Angela Means all took on neighborhood characters who resonated in major ways with audiences. Having those comics on the set of a film being shot by a newbie director (whose previous experience was making music videos) meant that all types of ridiculousness ensued. And for some cast members, marijuana was the great — and paralleling – unifier.

Faizon Love

New Line Cinema / Everett Collection

“Chris and I used to share a car, a Jetta,” Love says in an interview with BuzzFeed News. “We would smoke out in the car in the mornings. Chris was like my little brother. We would always work on scenes together, go to the comedy club ... we were always fucking around. Back then, we smoked weed every day. Gary Gray hated me and Chris because we would talk so much shit. He was like the principal, and we were like the bad kids. Every day, we would get fired. Chris got fired. I got fired.”

But they kept coming back, largely because they were able to bring the right comedic tone to a film that would heavily rely on ad-libbing. Gray says Cube was so open to the changes of the script, of which about 65% was written and about 35% improvised. This worked quite well, considering that the cast was stacked with so many recognizable black stand-up comics.

“Their ability to improvise and contribute creatively made the movie a classic," Gray says. "There’s no Friday without Chris Tucker and Faizon Love and what they contributed. Cube and DJ Pooh did a great job with the script but you can never dream up on your laptop the things that some of these comedians would come up with on the spot.”

Gray says he recently discovered 16 hours of behind-the-scenes footage that has never been seen before, including rehearsal moments where some of the more famous lines were created.

“I found the first moments of ‘Bye Felisha,’ ‘You got knocked the fuck out,’ — all this stuff that happened in our rehearsal out of improv,” Gray says. “That’s the brilliance of the actors. It’s also the brilliance of Cube not being precious with his words — he said the best idea and the funniest idea is the idea. I think with that approach, we led with our hearts and it paid off.”

New Line Cinema / Everett Collection

Love says he helped to round out his hair-curler-wearing drug-dealer character Big Worm — who sold drugs from an ice cream truck — and pulled traits from a guy named Bird from one of the neighborhoods he grew up in. When he auditioned for the role, he showed up with a joint and helped to create one of the film’s more memorable lines — “Playing with my money is like playing with my emotions” — partly from a soul song he’d heard earlier that morning.

“But the ice cream truck?” he adds. "That’s some other shit."

New Line Cinema / Everett Collection

The film had a small release — worldwide it played in only 883 theaters — but grossed $28 million. And the life it’s had in VHS rentals and later DVD sales was so impressive that it spawned off sequels — Next Friday, which earned more than $57 million in 2000 and introduced comic Mike Epps; Friday After Next, which brought in about $33 million; and Friday: The Animated Series, a short-lived cartoon series that aired on MTV 2 in 2007–2008. No one in the cast — save for maybe Cube himself — had much faith that this film would hit the way it has. It was mostly something to do while awaiting the next gig: quick money for a film that featured a ton of comedians. As insular as it was in subject matter, place, and time, the comedy has translated in a major way, and has connected across audiences with fans all over the world.

“You know those people,” says Regina King, who played Cube’s sister, Dana (and who also co-starred in Boyz herself). "You are those people. And I think that as great as Boyz in the Hood was, and Menace II Society was, they only reference a small part of a neighborhood life. “I don’t want to say 'hood.' I want to say 'neighborhood.' Because there’s a difference. When you reference the hood, it sounds like it’s something that people that are not black or Latino don’t experience. People that are white look at that movie and know those characters. They have an Asian Smokey. There is a white Craig. That exists.”

Love says he was shooting another movie in 2001 on location in South Africa when he saw a guy craning his neck to get a good look at him. “We see this guy walking. He has little ratty-ass trousers on and no shoes and a stick. He's beating a satchel. And he looked thirsty ... and I was like, ‘Get him some water.’ And he looked at me, and he pointed, and he said, ‘Big Worm?’ And I said, ‘Oh, fuck no!’ Out of this bush, this no-having-shoes-motherfucker … he ain't got no shoes! Where did he see this movie?"

But that’s how strongly the film has resonated with viewers. Two decades after its initial release, and the pop culture hold is prevalent: Quotes from the movie have filtered into contemporary lexicon.

New Line Cinema

Blame the “Bye Felisha” wave on a small but hilarious scene where Craig dismisses Means, the neighborhood beggar with those two words after unsuccessfully asking Tucker to “borrow his car right quick.” The comedic power lies in a bunch of tiny scenes like that one; they live on YouTube, benefit from multiple viewings on cable outlets (while fans live tweet it), and get brought back to life by contemporary reality-TV stars who quote the film and connect it with a younger audience who didn’t get it the first go-round.

“I thought maybe four people would see it,” King says. “It was one of those movies where in between scenes we all sat on the porch and talked shit. Everybody. The director. The props person. The DP. Everybody.”

Anna Maria Horsford

New Line Cinema

78 Thoughts I Had During The “Love & Hip Hop: Atlanta” Season 4 Premiere

$
0
0

“Who bought this sex tape? Make yourselves known.”

Stevie J pays a visit to his former girlfriend, Mimi Faust.

VH1

1. Mimi and Stevie J being business partners in her new music management company is not going to go well.
2. Also, Mimi is managing musicians now? Doesn't she run a cleaning business?
3. And Lil' Kim's mentee Tiffany Foxx wants Mimi to manage her?!
4. PLEASE, PLEASE BE RUNNING AWAY FROM STEVIE J, JOSELINE.
5. Did Stevie J really just offer Mimi a bottle of his sperm to create another baby?
6. And did he really just call it his "special sauce"?
7. **Pauses DVR to vomit.**
8. "I can't be a greaseball like that." Side-eyeing Stevie J RN.
9. He wants to have both Mimi and Joseline together again. He really actually wants to be a greaseball, huh?

Introducing...Jessica Dimepiece.

VH1

10. King of Diamonds finally makes it on one of these shows. Makes sense.
11. Jessica Dimepiece and this pink wig, though. Get it, ma.
12. Karlie Redd and Jessica Dimepiece are friends?
13. Dawn wants Jessica Dimepiece to give Joseline a run for her money in Atlanta. Girl, stop.
14. Another stripper turned rapper. Here for it.
15. Guess we'll see her soon in Atlanta.
16. "I don't really know Joseline Hernandez. I know Shenellica Bettencourt. That's how far we go back." !!!!!
17. That's the name Joseline went by when she danced in Miami!
18. Why isn't Joseline returning your phone calls? Girl, bye. You already know. Don't come for the Puerto Rican Princess, honey.
19. $30,000 a week?! DOING WHAT?


View Entire List ›

Which Real Housewife Of Atlanta Are You?

$
0
0

The thirst is real.

Ira Madison III / BuzzFeed / Via Bravo

Which "Love & Hip Hop Atlanta" Star Are You?

$
0
0

You looking real good, ma.

Kelley L. Carter/BuzzFeed / Via VH1

19 Times Joseline Hernandez Said What You Were Secretly Thinking

$
0
0

“Get with the winning team, ho.”

When someone you didn't invite to your party shows up anyway.

When someone you didn't invite to your party shows up anyway.

VH1 / Via Giphy

When someone tries to make you feel young and inexperienced.

When someone tries to make you feel young and inexperienced.

VH1 / Via Giphy

When you have to duck out early because you have somewhere better to be.

When you have to duck out early because you have somewhere better to be.

VH1 / Via Giphy

When someone's wearing the same thing as you.

When someone's wearing the same thing as you.

VH1 / Via Tumblr


View Entire List ›

How Well Do You Remember "Bad Boys"?

$
0
0

“I bet when your punk ass woke up this morning, you didn’t think by 5 o’clock you would have a hole in your leg, did you?”

Columbia Pictures / Via Kelley L. Carter/BuzzFeed

11 Times Rasheeda From "Love & Hip Hop Atlanta" Said What You Thought

$
0
0

“I’m here. But I ain’t here. And we ain’t here.” We should all be so lucky to know exactly where we are.

When they try to take the throne away from you.

When they try to take the throne away from you.

VH1 / Via Tumblr

When you know that hashtag is about you.

When you know that hashtag is about you.

VH1 / Via Tumblr

When you debate telling your ex's dirty secrets.

When you debate telling your ex's dirty secrets.

VH1 / Via Tumblr

When someone tries to get brownie points from the boss.

When someone tries to get brownie points from the boss.

VH1 / Via Tumblr


View Entire List ›


27 Times This Week's Episode Of "Black-ish" Was Way Too Real

$
0
0

The Johnson family addressed homophobia in their Mother’s Day episode in a hilarious way. “Because all lesbians love beer?”

When Dre brought up O.J. Simpson.

When Dre brought up O.J. Simpson.

ABC

And when he revealed this dirty little secret.

And when he revealed this dirty little secret.

ABC

When these guys were caught jamming to blue-eyed soul at work.

When these guys were caught jamming to blue-eyed soul at work.

ABC

And especially when he dropped this bomb.

And especially when he dropped this bomb.

KABOOM.

ABC


View Entire List ›

What Ava DuVernay Is Doing To Fix The Overwhelming Whiteness In Hollywood

$
0
0

The Selma director, who has an organization that aims to distribute work by diverse filmmakers, talks to BuzzFeed News about changing Hollywood’s diversity problem.

David Oyelowo (as Martin Luther King Jr.) discusses a scene with director/executive producer Ava DuVernay on the set of Selma.

Atsushi Nishijima / Via Paramount Pictures

Ava DuVernay was a big name this past awards season. She was the first black female director nominated for a Golden Globe for her work on Selma, about the three marches from Selma, Alabama, to Montgomery, Alabama, in 1965 that led to the passing of the Voting Rights Act. But when it came time for the Oscar nominations and her name wasn't called for Best Directing, it was an exclamation point on how white the awards were this year...and usually are. After the uproar, she became the unofficial spokesperson for Hollywood's diversity problem.

But DuVernay has been talking about these issues for years. In fact, she's been doing more than talking. "I didn't get out and have a whole bunch of conversations about diversity and inclusion. The real work was to do the work," DuVernay told BuzzFeed News of the thousands of media requests she fielded during awards season. "We've been doing the work, the filmmakers have been doing work, the audience has been doing the work, the volunteers have been doing the work. [We're] not talking about it but being about it."

Five years ago, DuVernay started a movement, which was formally launched in 2011 as African-American Film Festival Releasing Movement (AFFRM), dedicated to getting films by black filmmakers made and in theaters or online. Since its inception, AFFRM's Array Releasing has distributed eight feature films by filmmakers in theaters and on digital platforms. And now, post-Selma, with more name recognition and a more mainstream fanbase, DuVernay is leading the second annual membership drive for AFFRM. The membership drive is currently underway and will continue until June 5.

"This is the first time I've tried to get people to focus on the work of other filmmakers that I do with AFFRM," she said. "Time will tell if this is successful, whether folks want to point and stare at the black woman filmmaker who made a certain kind of film and pat her on the back, or if they want to actually roll up the sleeves and do a little bit of work so that there can be more of me coming through."

This "Pitch Perfect 2" Star Has Written Big Hits For Katy Perry And Rihanna

$
0
0

Ester Dean has written songs for the world’s biggest pop stars. BuzzFeed News chats with the singer/songwriter/actor about how some of those songs came together.

Songwriter Ester Dean stars as Cynthia-Rose Adams in Pitch Perfect 2, which opens in theaters May 15.

Richard Cartwright / Via NBC Universal

Even if you don't think you've heard an Ester Dean song, you probably have.

These days the singer-songwriter is starting to make a name for herself as an actress — she reprises her role as Cynthia-Rose Adams, a member of a capella group The Barden Bellas in Pitch Perfect 2, which opens May 15 — but for years, the 29-year-old has been penning hits for some of the world's biggest music stars. BuzzFeed News chatted with Dean to get the stories behind some of her favorite tracks.

"Rude Boy," by Rihanna (2009)

Rihanna’s hit song from her fourth studio album, Rated R, teased about giving her all to an aggressive man. The track peaked at No. 1 on the Billboard charts and stayed there for five weeks, making it the sixth such hit for the artist.

“This was a dubstep reggae song, you know? I remember asking Ri, I said, ‘What do they call bad boys where you’re from?’ And, she said, ‘We call them rude boys.’ I was like, oh, shit! And she started dancing. That movement. I just wrote to her rhythm and her moves.”

youtube.com

“Super Bass,” by Nicki Minaj (2010)

Dean co-wrote the electronic-inspired track from Minaj's debut album, Pink Friday, with collaborators Roahn Hylton and Kane Beatz, and it peaked at No. 3 on the Billboard charts.

“She called me down in the middle of the night. It was the first time going into the studio with Nicki. I got in the booth, she got in the booth, and I didn’t really know what was going to happen. With Nicki, I never know what is actually going to make it. It was only going to be on the deluxe album, but then it hit the radio station. That got Nicki to understand how good this song is. The radio response opened her eyes!"

youtube.com


View Entire List ›

How "Love & Basketball" Changed The Way Black Audiences Saw Themselves Onscreen

$
0
0

In the opening moments of Gina Prince-Bythewood’s Love & Basketball, three little boys are jaw-jacking about the skills of an NBA star. The good-natured trash-talking soundtracks their own missed shots as they ball on a half-court on the grounds of a pristine upper-class estate.

“I thought you said only girls moved in?” one of the kids asks of the new next-door neighbor who emerges from up the hill, wearing grubby jeans, a T-shirt, and a fitted cap, asking for a chance to join in the game.

The kids agree, and as that hat is removed, and the pressed, un-ponytailed hair of a young tomboy is revealed, they collectively groan in disapproval.

“Girls can’t play no ball!” one little boy gripes.

Then, young Monica Wright (Kyla Pratt) — who dreams of being the first woman to play in the NBA — says words that hit as hard as that first layup she throws on a guy nearly twice her size: “Ball better than you.”

At its core, Prince-Bythewood’s directorial debut has almost nothing to do with race, yet this film is undeniably black, delivering a subtle and significant message. But in many ways, that important narrative — dropping black folks in a tony, all-black area without explaining how they got there — was almost a sideshow to the message of girl power, told with brown faces.

Gina Prince-Bythewood and Sanaa Lathan

New Line Cinema/ Everett Collection

Love & Basketball was Prince-Bythewood’s story. She’d been an athlete for as long as she could remember — she ran track for UCLA and played basketball all her life — and had yet to see a film that reflected her experience. Her movie was a romantic coming-of-age story divided up into four quarters (like a pro basketball game), and it introduced us to two things we’d never seen on the big screen before: unpretentious black wealth set in a predominantly black neighborhood and a female athlete who was no less of a woman because of her strength.

This was a film written and directed by a black woman — a novelty then, and still unique enough now that when it happens, it grabs a headline. (Last year, only three of 275 of the top-grossing films were directed by black women; Prince-Bythewood was one of them.)

“Honestly, I never set out to write a feminist mantra,” Prince-Bythewood said in an interview with BuzzFeed News. “I wanted to put out in the world that we could have it all. I wanted to destroy the negative perception of a female athlete. I wanted to counter the stereotype of a female athlete. And I knew who I was, and who these women around me were, and it wasn’t what I was seeing in the media and television and film. I want and deserve the career and love, and you can have both. It doesn’t need to be a choice.”

Love & Basketball was released 15 years ago and debuted in the thick of a renaissance of movies that chronicled black coming-of-age stories — Juice, The Wood, and Crooklyn all came along before the 1990s closed out — but missing from Prince-Bythewood's plot was the downtrodden experience audiences had grown accustomed to. Instead, this sophisticated coming-of-age story was unmistakably about love. Finding it. Keeping it. And mastering your dreams in spite of it.

New Line Cinema / Everett Collection

Love & Basketball covers a roughly 13-year friendship, from 1981 through the mid-'90s, of two well-to-do next-door neighbors, Monica and Quincy, bonded by their shared love of basketball. By the time they enter their senior year of high school, the two best friends realize they’re in love with each other, which is almost perfect considering they’re both heading to play hoops for USC.

The film uses gender equality issues in sports as a source of tension for their romance — the girls’ games in high school are sparsely attended in comparison to the boys’ games; and in college, the women adhere to a stricter curfew, while the men’s team has a much longer leash — and the adoration of their entire campus. Quincy doesn’t quite understand the of-the-moment struggles that his girlfriend faces, much less the idea that after college, her options to have a career playing ball professionally means she’ll have to live outside of the country. The WNBA is not yet an option for her, not to mention, taking that route would be far less lucrative than that of her boyfriend, who has tunnel vision while trying to chase his dad’s successful and celebrated NBA career. That divide is what ultimately ruins them by the time we hit the middle of the film: Quincy doesn’t understand the trials she faces as a female athlete, and he doesn’t seem keen on ever getting the point.

The only thing Monica loves more than Quincy is basketball — it’s what she’s good at and it’s the thing that keeps her focused. She’s unlike her ultrafeminine sister, who takes after their stay-at-home mother, both preferring lipstick, foundation, and sticking to the traditional lines of who a woman should be. The be-who-you-were-meant-to-be catalyst for Monica is her father, portrayed by actor Harry Lennix, who encourages his younger daughter to embrace her skill and passion as a ball player.

In Love & Basketball, the actual love story between
the two leads comes in second to the love a female athlete has with
fulfilling what seems to be an impossible dream — thriving in a field dominated by men.

“I wanted to put out this message in the world to be authentic to who you are,” says Prince-Bythewood. “That’s been a theme in all of my work. Just tapping into your authenticity and being brave enough to live in that.”

Love & Basketball's gender equality message plays as powerfully as the one of race — though the racial and economical messages are extremely subtle by comparison. And it hit just the right note, considering that by the time the film was released, the WNBA was in its third season and enthusiasm for a professional women’s basketball league was growing.

But it took a lot of convincing to even get Prince-Bythewood's story to the screen.

New Line Cinema / Everett Collection

Like John Singleton with Boyz in the Hood and the Hughes brothers with Menace II Society, Prince-Bythewood was writing what she knew. She wasn’t trying to throw a ticker-tape parade, pointing to the idea that her characters could have grown up in the same types of neighborhoods that say, any of John Hughes characters did in his classic 1980s films, chief difference being that they were black. She wanted that very visual statement to be quiet, but recognized and normalized.

"I wanted to put it out in the world that these two characters travel the same way that anybody else travels both in career and in love," Prince-Bythewood said.

That was part of the problem with getting a round of yeses for Love & Basketball. Her subtle storytelling was, perhaps, too loud. There was no real reference point for a movie that focused on upper middle class people who happened to be black, and that proved to be a problem for Hollywood.

“When I went out with this film, this got turned down by everybody,” Prince-Bythewood said. “I kept getting a repetitive refrain that it was soft. That was the note and why people didn’t want to do it. I didn’t understand. How is it soft? Because no one’s getting chased by a knife or no one’s been shot? How do you address that?”

Lennix said that it took him years to fully understand the importance of the film’s representation of blackness — which directly feeds into Hollywood's hesitation to make it. Love & Basketball was a film that embraced dynamics we weren't accustomed to seeing: a black nuclear family who uplifted academic importance (college wasn't a dream here, it was a given).

New Line Cinema

“I think frequently, rather than dealing with black victimology that the people want to see something that's good tasting and good for them and reminds them that they have ... the human experience that anybody else has,” Lennix said. “I think that that was about a current time. It was about people who were recognizable, and unfortunately, I guess, there aren't more of those.”

Once Prince-Bythewood got turned down by nearly every studio in town, she went through a Sundance Institute program to workshop her screenplay. Organizers heard of her script and invited Prince-Bythewood to be a part of the program where she made minor adjustments and staged a reading. One key listener at that Sundance reading was Sam Kitt, an executive from Lee’s production company, 40 Acres and a Mule. He loved it, attached 40 Acres to it, and took it to New Line Cinema, which had released a string of successful House Party movies in the '90s.

She got the greenlight, but then Prince-Bythewood needed a star, and she was particularly sensitive to which actress could carry the lead role. Her mentor, longtime TV producer Stan Lathan, suggested his daughter Sanaa, who wasn’t a very recognizable face before 2000 rolled around. But he was confident his daughter could pull off the complexity Prince-Bythewood was looking for.

Sanaa Lathan

New Line Cinema / Everett Collection

Lathan earned degrees at the University of California, Berkeley (English), and Yale (drama), and her body of work largely came from New York and Los Angeles stages. Her first film role was two years prior, in 1998, playing Wesley Snipes' mother in Blade, and she chased the next year with smaller roles in The Wood and The Best Man. Performing was in her blood, given that her father had worked on shows including Sanford and Son and Def Comedy Jam and her mother worked as a Broadway actress and dancer. Stan swore he wasn’t being biased by suggesting his daughter to Prince-Bythewood, who, before writing and directing this debut film, had cut her teeth working in television, namely on the long-running Cosby Show spinoff A Different World, where she worked as a writer.

Prince-Bythewood held an audition for Sanaa at the home of actor Hill Harper — who read the role of male lead Quincy — but it didn’t get off to the best start. “I walked in the door and she shows me this Vibe magazine spread that she just did which was like a bikini spread,” Prince-Bythewood said. “I was like, This is so not the character at all! I didn’t know how she was going to get the part, but she read and she was pretty good. I told her I would think about it. I left, and it’s funny because when she and I talk about it later, she was pissed off that I didn’t offer it to her there.”

New Line quickly agreed to Prince-Bythewood's first choice for the role of Quincy: Omar Epps, who, the writer-director noted, "was the man back then." Epps was a well-established actor, starring in films like 1993’s The Program, 1994’s Major League II, and 1995’s Higher Learning — all movies in which he portrayed athletes.

Omar Epps

New Line Cinema/ Everett Collection

The studio informed the writer-director that if she went with a well-known actor for his part, she could choose whomever for Monica. After going through more than 700 actors and athletes, Prince-Bythewood said she realized that she didn’t have anybody else in mind other than Sanaa Lathan.

“I called her back and said, ‘You have the part for the reading.’ And I knew she would only be doing the reading because she had never touched a basketball in her life, and I would never hire a woman who couldn’t play ball for the film,” Prince-Bythewood said. “We did the rehearsal for the reading, and she was awful. Awful. And I was so freaked out that I went to my husband, and I said, 'I’ve got to fire her. Who can we get to do this in like an hour?' Racking our brains, we could not find anybody and finally we just have to go with her. I called her up and I was like, You have to bring it. And then she came to the reading and was amazing.”

Lathan hired a trainer and worked for three months so that she could deliver a true female basketball star. She filmed those scenes alongside actual athletes and said they often would look at her quizzically, trying to figure out how she landed a role playing a basketball player, but yet couldn’t hoop.

“I practiced for hours on my form,” Lathan said. "I practiced for hours on my layups. Dribbling. All of that. My form was really good. But if you actually put me in a real game? Forget about it.”

In the movie, Lathan’s now good friend Gabrielle Union played Shawnee, the sexy, feminine high school student who wanted to hook up with Quincy, while Monica was much more comfortable in sneakers than heels. “Normally we think of people losing themselves in roles, and we think of Charlize [Theron] in Monster or Halle [Berry] in Monster's Ball," Union said. "But what Sanaa had to do to become Monica ... Sanaa Lathan is a hippie. The fact that we all bought her, lock, stock, and barrel, as this gifted athlete says a lot about her level of preparation and her commitment to the role. 'Cause that ain't her. At all.”

Prince-Bythewood was blown away by Lathan’s work ethic and was floored by the chemistry she and Epps had on set. But what the director wasn’t immediately aware of: Lathan and Epps were secretly dating at the time.

“I think if I had known, I don't know if I would have taken that risk,” Prince-Bythewood said, laughing. “When people are dating or married, a lot of times they don't have chemistry on screen. What if they break up midway through shooting? But they were hot. There was this sweetness between them. And I just wanted to watch them.”

New Line Cinema / Everett Colleciton

Seeing the burgeoning brown-skin love affair come to life on screen was restorative. It signaled change, especially considering that it came shortly after 1997’s Love Jones and 1999’s The Best Man, which both had audiences piercing their hands in the sky, celebrating the fact that contemporary black love was finally getting highlighted on screen.

“If you never see yourself, it’s going to affect your self-esteem and self-worth on a deep, unconscious level. I believe that,” Lathan said.

But there was a yielding of sorts for other black romance films. Two years later, Brown Sugar — which was directed by The Wood’s Rick Famuyiwa and also starred Lathan, pairing her with Taye Diggs — gave a similar amorous moment. (There have been several romantic comedies with largely black casts — most successfully 2012's Think Like a Man — but not simply a romance film.)

There wasn't a movie truly like Love & Basketball, arguably, until Prince-Bythewood's 2014 movie Beyond the Lights, which took five years to get to theaters. She still had to fight to get a comparable love story — featuring two young, black characters who were not set against a backdrop of environmental strife — on the big screen.

“I think it's the design of people who are comfortable seeing black people as desperate and despicable people — making victims of them, making pariahs of them,” Lennix said. “Why is there this fascination with black victimhood in slave movies and so forth? There's no reason for them, really, to empower black people with nutritious content when you can get them junk and have them buy it in even greater fervor.”

Love & Basketball's characters just happened to be black, yet it was placed into the distinct “urban” film genre. Besides a particularly saucy conversation between Monica and another basketball player while overseas — “Shit. Them Italian boys? They love them some black women,” the character cooed — race is never mentioned.

“It was an organic time to have that conversation because that was the only time the characters had that experience,” Epps said of the scene. “Black people, we’re not sitting around talking race in that regard. For Love & Basketball, that conversation didn’t need to happen because it was a bunch of brown people talking to brown people.”

New Line Cinema/Everett Collection

Love & Basketball is now reaching a new generation of fans — at an event with high school students earlier this year to promote Beyond the Lights’ DVD release, Prince-Bythewood collected the loudest cheers when her young audience learned she wrote and directed the 2000 film.

The fact that Love & Basketball still resonates is telling. Filmmakers — Prince-Bythewood included — still struggle to get the greenlight for daring to make movies about black people that go against the grain. All these years later, news of a black female protagonist in a film is still a moment worth heralding.

“It is a feminist movie,” Lathan said. “It’s a new classic now. When I say classic, I mean something that stands the test of time and also crosses cultural lines. I’ve had old Asian men come up to me and be like, 'I love Love & Basketball.' It stands.”

Even though there was a campaign among fans to get a sequel going (a mockup of a poster announcing a new film that would hit theaters this Valentine’s Day circulated online), it’s never happening. Prince-Bythewood said the story ended how it was supposed to in its flash-forward epilogue: After years of being apart, Monica and Quincy eventually acknowledge they’re still in love with each other, marry, she goes on to star in WNBA (which now exists!), he’s the ex-athlete husband who is supportive of her career, and they have a daughter, who has a role model right at home — the kind her own mother couldn’t dream of having while growing up.

“I put out characters that I knew. I knew people that lived in Ladera Heights and View Park, where we shot. The houses that we used, black folks lived in them,” Prince-Bythewood said. "I consciously wanted to show a side of black life that hadn’t been shown.”

In June, the entire cast will reunite for the first time since its release, and present the film as part of the L.A. Film Festival to commemorate its 15th anniversary.

“One of the things that I care about so much is the fact that we can all be able to be reflected,” Lathan says. "Obviously, because I’m a black woman, I want to see myself up on that screen. And I’m so happy that this movie is that for young, black girls.”


Finally, Omari Hardwick Has The “Power”

$
0
0

In anticipation of the Season 2 premiere of Starz’s hit series Power, the show’s lead actor talks to BuzzFeed News about his breakout role and his next project: a Gil Scott-Heron biopic that he’ll produce and star in.

Omari Hardwick as Ghost in Power.

James Minchin Iii / Starz

At first glance, 41-year-old actor Omari Hardwick is a bit of a walking contradiction.

His athletic build hints at his former life as a professional football player — he was cut from the San Diego Chargers after suffering a career-ending knee injury — but he won't be forced into some athlete stereotype. Hardwick is also known for throwing people off guard by speaking in iambic pentameter. But the words and their delivery don't seem at all contrived. He's a poet, and when the mood strikes, he's quick to spout verses of swoon-worthy spoken-word deliciousness.

In nearly every facet of his life, Hardwick has two sides. "I would say, as loving as I am … I am definitely an extremely temperamental man who has a very large temper," he told BuzzFeed News. But his job pulls it all together. "Acting is the art of being and existing, and not being fake," he added.

And after appearing alongside marquee names like Whitney Houston (in her final role, 2012's Sparkle) and Janet Jackson (in 2010's For Colored Girls), Hardwick is now enjoying his biggest role yet: James "Ghost" St. Patrick, one of New York City's most powerful drug dealers, on Starz's dynamic, sexy (and sexed-up) series Power.

The show, created by Courtney Kemp Agboh and produced by rapper and actor Curtis "50 Cent" Jackson, has given Hardwick an opportunity to use his own complexities to bring the multilayered Ghost to life. "The thing is, Omari has everything that Ghost has. Very intelligent — he's able to do a lot of things: He's a poet, he's an athlete, he's an actor," Kemp Agboh told BuzzFeed News. "You need someone who is hyper-intelligent, really sexy, really strong, and a little scary. There are plenty of actors that have one or two of those. I was looking for the whole package."

And that's just what Hardwick offered Power, helping the series grow its ratings steadily over the course of its initial eight-week run in 2014 and leading to a second season, which premieres on June 6.

Starz


View Entire List ›

The Self-Proclaimed "Chocolate Goddesses" Of "Orange Is The New Black" Are Breaking Down Stereotypes

$
0
0

Five actors at the heart of Netflix’s hit series talk to BuzzFeed News about playing prisoners and bringing nuance to their roles.

Adrienne C. Moore as Black Cindy, Uzo Aduba as Suzanne, and Danielle Brooks as Taystee in a scene from Season 3 of Orange Is the New Black.

Jojo Whilden/Netflix

Some of the funniest and most honest moments in Netflix's hit series Orange Is the New Black happen when a particular combination of characters — Tasha "Taystee" Jefferson (Danielle Brooks), "Black Cindy" Hayes (Adrienne C. Moore), Janae Watson (Vicky Jeudy), Poussey Washington (Samira Wiley), and Suzanne "Crazy Eyes" Warren (Uzo Aduba) — get together.

The audience laughs as they sit around a cafeteria table making up rap songs, whispering about homemade hooch in the library, or answering trivia questions with "the white Michelle Williams." And we cry when they unravel, as we've seen with Aduba's Suzanne, who, in a highly emotional moment, repeatedly slapped herself in the head while she called herself stupid — a moment made all the more heartbreaking considering that her character lacks the same social development as her contemporaries.

Brooks calls the tribe of five the "Chocolate Goddesses." The actors are their own sorority, bounded by race and their impressive (and downright intimidating) academic pedigree — the women all have studied at some of the finest acting institutions in the country, and many can boast a classical Shakespearean training. But on Orange, they're playing a group of black women who — some have argued — are stereotypical, neck-swiveling, wrong-side-of-the-tracks criminals. And that potentially polarizing issue did give several of the actors pause, especially those who were signing up for their very first roles on television.

"When I first started this, I was very skeptical, being that I was a black woman playing an inmate. I was very nervous about that," Brooks told BuzzFeed News in a phone interview. "But … every story is valid, everyone's story. Whether we like to admit that, there's a lot of women that are of African descent that are incarcerated, or people of color who are incarcerated — those are stories that need to be told too. I feel like when they're told so specifically, and so authentically, and stated and done with so much truth, then I'm up for it."

And Orange Is the New Black does just that: All of the characters on the series landed behind bars for very specific and distinct reasons — the good girl gone bad, the drug mule, the airport employee who stole private property, and the list goes on. Yet these women feel fully realized. The beauty is in their backstories of college dreams dashed, the perils of growing up in the foster care system, and what happens when mental illness isn't properly treated.

Tumblr


View Entire List ›

“Orange Is The New Black” Helped Its Breakout Star Learn How To Love Herself

$
0
0

Adrienne C. Moore brings Black Cindy to life on the hit Netflix show, and Season 3 was her best yet. She talks to BuzzFeed News about tackling religion and body image issues (i.e., not having “TV titties”) through her character. WARNING: SPOILERS AHEAD!

Adrienne C. Moore stars as Black Cindy in Orange Is the New Black.

Netflix

Black Cindy has a way of commanding a scene on Orange Is the New Black.

Sometimes her presence — brown-skinned, full-bodied, usually with a duo of striking Afro puffs — is enough to indicate something good is a-coming. Viewers of Netflix's hit series know immediately that they're in for a treat. Other times it's a simple 'hood anecdote, some twisted words of wisdom, or one of those quick "I wish a bitch would" moments that Adrienne C. Moore — the actor who brings this absorbing character to life — delivers so very well.

During the show's second season, Black Cindy's place became more prominent as her backstory was revealed: She'd worked as a security guard at an airport, stolen some personal property, and had an affinity for ganja — as well as a daughter who only knows her as an older sister. Cindy became more than just the background character who could always deliver a potent punch line. There was depth there.

But with the third season of Orange Is the New Black, which was released on Netflix earlier this month, the character gets even more fleshed out, and undergoes a spiritual awakening as she realizes that she's found her people, very surprisingly, in the Jewish faith.

Any assumptions that this conversion would simply be played for laughs are understandable. Instead, Black Cindy's Season 3 storyline actually takes a more serious route. Several inmates discover that Litchfield, the federal prison where the ladies are being held, allows its inhabitants the option of keeping kosher, serving them frozen meals that are much better than the slop being served to the rest of the women. Black Cindy and her comrades are happy: finally, food fit to eat. But when prison officials catch wind that the Jewish population has seemingly increased dramatically, they clamp down, bringing in a rabbi to sniff out the real Jews. A shift begins as we see Black Cindy take a razor-sharp interest in the religion, wanting to learn more about the foundation of the faith, much to the surprise of those around her. A big moment comes for the character when she sits down with a rabbi, and breaks down in tears while explaining why she is meant to be Jewish.

"The first couple of takes I did had a little bit of her humor to it. More serious, of course, but certainly that touch of humor. And then I literally had this flashback — and this is where it gets personal in my own life … And just this whole idea of even how I, Adrienne, having been raised with this idea of what Christ is and what the Christian church is, and someone with a strong Christian identity, and it took me to my college days when I began to realize my own self and had this 'aha' moment where I was like, so, wherever your faith is — and in this case for Black Cindy, it was Judaism — it is the act of doing it," Moore says of filming her intense scene with the rabbi. "That revelation just brought me to a very emotional place and to a very real place."

Tumblr


View Entire List ›


Why LaLa Anthony Stripped Down In This Week's "Power"

$
0
0

The former reality TV star tells BuzzFeed News this is the start of taking her acting career seriously. “If they can get past, ‘LaLa’s boobs are out!’ … then they can see that.” WARNING: SPOILERS AHEAD!

LaLa Anthony stars as LaKeisha on Power.

Starz

When LaLa Anthony slides her hands down the sides of the smooth, bare, chocolate skin of her co-star Sinqua Walls on Power on Saturday night, you will practically hear the gasping, howling, and screaming from audiences everywhere.

As the camera closes in on her face, her eyes pop open, she smiles and eventually disrobes and straddles her younger lover. Fans of the saucy, sexy Starz drama have been waiting for this moment ever since it leaked a few weeks ago that Anthony would have such a meaty storyline in Season 2 — that sex scene, in which she is topless, included.

"Being a person that people already know, I know the scrutiny is going to be even more," Anthony told BuzzFeed News in a phone interview. Her husband, New York Knicks superstar Carmelo Anthony "doesn't want to watch it," she recently said on Power 105.1's The Breakfast Club. But, she added, "He understands that it's my job."

For Anthony, who has an airtight scandal-free reputation, the scene on Power indicates she's ready to push the boundaries in regards to her acting career.

"I just feel like if I am taking acting seriously — and this is what I'm doing — then how can I be an actress that has never had a love scene or a sex scene? It seems a little unrealistic," Anthony told BuzzFeed News. "If you look at all the great actresses, the people who are doing great work, they've all had sex scenes or love scenes. I just thought career-wise, it made sense. It's something I felt was great and something that I wanted to do. But any time you take your clothes off, anybody's going to be nervous about that."

Starz

Anthony rose to prominence as an MTV VJ in 2001 (co-hosting Direct Effect and Total Request Live), was in a long term relationship with one of the NBA's best athletes, had a must-watch reality show on VH1, and counts celebrities like Kim Kardashian West, Ciara, and Kelly Rowland among her best friends. She landed a role in the 2012 ensemble film Think Like A Man, comfortably playing the sidekick best friend to a tragically single Meagan Good — it was familiar territory. But with Power, Anthony was ready to really dive in and go places her longtime fans couldn't ever have imagined her going.

She plays LaKeisha, the childhood best friend (though at times, frenemy) of Tasha (Naturi Naughton) — and in Power's inaugural season, it was business as usual for Anthony, who didn't venture too far outside the confines of what we've seen her doing before.

"I knew that the character would want to go somewhere. I liked that there was always room for her to continue to grow," Anthony said of her initial interest in the role. "Sometimes people want to come out the gates doing so much, but a lot of times on shows like Power, it becomes a quick burn. You're there, and then all of a sudden you're gone. With my character, I like that they're easing her in and giving her more and more to do as you go. I was intrigued by that."


View Entire List ›

The Oscars May Be A Lot Less White Next Year

$
0
0

Its more new inclusive list of invitees signals progress, but it’s only the beginning. “That doesn’t mean that we sit back. It means that we keep going,” Academy President Cheryl Boone Isaacs told BuzzFeed News.

Anna Kendrick and Kevin Hart present onstage during the 87th Annual Academy Awards at Dolby Theatre on February 22, 2015 in Hollywood, California.

Kevin Winter / Via Getty Images

The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences saw your #OscarsSoWhite tweets. On Friday, the organization extended invitations to 322 members of Hollywood, who work both in front of and behind the camera, and it's likely the Academy's most diverse crop of invitees yet, including Kevin Hart and Gugu Mbatha-Raw.

This year, 8 of 25 actors invited (32%), 10 of 26 directors invited (38%), and 10 of 21 writers invited (48%) were people of color. By comparison, among last year's invitees, only three actors of color (Barkhad Abdi, Lupita Nyong'o, and Chris Rock), two directors of color (Hany Abu-Assad and Gina Prince-Bythewood), and one writer of color (John Ridley) were invited.

Cheryl Boone Issacs, the first black female president of the Academy, told BuzzFeed News that her efforts to diversify the Academy Awards' voting body began long that #OscarsSoWhite hashtag dominated social media when not one person of color was nominated in an acting category this year. It was the whitest Oscars race in nearly 20 years, and Boone Isaacs' group was taken to task for it.

"This is something that the Academy has been working on for a while," she told BuzzFeed News in a phone interview. "And we really stepped it up. It is so gratifying to see the increases in gender and people of color and age and national origin. It's really a testament to the extraordinary breath of talent. It's one of our initiatives — inclusion of normalization of recognizing [diverse] talent."

The new crop of invitees include directors and writers like F. Gary Gray (Friday and the upcoming Straight Outta Compton), Rick Famuyiwa (Dope and The Wood), and Tyger Williams (Menance II Society). And there's also an influx of women being asked to join, including Elizabeth Banks and Felicity Jones.

There are multiple branches of the Academy's voting body — actors, directors, writers, casting directors, cinematographers, costume designers, designers, documentary, executives, film editors, makeup artists, and so on — that set their own criteria for who gets an invite. "They have really paid attention to … who might have been overlooked in the past," Boone Isaacs said.

And while the progress is significant, there's still a long way to go, which the Academy's president knows.

"This is a wonderful day today, talking about our new members, but that doesn't mean that we sit back," Boone Isaacs said. "It means that we keep going."

21 Things That Need To Happen At Comic-Con 2015

$
0
0

Jennifer Lawrence says goodbye to Katniss, we get some Game of Thrones closure, the Justice League makes its debut, and Lady Gaga crashes American Horror Story: Hotel — it ~could~ all happen!

Jennifer Lawrence and Josh Hutcherson will be awkward and adorable for the last time (at Comic-Con, anyway).

Jennifer Lawrence and Josh Hutcherson will be awkward and adorable for the last time (at Comic-Con, anyway).

Ethan Miller / Getty Images

The Hunger Games: Mockingjay – Part 2 panel
Thursday, July 9, 12 p.m.

Scheduled to attend: Stars Jennifer Lawrence, Josh Hutcherson, Liam Hemsworth, and Willow Shields; director Francis Lawrence; and producer Nina Jacobson

What needs to happen: The final Hunger Games film hits theaters Nov. 20, so this is really one of our last opportunities to see the beloved Holy Trinity together. We need to see JLaw and Josh (pictured above at the 2013 Comic-Con panel for The Hunger Games: Catching Fire) be adorable goofballs together — ideally she'll spill something or trip — while Liam looks on lovingly. We also need another trailer with way more Peeta and Gwendoline Christie. —KF

We learn Clara's fate on Doctor Who once and for all.

We learn Clara's fate on Doctor Who once and for all.

BBC America

Doctor Who: BBC America's official panel
Thursday, July 9, 2:15 p.m.

Scheduled to attend: Stars Peter Capaldi, Jenna Coleman, and Michelle Gomez and executive producer Steven Moffat

What needs to happen: This is a pretty nail-biting panel, if only because of those rumors circulating that Jenna Coleman might exit the show after this season. But hopefully she doesn't announce any plans to do that, and instead we just get a lovely panel with a Season 9 trailer, a premiere date, and some juicy deets about next season. —ELR


View Entire List ›

The Most Surprising Nerd At Comic-Con

$
0
0

Aisha Tyler has finally found her tribe. “Whoever you are, how you express yourself is OK here,” she tells BuzzFeed News.

Tyler at SiriusXM's Entertainment Weekly Radio Channel Broadcasts from Comic-Con 2015 at Hard Rock Hotel San Diego.

Vivien Killilea / Getty Images

SAN DIEGO — When you think of Comic-Con, you probably think lightsabers, glasses, and cosplay, not a 44-year-old, 6-foot black woman. Yes, Aisha Tyler stands out in the crowded convention center in San Diego, but in her heart, she feels right at home.

"This is my tribe, you know?" she told BuzzFeed News while sitting on a couch at a hotel just a few blocks south of the action. "I think what Comic-Con represents culturally is just broad, unapologetic acceptance of who you are. Whoever you are, how you express yourself is OK here."

That's something that's kept the actor, comedian, and host coming back to Comic-Con for the past six years, but it's something she's been searching for her whole life.

Tyler grew up 500 miles north of her current home away from home in San Francisco, where she kept to herself, her books, and her video games, always living right on the outside of everyone else. "I was a really nerdy kid," she said. "A lot of people want to claim nerdery, but you can't say you were a nerd when you were a kid unless you played alone for a significant portion of your childhood. For a long period of time, there was a lot of imaginary play. I was a crazy reader — and had a reader imagination. You know, just like a loner."

That feeling was even more glaring when Tyler found herself fighting for a place in Hollywood. The brown-skinned, tall, funny woman with a Dartmouth education was so far removed from Hollywood's vision of who a black woman was. "I didn't fit any mold. I wasn't gonna fit into the ingenue romantic lead, and I also didn't fit the Def Comedy Jam stereotypes. People just didn't know what to do with me. And also I was just giant. Giant," she said for emphasis. "There just wasn't anything out there."

While it was a challenge for Tyler to find a place for herself when she came onto the scene in the '90s, but she wasn't willing to sacrifice who she was to get where she wanted to be. "I felt like, I'm never going to make any progress. I'm never going to get any traction. I'm too strange. I'm too weird. I'd have to get up on stage early on in my career and explain why I talked like this," she said. "I came out and people wanted Mo'Nique or they wanted Sommore, and I couldn't be that way. That's just not who I was, and a lot of times that can make you feel inadequate and other and less than. I just wanted to stick to my guns and not be made to feel ashamed of who I was."

And sticking to her guns has served Tyler well: She is currently working on four TV shows — she voices Lana Kane on FX's Archer, co-hosts The Talk, hosts Whose Line Is It Anyway?, and she recently landed a recurring role for Season 11 of Criminal Minds. Her unqiue voice is finally being celebrated.

"That frustration of 'I don't fit anywhere' helped me just say, 'Well, if I can't conform, I might as well stay as far outside of the box as I possibly can and embrace the fact that I'm an outlier,'" she recalled. "Weird kids make iconoclastic adults. I was a really weird kid, and even as an adult from an entertainment perspective, I didn't really fit in. And so I kind of developed an iconoclast because I could. Because I was like, well, if no one really cares what I say, I'm just going to say what I think.'"

Now, plenty of people care. Tyler — again, hard to miss as she walks through the streets of San Diego — easily gets scouted out by fans, who are eager to pile on their love of her career, and embrace her as one of their own. Twenty years into her career, it's hard to believe the same voice that has fans running up to her was rejected in Hollywood for going so far against type.

"I say this to young comics all the time — the concept of if you build it, they will come... Stop trying to look at what's happening and match it. Just do what you do best. And embrace it fully and aggressively. And then your audience will find you," she said. "It may take a lot longer than if you were trying to conform to what sold. But what you want to do is be so unique that you can't be replaced. You don't want them to go get an Aisha Tyler-type. You want them to get Aisha Tyler."

And that's exactly what they're getting.


View Entire List ›

The Winners And Losers Of Comic-Con 2015

$
0
0

It’s good news for fans of superheroes and bad news for fans of Game of Thrones.

Winner: Deadpool

Winner: Deadpool

With Marvel Studios forgoing Comic-Con this year, 20th Century Fox swooped in to claim its prime Saturday afternoon slot in Hall H with an almost two-hour mega-panel showcasing several of the studios’ upcoming movies. And Deadpool — the R-rated adaptation of the profane and irreverent Marvel Comics mutant superhero — was, by far, the movie that won the biggest roars in the crowd. So much so, in fact, that they demanded as one to see the trailer again, and moderator Chris Hardwick was happy to oblige. Later, in the X-Men: Apocalypse panel, star Nicholas Hoult was totally distracted, admitting, "I can’t concentrate, because I’m still psyched about the Deadpool trailer." —Adam B. Vary

Kevin Winter / Getty Images

Loser: Fantastic Four

Loser: Fantastic Four

By stark comparison, the panel that preceded Deadpool was for the reboot about Marvel Comics’ very first superheroes, Fantastic Four, which has been dogged by bad buzz for months — and the panel did very little to dissuade fans from that impression. Director Josh Trank (Chronicle) talked about the film’s focus on the team’s “tragic” origin, and called it a kind of prequel to when the Fantastic Four actually become the Fantastic Four. When it came time to screen a new trailer for the movie, the crowd’s muted applause was all you needed to know about fan enthusiasm for Fantastic Four. —ABV

Kevin Winter / Getty Images

Winner: Joss Whedon

Winner: Joss Whedon

OK, yes, I know saying Joss Whedon is a winner at Comic-Con is a bit like saying the pope is a hit at Christmas, but the reigning lord of San Diego truly walked away from his Dark Horse: An Afternoon with Joss Whedon panel one of the weekend’s biggest winners — literally. The Buffy the Vampire Slayer creator was presented with the Icon Award, previously won by Ray Bradbury, Neil Gaiman, Matt Groening, Stan Lee, George Lucas, and Frank Miller. Additionally, his panel was charming and insightful, resulting in multiple standing ovations. —Jarett Wieselman

Kevin Winter / Getty Images

Loser: Benedict Cumberbatch

Loser: Benedict Cumberbatch

Because he wasn’t there and we needed him. We always need him.​ —Keely Flaherty

Toby Melville / Getty Images


View Entire List ›

Viewing all 147 articles
Browse latest View live


<script src="https://jsc.adskeeper.com/r/s/rssing.com.1596347.js" async> </script>