We always have great guests on Rainmaker FM, and this week is no exception …
This week’s Rainmaker Rewind features an interview on The Writer Files with advice columnist and author Heather Havrilesky who chats about her writing process as well as the many hats she’s worn over the last 20 years.
Plus, I’ve included my favorite Copyblogger post from the last week and eight more must-read articles for you.
Listening to music may make the daily commute tolerable, but streaming a podcast through your headphones can make it disappear. The New York Times explains what’s happening: This Is Your Brain on Podcasts
From infographics and SlideShares to articles and memes, marketers and bloggers can never have too much help coming up with ideas for compelling, relevant content. ProBlogger explains how to decide which type to use for your business: The Best Research Tools for Finding Kick-Ass Content
Ailee, who was teamed up with Yoo Jae Suk, sang a reinterpreted version of Jung Il Young's original ballad track "Prayer." The piece was spiced up with hints of British rock, and Ailee's voice was the perfect complement to the guitar and piano.
Meanwhile, Eunji was teamed up with Kim Je Dong and sang K2's "To Her Lover," which was originally a ballad track and had orchestral instruments added to it for a dramatic effect.
It was neck and neck, but in the end, Eunji took more audience votes, having moved the hearts of those in their twenties and forties.
Check out the performance clips and let us know whose vocals you think were better!
Khloe Kardashian is sticking by the vows she took the day she said "I Do."
While she has been separated from her former husband, Lamar Odom since filing for divorce in 2013, the 31-year-old has remained fiercely by his side since the day he went unconscious from a drug overdose and was rushed to the hospital in October 2015.
"I was told when I did go to the hospital that he had four hours to live and make your peace with this and I was not going to accept that answer," she told the hosts of The Talk. "This is not the way this man is going to go out."
Since that day, Kardashian stayed devotedly by his side, calling off their divorce and even arranging flights for Odom's children to visit him in the hospital in Las Vegas. Nearly five months after intense hospitalization and subsequent private rehabilitation, the former NBA athlete finally made his first official public appearance at Kanye West's New York Fashion Week season debut—a move that made Kardashian feel a bit on edge.
"He wanted to go to Kanye's show so badly. I had so many reservations. I was so nervous," she revealed on the show. "I was just so protective. I'm still so protective."
Despite her concerns, Odom's first public steps went off without a hitch. "He walked in on his own with Kanye and he went to Madison Square Garden where he used to play," she gushed. "It was so just impactful. It was beautiful."
As a visible caretaker to the athlete, many have speculated that the former pair has resumed romantically, but Kardashian asserts they've just taken on a different kind of love.
"We're not back together. We're not at all. I love him with every fiber of my being…but we were married and I shared that union with him," she explained. "I didn't want for our divorce to happen, but it happened for many reasons and that doesn't mean I just forget about this person."
She hasn't forgotten about Odom, nor has she forgotten about the solemn promises she made the day she married him in 2009.
"I still believe in my vows of being there for him," she admitted. "I know it's confusing. it's very confusing. It's not a romantic place. It's coming from a place of real care and concern and love."
Anyone who can't wrap their minds around the concept is—for Kardashian—far too restricted.
"I don't think love just because we're not romantically involved means I can't care about someone," she said. "I find that so simple-minded."
SHINee's Jonghyun showed strong support and love for his fellow member Taemin and his solo album.
On February 22, Jonghyun updated several tweets referring to Taemin. His tweet full of love reads, "My son! Good luck on this new start~~ ^^~* Lee Taemin fighting ♡ My Son fighting ♡ First album fighitng ♡ Go big my son ♡"
Another tweet was added shortly as it said, "His dance was so powerful.. I was worried that my son's legs were going to get broken~~^^~~* I shed a bit of tears as I was saw him dictating the stage like a pro~ ☆ My Taemin is all grown ♡."
Lastly, Jonghyun made a clarification to his fans as he tweeted, "Everyone, we have to accept what needs to be accepted. I was Taemin mom from our trainee days. Even if you guys were fast, probably 3 years after me. The very frist Taemin mom was me. - From 11 years Taemin mom Jonghyun with pride-"
Jonghyun sure did showed overflowing love and support as the first Taemin mom!
Double S 301, a new sub-unit of SS501, has now grabbed their first trophy since making their debut with "Pain"! 'The Show' awarded them with the win, making it the group's first trophy after seven years or so.
It must have been a wave of nostalgia for the boys to promote together again and now win, too! Congratulations!
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السبت، 20 فبراير 2016
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"There have been big parties for little people and small losses with great lessons… and we even had a romantic night filled with more love for each other than we even thought was possible," Rory wrote on ThisLifeILive.com. But mostly, this has been a week filled with thankfulness.
It's a bittersweet time for the couple, with Joey in full-time hospice care after battling cervical cancer since 2014. Having neither expected the nomination nor knowing if they would get to see the results together, Rory explained that the year's more important gift was that of perspective.
"I've said before that just being nominated is enough," he wrote. "But after having more time to think about it… that's not actually true. Instead, I would say that just being able to wake up and look into the eyes of the people we care about and tell them that we love them is enough. Everything else is just icing on the cake."
The couple even joked about how there was "always next year."
To celebrate Valentine's Day, Rory wrote, the two enjoyed a takeout spread of sushi, one of Joey's favorite foods. Despite having little appetite in the preceding weeks, Joey "had the greatest time," donning makeup and a nice shirt for the occasion — along with a corsage that had been sent in the mail. "I hadn't even seen a corsage since my senior prom," wrote Rory, who wore a matching boutonniere.
The most special part of the evening? An unexpected cuddle, when Joey asked Rory to "lay down with me and put your arms around me" after the meal. The two hadn't shared a similar moment since Rory entered hospice care in November. "For one sweet half-an-hour … that changed on Valentines day," Rory wrote.
But perhaps the week's greatest victory came with daughter Indiana's second birthday, another event the couple didn't know if they'd experience together.
"We made it," Joey told her husband, crying. "We made it."
From 'This Life I Live' by Rory Feek
Rory wrote that he would "let Indy’s face tell the story."
The family decorated the room where Joey is staying so the whole family could celebrate together … and Indiana celebrated hard when it came time for cake.
Luis Enrique has often said of late that he’s wary of playing teams that are fighting for First Division survival. The recent trips to Levante and Sportingwere far from easy, and his team was also made to a lot harder than might have been expected to take three points from Saturday’s visit to Las Palmas.
Goal each for starters
With Busquets suspended and Piqué left at home, the Barça boss also opted to leave Ivan Rakitic on the bench, but a nevertheless fearsome starting eleven powered into the game. It took just six minutes for them to open the scoring. Jordi Alba picked outLuis Suárez to perfection and the latter smacked home his 26th league goal of the season.
Arsenal draw in FA Cup
Barça's Champions League rivals Arsenal were held 0-0 in the FA Cup fifth round by Championship leaders Hull City. Arsène Wenger chose to rest several key players, presumably with an eye on Tuesday's game. They’ll now have to play a replay, although it’s not clear exactly how the game is going to squeezed into what is already a tight schedule for the Gunners.
With the colours the teams were wearing, it almost looked like he’d just scored for Uruguay against Brazil. To add to the illusion, four minutes later Las Palmas were back level when their Brazilian strikerWilliam José converted a back-heeled assist from Jonathan Viera. Ten minutes gone and an electrifying game was back to all-square.
Neymar re-establishes lead
The goal fired up the home fans and although they were let off the hook after 27 minutes when Suárez nodded a simple header wide, the Canary Islanders responded well. Barça were not on top of this game.
That changed after 39 minutes thanks to a goal involving all three of the trident. Messi’s shot off a Suárez assist was parried away by keeper Javi Varas, but only as far as Neymar Jr. The Brazilian scored, and the Catalans would be taking a 2-1 lead into the dressing rooms at half-time.
Intense battle
Immediately after the restart Suárez was frustrated once again, slamming a perfect headed assist fromDani Alves straight at Varas. That wasn’t the last of the chances Barça couldn’t afford to waste against a Las Palmas team, led by the fleet-footed Viera, that showed little sign of flagging despite the game’s relentless pace.
As the minutes ticked by, Barça couldn’t kill of the game. Meanwhile, Las Palmas grew more and more hopeful of sneaking an invaluable point to boost their bid to avoid relegation, with former Barça B manSergio Araujo causing plenty of danger when he came on as a substitute.
The game remained intense right through to the final whistle, when Luis Enrique and Barça fans around the world breathed a huge sigh of relief. The six-point lead remains intact, and thoughts can now turn toArsenal and the return of the Champions League.
Jermaine ripped Trump, saying ... "name-dropping Michael don't make you cool and won't win you votes. Especially when using botched facts."
It's a known fact Michael and Donald were friends, but Jermaine is taking issue with Trump claiming MJ lost his confidence because of "bad, bad, bad surgery."
Jermaine calls that a "BS" theory and tweeted, "Michael's confidence was affected by the pressures, injustice and vitriol of external circumstances. Period."
Steve Martin performs on The Tonight Show on October 28, 1976. Photo: NBC/Getty Images
Around 8:04 p.m. last night, the lights dimmed at New York's Beacon Theatre and Frank Sinatra's "New York, New York" played over the PA. I wouldn't call it the most surprising choice, considering that the audience was there to see Jerry Seinfeld's second show in a yearlong residency at the storied venue. Then an announcer came on — "Good evening, New York City, and welcome to the 2016 Jerry Seinfeld show" — and I, like everyone else, didn't even stop the conversation I was having, it was so innocuous. "Please welcome Jerry's very special guest ..." The announcer paused there, and I still didn't think much of it. It's probably Tom Papa, I thought, Seinfeld's regular opener, who is a very fine stand-up but undoubtedly gets called a "very special guest" mostly out of politeness. But the announcer's pause continued, and I wondered if he might say "Paul Simon," as there was a guitar mic onstage and I have to assume Seinfeld is friends with Simon, you know, just from being famous guys — hell, Tom Hanks was in the audience. Then he said it: "Mr. Steve Martin." I lost all of my shit. I screamed a scream I was familiar with, as it's the sort of scream I've heard at comedy shows for years when some celebrity — be it Chris Rock, Dave Chappelle, or Louis C.K. — drops in on a show unannounced; however, this time it was coming from my mouth. This was a very special guest.
In 1981, Steve Martin was the biggest stand-up in the country. He was arguably the biggest stand-up ever up until that point, regularly selling out amphitheaters when other top names were still playing clubs. And then he just stopped. He played a show and, after the show, decided not to do stand-up anymore. "My act was conceptual. Once the concept was stated, and everybody understood it, it was done," Martin wrote in his classic 2007 memoir Born Standing Up. "It was about coming to the end of the road. There was no way to live on in that persona. I had to take that fabulous luck of not being remembered as that, exclusively. You know, I didn't announce that I was stopping. I just stopped." It would be like if, 25 years from now, you realized that Kevin Hart's last tour — the one that sold out basketball arenas across the country — was really the last tour. It's the story of legends, one frequently discussed among comedians. He just stopped.
Until last night. There was a banjo onstage, which I didn't notice at first, but Martin didn't walk over to it right away. He walked up to the mic stand and took the mic off. He didn't put the stand behind him, however, as veteran comics do, to signify, I'm not going anywhere. Martin wanted the crutch; he wanted the out. "Thank you. Jerry couldn't make it tonight ... Have a safe ride home!" which is a solid enough opener, a thing he cares a lot about. "Actually, I'm here tonight because of that old showbiz saying: Never lose a bet to Jerry," he continued, referring to his episode as a guest on Seinfeld's web seriesComedians in Cars Getting Coffee. Though there wasn't technically a bet made during the episode, rewatching it now, the whole thing feels like Seinfeld making a sales pitch for Martin to try stand-up again. See, not only does Steve Martin not perform stand-up, besides the memoir, Steve Martin doesn't even talk about stand-up, at least publicly. There was the 2010 92Y debacle, in which he was so intent to only talk about art that a 92Y staff member brought a note to the interview — mid-show — asking for them to "discuss Steve's career." I can confirm, from personal experience, that he doesn't want to be interviewed about it. But Seinfeld is different — he's also a legend; he's also a stand-up — and he got Martin to talk about that time at length. In the episode, Martin does seem a bit tense at first — likely because the conversation is being filmed — but slowly he loosens, joking around and even talking about ideas he has for jokes. Based on what Seinfeld said later at the Beacon, it seems like Seinfeld used this as an opportunity to get Martin back.
So, how was he? It's always hard to tell with celebrity drop-ins, because the audience gives them a pass for the first few minutes, laughing at everything in a way that is more like friends at a dinner party than an audience who paid to be there, and Martin only did a few minutes, but, looking back at the jokes themselves, I'd say he was mostly pretty good, occasionally almost great, and for one moment truly special. "I'll be honest with you, right off the top, because I'm a little upset with the Beacon Theatre," one joke began. "I was backstage and I used the restroom. And there was a sign that read, 'Employees Must Wash hands.'" Pause. "And I could not find [pause] one employee [pause] to wash my hands." Man, is that a classic Steve Martin joke. Reading it back, it might read overly jokey or cheesy, but that's the point. Martin in his prime did comedy that made fun of comedy. He told jokes that were unfunny, but he knew they were unfunny, and the audience knew he knew, and that's what made them funny. The difference is that last night, he didn't have the same schlock-y, showbiz-caricature persona he made famous in the '70s — he didn't do some dumb dance afterward — but you could still see the intention. And his specific, off-kilter rhythm was there (which is why I transcribed the pauses), where he hides the punch line so the audience isn't just being told when to laugh, allowing them to surprise themselves with when they laugh. A technique he pushed further with his next joke, the aforementioned special moment.
Here is the joke in full, as I was able to write it down:
By the way, I apologize for the ticket prices. [Pause.] I know it seems expensive, because there is like one guy, two guys, and a couple of mics, but it's not that way. There are like four sound people, and two lighting people, and [pause] drivers, and wardrobe people, and catering, and someone to walk Jerry's Fitbit around. [Pause.] A celebrity look-alike, in case Steve doesn't feel like going on. Steve says hi, by the way.
I've seen a lot of live comedy. I've seen all the celebrity drop-ins I mentioned above. Hell, I saw Jerry Seinfeld destroy about five minutes later. But this was easily one of the most exhilarating moments I've ever had as a comedy audience member. This was the Steve Martin whose albums I've listened to my whole life, whose copy of an old set list I bought on eBay and hung on my wall, who shaped modern comedy. The faux-entertainer shtick was clearly articulated, as Martin was using the sort of Hollywood, very fake, apologetic tone. And the use of rhythm was masterful. The joke, which gets lost a bit when typed out, builds by not building. The biggest laugh, arguably, came around the "and" in "and drivers." It's so classic Steve Martin, I found it hard to think of an analogue in music. By their nature, musicians play their old songs, which is supposed to remind you exactly of when they were great but doesn't really. Watching Steve Martin tell that joke was like if, in the middle of a modern-day Bob Dylan set of gurgles and growls, he brought out a time machine, turned the dial to 1965, and had young Bob Dylan come out to sing "It's All Over Now, Baby Blue."
After the show, my friend doubted whether this counted as a return to stand-up. Martin told jokes that he has probably been telling for years in between songs with his bluegrass band. And she was likely right about the jokes — especially considering he performed half the set sitting down with his banjo — but it was not the same thing. Steve Martin hasn't performed stand-up in roughly 35 years — he hasn't not been funny; he hasn't not stood up and told jokes, say, at Saturday Night Live or some awards show — he hasn't gotten onstage in front of an audience explicitly expecting stand-up and performed stand-up. Sure, you have to imagine any Steve Martin bluegrass audience is expecting jokes, but they also are mostly anticipating bluegrass. Last night, there were no expectations once he grabbed the microphone, and in that way, he was just like every other stand-up comedian performing in the city at the same time. The difference is maybe imperceptible to us, but it definitely wasn't to Steve Martin.
Midway through Martin's little banjo medley, Seinfeld came onstage with a banjo case and jokingly made a face that said, "Okay, wrap it up." So he did. And Martin got up from his stool, walked over to Seinfeld, shook his hand in the perfunctory way comedians shake the hand of the comedian who's up next at the mic, and said, "Thank you." Later in the show, before going into a question-and-answer encore, Seinfeld asked the audience to give one more hand to Steve Martin. "That is really the thrill of my career," Seinfeld added. Same.