Tuesday, December 11, 2012

Kristen Stewart On Her Commitment For 'On The Road' And ...

The Huffington Post has very recently published this interview with Kristen Stewart where she speaks about her commitment for ?On The Road? and reconnecting with her ?Twilight? fans. She also confirmed the rumour that she?ll be working in a new movie with Ben Affleck that starts filming in April.

Michael Hogan: I remember reading On the Road as a teenager, and the women didn?t register for me so much as characters. So I wonder, as a teenage girl reading it, how the women seemed to you when you first read the book?

Kristen Stewart: Yeah, it?s funny, they didn?t really register with me, either. People do love to say that this is a boy book and that the female characters tend
to be treated as play things and are peripheral. When you read the book, they tend to seem as though they?re almost like a tool for Kerouac to show that life?s crazy, that things are wild and sexy. That?s why, playing the part, we were privy to information that made this thing so different. I think getting to know the women behind the characters and getting to know Jack?s relationships with them and Neal?s relationships with them, it made it easier to play the character.

Did you meet LuAnne Henderson, whom your character, Marylou, is based on?

She had passed away, like, right before we started. But I met her daughter and there were hours and hours of tapes where she recalled her life in great detail, and very much within that time frame as well. When I first read the book ? I have brothers, and so I always felt like there wasn?t a huge distinction. I kinda wanted to be one of the boys for a while, and in some cases still do, and I think there are a lot of girls who read ?On the Road? who feel [that way]. I wasn?t aware then that the females weren?t at the forefront of the story. I was just so into the main characters, I was so enamored by them, I wanted to meet people in my life that were going to shock me and pull something out of me that I didn?t expect ?

Marylou?s a little bit that way too, isn?t she?

Oh, definitely. She was such a formidable partner for Neal [Cassady, the real-life inspiration for the book's Dean Moriarty]. Men, especially, love to identify with me and go, ?Well, you know, it?s kind of a misogynistic viewpoint. The book has a fairly chauvinist feel to it. How do you feel about that??

Kind of like my first question.

No, no, no. Not at all. That was actually really different. Because their thing is, ?Oh, how could they have allowed all those terrible things to happen to them?? It?s like, What makes you think that they were not absolute equal partners in that? What makes you think that they were taken from more than they gave, or more than they got back from the men that were apparently taking from them. I feel like getting to know LuAnne and who she was, and why she did the things that she did, and how she felt about them afterward, there was no thievery going on. She loved his life so much that she didn?t want to deprive him of any of that life, and he felt the same about her, and she very, very much carved her own path.

Obviously, you?re really asked to go places in this role. After I saw ?On the Road? in Toronto, I wrote an analysis of it, and one of the things I focused on is that you?re committing to the role to an admirable degree, with nudity, with sleeping with two men at the same time, with all this other stuff, and some people attacked me, saying, ?Just because she takes off her clothes, you think that?s real art?? But what I meant is that it?s an actor?s job to do the role she?s given without holding back. Can you help me defend myself a bit here?

[Laughs.] Actresses love to stand up and say, after they?ve shown their tits in a movie, that it was done tastefully and that it was, you know, far from gratuitous. I mean, projects that really require it are really few and far between. And I think that in this case, it needed to be. This book celebrates being alive and it celebrates being human, and if you want to cover up and deny any aspect of that, you are denying the spirit of the book. I think that it would have been so wrong to shy away from anything in this movie. I think that I would have gotten flak for that. I think that it would have been that I was scared to disappoint my ?Twilight? fans or something.

And I do hate also when people go, ?Oh, wow, great performance. So brave.? Oh, because I?m naked? That?s very annoying. But at the same time, if that?s what they?re focusing on, then ?On the Road? probably isn?t for them anyway. Also, I understand when people are already successful, you try to control some perception or you try to choose parts based on some expectation of what people are going to think. You?re clearly doing things because you want to be in some position of power and fame, which is not why I do what I do. And people, anyone that consumes that is then obviously going to think that you must have some consideration for those types of things, like what people are going to think.

But how hard is it ignore those considerations when you really are one of the biggest celebrities in the world? I mean, there?s no way around that.

It?s really not that hard. I can?t pragmatically approach anything in terms of my career. I need to be so rocked by something, so moved by something that the idea of letting it down or ruining it is painful, and that?s what gets you through the shoot. You read material and it provokes you on some level, and the reason you make the movie is to find out why it made you feel all those things. Those things are so rare to find that if you start also considering what people are going to think, you?ll never make a movie.

At the Toronto Film Festival, you took a full hour to come out and be with all your fans, and that was at a difficult time. How important was it for you to come out for the film and reconnect with your fans that day?

You should never step outside of your life and look at it like it?s this malleable thing you can shape so that people view it a certain way. I would never not have gone to something like that. I?ve been working on this for five years. I love this movie. I?m so proud of everyone involved ? I feel so strong standing next to them. I was asked a few times whether I was going to do it or, ?Oh, was it difficult for you? What made you stand up and do this?? It was like, why wouldn?t I? It made so much sense to me. I mean, the only time I feel comfortable being on TV or doing any sort of public appearance or anything, it has to have context. I don?t like just being a famous person, but with ?On the Road? it?s so clear why I?m there. With the fans and stuff, it?s just human energy that you simply cannot deny. People are standing there and sort of screaming for you and I?m not about to turn my back and walk away and go get warm inside, you know what I mean? So I didn?t plan anything. I just went to the opening of the movie and there were a bunch of people there and it was really nice to see them.

Have you heard from your ?Twilight? fans about this movie yet?

I mean, not really. ?Breaking Dawn 2? just came out and we carted that one around the world for a bit. And there were a bunch of people in the crowd in Europe ? because the movie?s out already in Europe ? who said, ?Oh, my god, ?On the Road, we loved it.? Everyone likes to think that we just have teenage fans ? we have girls, women in general, it literally is every single age, well into peoples? 70s. So yeah, people were into it, I think.

There?s a rumor that you?re going to star alongside Ben Affleck in a movie called ?Focus.?

I can confirm that rumor. It?s a comedy, I?m really excited about it, we start shooting in April.

Are there any other projects on the horizon?

Not yet. I would love to find some microproject before then, because April is kind of a ways away, but not yet, haven?t been ?taken? yet.

Source: http://twilightersanonymous.com/kristen-stewart-on-her-commitment-for-on-the-road-and-reconnecting-with-fans.html

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Is Olive Oil Safe to Cook With? - Shape

For a long time the nutrition community touted the health benefits of olive oil and its role in the Mediterranean diet. But when information about the smoke point of various oils began to surface, EVOO got a bit of a bad rap. Deemed unfit for cooking due to a low smoke point that would turn the healthy fat into a smoky, stinky, free-radical-releasing mess when heated, olive oil was relegated to the salad bowl.

Now, however, it's making a comeback as more is learned about the smoke points of various oils. According to a report published in the International Journal of Food Sciences and Nutrition, olive oil has a smoke point of about 468? Fahrenheit. Considering that the average cooktop heats to between 350? and 375? Fahrenheit, it looks like we are good to go with our favorite oil. In fact, extra virgin olive oil can be heated to 410? Fahrenheit before smoking, so go ahead, saut? away.

To see how other oils stack up, check out this handy infographic from the International Olive Council. Sure does dispel all the cooking oil myths out there!

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As an editor at SHAPE I have the chance to learn about the healthiest ways to cook, eat, and live from all sorts of experts but I?m also a single girl living in NYC with a busy schedule, active social life, and chocolate cravings. I?m here to share what works for me?and where I need a little help from you.

Source: http://www.shape.com/blogs/fit-foodies/olive-oil-safe-cook

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British astronomer Patrick Moore dies at 89

FILE - In this Dec. 29, 2000 file photo, British astronomer and broadcaster Patrick Moore at his home in Selsy, West Sussex, England. British astronomer and broadcaster Sir Patrick Moore has died, aged 89, his friends and colleagues have said, on Sunday, Dec. 9, 2012. (AP Photo/ Kirsty Wigglesworth/PA File) UNITED KINGDOM OUT

FILE - In this Dec. 29, 2000 file photo, British astronomer and broadcaster Patrick Moore at his home in Selsy, West Sussex, England. British astronomer and broadcaster Sir Patrick Moore has died, aged 89, his friends and colleagues have said, on Sunday, Dec. 9, 2012. (AP Photo/ Kirsty Wigglesworth/PA File) UNITED KINGDOM OUT

(AP) ? British astronomer and broadcaster Patrick Moore died Sunday, according to friends and colleagues. He was 89.

He died at his home in the coastal town of Selsey in southern England, according to a statement released Sunday. No specific cause of death was given, but he had heart problems and been confined to a wheelchair.

Moore was well known for his long-running BBC television show "The Sky at Night," which was credited for popularizing astronomy with generations of Britons. He had presented the show for more than half a century.

The statement said he was briefly hospitalized last week when it was determined no more treatment would help him. Instead, his wish to spend his final days at home were honored.

"Over the past few years, Patrick, an inspiration to generations of astronomers, fought his way back from many serious spells of illness and continued to work and write at a great rate, but this time his body was too weak to overcome the infection which set in a few weeks ago," the statement said.

It was signed by various staff members and friends, including Queen guitarist Brian May. May said Moore was irreplaceable and had stirred millions through his broadcasts.

"Patrick will be mourned by the many to whom he was a caring uncle, and by all who loved the delightful wit and clarity of his writings, or enjoyed his fearlessly eccentric persona in public life," May said.

In its obituary, the Daily Telegraph reported that Moore believed he was the only person to have met the first man to fly, Orville Wright, as well as the first man in space, Russian Yuri Gagarin, and the first man on the moon, the late Neil Armstrong.

Moore, who received a knighthood in 2001, had recently celebrated the 55th anniversary of his program. He only missed one episode, because of an illness caused by food poisoning. He was known for his trademark monocle and his occasional xylophone performances and his frequently professed love of cats.

He wrote dozens of books using a 1908 typewriter he received as a gift when he was 8.

Moore had long expressed an interest in traveling into space, but said he wasn't medically fit to do so ? he said he was so large that a special rocket would be needed.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/b2f0ca3a594644ee9e50a8ec4ce2d6de/Article_2012-12-09-EU-Britain-Obit-Moore/id-79f96d9502dc4cc398e1d36ab0c154b1

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