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Kid With Free Porsche Makes Worst Attempt At Financial Independence

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Kid With Free Porsche Makes Worst Attempt At Financial Independence

Folks in Shaoxing City raised eyebrows when some punk pulled up in a Porsche Cayman and opened up an impromptu scarf-vending stall on Shengli Dong Road. He said he felt bad asking parents for gas money after they bought him the car.

Shanghaiist's Lucy Liu says the cops weren't having it. I guess it isn't legal to just start a store anywhere you want in Zhejiang province. After he got a stern talking to, the kid blazed out to another spot with his scarves and a female companion in tow.

"I sell scarves here just to earn money to buy gas for my car," he apparently told News163, which went on to explain that "his parents paid for the snazzy Porsche but he didn't think that it is right to ask for gas money."

Huh.

This gentleman is apparently considered "second-generation Tuhao;" a derogatory Chinese colloquialism for "new money" generally extending to mean entitled, gauche, you get the idea.

Image via Shanghaiist


Sad Keanu Reeves Wishes He Got Better Movie Offers

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Sad Keanu Reeves Wishes He Got Better Movie Offers

If you've ever wondered what it's like to be Keanu Reeves, The Actor in 2014, "it sucks."

Sad-eyed Reeves—making the publicity rounds for John Wick—spilled his sorrows to Indiewire when the interviewer asked why he was making so many independent movies.

You aren't doing many studio movies these days. "John Wick" was produced independently and acquired later by Lionsgate. Do you have a preference for indies over studio projects?

Not really. The last studio movie I did was "47 Ronin," but before that it had been a long time — probably "The Day the Earth Stood Still." So I haven't been getting many offers from the studios.

Are you OK with that?

No, it sucks, but it's just the way it is. You can have positive and negative experiences, but what I like about studios are the resources and the worlds that they can create. Obviously, a lot of good filmmakers work on studio movies. Even when I was working on studio movies more often, I was always doing independent movies. So for me, that was just not happening, but I want to keep going, making things, and telling stories. I want to be able to do that — to be an actor, a director, to produce, you know? If we're going to do a delineation between studio and independent [films], I was always hoping to do both.

Other bummers for Keanu—aside from routinely discovering female intruders in his home—include missing out on a superhero movie franchise.

"I always wanted to play Wolverine. But I didn't get that. And they have a great Wolverine now. I always wanted to play The Dark Knight. But I didn't get that one. They've had some great Batmans. So now I'm just enjoying them as an audience," the Matrix actor told Moviefone in another interview.

[h/t NYDN, image via AP]

Kristen Stewart Taking Time Off From Acting to Make a "Bunch of Shit"

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Kristen Stewart Taking Time Off From Acting to Make a "Bunch of Shit"

Semi-pro frown girl Kristen Stewart is taking some time off from her main art form, acting, to work on another: makin' shit. In an interview with USA Today, she explains that she's buying a "live-work space in downtown LA" to produce wares with her bare hands.

Here is USA Today's obviously censored version of K-Stew's plans:

I'm taking some time off because I've been working for two years. I'm an actor and that's my art form, and because I started that so young, I've always felt intimidated and insufficient when I think about other forms of art I want to create. I'm going to take so much time off.

I'm going to buy a live-work space in downtown LA and I'm going to make some (stuff) with my hands. Literally, I made that decision a few weeks ago. I'm making a short film. I'm making a bunch of (stuff). I don't know how I'll put it out. But I'm not going to hold it so preciously close to me. I write all the time.

Cool!

Later in the interview, Kristen makes a desperate plea for the interviewer to characterize her as "not frowning." Here's her effort to convince us all she's not doing exactly what she's doing: "I'm really happy right now, overly happy. I'm definitely not looking furtively—I like to look around at (stuff). I feel great. I'm not overcoming fear right now."

I'm definitely not looking furtively... I'm definitely not... looking... furtively

Mazel tov to Kris and her foray into making what we hope is some Miley Cyrus-style shit.

[Photo via AP]

"Let's Fucking Roll": Track Palin's Drunken Interview With Police

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"Let's Fucking Roll": Track Palin's Drunken Interview With Police

In new audio from the Palin Wasilla Throwdown, Track Palin recounts the night of fisticuffs, shouting, and crying to a police officer as best his drunken self will allow.

Track first explains how his family got into their scrape in the first place. "Alright this is my old man," Track tells police. "It's his birthday, okay. So we're at this party in Wasilla. Dude, surprise him with a new truck, new trailer, new wrap on the trailer. Everything was fucking kosher."http://gawker.com/police-release...

At some point, men at the party at family friend Korey Klingenmeyer's house allegedly badmouthed the Palin daughters, leading to father Todd and son Track punching their friend Steve. "He's like a little pussy you know what I'm saying?" Track told the officer. "Like he's not gonna fight nobody. Most innocent, basically a gay guy, but he's not."

More men then apparently became involved. Track took his shirt off.

"I just bought this brand new shirt, so I took it off. I don't want to rip it," Track tells the officer. "Let's fucking fight. Four guys came on me, I hit one. One picked me up, tackled me, I hit one."http://gawker.com/sarah-palin-wa...

He insists, however, that had it been a fair, one-on-one fight, he'd have won.

"If it was one-on-one, I'd beat the shit out of them," he said. "One-on-one, like I'll beat their ass. I'm not trying to be gay or nothing. But they're four guys, man, like come on. I've done jujitsu my whole life, wrestled forever. Like let's fucking roll."

And when the officer of apparently saintly patience asks Track to describe the men he fought, he simply explained, "They're all like little bitches."

The full, 30-minute recording can be heard here, via Talking Points Memo.

[H/T Wonkette // Image via AP]

"Fuck Chinatown!": San Francisco Tour Guide Goes on Racist Rant

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On her last day at her job leading bus tours of San Francisco, one woman decided she could no longer hold back her honest (racist) views about the city's Chinatown. Some German tourists took video of the whole thing—it's not clear if they were among the cheering tour guests who apparently thought the guide made some salient (racist) points.

Local news stations have picked up the story, but the guide hasn't been identified yet. Maybe she's going to go back to L.A., where the Chinatown is "cleaner, has better food" and all the Chinese-Americans have apparently assimilated to her (racist) satisfaction.

She seems nice.

[h/t Broke-Ass Stuart]

Gizmodo Why You Definitely Shouldn't Drink Your Own Pee | io9 You Probably Never Realized How Marble

Confused NYPD Officer Kicks Fellow Cop in Head Thinking He's a Suspect

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Confused NYPD Officer Kicks Fellow Cop in Head Thinking He's a Suspect

The video below shows a plainclothes NYPD officer cranking back his leg and driving the toe of his boot into another man's head. "So what?" you might be saying. "Cops beat the shit out of people all the time." In this case, however, the victim was another cop.

The video, shot in January by photographer Rod Risbrook and published on DNAinfo, opens on two police officers struggling with an alleged fare-dodger in the Coney Island/Stillwell Avenue subway station. Shortly after it begins, several more plainclothes officers rush in, and with a loud thud, an officer in a gray sweatshirt and Timberlands plants the kick. "He kicked a cop," a woman behind the camera can be heard laughing. "He kicked the cop." Realizing what he's done, the officer gives his buddy a little pat on the head, and then, for good measure, gets on top of the suspect and clocks him in the face.

According to DNAinfo, the officer, whose name is unknown, was stripped of his gun and badge, and internal affairs and the Brooklyn District Attorney's officer are investigating the incident. The suspect pled guilty to a reduced charge.

It's Time for Nashville's Hunky Gay Cowboy to Come Out

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In a show where heightened drama has traditionally meant faking a miscarriage with pork blood (that actually happened!), watching gay country singer Will Lexington struggle with his sexuality for two seasons has been legitimately heartbreaking.

Will's mix of personal turmoil and professional ambition in an industry that isn't exactly known for its liberal social stances has led to increasingly tortured and risky decisions, from marrying horrendous beard Layla Grant to agreeing to appear on an invasive reality show to refusing to acknowledge any kind of emotional connection with a male paramour (who, in the clip above, throws his non-disclosure agreement in the trash) to cruising late at night in a park where he is ultimately beaten, robbed and bashed.

What's both reassuring and extra heartbreaking is that aside from the real dicks on the show—these include label head Jeff Fordham, who only cares about Will's ability to sell records, and Will's wife Layla, who does have a pretty legitimate grievance about the situation—the characters who know that Will is gay are totally fine with it. Though initially taken aback when Will tried to kiss him, his friend Gunnar has been supportive and encouraged Will to be honest with and about himself. And in this week's episode Deacon revealed himself to be another ally.

Maybe Deacon can, from one tortured soul to another, finally get Will to come out. And, since basically three-quarters of Nashville already knows he's gay, if he doesn't do it soon, somebody is going to do it for him, likely in a rather unpleasant fashion. Plus, it's 2014! Though his coming out will doubtlessly entail some struggles, particularly professionally, I think the audience would like to see him have a chance at peace and happiness, as well as to enjoy some hunky cowboy sex scenes without an aftermath of self-hatred.

Of course, Will isn't the only character in Nashville with a glass closet. This episode featured a number of people trying to hide things that everybody already knows.

It's Time for Nashville's Hunky Gay Cowboy to Come Out

Juliette Is Pregnant: Between Zoey weirdly skulking around in Juliette's dressing room and overhearing pregnancy complaints, Juliette texting Avery that he's about to be a dad, Avery subsequently standing outside her trailer and screaming about her pregnancy, and the fact that her face has gotten enormous, there's no way that anybody REALLY doesn't know that Juliette is pregs. Her Patsy Cline biopic co-star Noah (played by Derek Hough) also finds out, and it has apparently made him want to date her. For anyone who's still in the dark, Juliette's woozily stumbling off the stage mid-performance may provide another clue.

It's Time for Nashville's Hunky Gay Cowboy to Come Out

Gunnar Has a Nine-Year Old Kid: So, it was pretty obvious to we, the viewing audience, that as soon as little mop-headed Micah walked into the diner where his mom Kylie (who also happens to be Gunnar's ex-flame) works that he was Gunnar's kid. Kylie confirmed it at the end of the episode, and now Gunnar has a secret babydaddy story to rival Avery's.

It's Time for Nashville's Hunky Gay Cowboy to Come Out

Teddy Is Not Cool: Jeff Fordham knows that Teddy's not cool, but is trying to convince him that he is to get him to sign his daughters to Edgehill. Teddy's daughters know that he's not cool but prey upon his desire to be cool to get highlights and ear piercings. And that gross love interest that Jeff introduced him to knows that Teddy's not cool, but wants him to use his mayoral powers to take care of her parking tickets. Teddy would be way better off accepting his uncool self, as the alternative just makes him more pathetic.

It's Time for Nashville's Hunky Gay Cowboy to Come Out

Daphne Is Adorable and Agreeable: Daphne tried to fool everyone into thinking that she was a brat, first demanding chocolate milk on a flight to visit Rayna, on tour, and then using the word "suck" two times in four seconds. But really she just misses her mom, and once Rayna had a few loving parental words with her and took the whole family bowling, Daphne's true adorable nature reemerged! Thank goodness, because two moody brats in that family would be too much to take.

It's Time for Nashville's Hunky Gay Cowboy to Come Out

Zoey Is an All About Eve Style Schemer: First Zoey was lurking amongst Juliette's wardrobe rack in her dressing room. And THEN when Juliette had her medical crisis and left the stage in the middle of a song, Zoey wasted no time leaving her backup singer station and finishing out the lead vocal. She's been on this job for like four days! Even in the midst of a medical crisis, Juliette was aware of the shit that Zoey was pulling, and it ultimately made her pass out.

It's Time for Nashville's Hunky Gay Cowboy to Come Out

Scarlett Should Go Into Social Work: While all this drama was swirling around, Scarlett sat in her publisher's office, writing. She found herself stuck, in part because a homeless guy outside her window kept yelling about pizza. And so, she brought him a sandwich, and they shared a moment, and he gave her some quality lyric ideas. Since the vast success she saw in her musical career was too much for her fragile emotional state, maybe Scarlett should just give it all up and go back to school for her MSW?

It's Time for Nashville's Hunky Gay Cowboy to Come Out

Rayna Wants to Be with Deacon: This wasn't a plot point in this particular episode, but, I mean, OBVIOUSLY! Stop pretending that you want to be with Luke, go knock on Deacon's door and have one of those OMG moments about soulmate love, and please get him away from that awful Pam lady who's always like, "HAVE YOU FORGOTTEN WHAT IT FEELS LIKE TO HAVE FUN WINK WINK?" or some similar shit.

It's Time for Nashville's Hunky Gay Cowboy to Come Out

Next week: The preview voiceover actually used the words "double platinum drama." So, expect double platinum drama, I guess.

[ Videos and images via ABC.]

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Peggy Noonan Would Like Commoners to Be More Like Oscar de la Renta

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Peggy Noonan Would Like Commoners to Be More Like Oscar de la Renta

Peggy Noonan was friends with Oscar de la Renta. Were you? Pity. A fine man. A fine, gentle, and wise man. A Reagan, of the world of drapery. Why can't you, the childish majority, be like him?

"Oscar," is what Peggy Noonan calls him. They were friends. Yes—personal friends. The wordsmith and the designer, together, both designing, in their own ways. Creating beauty. He, with dresses, and she, with abstract paintings made by dribbling gin from a handle bottle onto a canvas, and then vomiting onto it. Vomiting freedom. Vomiting America.

Peggy remembers:

I said at the top that I hope Oscar proves to have been a carrier of dignity, an encourager of it, even when he's gone. There are fewer and fewer in my beloved city who can make this old town work with all its divided and competing parts. Oscar was both a cultural and social force, and as those things he was both a leader and an example. He penetrated to the essence of a person and put aside the outer differences in which we are all encased.

New York needs to remember this style. My city now is increasingly a town of babyish partisans, especially on the liberal and Democratic side, which is the biggest and almost only side. Their primary fault is not that they can see no goodness on other sides, though that is often true, but that they don't even know what their own side believes, and so they cannot see potential areas of progress and peace. They know nothing. They watch a little cable, go to dinner, take their cues. Not only are they smug, their smugness is unearned. And they are running the city, in almost every area.

Oscar, that discerning man, was not like that. I hope the old style of his dignity and discernment spreads.

Babies. It had to be said. Most of New York City's 8.4 million citizens are babies, who know nothing. (Peggy knows—she has even been to Brooklyn.) Unlike Oscar. Why can't you babies, here in Peggy's city, exhibit the sort of dignity that this fashion designer had? Or, indeed, the dignity of Peggy Noonan, who has called you a baby?

Later on Peggy writes, in reference to Ben Bradlee: "I think some Torquemadas of his profession accused him of being insufficiently pure. But I never understood journalism to be pure."

Unsurprising, since she used to be a professional speech writer for Ronald Reagan, and now she is a professional "journalist."

[Photo: Getty]

Honey Boo Boo's Mom Is Reportedly Dating a Convicted Child Molester

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Honey Boo Boo's Mom Is Reportedly Dating a Convicted Child Molester

June Shannon, the matriarch of the family portrayed on TLC's Here Comes Honey Boo Boo, is dating a man who molested an 8-year-old by forcing oral sex on her, TMZ reports. Mark McDaniel was convicted in 2004 and served 10 years in prison before being released in March. The child he molested was a relative of June's.

So that's a fucking nightmare.

Shannon has managed to find a dude that makes her estranged live-in companion and Alana "Honey Boo Boo" Thompson's father, Sugar Bear, look like a complete and utter prize. Get him back, now, girl.

TMZ has posted a picture of Shannon and McDaniel that reportedly was taken a few weeks ago in a hotel room. The site adds: " We're told Honey Boo Boo's mom has been seeing McDaniel for the last few months ... sneaking away from production of the show and meeting up with him. We're told she's also been setting him up by buying him various gifts."

TLC told the site that it is "reassessing the future of the series," as a network does when one of its stars starts dating a child molester. I thought the Mama June/Sugar Bear split was a stunt to boost sagging ratings, but it looks like shit just got real.

[Image via Getty]

Lone Gunman Responsible for Deadly Shooting Attack in Ottawa

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Lone Gunman Responsible for Deadly Shooting Attack in Ottawa

Police now say only one gunman was responsible for the shooting attack yesterday that shutdown most of downtown Ottawa and left one soldier dead.

Michael Zehaf-Bibeau, the 32-year-old Canadian identified as the shooter, has a criminal record stretching back at least to 2001. From the Toronto Star:

In a one-month period between Nov. 20 and Dec. 15, 2001, he received an absolute discharge for credit card fraud in Montreal and fines for drunk driving in Mont-Tremblant and assault in Laval.

In March 2003, he was sentenced to three months in prison for theft and another six months for possession of a dangerous weapon in Saint-Jérôme, north of Montreal. In 2004, he received another brief jail term to escaping custody twice and possession of marijuana and PCP. In mid 2005 and again in 2006, he was charged with marijuana possession in Montreal, for which he received first a small fine and, on the second occasion, another absolute discharge.

Zehaf-Bibeau was also charged with robbery in 2011 and pleaded guilty to "uttering a threat," as Brian Anderson, the lawyer who defended him then, put it.

The Globe and Mail reports that Zehaf-Bibeau had plans to study Islam and Arabic this year in Libya—where he'd previously spent time—but was unable to secure the proper paperwork. His father, Belgasem Zahef, a Quebec businessman, reportedly fought with rebels in Libya in 2011. His mother is the deputy chair of a division of Canada's Immigration and Refugee Board.

One of Zehaf-Bibeau's friends, Dave Batburst, told the Globe and Mail that he believed Bibeau was mentally unwell.

"We were having a conversation in a kitchen, and I don't know how he worded it: He said the devil is after him," Mr. Bathurst said in an interview. He said his friend frequently talked about the presence of Shaytan in the world – an Arabic term for devils and demons. "I think he must have been mentally ill."

A Seattle-area school district has agreed to let a Sikh elementary school student carry a dagger to

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A Seattle-area school district has agreed to let a Sikh elementary school student carry a dagger to school every day, as long as it stays concealed. Said a district official, "That allows them to express their religion without jeopardizing anyone's feeling of safety."

Why Is a Conservative Group Running These Ridiculous Pro-Weed Hulu Ads?

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If you live in North Carolina and you watch a lot of online TV, you might have seen the ads. "More weed, less war," exclaims a twentysomething dudebro in one of them, waving a pot leaf-emblazoned poster. "Vote Sean Haugh...Ohhhh Yeah." But Haugh, a Libertarian Senate candidate, has nothing to do with them.

The hopelessly chintzy Hulu ads, first spotted by North Carolina politics blogger Matt Phillippi and picked up by Dave Weigel at Bloomberg, were placed by a Koch Brothers-backed dark money group called the American Future Fund. Ordinarily, the AFF would have no interest in backing a hippy-dippy candidate like Haugh, and even now, they don't, really.

As Weigel explains, by focusing on qualities that might appeal to young liberals—weed! peace! Bob Marley t-shirts!—the group hopes to split votes for incumbent Democratic Senator Kay Hagan and help elect Thom Tillis, her Republican challenger.

Haugh himself is bemused by the whole thing: "It's like somebody put me into Google Translate, translated me into another language, and then back into English. It has that sort of disconnected, off-key feel to it. It's just surreal to be a subject of this."

Tillis, the candidate the ads are actually shilling for, doesn't share the target audience's free-loving views: on his campaign issues page, he proudly touts his plan to dismantle Obamacare and a record of endorsing drug tests for welfare recipients and fighting against gay marriage.

Koala Fight Videos, Ranked

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7. For the good-natured tussling:

6. For the strange setting (not a tree):

5. For the (particularly) crazy koala sounds:

4. For the dramatic tension:

3. For the koala who won’t give up:

2. For the weird koala in the corner:

1. For the up-close action:

Courtney Love and Dave Grohl Have a $10,000 Stripper Bet

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Courtney Love and Dave Grohl Have a $10,000 Stripper Bet

Courtney Love and Dave Grohl, two souls floating through life forever tethered by the death of Kurt Cobain and the hope of regained relevancy, reportedly have a $10,000 bet about who "can get the most strippers." OK!

"Strippers love me!" Courtney Love told Page Six, referring to the terms of her alleged $10,000 bet about who "can get the most strippers," whatever that even means, with adult man Dave Grohl. ("Get" like have sex with? "Get" like collect the bodies of?) "I'm taking [Grohl] down," she added.

"I used to be [a stripper], and I tip like a maniac so they relate to me," she said of, apparently, high-tipping strippers. "That's the whole premise. That's why we made the bet."

The bet—the premise of which is that Courtney Love used to be a stripper and tips like a maniac—arose when Dave Grohl and pals spent $10,000 at Scores one night after Courtney Love had gone home. She explains, "I had a few too many shots, but I would have kicked his ass." Kicked his ass at what? Courtney?

"I can remember the pole. That was a long time ago."

Courtney. :(

[image via Getty]


Why I Will Never Tell My Daughter to Give You a Hug

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Why I Will Never Tell My Daughter to Give You a Hug

I feel grumpy. It's probably too late for me to be up. There's a house full of people, some kind of party. I go to my parents' room to lie on the bed, and my Grandpa Pat comes after me. He wants a hug and a kiss. I don't feel like it. I like him, but I'm always a little shy: he's got that big barrel chest and smells like sour fruit (much later in life, I'll learn that this the hallmark smell of a Maker's Mark binge). I screech "No," but he comes at me anyway, his Irish pan-face coming closer to mine. I lie back and kick my legs to keep him away. I kick so hard my knee smashes into my nose. Blood spurts all over my clothes and the blankets. I am four years old and I feel like a little bitch for not respecting my grandfather and causing such a problem.

I'm five or six. We have a neighbor named Hy who writes plays and songs. He keeps candy in his pockets and has a typewriter. (My dad does too, but my dad doesn't let me use his.) At Hy's, I can type and eat candy, so it's a win-win. One day Hy slips his hands down the back of my pants. I assume that is the way an old man shows affection for a young girl, so I don't ever mention it. This goes on for a while. Months? Years? I don't remember.

I am in college and all of New York feels like a palette for the fabulous life I imagine I am creating. I make lots of money as a bartender and cocktail waitress. The tighter my clothes, the higher my tips. My Betsey Johnson rose-print Lycra stretch top plus a butt-skimming black skirt is a standard outfit, an Old Faithful. I spend what is in retrospect an embarrassing fortune on taxis to take me and my cohorts to bars, where I leave a wad of tip cash and drink for "free." Often, I find myself at a friend, acquaintance or stranger's house, where it's too late and I'm so tired and drunk and it's just probably easier to have sex than say no and go home. I'm there because I want someone to pay attention to me. I want to feel something like love, but maybe this will do for now. I want to be wanted. But it always ends with the bumping, scraping search of clothes in the morning, the smell of sour fruit and a big glass of water that never washes away the night.

I am not that girl anymore. A lot has happened since then. I found love, many times over. I got married and divorced. I became a mom. Not in that exact order.

I know that every mother thinks her kid is beautiful, special, magical. But my three-year-old Grace has the charisma and comic timing of Bette Midler. The persuasiveness and intrinsic sense of justice of Gloria Allred. A golden halo of curls, like Shirley Temple. In fact, she looks a lot like Shirley Temple. Her looks prove irresistible for the ladies of a certain age in our neighborhood, who come up to her and want to run their hands over her creamy cheeks. They touch her hair, a talisman for impossible youth and paradise. "So beautiful," they say, and mean it.

I was raised to be a people-pleaser. I grew up thinking that manners were the only thing separating us from full-scale anarchy, and to this day, I believe that thank-you notes make the world go round. But I don't want people touching my kid. Grace doesn't want them touching her.

Still I know that these women don't think they're being invasive. Touching a kid's cheeks is like feeling a loaf of bread or smelling a flower. It's just a part of how you walk in the world. It's a compliment, an act of approval, of love.

So life in public becomes a constant calculation of the social implications of denying people versus letting Grace keep her own space. For strangers, the decision is often easy. It's Trader Joe's. Who cares? A simple, "Oh, maybe not today," and putting my arm around her often keeps them at bay.

It's not as easy to do with friends and family. Grace is shy with her affections. There are only two times I can think of that she's willingly hugged or kissed someone she's just met. She does give big meaningful hugs to her friends at the end of the preschool day, so I know she gets how to do it.

Grace loves her grandparents, for example. You can tell by how excited she gets to go there, about how she waxes on about "driving" her Papa's 1957 Buick Roadmaster, how she heads straight for the cart filled with plastic produce that they've always set out for her. She loves her dad, whom she stays with twice a week. She loves her aunties, my lifelong girlfriends who have mastered the art of connection with her. She loves pretty much everyone we know, to some degree or another.

But comings and goings are awkward. Not for her, of course, because she's three and it's easy for her to follow her heart compass, and she doesn't give a rip whose feelings are bruised. I mean that these interactions are awkward for me. Whether it's my grandparents, my mom, people who come to visit her, even sometimes her dad: It is my immediate instinct to tell my daughter to greet her loved ones with a hug. And what I mean by this, of course, is Go give them a fucking hug because look how much they love you and look how much you love them and they could all be dead tomorrow and then how much would we regret not getting that last hug in?

But I don't. Because I made it a personal policy, when Grace was very little and I saw the way this was going, not to force her into any kind of affection she doesn't initiate or accept on her own. I think of the forced hugs with people I barely knew who came to my parents' door. The wrong smells. The awkward seconds until it was over. Being pushed into things I didn't want and I didn't realize were optional.

My parents took good care of me—they made sure I didn't get hit by a car and that I ate a sufficient amount of calories—but they never gave me much training in the psychic and emotional protective arts. When I was 15 or so, I had no radar for creepiness, and I'd go behind our house into the woods to make out with Mike, a 20-something who helped my grandmother out around the house. A few months after we met, he tied up and robbed my grandmother and her sister. Convinced that I was the one who tipped off the cops, he wouldn't stop writing me letters from prison. I still feel such deep shame about this. (My father, at least, did go out of his way to get a restraining order.)

So I am trying to teach Grace to hone that sense of what feels right and what doesn't. When we leave and she sidles up to hide behind me at hug time, I say something chirpy like, "Oh, well, maybe next time! Say bye-bye," and Grace will make an exaggerated wave and yell, "BYE-BYE" and it cuts the tension a little. And we all laugh a little and we go home. And she will sleep close to me, pressing her little body against mine as if she's trying to mash our molecules together, her tiny arms around my neck.

The other day, our neighbor Bill, a kindly insurance adjustor for nuclear plants, came by as we were sitting on our stoop. He's good with flowers. Grace and Bill like each other. He offered a high-five, which she refused. "It's okay," I told him. "She's shy." He nodded in understanding and started to walk away. But before he was out of sight, Grace looked toward him, stood up, and blew a kiss.

Vanessa McGrady is a Los Angeles-based writer and mama to a toddler. Her dreams are epic theatrical explorations of psyche with casts of dozens. She feels that feminism and impossible shoes can peacefully coexist. She has learned how to make something from nothing in the realms of food, decor and style. She is either in a state of profound gratitude or utter befuddlement, often simultaneously. She would very much like you to visit her blog, and hang out with her on Twitter @swerveblog.

Illustration by Jim Cooke.

Guy Accidentally Texts His Probation Officer "You Have Some Weed?"

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Guy Accidentally Texts His Probation Officer "You Have Some Weed?"

If you were to get high and make a list of people who, hypothetically, you would not want to text with a request for weed, "probation officer" would probably be near the top. Right up there with Simon from Alvin and the Chipmunks and former president George H.W. Bush.

But knowing you shouldn't hit up your P.O. when you're trying to buy drugs is only half the battle. You also have to not accidentally type "You have some weed?" in a message to that person, and then hit "send."

This was too much for Albany, Ga., man Alvin Cross, Jr, whose unfortunate misdirected text resulted in a raid on his house, where he was rearrested and charged with possession of a bag of cocaine. He pleaded guilty Monday and will serve one year in prison.

Should have blamed it on ducking autocorrect.

[Photo: WALB, h/t: The Root]

Sixty three percent of Americans now support the death penalty, down from a high of 80% twenty years

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Thursday Night TV Implores You Not to Sweep The Leg

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Solar eclipse this afternoon, Mercury comes out of retrograde tomorrow, and that's all I know today about our common enemy, the sky. While you're setting your intentions and figuring out that your phone is actually not broken like you thought, but was being acted upon by astronomy like a dick, here's some TV to chill you out:

AT 6/5c. on Cartoon Network: Teen Titans Go!, Clarence, Steven Universe, Amazing World Of Gumball, and Regular Show ("Daddy Issues").

Shondaland: Grey's Anatomy puts Callie and Arizona through another wringer, hopefully so they can finally be happy again; Scandal distracts Olivia with Jake's disappearance while Cyrus continues to be in love with a hooker and Fitz gets curious about his son's death; and on How to Get Away With Murder, Stan's penis is on a dead girl's phone!

Also at 8/7c.

  • It's dueling renovations as The Biggest Loser airs opposite This Old House Hour on PBS.
  • On Vampire Diaries, Stefan's plans to take advantage of Elena's self-imposed emotional amnesia go awry, Alaric tries to fix the many things currently wrong with Jeremy, and Damon attempts to defeat the '90s once and for all.
  • Mostly the point is that Sting is going Inside The Actors Studio to talk about his craft, which as we all know is that of acting. (Also fucking, of course.)

AT 9/8c.

  • On NBC, Bad Judge continues to be awesome while A to Z continues to be okay.
  • Gracepoint nears its halfway point and Bones has been preempted, on Fox.
  • The CW's Reign shows us how happy Francis and Mary could be for a second, only to make it worse when they resume being miserable because fertility clinics won't be invented for a while.
  • And on Lifetime, it's the 90-minute finale of mothership Project Runway before a new teen-centric spin-off Project Runway: Threads follows, at 10:30. (All-Stars will also be debuting in a few weeks, by the way.)

AT 10/9c.

  • Parenthood this week is titled "The Scale of Affection Is Fluid," while the Beat Bobby Flay finale on Food Network is titled "Orange Is the New Beat," meaning that Parenthood wins this round: It beats Beat Bobby Flay.
  • On WE, it's the third season premiere of Tamar & Vince, a show about people named those names.
  • There's a new Monsters Inside Me on Animal Planet, if you are super edgy and into being alienated from your own self, while if you prefer actual quack medicine to freak you out, OWN premieres a double-shot of its new show Surgeon Oz.

AT 11/10c.

  • It's the fifth episode of Reelz's Jean-Claude Van Damme: Behind Closed Doors, the first documentary to bravely go behind a door to see what is on the other side; and out of another door entirely—the door of The Closet—we have:
  • Alan Cumming and Victor Garber on a new Watch What Happens: Live. Do you remember when Alan launched a fragrance line and one of them was called Cumming All Over? Now he is on The Good Wife.

One place it is all happening is in the after-hours entertainment category:

  • At 11:59 Adult Swim premieres the second season of Newsreaders,
  • At 12:00 midnight the second season of Alpha House will be available on Amazon Prime,
  • At 12:15 the sixth Tim & Eric's Bedtime Stories is on Adult Swim, and
  • At 12:30, Adam Devine's House Party comes out on Comedy Central.

So there you have it. Let's talk about Shonda for a second, because I feel like the buzz around her shows always follows this path of being so buzzy that it gets treated like part of the news cycle, and within months everybody's like, "Is that still on?" even though the ratings suggest that everybody saying that is actually still watching it and just... don't know it.

Like, would it surprise you to learn that Grey's Anatomy is still like the number-one drama on television? It surprises me, but only because I think it's too good to get those numbers—and now we've got Scandal, which has calmed itself the hell down and really benefited from that, and How To, which is still the same amazing show it was a month ago.

I don't know. Maybe we get bored too fast, or maybe it's a much cooler thing, which is that we are learning as a culture to separate buzzy-buzz talk from our actual in-real-life lives, so if you talk about Scandal it's becoming less about FOMO and more because you are making a real connection with another one of the millions of people who just watches it, without treating it like a new luxury pashmina or Birkin bag.

Maybe letting go of identifying with our pop culture products is the first step toward treating our dumb belongings the same way, and then we won't be so obsessed with lifeguarding and gatekeeping those products from being enjoyed by others without our permission. Either way, it's nice to think about.

Morning After is a new home for television discussion online, brought to you by Gawker. What are you watching tonight? What are we missing out on? Recommendations and discussions down below.

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