Quantcast
Channel: Oh No They Didn't!
Viewing all 160812 articles
Browse latest View live

Lionsgate buys 'Dirty 30', a film starring Grace Helbig, Mamrie Hart, and Hannah Hart.


Tayvin is unbroken: Calvin shows up to Taylor's Miami Concert.

0
0



Her guest performers for the night were Ricky Martin & Pitbull. D-Wade also came out to give her a lucky #13 Heat jersey.



source 12

Marc Jacobs addresses NY Post takedown with scathing open letter

0
0


Marc Jacobs has been no stranger to negative press over the course of his career. Recently, though, it seems as though the media has it out for the once-wunderkind fashion designer. In particular, the New York Post has seemingly been having a little too much fun painting Jacobs in a none too flattering light--on Saturday, they published Maureen Callahan's smear piece What’s wrong with Marc Jacobs? Mystery of business struggles, bizarre behavior, which relied heavily on recycled bits of old articles to highlight Jacobs' history of addiction, critical denouncement, and business blunders, and imply that history was repeating itself for the former Louis Vuitton creative director. Then there was Sunday's Page Six piece, in which an insider gave lurid details of an alleged 10-person orgy of twenty-somethings selected via Grindr and hosted by Jacobs.

Never one to play coy about his sexual escapades, Jacobs responded to the orgy exposé with his trademark mix of candor and humor via Instagram, writing, "Wild? I'd say 'mild'," and wishing the blabbermouth guest "good health, happiness, and a long life to enjoy taking advantage of the kindness of strangers and talking shit about others."

Jacobs took far less kindly to Callahan's takedown, however. In another Instagram post, he penned a scathing open letter to the journalist, before linking to a far more sensitive piece about himself published to another blog.

An open letter to MAUREEN CALLAHAN

Girl, I think I understand your pain. You're a sick woman. It must be such a sad, unfulfilling and lonely existence to get paid for "writing" (I use the term loosely) an article put together from out of context information "written" by other journalists over a period of time, for different periodicals, in different countries. I can't even imagine your suffering having made a life and name working for what has to be the worlds worst, trashiest, and most irresponsible of "newspapers" (LOL)! I can imagine the powerful and fulfilling feeling you must feel with each piece you "write" that helps yourself and your readers feel better about their lives by putting down others who are so fortunate as to have been blessed with a genuine passion for creation. Those creative individuals who like everyone else has feelings, a sexual appetite, "issues", character defects, and professional ups and downs. If you were a real writer and not the parasite feeding off of the successes and failures of others I wouldn't bother writing my thoughts here. I do feel sorry for you. Please know you are in my prayers. I hope you will someday find something, somewhere that gives you pleasure...and not at another's expense. Should that moment happen for you, please don't thank me. I only wish the best for everyone. Even you.

Sincerely and disrespectfully,
Marc (Jacobs)




Source

Kendrick Drops Video for "These Walls"

0
0


source
falkdjfkaldjf @  terry crews and kendrick dancing

Adele shares her guilty-pleasure TV shows

0
0



- Adele's guilty-pleasure TV shows are MTV’s Teen Mom, The Walking Dead, and American Horror Story.

SOURCE
what's your guilty pleasure shows?

Queen Celine Joins Instagram! + Works On French Record

0
0

celinedion Hello Instagram! / Bonjour Instagram! #firstselfie

Celine joined instagram yesterday!
She's currently working on her french album which is supposed to be released next year. She's also going to record an English album which is supposed to be released in 2017.



What's your favorite instagram account ONTD?!

SOURCE
SOURCE

Alber Elbaz Exits Lanvin, Wishing House ‘the Future It Deserves’

Amber Heard Gets Pranked By Johnny Depp and Her Dad on 'Overhaulin'!


alessia cara performs "here" on the ellen show

Updated Oscar Predictions

0
0
Scott Feinberg edition


twitter


Best Actor
1. Leonardo DiCaprio - The Revenant
2. Matt Damon - The Martian
3. Johnny Depp - Black Mass
4. Will Smith - Concussion
5. Eddie Redmayne - The Danish Girl

Best Actress
1. Brie Larson - Room
2. Saoirse Ronan - Brooklyn
3. Jennifer Lawrence - Joy
4. Cate Blanchett - Carol
5. Blythe Danner - I’ll See You in My Dreams (huh)

Best Supporting Actor
1. Tom Hardy - The Revenant
2. Paul Dano - Love & Mercy (huh)
3. Mark Ruffalo - Spotlight
4. Michael Keaton - Spotlight
5. Mark Rylance - Bridge of Spies

Best Supporting Actress
1. Alicia Vikander - The Danish Girl
2. Rooney Mara - Carol
3. Kate Winslet - Steve Jobs
4. Jane Fonda - Youth
5. Elizabeth Banks - Love & Mercy (huh)

more weird predictions @ hollywoodreporter

Brie needs a tag!

breaking: taylor swift hangs out with men as well as woman

Demi performs "Confident" on GMA + #1 on the Global Album Charts

0
0
Demi Lovato performs "Confident" on Good Morning America with live band.

Confident is No.1 on Global Album Charts


Demetria Devonne 'Demi' Lovato's fifth studio album Confident, debuted at #1 on the Global Chart Album with 186,000 sales. The biggest part of it comes from the USA with 76,600 copies, but the set sold also extraordinarily in Latin America, especially (Come to) Brazil and Mexico. Her last self-titled album landed at no.2 with 139,000 in the week 22, 2013.

American a cappella group, Pentatonix landed no.2 on the charts with 118,000 units sold.

Source: Youtube | Global Album Charts / Media Traffic



Cracker Barrel, who?

Lexi Alexander on Why More Women Aren’t Directing Superhero Franchises

0
0








It's a short interview, so I would definitely read. A great standout:

A lot of talk has surrounded Effie Brown and the current season of Project Greenlight — what should viewers take away from this show when it comes to the treatment of women in Hollywood?
It’s a case study of how Hollywood functions: The passive-aggressive punishment from the mighty and powerful when someone disrupts their fake PR liberalism. I mean, you have to have some nerve to quit the show, like the Farrelly brothers, or shut someone up right on camera, like Matt Damon did to Effie merely because someone questions their rather ambiguous commitment to diversity and inclusion. Effie is a successful, black female producer, a fact that seemed to fly right over their heads.

Source

Dianna Agron Gives Interview With BUST For Ucoming Film Bare + Cute Instagram Pics

0
0

-She's tried to pick different characters who aren't the same
-Thinks that director Natalia Leite and Alexandra Leite (producer of Bare) are very talented
-When asked if she feels close to the LGBT community she says she feels like people should be represented and tell their stories

Bare trailer in case ya missed it



She's currently filming Hollow In The Land

diannaagron #hotlinebling #HollowInTheLand

lol

diannaagron When you and your stunt double look practically identical. 😂 Wide shots. Really, really wide shots. 👩🏼👨🏼🚙🎥


diannaagron 👻👻👻


jessicasueann Caterpillar Camouflage 🐛@diannaagron #WhereIsDi #HollowInTheLand


1 / 2 / 3

Rick Ross (aka William Leonard Roberts II, aka Teflon Da Don, aka Ricky Rozay) remixed Adele's Hello


Female-Centric Movies Make a Ton of Money

0
0



From the article:
"In ten years of filmmaking, films with male leads grossed an average of $80.6 million, while top-grossing films within the same time frame starring female leads grossed an average of $126.1 million."

Source

New poster for 'Jessica Jones' highlights David Tennant's Purple Man

ONTD Original™: 5 Scary Urban Legends

0
0


Everyone knows them.You have probably told one, or you heard it as a "true story" from a friend of a friend. These modern horror folktales stick with us regardless of logic and truth. Here are five urban legends that continue to creep us out to this day, and the movies, TV shows, and books that they have inspired.






A teenage babysitter receives a phone call while her wards sleep upstairs. The person on the other line asks her if she is alone, or if she has checked on the children lately. Thinking it is nothing but a prank, the babysitter hangs up. The calls continue throughout the night, and the babysitter finally calls the police for help. A cop says that they will have the phone company trace the call. When the cops calls back, he tells her that the calls are coming from a second phone line inside the house. The caller, a deranged killer, has murdered the children upstairs in their bedroom, and he heads downstairs to finish off the babysitter...

In some variations, the children survive, or they disappear along with the killer. Another take has the kids making the prank calls because they do not like the babysitter.


Fright (1971): A babysitter's life is in peril as her charge's dangerous father escapes from a mental hospital.

Black Christmas (1974): A sorority house's residents are threatened by an unseen caller.

Halloween (1978): A babysitter is targeted by a masked killer.

When a Stranger Calls (1979): A babysitter barely survives an ordeal involving a man calling from inside the house she was staying at. Years later, she receives a visit from the stranger. In the 1993 sequel When a Stranger Calls Back, the trope is completely reworked. In fact, the phone is hardly used in the opening. The 2006 remake of the original was devoted primarily to the babysitter's night of terror.

Scream (1996): A horror movie buff/serial killer calls his first victim and plays a trivia game with her over the phone. What the teen does not know is that the caller is lurking around her house.

Babysitter Wanted (2008): While the movie starts off like the urban legend, it has a completely different ending.


30 Rock, episode "Corporate Crush": Liz Lemon's boss Jack becomes too attached to her boyfriend Floyd. He constantly calls the couple as they hide out in Lemon's apartment. The infamous "the call is coming from inside the house" is jokingly uttered by Liz as they realize Jack is in the building.

Regular Show, episode "Terror Tales from the Park III": Thomas tries to tell the story to his friends, but he messes up the ending by saying, "...and the maniac was calling from outside the house! Wait, is that right? I mean, I mean, inside the house!"

Bud Ice commercial (1996): A couple receives an ominous yet silly phone call inquiring about their beer, and the cops trace it to the upstairs line. The culprit turns out to be a penguin.


The Babysitter quadrilogy (1989-1995) by R.L. Stine: Jenny is being tormented over the phone while babysitting. In the first book, the caller and killer is the father of the child she is watching over; Jenny's therapist's receptionist is responsible in the second entry; in the third book, Jenny herself is threatening her cousin over the phone; and finally in the last of the series, the danger at hand is caused by the ghosts of two dead kids.


In 1950, thirteen-year old Janett Christman was murdered by an unknown assailant in Columbia, Missouri while babysitting. Although the window was broken with a garden hose, evidence contradicts that the intruder ever entered that way. It is presumed that Janett recognized her killer, and she opened the front door for them. Local authorities received a brief phone call from Christman during the crime, but it was too late. The prime suspect, Robert Mueller, passed a lie detector test and later sued the police for holding him illegally. The crime remains unsolved. (For more information, watch the documentary Killer Legends.) SOURCE



A woman driving home late one night notices another car driving closely behind her. She signals to the other driver that he should pass. Instead, the other car turns on their high beams and continues to flash the woman's car. The woman finally reaches home, and her pursuer pulls up in behind her. As she runs towards her house, the stranger in the other car pulls an armed man from the woman's back seat. He was trying to warn her by flashing his brights.

A common variation (aptly called "Killer in the Back Seat") has the woman stopping for gas, and an employee brings the lady inside the store to discuss a problem with her form of payment. This is merely done to get the woman to safety as the attendant spotted a knife wielding maniac in the back seat.

There are other car related legends that include madmen. The most famous might be "The Hook" - a couple's makeout session in a secluded area is interrupted by a radio report of an escaped convict with a hook in place of one hand. The girl urges her beau to take her home, and they later find a bloody hook hanging off the passenger side door handle.

In "The Boyfriend's Death," the young man leaves his girlfriend alone in the car to go buy some gas. As the evening continues, the woman hears a scraping noise on the roof. She ignores it until morning when a cop comes to help. He tells her to walk to his squad car without turning around. She does not abide and she sees her dead boyfriend hanging from a tree above the car. The scraping noise the girlfriend heard all night was the ring on his finger scratching the roof as he swayed.


Nightmares(1983): The first story ("Terror in Topanga") in this horror omnibus features a woman in need of cigarettes. Despite there being a warning out about a killer on the loose, the woman goes out that night to find some smokes.

Urban Legend (1998): A college student believes she has escaped imminent danger, but she is wrong. The Tamil remake Whistle in 2003 has the same scene.


Beyond Belief: Fact or Fiction, segment "Bright Lights": A woman refutes a trucker's flirtations at a diner, and she drives out of the parking lot without realizing someone is in her back seat. The story was deemed false.

Millennium, episode "The Pest House": The characters investigate a series of murders based on popular urban myths. A gas station attendant notices the perpetrator in a woman's back seat.

Veronica Mars, episode "Leave It to Beaver": The person responsible for murdering Veronica's best friend sneaks into the titular character's back seat.


Bad Monkeys (2007) by Matt Ruff: The myth makes its way into the story, but it does not play out in the traditional way. A character says, "There's a guy with an ax hiding behind the driver's seat, isn't there. Don't worry, he's not going to hurt me."

John Dies at the End (2007) by David Wong: The protagonist discovers someone in his back seat, but this person seems to only want to talk. For now.


The modern adage of "check your back seats before you get in" is not unheard of, and there seems to be a few real life crimes with similarities to the myth.




A young girl is left home alone while her parents are out. When she goes to sleep, her loyal dog takes his spot beneath the bed. The girl puts her hand down to receive a comforting lick from her beloved pet. Later in the evening, the girl wakes up. She goes to check if her parents are home yet, but their bed is empty. Upon returning to her room, she feels a bit uneasy. So she lowers her hand to feel that reassuring lick from her dog. The next morning, the girl wakes up and goes to her bathroom. She screams when she sees her dead dog hanging from the shower curtain rod. On the mirror written in the dog's blood is the message: "People can lick, too."

There is a similar story often dubbed "The Roommate's Death." In it, a student comes home to her dorm room that she shares with another young woman. Not wanting to awaken her sleeping roommate, she leaves the lights off as she readies for bed. The next morning, she wakes up to find her roommate dead and the bloody message "Aren't you glad you didn't turn the lights on?" on the wall.

A variation of the above tale has the two women staying in the dorm during the holidays while everyone else has gone home. One girl goes out for the night, leaving the other by herself. The remaining girl hears a scratching noise at the door throughout the night, and she is too terrified to check. She hides in the closet till morning. The noise has stopped, and the student opens the door. The other roommate is found dead, her throat cut and her fingers bloodied from scratching at the door all night, trying to get help.


Campfire Tales (1997): A teen is stalked by an online predator pretending to be a girl named "Jessica." As her family leaves her home alone with the dog, "Jessica" comes over to play...

Urban Legends: Bloody Mary (2005): When his friends start to die off, a jock hides out in a motel room with his dog. He has a rude awakening, though. The legend is mentioned in the previous movie, Urban Legends: Final Cut, too.

Supernatural, episode "Family Remains": A girl feels her "dog" lick her hand from under the bed, but then sees her dog come in from the hallway. In the episode "Hook Man," a few well known urban legends - including the "Aren't you glad you didn't turn the lights on?" one - are played out.

Fortunately for everyone, no. The legend as well as the related ones were probably created as a cautionary tale for women being on their own or living alone.



A woman and her sick mother check into a motel. The daughter goes to fill a prescription at an all night pharmacy. When she returns to the hotel, her key no longer works. She asks the man at the front desk for help, but he does not recognize her. He finally opens the door to her room, revealing that it is empty. The woman's mother is never seen again.

In a less open ended telling, the daughter learns that her mother died of a deadly, contagious disease (like the plague), and the hotel staff got rid of her body. To ensure that the hotel's reputation is not affected by this, they pretend that the woman and her mother never checked in to the hotel.


The Lady Vanishes (1938): Aboard a train, a socialite says an elderly passenger has disappeared, but no one has even heard of or seen this missing woman. Remade twice: once in 1979 and again in 2013.

So Long at the Fair (1950): A woman in Paris believes her brother has gone missing from their hotel. However, the staff has no recollection of him ever checking in.

Dangerous Crossing (1953): On a cruise, a wife says her husband has gone missing. Yet the manifest lists her as traveling alone. Remade as a TV movie, Treacherous Crossing, in 1992.

Bunny Lake is Missing (1965): Ann's daughter is nowhere to be found when she goes to pick her up at school, and no one believes that she ever existed.

Flightplan (2005): A recent widow with her young daughter in tow escorts her husband's body back to America from Berlin. After dozing off in mid-flight, the woman wakes up to find her daughter missing. The whole plane has no memory of the child ever getting on the plane.

Alfred Hitchcock Presents, episode "Into Thin Air": In a Parisian hotel, a woman claims her mother has gone missing from their room. Of course the staff has no record of her.

Beyond Belief: Fact or Fiction, segment "Room 245": Follows the original legend, and it is labeled as "Fact."

The End of Her Honeymoon (1913) by Marie Belloc Lowndes: On her honeymoon, a newlywed's husband disappears from their hotel.

There is conflicting information about the origins of this legend. While some say it is based on factual instances where hotels had to secretly discard of guests stricken with the plague, there is a lack of recorded evidence.



If you stand before a candlelit mirror and repeat "Bloody Mary" three or five times, an evil spirit will appear and possibly kill you.

She goes by many other names: Hell Mary, Mary Worth, Mary Worthington, Mary Whales, Mary Johnson, Mary Lou, Mary Jane, Sally, Kathy, Agnes, Black Agnes, Aggie, Svarte Madame.

There are different rituals for summoning Mary. Sometimes a candle must be lit before blowing it out after the third "Bloody Mary" is said. An alternate mantra is "I believe in Mary Worth."


Hello Mary Lou: Prom Night II (1987): In this supernatural sequel to the slasher Prom Night, a high school student accidentally unleashes the vengeful ghost of a 1957 mean girl named Mary Lou (one of Bloody Mary's nicknames). Mary Lou returned in Prom Night III.

Candyman (1992): The spirit of a tortured slave can be brought forth by saying his moniker "Candyman" three times in front of a mirror.

Urban Legend (1998): The protagonist and her best friend try to conjure Bloody Mary while standing outside Stanley Hall, the site of a supposed campus massacre.

Urban Legends: Bloody Mary (2005): Teens set loose the ghost of victimized Mary Banner, and urban legends inspire her killing methods.

Bloody Mary (2006): The nurses at a psychiatric hospital foolishly release the spirit of Bloody Mary upon the patients and staff.

Dead Mary (2007): A group of friends play a game of Dead Mary in this Evil Dead inspired slasher: say her name three times before a mirror and she will appear.

The Legend of Bloody Mary (2008): A young man feels guilty because his sister disappeared following a game of Bloody Mary.

Paranormal Activity 3 (2011): The kids in the movie try to do the ritual in a bathroom. The scene is notably different in the trailer.


The X-Files, episode "Syzygy": Characters play Bloody Mary in the episode.

Ghost Whisperer, episode "Don't Try This at Home": Melinda helps a group of college students that think they are being haunted by Bloody Mary.

Supernatural, episode "Bloody Mary": The history of this specific Bloody Mary is explored in detail.

The Haunting Hour, episode "Scary Mary" (parts 1 & 2): A local legend, Scary Mary, is more real than fiction. She want to steal the face of a particular teenager, too.


Mary: The Summoning (2014) by Hillary Monahan:  Shauna and her friends mess up the ritual for calling Mary Worth. Now their lives are in danger.

Say Her Name (2014) by James Dawson: When some boarding school kids play Bloody Mary, one girl wakes up with the message "Five days" written on her bathroom mirror.


It highly possible that the game is derived from old divination rituals used by the unmarried. In the dark, you said a rhyme that led to a glimpse of your future wife or husband in the mirror. There is also the universal belief that mirrors are the portals between the worlds of the living and the dead.

Bloody Mary is often confused with Mary I of England, who was known historically as "Bloody Mary," too. She was bestowed the epithet because she sentenced some Protestants to death whilst in pursuit of reestablishing Catholicism in her land. The Mary in the legend was typically a witch that was executed for practicing the dark arts, or a woman whose face was horribly disfigured in an accident. Some might mistake Mary Queen of Scots as the inspiration for Bloody Mary. Nothing in her history validates this.

The Japanese have a similar folktale, Hanako-san, that includes a WWII era girl that haunts school bathrooms when one shouts her name.

SOURCE



Images hosted at: Ultraimg

What's your favorite urban legend, ONTD? Know any true crimes that sound like they were inspired by these myths?

Selena Gomez to produce “13 Reasons Why” series on Netflix

0
0


  • Netflix ordered the show straight to series.

  • Selena Gomez and her mom, Mandy Teefey, will be executive producers of the show.

  • 13 Reasons Why is a 2007 book that follows a young teen, Hannah Baker, who committed suicide and left behind thirteen cassette tapes that reveal the reasons she decided to end her life.

  • Gomez was supposed to play Baker when it was first rumored years ago that the book would be adapted into a movie because the author thought she was perfect for the role.

  • This time, according to her rep, Selena will only produce the series and someone else will play the lead character.

sources: 1, 2

Mariah And A Few Other Celebs Attend Opening Of James Packer's Casino

0
0





-James Packer opened his 4.4 billion casino in Macau called Studio City
-Mariah performed
-Leonardo DiCaprio, Robert DeNiro and Martin Scorsese attended because they were in a short film promoting the casino


Leo


James, Leo, Martin, Brett Ratner, Robert DeNiro and his wife Grace


Red Carpet




Emotions (starts at 2 20)


Always Be My Baby


We Belong Together



1 / 2 / 3
Viewing all 160812 articles
Browse latest View live




Latest Images