Captain Marvel Has No Patience For Shapeshifting Old Ladies And Nick Fury In New Trailer

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Every generation needs a hero, and honestly, I’m pretty jealous of the kids (and adults) who get to grow up with Brie Larson’s Captain Marvel in the world. She flies six-times the speed of sound, has super-strength, emits blasts of radiant energy, and looks rad as hell while doing it — like an alien gladiator flying through space, looking for bad guys to punch in the face.

On Monday (December 3), Marvel dropped the action-packed second trailer for the female-led superhero flick, and not only does it show us the first footage of Captain Marvel and her Kree physiology in action, but it also dives deep into the noble warrior hero’s backstory.

Because every superhero has an origin story — and Carol Danvers’s story is a wild ride through space and time:

If you can’t already tell by the hair and Nick Fury’s more youthful appearance, Captain Marvel is set in the 90s. The film will trace Carol Danvers’s complicated origins, explaining how she went from human U.S. Air Force pilot to Kree warrior fighting a war with the Skrulls on an alien planet — and how she ultimately ended up back on Earth.

With just a few short months between the release of Captain Marvel and Avengers 4, the film will no doubt reveal how she finds herself in the future with Captain America, Iron Man, and company a few decades after the events of her own film. All she has to do is answer the call.

Captain Marvel hits theaters March 8, 2019.

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Why Squidward Was the Wake-up Call I Needed Most When I Was Depressed

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By Clarkisha Kent

When SpongeBob SquarePants creator Stephen Hillenburg passed away last Tuesday, I found myself thinking a lot about the impact of his show on pop culture and the hard and funny lessons it taught me, particularly about my depression. How I came to comprehend it in the first place was through Hillenburg’s creation of Squidward Q. Tentacles.

For better or for worse (but mostly for better), I’ve related closely to Sir Tentacles in recent years because of how he’s helped me understand depression in general, how it operates in my life, and how to deal with it. I could probably trace its origins back a little further — abusive families will do that — but I wasn’t officially diagnosed with depression and PTSD until after I suffered a debilitating ACL injury between my sophomore and junior year of college. In the aftermath, I sometimes wouldn’t eat or bathe for days. I occasionally ate too much. I went from sleeping normally to either sleeping all day or being up all night. I became even more jumpy and anxious than my upbringing had taught me to be. I lost interest in a lot of the things I loved — including writing. And I found that I completely avoided the soccer field where the injury had taken place.

From that point, there were many things I did to cope. Binge-watching SpongeBob Squarepants was one of them, usually with pizza rolls and alcohol. (For some people, emotional eating and drinking aren’t too far behind depression.) I did attempt to give myself a fair and healthy shake at dealing head-on with my struggles through therapy — which worked for the three seconds I could actually afford to pay for therapy.

Though I had spent my early childhood roasting Squidward for his “nasty” attitude, I saw myself very clearly — and rather uncomfortably — in him this time around. For myself and other Black millennials I knew, who were far more likely to dismiss the importance of mental health, it was perhaps the wake-up call we needed.

Squidward exhibited many of the symptoms and hallmarks of major clinical depression. At the Krusty Krab, he was always tired and regularly regretted getting out of bed and going to work. He was apathetic about his own existence, and the existence of others. When pushed to his emotional limits by SpongeBob, he often experienced bursts of anger — either from irritability or frustration. He was disinterested in performing happiness and joy publicly in ways that made those around him more comfortable — particularly in the workplace — but recognized that his “nasty” attitude had to be contained somewhat because… capitalism. And he was extremely discontent with and resentful about the mundane turn his life had taken: getting up to go to work, being miserable at work, coming home, sleeping, and maybe finding a sliver of joy in between from playing his clarinet.

In “Band Geeks,” one of the series’ most beloved episodes, Squidward’s despair comes to a head. His high school nemesis Squilliam Fancyson pops up to deride his lack of of professional and personal success, goading him into accepting an offer to the Bubble Bowl halftime show with his nonexistent band.

While it remains one of the few moments in the series where Squidward “wins” (as SpongeBob rallies the denizens of Bikini Bottom together for the performance), the envy, regret, and frustration he experiences during this episode is 100 percent relatable. I mean, technically, Squidward is doing decently enough. He’s employed and maintains a roof over his head. But he’s also stuck in what many of us would consider a dead-end job, is likely paid minimum wage by Mr. Krabs, who is extremely cheap (just like a Baby Boomer!), and at this point, has come nowhere close to realizing any of his dreams (the very same that he’s shown to have buried in “One Krab’s Trash”). When Squilliam comes to town and flaunts his own success, Squidward is forced to confront everything he’s given up on.

Let me tell you: As a millennial of color who lives in constant existential dread just at the idea of having to maybe show up at my high school reunion, I feel this. A lot. Dread about being that nobody at the reunion. Dread about financial insecurity. Dread about uncertain futures. Dread about barely making enough (or even minimum wage) to cover the necessities like housing and healthcare that should be guaranteed. That’s not even getting into the hefty school loan debt that our generation collectively faces, the ugly gap in how this dread is distributed when we break down race or gender, and so many other things.

Overeducated. Underpaid. Underappreciated. Undermined.

It’s all dreadful, truly. So why wouldn’t millennials like myself relate to Squidward?

But even so, it’s not all gloom and doom with him. Like many folx who may be living with depression or some other mental health issue (and are perhaps undiagnosed), he can still display the full range of his humanity (and the human experience). Case in point, though he despises work, and by extension SpongeBob, when the latter is mistreated at the hands of a customer in “Pizza Delivery,” Squidward is incensed, empathizes, and fiercely steps in to defend him. In “Band Geeks,” when he proves Squilliam wrong, we see him experiencing pure and unadulterated joy. And while he can be read as battling a mental health issue, he deals with it mostly through his dry, caustic, and bitingly sarcastic wit. The scope of his character ensured that I could identify with him, that myself and other folx who live with mental health issues could see that we are normal, everyday people who aren’t just “sad” all the time. That our existences are nuanced, as are our struggles, and how we cope with them.

Such nuance includes the observation that, as one person tweeted, some Black families have at least one family member that we just don’t talk about because most of the family has written them off as “crazy.” Such nuance comes with the understanding that while younger generations of Black people understand the impact that poor mental health can have, we’re mostly ill-equipped and ill-prepared to discuss or properly combat it. Instead, we’ve been told that the solution is merely to pray it away, that these are “White People diseases” that we’re dealing with, or that the suffering reflects poorly on us and our families. To alleviate the most biting symptoms of our mental health issues, we’re turning to less-than-ideal coping mechanisms, self-medication in various forms and, for myself, self-deprecating humor. Especially when we cannot afford therapy or are too ashamed to engage in it, even when we know we need it.

None of this is cut and dry, because people aren’t cut and dry. If this nuance doesn’t sum up the plight of millennials of color and our other unhealthy coping mechanisms, I don’t know what does. And perhaps Hillenburg was writing with us in mind all along.

Whatever the case, Squidward, at the hands of Hillenburg, joins a long line of fictional characters in our cultural lexicon who can be interpreted as living with mental health issues, but still live the fullest ranges of their truths on our TV screens. Characters like Eeyore. Or Oscar the Grouch. Sailor Saturn. Dr. Cox. Bojack Horseman. They’re all vibrant and often painful reminders that we aren’t alone.

Squidward is a testament to Hillenburg’s commitment to truthful, humorous, and touching storytelling. And our culture is so much poorer with his passing.

If you or someone you know are struggling with emotional health issues, help is available. Head to halfofus.com for more resources.

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Watching YouTubers use paint-by-numbers kits is wildly soothing

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As the daughter and granddaughter of two artists who are very persnickety about what constitutes as “real art,” I’m reluctant to reveal my love of paint-by-number kits. 

Specifically, watching the completion of paint-by-number kits on YouTube. (I suspect talks of extraditing me from the family is now underway.) 

Paint-by-number kits are a bygone pastime that first emerged in 1953, invented by Craft Masters to enrapture mid-century craft enthusiasts. While the popularity of these kits have waxed and waned over the years, it appears that it is in the midst of another resurgence — and it’s all being documented on YouTube.

A new generation of YouTubers is discovering these kits and are happily sharing their experiences with them, documenting their challenges, what they enjoyed, tips, and of course the painting process itself.

If you’ve never had the pleasure of completing a paint-by-number kit, allow me to explain the very simple process. 

Each paint-by-number kit typically contains a board — sometimes a canvas, or heavy weight paper — with an image printed on it. The image is segmented into smaller sections checkered with an array of numbers. Each number corresponds to a set of numbered paints indicating what section should be painted with each color. 

These kits range in difficulty, from simpler kits designed with kids in mind, to the more complicated and complex ones for a more time-involved activity. 

Watching people gradually create works of art — however manufactured they may be — is extremely relaxing and ASMR-esque. It’s also a fun reminder that you yourself are capable of creating the exact same work of art if you so choose. 

In one of art enthusiast ALLJArt‘s videos, she explains that a lot of people enjoy painting but dislike drawing, or mocking up their own original paintings.

She also suspects people find the process of freely painting to be calming and zen-like, similar to the experience of coloring in a coloring book.

Regardless of how or why people find themselves getting involved with paint-by-numbers, the YouTube results remain a soothing balm, perfect for zoning out to. 

Just take a look at this simple landscape come to life!

Or, take a peak at this “mindful painting” video time-lapse that documents a crowned flamingo being formed:

Are these the most beautiful works of art I’ve ever seen? Hardly. But, I weirdly love them all the same. 

If you can appreciate the meticulousness of the activity, and have an affinity for coloring I’m positive that you’ll be able to appreciate these kitschy videos.

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This Bazzi Super Fan Just Got Three Giant Framed Photos From Her Mom

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A 17-year-old Bazzi super fan and her equally obsessed mom are proving a point: Stanning doesn’t have to be kept a secret from your family.

That’s the lesson to be learned after Tammy surprised her daughter, Savannah, with three massive photos of Bazzi, one of the high school student’s all-time favorite artists. Just as much as Savannah shares her fandom online, both mother and daughter express their love of Bazzi in the real world, too.

Just one day after seeing Bazzi for the first time at 106.1 KISS FM’s Jingle Ball in Dallas, Tammy pulled out all the stops for her daughter. Though Tammy’s rather new to the “Beautiful” singer’s fandom, Savannah is a long-term, card-carrying member.

“I started to stan fully this April when he released Cosmic, his album,” Savannah tells MTV News. “I immediately felt a connection to the album and the fact that he literally put his heart and soul into it. The lyrics and meaning behind each song are so powerful and I think that’s what made me fall in love with them.”

And while her mom wasn’t a full-fledged fan just yet, Tammy was fully aware of Bazzi as a result of Savannah’s stanning and attendance at the Cosmic tour earlier this year.

“[My mom] was super excited because of how highly I talk about him and his stage presence,” Savannah explains. “We saw him and, of course, she fell more in love, so the next day she spends time looking him up and watching all his interviews on YouTube. And while she’s doing this, she’s texting me the whole time while I was in school and telling me all the new stuff she found out about him.”

Little did Savannah know, Tammy was plotting the giant photo surprise for her daughter as a birthday present.

“I loved his music even more after hearing him live!” Tammy tells MTV News about Bazzi’s performance. “After seeing all the great photos of Bazzi on Instagram, I thought this would be a great idea. I mean, come on; who wouldn’t love looking at his beautiful face everyday all day?!”

Savannah’s tweet showing her mom with the three life-size Bazzis immediately caught the love and affection of fellow fans, all in agreement that Tammy is the definition of mom goals.

“I was pretty shocked at all the attention the photo got,” Tammy says. “I mean it’s just me being me.”

Being supportive of her daughter’s interests isn’t anything new for Tammy. In fact, it’s Savannah and Tammy’s shared fandom of Bazzi and other musicians that keeps their relationship so tight.

“It honestly means the world to me that she supports me and my stan life, for Bazzi and for other artists,” Savannah says about her mom. “She’s my best friend and I always keep her up to date with the new artists nowadays.”

Tammy’s parenting philosophy is different from what most would expect from a stan’s parents. She actively makes an effort to listen to what Savannah’s into and show support for her daughter’s interests.

“I was told most parents don’t get into their kids’ music much,” Tammy explains. “I’m a firm believer in order to stay close and connected, sometimes we have to join them in their likes and dislikes!”

“Parents are so busy nowadays making a living they forget the little things,” Tammy continues. “It’s the little things that mean the most! And my daughter Savannah is my top priority!”

As far as the three framed photos go, Savannah and Tammy already have a plan for where they’re going.

“I’m definitely planning on hanging them up,” Savannah says. “My mom has already said she wants the larger one put in her room, being it’s the first time she’s seen Bazzi and she wants a huge picture of his face hanging in her room. I couldn’t agree more.”

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The Dyson Pure Hot+Cool is an air purifier, heater, and fan combined

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Dyson launched a big upgrade to its air purifier earlier this year with the Dyson Pure Cool.

The UK-based company is now launching a new version called the the Pure Hot+Cool. As you might suspect, it’s the same general idea, only this time the purifier can heat the air as well as cool it. It’s a costly three in one product, though, with a $649.99 price tag — a full $100 more than the Pure Cool.

The Pure Hot+Cool sticks with an elongated oval design similar to previous fans. The cylindrical base contains the filters. The oval on top of the base pushes the air outward via Dyson’s Air Multiplier tech (used on all the company’s fans, heaters, and air purifiers). It can oscillate side to side, and can also change to a backward-airflow mode so the air blows from the sides instead of the front.

In heating mode, you can set a desired temperature on the Hot+Cool or via the companion app or the small circular display on the front. Unlike the Dyson Hot fans, when the desired room temperature is achieved, the fan doesn’t stop; it still blows to purify the air, but the heating elements are switched off.

Cooling mode is what it sounds like and is exactly how the Pure Cool works now.

Dyson’s purification tech uses lasers (as well as other sensors) to measure and identify particles that are floating around. It also monitors the humidity and temperature to know what particles are in the air, including pollen, NO2, formaldehyde, benzene, and other bacteria. A HEPA filter will capture those particles as they’re sucked in.

The Pure Hot+Cool has a backward airflow mode to prevent the purifier from blowing in your face while still getting the benefit of air purification.

The Pure Hot+Cool has a backward airflow mode to prevent the purifier from blowing in your face while still getting the benefit of air purification.

With the Dyson app, you can control and monitor the purifier’s performance, and you can check your air quality in real time. You can also look at the air quality historically, going back to when you first switched it on. The app also tells you when to change the filters.

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Drake’s 2018 Streams Are In The Billions, With A ‘B’

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Every December, while we patiently wait for those sweet, automated Spotify year-end playlists to hit our phones, we’re treated to an even larger banquet of number-crunching — namely the granular data that reveals which artists had the best 2018 as far as streaming is concerned. Now we know who ruled, and the answer makes total sense to anyone who’s been following along not just the Hot 100 chart all year, but certainly culture at large.

And the person who ruled, naturally, is Drake.

Spotify revealed Tuesday (December 4) that Drizzy had another gargantuan year on the platform. In addition to becoming its most-streamed artist of all time, he was streamed 8.2 billion times in 2018 alone. It’s fitting, given how three of his singles — “God’s Plan,” “Nice for What,” and “In My Feelings” — hit No. 1 this year; just yesterday, Travis Scott’s “Sicko Mode,” on which Drake features, also hit No. 1. The dude needs to cover Nelly at his next karaoke outing.

“What an amazing way to end off the year,” Drake wrote on Instagram to celebrate the dual achievements.

Following Drake on Spotify’s most-streamed artists lists are Post Malone, XXXTENTACION, J Balvin, and Ed Sheeran. Ariana Grande, whose also had a massive year, overtook Rihanna as the platform’s most-streamed female artist and the most-streamed female artist of 2018, ahead of Dua Lipa, Cardi B, Taylor Swift, and Camila Cabello.

The good news didn’t stop there, though. Drake was also chosen as Apple Music’s artist of the year as well. He also had three songs — his three No. 1s, to be precise — in the top five of that platform’s top 100 global songs chart.

Congrats to Drizzy for all these accomplishments, but also for being the object of desire for people looking to raise the profiles of their weak-as-fuck IGs.

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There’s more than one Hannukah song, y’all

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When I was in elementary school, my chorus teacher, riding that multicultural music wave, introduced some Hanukkah songs into our holiday concert line-up that were extremely — how do I say it? — bad.

I can’t blame her. The only Hanukkah song most of the gentile (and even many of the Jewish) community knew back then and know now is “Dreidel, Dreidel, Dreidel.” So my teacher took whatever complimentary Hanukkah sheet music she got in the mail and made do with those somber minor chords.

It didn’t have to be that way. There’s plenty of  … better Hanukkah music out there. You just need to know where to look (this post). 

Read on for some of the best Hanukkah music available — for your Spotify playlist or elementary school concert.

1. Adam Sandler, “The Hanukkah Song”

Sandler first performed this song in 1994 for Saturday Night Live. It centers on the feelings of Jewish kids forced to endure Christmas, and it has been a Hanukkah staple ever since. 

2. Matsiyahu, “Miracle”

You have to give Matsiyahu credit for this combination of labels: He creates dancehall jam-band-style Jewish-American reggae music. I’m extremely here for one of his best creations, “The Hanukkah Song.” It premiered in 2010 and climbed to the top of the charts. 

As Matsiyahu claimed on NPR’s “All Things Considered,” part of the reason his song was so popular was simple scarcity. Jewish-American artists, he said, have been far too busy creating Christmas music to develop any of their own. 

3. Levees, “How do you spell Hanukkah?”

I don’t think I’ve spelled Hanukkah correctly in my 35 years on this earth. If you see the word spelled correctly in this piece, it’s only because of my editor.

4. Saturday Night Live, “Christmastime for the Jews”

This 2005 SNL sketch captures what’s truly great about the holiday: no lines at movie theaters.

5. The Maccabeats, “Candlelight”

I suffered through four years of terrible liberal arts college a capella music. But I’ve been able to look past my trauma for “Candelight,” a Hanukkah song made by a capella group The Maccabeats and inspired by Taio Cruz’s “Dynamite.” Thankfully, this one comes with a beat.

It’s an obscenely, borderline offensively dorky Hanukkah masterpiece.

6. Barenaked Ladies, “Hanukkah, O Hanukkah”

My apologies: Any post involving the Barenaked Ladies should come with a trigger warning. If you’re going to listen to the Ladies, let it be this song, which features atmospheric ancient civilization chants. 

7. Sharon Jones & The Dap Kings, “8 Days of Hanukkah”

If you’re interested in *hip* phunky soulful Hanukkah music, this is your choice … your only choice. 

8. Erran Baron Cohen, “Hanukkah O Hanukkah”

This Hanukkah classic sounds like a really good Casio keyboard demo. I’ve got a soft spot for the Hebrew rapping and the sick *flute* work.

Bonus: Erran Baron Cohen is Sacha Baron Cohen’s brother and wrote original music for his show.

9. Rugrats, “Hanukkah O Hannukah”

For those of us who love baby voices (not me) there’s this Rugrats hit, which I guess appeals to someone out there.

10. Six13, “A Hamilton Hanukkah”

If you’re going to do musical parodies, let them be choreographed Hanukkah parodies sung by Hamilton nerds.

11. Erran Baron Cohen, “Ocho Kandalikas”

Pretty much any song from Baron Cohen’s album, “Songs in the Key of Hanukkah,” is great. I’m a particular fan of this one, which falls into my favorite category: sultry Hanukkah music.

12. Tom Lehrer, “Hanukkah in Santa Monica”

This hit definitely falls into the category of “music my father finds funny and no one else.” A nostalgic favorite nonetheless.

13. Woody Guthrie, “Hanukkah Dance”

I don’t typically associate “religious Jewish celebration” with Woody Guthrie. Nothing about this song screams dance, either, unless your version of dancing is “gentle foot-tapping.”

A winner.

14. “The Hanukkah Waltz,” Bela Fleck and the Flecktones

It’s moody, dark, and decidedly un-festive — just the way I like my holiday music. 

15. “Rock of Ages,” Def Leppard

Leppard appears to have taken the title of this song from the traditional prayer sung after the Menorah is lit. There’s really no other Hannukah elements involved; I’m just happy to include it on this list.

16. Six13, “A Bohemian Hanukah”

Hanukkah-o let me go and enjoy this song!

Happy eight nights of Hanukkah karaoke, everyone. 

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Night King actor reveals pretty big spoiler about a vital scene in ‘Game of Thrones’ Season 8

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Warning: Spoilers for Game of Thrones Season 8 may lie ahead!

You know it’s coming. You might even have seen that major spoiler. The ultimate battle between the living and the dead will be upon us in Season 8 of Game of Thrones. And one major character just let slip a pretty big piece of information about said battle. 

Game of Thrones star Vladimír Furdík, who plays the frightening, blue-eyed creature that is The Night King, revealed that the legendary battle might be on your screen sooner that you’d expect. 

Since Game of Thrones has the habit of letting the penultimate episode of the season be the most dramatic (see episodes “The Rains of Castamere,” “Battle of the Bastards,” and “Beyond the Wall” for reference), fans had expected the fifth episode of the six-part finale to feature the battle-to-end-all-battles.

But, according to Furdík, we won’t have to wait quite that long. Speaking at a fan convention in Hungary, the Slovakian actor said that the battle will take place in the middle of the season. 

“In the third episode of the last season, there is a battle that the creators intended to be a historic moment in television,” said Furdík, according to Hungarian site SorozatWiki. Mashable had a native speaker of Hungarian verify the translation of the quote.

Furdík is talking about the battle that famously took 55 days to film. According to Furdík, the 55-day battle has been cut down to about an hour of action-packed television. 

“Almost the full episode will be about the battle, it will take about one hour,” Furdík said. 

This changes everything, honestly. We have no idea what to expect anymore. 

H/T Metro.

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