Jena Sims In Sexy Pink Lingerie
Check out HQ photo-set here
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Hot Trailer: ‘Hit And Run’ Red Band
Parenthood‘s Dax Shepard wrote, co-directed (with David Palmer) and stars in Hit And Run. The movie is about a nice guy (Shepard) with a questionable past who risks everything when he busts out of the witness protection program to deliver his fiancé (Kristen Bell) to Los Angeles for her dream job. They are chased by feds and gangsters. Bradley Cooper, Tom Arnold and Kristin Chenoweth co-star. Open Road is releasing it August 24. Here’s the clip.
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Kate Melton auditioning for the role of Angelina in About Cherry
* The role that eventually went to Ashley Hinshaw was so close being given to Kate 'Daphne' Melton. Goddamnit! If I was the director, I would have rewrite the Dev Patel character into a female part and made sure to cast Kate. In my version, Ashley and Kate are lovers and I will include a graphic lez all out nude scene.
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Sugar Babies
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We Love Black Men   
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Germany has the Best Prostitute in the World! 
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Club Orange’s New Sales Strategy? Breasts
If all else fails when trying to create a viral ad you can always turn  to sexual innuendo which is actually what Club Orange have done with  this video that talks all about women’s bits. The reference is of course  to do with the “bits” in their famous drink but the action focuses  pretty much entirely on a series of models breasts rather than on the  drink itself. It’s an advert that could only ever appeal to the male  demographic and is sure to get slammed by certain groups online but  shared in equal measure. While some ads use naked women just for the sake of it  at least this one has a bit of a tongue in cheek message that is  actually quite funny. What do you think? Good ad or a bit too sexist and  over the top?
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WELCOME TO SZYMON BRODZIAK'S CLUB
From time to time, I don't know if it depends of a planetary alignment or not, I find a photographer's website which freezes my breath and stops my heart.
Szymon Brodziak, a Polish born in 1979 who's an expert of getting the most from the black and white photography, even creating his own style.
Visit his website, not only because there're photos as good as these, but also because there's a really good video when you enter the site : szymonbrodziak.com
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Internet Girls, Mad Men, and Why the 'Greatest' Generation Wasn't
by Cord Jefferson
If the guy's older, you can call  it a Roger Sterling costume, I suppose, and if he's younger, a Pete  Campbell costume. A chubby oddball with the right suspenders might even  be able pull off a Bert Cooper costume. In the end, it doesn't really  matter what Mad Man you go as, because here's the secret: They're all  just assholes in tie clips anyway. 
Ever since Mad Men  captivated the consciousness of a particular subset of the American  population a few years back, we—men in particular—have learned to ignore  how deplorable most of the male characters on the show are. Among the  qualities listed above, the guys in and around Sterling, Cooper, Draper,  Price are also rapists, cheats, thieves, pimps, layabouts,  anti-Semites, and cowards. It's probably redundant to note that they're  unflinching misogynists, but they are that, too, and to a degree so  toxic many women flee them in tears or, more seldom, while sashaying to  other jobs where they'll actually be appreciated.
And yet viewers continue to adore  these guys, year after year, season after season, revolting indiscretion  after revolting indiscretion. Perhaps it's the slim-cut suits, or the  glossy, Brylcreemed hair. Perhaps it's because the Mad Men are handsome  men, and thus harder to hate. Or perhaps it's the fact that, of late,  everyone seems to be having a love affair with their own dreamy fantasies of mid-century America.
Besides the prolonged and continued adoration of Mad Men, there is also the latest telling quote from writer Aaron Sorkin, who on a press tour for his widely derided new show, The Newsroom, lamented that he wasn‘t alive in the 1940s. "I think I would have done very well, as a writer, in the forties," he told the Globe and Mail's  Sarah Nicole Prickett. "I think the last time America was a great  country was then, or not long after. It was before Vietnam, before  Watergate."
Sorkin is a middle-aged rich white  man, and his nostalgia for the greatness of the 1940s reminded me of  Foster Friess, another rich white guy who also recently complained that  things were better when he was younger. Speaking to MSNBC's Andrea  Mitchell in February, Friess, a major backer of Rick Santorum's now dead  presidential campaign, told Mitchell that he gets "such a chuckle" out  of ongoing debates regarding women's rights to safe, secure, and  inexpensive contraception. "Back in my days, they used Bayer aspirin for  contraception," said Friess.  "The gals put it between their knees." Mitchell stared at Friess in  silence for a moment following his comment; she said she had to catch  her breath.
That America is on a steady  decline toward uselessness is a favorite canard of a lot of rich white  men besides Sorkin and Friess, including Bill Maher, Thomas Friedman, and Mitt Romney, whose book, No Apology,  is so named because he says he wants to make no apologies for the bad  things America has done on its pursuit toward global dominance. It's  very likely you yourself have heard this kind of thing spouted off in  person, as well: at family barbecues where your uncle goes on about our  "once great" nation, or a grandfather who remembers how wonderful  America used to be, before it got sick and depraved and filled with sex.  We've even started calling the people born during Sorkin et al.'s  bygone era of milk and honey the "Greatest Generation," as if nobody before or since could even think of improving upon what they accomplished all those years ago.
My father was born in the 1940s,  the decade Sorkin says was the last time the United States was great.  Yet despite being a big fan of Sorkin's Sports Night, I don't  think my dad shares his affinity for America's recent history. Though he  doesn't remember a lot of his early childhood, my dad does remember the  first time his mother told him to be careful about how he spoke to  white men, lest his tone should provoke them. He remembers reading about  Emmett Till, a black boy who was just a bit older than him, who was  mutilated and murdered in the South for getting "uppity" with a white  woman. He remembers seeing photos of Till and noticing a  resemblance—they could have been brothers, he thought.
But those were the "before"  photos. In the "after" photos, made famous because Till's mother  requested an open-casket funeral to share the monstrosity of her son's  attackers, Till is a bruised corpse. One of his eyes is gouged out and  he's bloated by water because the men who killed him had tied a  cotton-gin fan around his neck with barbed wire to sink him to the  bottom of the Tallahatchie River. When asked why he killed Till, J.W.  Milam, a decorated World War II vet, a member of the "Greatest  Generation," said, "I just decided it was time a few people got put on  notice. As long as I live and can do anything about it, niggers are  gonna stay in their place."
This is the ugly side of the  Greatest Generation. The time of Emmet Till‘s slaughter, and even before  it, is the time in America for which Sorkin and Romney unthinkingly  pine as being the best we can do, America at her pinnacle. They  fetishize the old days as being some idyllic wonderland when everyone  was strong, honest, and hardworking. They complain that they are too  good and smart for the modern world, all while neglecting to notice that  blacks or women or gay people never join them in their cheerleading for  the 1940s and ‘50s. Rarely do you see black men stepping out to  Halloween parties in their Mad Men costume, because that would be a janitor's coveralls.
The Mad Men era is a lot  less sexy for today's people of color and other minorities than it is  for white men. And what at least some people who say they miss post-war  America seem to be forgetting is that a lot of America's early  prosperity was created using racism, sexism, and oppression of all kinds  as building blocks. Factories used to be able to pump out product at  unprecedented rates because they employed expendable children who worked  to total exhaustion. Governments, both local and federal, were able to  avoid long and costly discussions about equality because it was barely  illegal to kill a black person with whom you disagreed. Gays didn't  speak out, because they, too, were in deep fear of being run out of  town, at best, and murdered, at worst. An old straight white man saying  he misses the days when things were simpler is tacitly saying that he  misses the time when nobody could say or do anything but he and his golf  buddies. And he's right: Things move much more smoothly when you're  allowed to lock up or beat down whatever stands in your way. The real  question is this: Is such simplicity "great"?
I try to give people like Sorkin  the benefit of the doubt when they tell young people that things used to  be better. I try to believe that what they intended to say was that  cars looked cooler or that people dressed nicer or that great art hadn't  yet been totally poisoned by commercialism. But very often they follow  up their praise of Old America with some denigration of New America, as  Sorkin did in his Globe and Mail interview. After saying he was  made for the ‘40s, in a moment of irritation with his female  interviewer, Sorkin told her, "Listen here, internet girl, it wouldn't  kill you to watch a film or pick up a newspaper once in a while."  Nevermind that the "internet girl," whose name, again, is Sarah Nicole  Prickett, was reporting on Sorkin for a newspaper. To Sorkin and people  like him, "internet" is shorthand for trashy things, stupid things,  pointless things, the kind of pablum young idiots go for before getting  older and appreciating Real Things, old things.
Despite writing a whole movie  about the most famous internet company in history, Aaron Sorkin will  probably die thinking that the internet and the young people creating it  will never be as valuable as the people and inventions his age and  older. And he is not alone. There are many wealthy white men throughout  the world who believe things were better when the power sat solely in  their soft, manicured hands. These are the men who laugh a little too  long at the part when Don Draper asks Roger Sterling, "What do women  want?" and Sterling replies, "Who cares?" But the good news is that the  reason these people bitterly cling to the past so damn tightly is  because they can see it slipping away. They're thrashing the way a man  on a sinking ship might futilely thrash at land well out of his reach,  kicking his legs until the very moment the water overtakes him. They are  a dying breed, and they know it, which is why they take it out on  people younger than them by calling our culture debased and calling us  "internet girls." They'll be gone soon, but in the meantime it's up to  us to ensure they know who they're talking to while they're still  around: That's internet woman to you, motherfuckers.
Cord Jefferson is a writer in Los Angeles.
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