Showing posts with label VIDEO. Show all posts
Showing posts with label VIDEO. Show all posts

Thursday, December 23, 2010

Mailman, Andrew W.K. Sing 'Silent Night' In Impromptu Duet (VIDEO)

Andrew W.K.'s hot new internet video features an unexpected guest: Rodney the Mailman.

The singer-songwriter was in the Chicago offices of The Onion A.V. Club, recording a number of versions of "Silent Night" for their terrific "Holiday Undercover" series. At the end of the recording, the office mailman Rodney is coming through. He's sung on a couple of tracks in the Onion studio before, so the staff asks W.K. if he'd mind doing a duet with Rodney.

The result is nothing short of pure Christmas magic.

Watch the impromptu performance:


Andrew W.K. and Rodney The Mailman cover "Silent Night"

For more from the Holiday Undercover recordings, head to AVClub.com.

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Thursday, December 16, 2010

HuffPost TV: Arianna 'Tawks' Education With Fran Drescher (VIDEO)

Arianna sat down to "tawk" with Fran Drescher on Tuesday. The former "Nanny" star recently launched her eponymous (and phonetic) "Fran Drescher Tawk Show."

Drescher's first question was about Arianna's strong positions and the reactions she gets.

"Especially women, they love it when you speak your mind," explained Arianna. "All of us as women have grown up with this desire to be constantly approved, and our fear is about expressing ourselves. When one of us does it, it's really validation for the rest of us. I feel that you can do it with grace and you can do it in a way that just makes it clear 'this is my truth, this is what I believe.' It can be about everything. You can have strong opinions, as I do, about politics and also about sleep. I'm a big believer in sleep!"

That kicked off the wide-ranging conversation. Along with politics and media, Arianna tackled education and had high praise for Michelle Rhee. "She's acting like a mom worrying about her own children," said Arianna while recognizing Rhee for bringing a sense of urgency to education.

WATCH:

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Sunday, December 12, 2010

HuffPost TV: Howard Fineman On The Clinton Crew's Return To The White House (VIDEO)

HuffPost's Howard Fineman appeared on MSNBC's "Hardball" Friday evening to discuss former president Bill Clinton's surprise appearance at President Barack Obama's press conference Friday, and the return of Clinton-era personnel to a central role in White House policymaking.

"They came to the fore in the last week or so in terms of handling this tax thing," Fineman told host Chris Matthews. "They knew they could sell it to Republicans because it involved cutting taxes."

WATCH:

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Monday, November 22, 2010

Seth Reams, Michelle King Featured On CNN (VIDEO)

HuffPost Game Changers Seth Reams and Michelle King were recognized for their volunteer efforts on cable news Saturday. TV and radio host Pete Dominick featured the couple on his CNN show "What The W...

HuffPost Game Changers Seth Reams and Michelle King were recognized for their volunteer efforts on cable news Saturday. TV and radio host Pete Dominick featured the couple on his CNN show "What The W...

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Sunday, November 21, 2010

Barbara Bush Jabs Sarah Palin: 'I Hope She Stays' In Alaska (VIDEO)

Barbara Bush has shared her thoughts on Sarah Palin, and it sounds as if she hopes the former Alaska governor decides against running for president.

"I sat next to her once, thought she was beautiful, and I think she's very happy in Alaska," Bush said, before adding, "and I hope she'll stay there."

The former first lady made the comments in an interview with Larry King, which will air Monday night on "Larry King Live."

Barbara Bush is not the only prominent Republican woman to speak poorly of Palin in recent days. On Monday, Alaska Sen. Lisa Murkowski, whom Sarah Palin vociferously opposed during the state's most recent -- and still ongoing -- Senate election, said that the former governor lacks the "leadership qualities" and "intellectual curiosity" necessary to be president.

In the interview with Larry King, Barbara Bush also said that she "loved" her son George W. Bush's new book.

When asked about the Tea Party in the same interview, former President George H. W. Bush said that "some of [their] ideas make a lot of sense," but added that he is "confused by it" and said he does not "know what it really is."

WATCH:

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StyleLikeU: Men's Fashion Writer Cator Sparks Is Inspired By Auntie Mame, India, And An Egyptian Dress (PHOTOS, VIDEO)

Cator loves the Auntie Mame quote, "Life is a banquet, and most poor suckers are starving to death," because for him, you have to live it and breath it all in. And he does - this man is all passion. We recently emailed him to let him know that his post was coming up, and we received an automatic response saying, "Greetings! I am away for a wedding in the depths of Africa, therefore I have no internet access, only tribal drums and smoke signals." Keep reading below. This was originally posted on StyleLikeU.com

Cator was inspired to become a writer on a trip to India in his late 20's, but not a "yogacentric nirvana trip. It was a boozed-out, wild party with a bunch of English people," where he met a renowned British journalist that recognized his vivid imagination, well-bred sophistication, and ability to put "pen to paper" or "fingers to keyboard." Today, Cator is a leading authority on men's fashion (and he now blogs for this site), an interest that stems from his aesthetically Anglo-infused childhood in Atlanta, surrounded by people like his grandfather (who was "a bit of a dandy"), his great-grandfather (who wore only "white suits in the summer and wool tweeds in the winter"), and his mother (who let him set the table with lavish place settings every year for Christmas dinner).

WATCH

It's all about visuals for Cator, and you can see it from his red room (an ode to taste icon Diana Vreeland) to his impeccable three-piece Brooks Brothers suit with every detail intact down to the Etro shirt, Vivienne Westwood tie, and antique watch fob. (It's absolutely wild to think of Cator in his rave days, with stickers on his face and glitter everywhere). Appearance is so imperative that Cator writes in an Egyptian dress and Turkish slippers in order for his genius to flow.

"[London] is such an amazing place. Period. I'll never forget riding the subway one day when I saw a man in a bowler, a bow tie, a cane, and a wax mustache. He just looked at me and winked. And I just [thought], 'This is it kids. This is what I want to do.'" -Cator Sparks

Be sure to check out Cator's website and blog.

If you like Cator, you might also enjoy John Wellington, Andrew D'Angelo, or Michael Arenella.

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Thursday, November 4, 2010

Arlene Weintraub: Centenarians: How To Make It To 100 (VIDEO)

What is it about centenarians that gives them the gift of extraordinarily long lives? On Nov. 1, Albert Einstein College of Medicine in New York launched a website, www.superagers.com, which tracks one scientist's decade-long quest to answer that question. Dr. Nir Barzilai, director of the college's Institute for Aging Research, has been studying 500 Ashkenazi Jews age 95 and older, along with 700 of their children. He's trying to uncover the genes that promote long life -- discoveries that he hopes will lead to drugs to prevent age-related diseases such as diabetes, cancer and heart disease.

Barzilai's research could take decades to bear fruit. But there are a few useful tips for healthy aging that you can glean from watching the videos on the site, which feature centenarians who are enrolled in the study. (See preview below.) I watched them all. Then I got some perspective from Barzilai. Here's what I learned from the Super Agers:

Moderate exercise works wonders. A lot of people roll their eyes when their doctor tells them to exercise and eat right. But I think these videos tell a compelling story. Witness Lilly Port, age 96. She lifts weights, rides a stationary bike, walks on a treadmill, and swears off fatty desserts. She refuses to move out of her home, where she climbs the stairs 65 times a day.

Barzilai believes his super agers were born with a genetic code that got them long past 80, but that living a healthy life is important for everyone -- regardless of whether they have those magic genes. "If you want to get above 80, you have to not smoke, you have to exercise, and you have to watch your diet," Barzilai says.

Exercise your mind, too. You don't see many easy chairs and remote controls in the videos of Barzilai's centenarians. These people are constantly on the go--traveling, visiting their grandkids, even working. At age 104, Irving Kahn was still working five days a week as an investment advisor. "I enjoy debating with him about business subjects," his son says in the video. (Incredibly, Kahn also had a 108-year-old sister.)

Numerous studies have demonstrated that mental stimulation helps delay the cognitive decline that typically accompanies old age. In March, for example, neurobiologists at the University of California at Irvine showed that learning preserves signals in the brain, which in turn preserves memory.

Watch your cholesterol. OK, this one is related to exercising and eating right. But it deserves some emphasis. Many of the people in Barzilai's study have high levels of HDL, otherwise known as the good cholesterol. Many of them also have the cholesterol ester transfer protein gene (CETP), which has been shown to lower the risk of both cardiovascular and Alzheimer's disease.

The drug industry has tried to mimic the positive effects of this gene, but with mixed results. Pfizer had to pull the plug on its CETP drug in 2006 because of safety concerns. Merck is still working on a CETP drug -- one that Barzilai hopes will find more success. "This is an example of something that's totally translational" to medicine, he asserts.

Maybe so, but it will be years before we'll know if the Merck drug works. So what can you do in the meantime to raise your good cholesterol? Exercise is one of the few activities that has been shown to raise HDL.

Barzilai says it's unclear whether the ability to live to 100 is equally attributable to lifestyle as it is to being dealt a good genetic hand. That's why he included the centenarian's children in his study. "We have some obese centenarians, we have a woman who's been smoking for 95 years," he says. Because the younger generations are more likely to eschew those unhealthy habits, studying them could provide some insight into the role of lifestyle in aging, Barzilai explains. "We want to see what happens when they interact with their environment in ways we recommend."

As for me, I'm inspired by the video of 96-year-old Port, walking the treadmill in her purple, velour sweatsuit. "You have to be active," she says. Good advice from someone who's truly qualified to advise us all on how to age well.


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Follow Arlene Weintraub on Twitter: www.twitter.com/awjourn

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