Wednesday, May 23, 2018

Danai Gurira slays on the Cover of Ebony Magazine’s June 2018 Issue

Hollywood actress Danai Gurira stuns on the cover of Ebony Magazine‘s June 2018 issue as she talks her goals as an actress, what motivates her, Black Panther and more.

Read more below:
On her goals as an actress: I definitely want to get more African stories on the screen—big and small—[it’s] very important to me. That is definitely something that is on my heart to see through. I have to see it through. That’s a big thing right in front of me that I feel very called to complete and to get into the full process of, which I am now in.
On the response to Black Panther: I think one of the most important things about Panther, one of the most beautiful things about what I witnessed and the response that I received was that there was a lot of beauty in the way it resonated across the world. But I think one of the things that’s been really important to me is that there’s been a reclamation—like a reclaiming that people are doing [things]; of who they are and what they’re doing and what their roots are. It’s a celebration and an understanding that our roots deserve respect. Hopefully, that compels and inspires the great artistic minds that we have in the African diaspora—that it inspires them to know that there are stories they must tell. When we can do that, we are going to have so much more of a beautiful landscape of our own representation. That, to me, is exciting.”
On what motivates her: I think of the little girl in Liberia, Rwanda, Zimbabwe or the Congo who will never have the opportunity I’m standing in. She looks just like me, but she’ll never stand in these shoes. It’s not right. The least I can do is do my best for her. So that, that motivates me. That gets me out of my own way when I remember it’s not about me.
For more on Danai, visit Ebony.



Wednesday, March 14, 2018

Big Bang Theory Cast, Neil deGrasse Tyson and Stars From All Over The World React to Stephen Hawkings Death

Stephen Hawking has certainly made a name for himself in the universe! The renowned theoretical physicist passed away at the age of 76 , a spokesperson confirmed to CBS News on Tuesday evening.

As the news broke, celebrities and personalities across the globe spoke out honoring the celebrated scientist.
The cast of The Big Bang Theory shared a group photo with Hawking, who appeared in seven episodes of the hit CBS comedy.
“In loving memory of Stephen Hawking. It was an honor to have him on The Big Bang Theory, ” the show’s official Instagram account wrote. “Thank you for inspiring us and the world.”

Bigbangtheory_cbs
In loving memory of Stephen Hawking. It was an honor to have him on The Big Bang Theory. Thank you for inspiring us and the world.

Star Kaley Cuoco shared the same image to her person account, writing , “It was truly such an honor getting to work with the incredible Stephen Hawking.. He made us laugh and we made him laugh. His life and career workings have been many a subject matter on @thebigbangtheory_ and we are all better for it. You will be missed but the world is grateful for the knowledge and courage you leave in your path. Thank you for being an inspiration to everyone. #stephenhawking.”

Cuoco’s co-star Johnny Galecki also posted to his Instagram, writing , “RIP #stephenhawking Not only your brilliance, but your sense of humor will be sorely missed by all.”

Mayim Bialik wrote , “As we near Pi day (3.14) I join the global community in mourning the loss of the greatest physicist of our era.

#StephenHawking is free from the physical constraints of this earthly condition we all exist in and he is soaring above us know marveling at it all. Thank you Dr. Hawking for enlightening us and blessing us with your wisdom and courage.”

Here are more celebrity reactions:

Neil deGrasse Tyson: His passing has left an intellectual vacuum in his wake. But it's not empt Think of it as a kind of vacuum energ permeating the fabric of spacetime t defies measure. Stephen Hawking, RI 1942-2018.

Sharon Stone: Rest In Peace Stephen Hawking.

Kumail Nanjiani: RIP Stephen Hawking. Genuinely very sad to hear that. If you haven’t, read Brief History of Time. It’ll make the w feel more amazing and beautiful and strange. It’ll also make you feel smar and stupid all at once.

Boy George: Wow. Stephen Hawking. Nothing but respect. R.I.P.

Jaden Smith: RIP STEPHEN HAWKING I'm gonna cry

Mark Duplass: #RIP Stephen Hawking. I have failed three times in my attempts to finish BRIEF HISTORY OF TIME. Sorry. I'll tr again someday soon. When I'm smar Also it's incredibly inspiring what yo done with your time on this planet.

Foo Fighters: "Remember to look up at the stars an not down at your feet" - RIP Stephen Hawking you fucking legend.

Steven Tyler: YOU KNEW THIS UNIVERSE BETTER THAN THE REST OF US...AND NOW Y PLAY IN SOME FAR AWAY PART OF YOU CHANGED THE WORLD AND LEF AN IMPACT...A REMARKABLE GENIU WE WONT SOON FORGET.   ENDLESS THANK YOUS AND BLESSINGS TO T HAWKING FAMILY.  GOD BLESS STEPHEN HAWKING.

KATY PERRY: there’s a big black hole in my heart hours before Pi day. Rest In Peace
@Steven_Hawking ... See you in the next life.

Misha Collins: RIP #stephenhawking! Your passing leaves a gaping hole in the Universe. son wants to be like you when he gro up. theguardian.com/science/2018/

Courtney Love Cobain: "The greatest enemy of knowledge is ignorance, it is the illusion of knowle
RIP Stephen Hawking

Cambridge University: "Look up at the stars and not down a your feet" - Professor Stephen Hawki
1942-2018 cam.ac.uk/stephenhawki

David Walliams: Goodbye #StephenHawking Thank y for being - amongst everything else - great laugh.

Janelle Monáe, Cindi: He lives . Forever our most beautiful mind & hero . Long live
#StephenHawking twitter.com/warrenleighttv…

Nickelback: Sad to hear of Stephen Hawking’s passing but extremely grateful for his contributions. He was a first-rate example of what a curious mind can achieve and how it can also inspire. Equally important as his theories. Thh you for everything... -RiP

juicy j: Rest easy Stephen hawking

Piers Morgan: RIP Professor Stephen Hawking, 76.
The world’s most brilliant man, and someone who never stopped wonder ‘Why?’
This hangs on the wall outside his of at Cambridge University.
It says it all.
What a life, what a genius.

For more on Hawking's incredible life visit www.toooknow.blogspot.com

Everything You Need To Know About Stephen Hawking, Legendary Physicist, Dead at 76

British theoretical physicist Stephen Hawking , author of the acclaimed best-selling book A Brief History of Time and the subject of the 2014 biopic The Theory of Everything , has died.

Hawking was 76.

A spokesperson for the celebrated scientist's family confirmed the news of his death to CBS News Tuesday evening.
Hawking was born in Oxford, England on Jan. 8, 1942. When he was 21, and studying to get his Ph.D from the University of Cambridge, Hawking was diagnosed with Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (ALS). Doctors told Hawking that he had only a year or two to live.

Hawking didn't let that deter him from his ambition and he continued on to become one of history's most famous minds, even as his body deteriorated due to his illness. Over the decades, he became paralyzed throughout his entire body, save for a muscle in his cheek, which was attached to a speech-generating device that allowed him to communicate.

In 1988, Hawking penned A Brief History of Time, which explained a number of scientific theories about the nature of the universe in accessible layman's terms which made the material understandable to those without prior knowledge of study of the topics the book explained.

The book became an international hit, selling over 10 million copies in 20 years and was translated into more than 35 languages. The book remained on the British Sunday Times best-seller list for a record 237 weeks, and it cemented Hawking's place in the public consciousness as a celebrity in the world of theoretical physics.

Hawking -- who received the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 2009 – was an advocate of the many-worlds interpretation of quantum mechanics and came up with a theory about radiation emitted by black holes, which became known as Hawking Radiation.
The acclaimed scientist was the subject of the 2014 biographical drama

The Theory of Everything , in which he was played by Eddie Redmayne, who won an Oscar for his performance.

During a press junket for the film, ET spoke with Redmayne and co-star Felicity Jones – who played Jane Hawking, his first wife and the mother of his three children – and the actor opened up about what it was like meeting the legendary scientist to do research for the role.
"I spent four months preparing to play him and then when I met him I got basically verbal diarrhea and spent half an hour telling him about himself," Redmayne recalled. "It got so bad that I was filling the air and I was reminding him that he was born on the 8th of January which is Galileo's birthday. I then said, 'I was actually born on the 6th of January, and so we're both Capricorns.' And the word Capricorn came out of my mouth and I don't think I've ever felt so horrific in my life."

"He spent like 10 minutes typing something out and then said, 'I'm an astronomer, not an astrologer,' Redmayne recalled, laughing.

We have reached out to a rep for Hawking.
For more on Hawking's life and legacy visit www.toooknow.blogspot.com

Wednesday, March 7, 2018

Oscars 2018: Lupita Nyong'o Hairstyle

#CULTURE👑 Amasunzu is an elaborate hairstyle traditionally worn by Rwandan men and unmarried women,with the hair styled into crests, frequently described as crescent-shaped. The hairstyle indicated social status, and men who did not wear Amasunzu were looked on with suspicion until the 20th century. The style was also worn by unmarried women after the age of 18–20 years, indicating that they are of marriageable age.

#Lupita #LupitaNyongo #BlackWomen #BlackCulture #BlackBeauty #Hairstyles #BlackHairstyles #BlackHair #BlackPantherMovie #Oscars #Oscars2018 #Wakanda #WakandaForever #African  #blackpeople #USA #music #hiphop #royalty #blackpower  -

Tuesday, March 6, 2018

A middle school teacher led a double life as a white supremacist podcaster

HuffPost outed a Florida social studies teacher as a white supremacist podcaster. Here's what you need tooo know.

In her first year as a teacher , Dayanna Volitich taught under the watchful eye of more experienced educators .

The school sought to make sure the novice teacher met standards set by the state of Florida . But the school ’s surveillance , she said, also made it hard for her to expose her students to an array of white - nationalist views .

“ I’m pretty hyper aware that [administrators and colleagues ] will be watching. They’ll be listening , and so I’m getting a little more underhanded,” she said on the Unapologetic Podcast , a white -nationalist show she produced in her free time.
During monitoring sessions, she’d engage in a “ dog- and -pony show” for her bosses.

“ I knew when they were coming ,” she told one guest, Lana Lokteff, the host of an anti- Semitic media outlet that the Southern Poverty Law Center said spreads hate speech.

“ I was able to anticipate when they would be there to evaluate , and so I did what I was supposed to do . I danced like a little puppet, and I waited until they were gone ,” she said in the episode , which aired in late February .
For more than a year , Volitich has been leading a double life .

She is a popular white - nationalist podcaster known as Tiana Dalichov who espouses anti-Semitic conspiracy theories and believes that Muslims should be eradicated from the earth , according to HuffPost. She ’s defended and praised neo-Nazis and white nationalists such as Arthur Jones , Patrick Casey and former KKK grand wizard David Duke . She says she believes that science has proven that certain races are simply smarter than others and decried training about implicit bias in classrooms as “ bulls—.”
And she is also a social studies teacher at Crystal River Middle School about 80 miles north of Tampa — one who has said it’s her duty to expose her students to her version of the truth.

She said she hoped that other like-minded people would infiltrate public schools and do the same thing .
Her double life came crashing down this weekend after she was outed in a HuffPost piece . The news organization identified Volitich as the person behind the Dalichov pseudonym, with its 1,400 Twitter followers and podcast . She did not respond to HuffPost’s requests for comment.

[An assistant principal wrote a children ’s book about alt-right mascot Pepe the frog . It cost him his job.]

Suddenly exposed , she was suspended after the Citrus County School District became “ aware of a concerning podcast ,” the district said

in a statement on Facebook .
Volitich could not be reached for comment. A message sent to her school email address was returned as undeliverable.

WFLA News Channel 8 published a statement reportedly from Volitich in which she claims that the words of her alter ego were satire meant to drum up listeners for her podcast and Twitter followers , and that she never injected her personal beliefs into the curriculum:
None of the statements released about my being a white nationalist or white supremacist have any truth to them , nor are my political beliefs injected into my teaching of social studies curriculum. While operating under the Russian pseudonym ‘Tiana Dalichov ’ on social media and the Unapologetic Podcast, I employed political satire and exaggeration, mainly to the end of attracting listeners and followers , and generating conversation about the content discussed between myself and my guests .

The Washington Post could not independently confirm the statement .

One of the last messages from the Dalichov Twitter handle came as HuffPost was about to publish its damning article. She tweeted that she “ might disappear for a while ,” and she set the account to private . Then she scrubbed her podcast from its site .
By Monday morning, the Twitter account was gone.
In the last year, emboldened white nationalists and neo-Nazis have marched through U .S . streets and grabbed national headlines.

The rest of the country has become acutely aware that the people who march with tiki torches on the weekend have day jobs like the rest of us . At times, strangers on Twitter have outed people who attended white - nationalist rallies . The campaigns have subjected white nationalists to public scorn and cost some their jobs , including one guy who was fired from his job as a hot dog cook.

But Volitich went further than attending a rally or merely identifying as a white nationalist , reports say: In audio clips , she painted herself as a proselytizer .

By her own admission , she was a subversive presence who sought to not -so -subtly indoctrinate students assigned to her classes with her world view . And she bragged about her ability to do so without her employers or colleagues finding out .
In Volitich ’s education-centered conversation with Lokteff, the women talked about how imperative it was for people who shared their views to become educators .

“ We need more people on our side who would be committed to being teachers — they don ’t need to be vocal about their views but get in there, be more covert and just start taking over those places,” Lokteff said. “ That ’s what the left did . … Well , we have to take those institutions back .”

Volitich said she agreed, although she conceded her double life had difficult moments .
“ As a teacher , it’s a tough place to be . It ’s not nearly as bloody as a battlefield, but it ’s pretty darn close,” she said. “ You ’re on a very steep hill and it ’s hard to work your way to the top of it when you’re virtually alone. It ’s still difficult to be fighting that battle .”

But she said she had some victories, at the school where 90 percent of students identify as white , according HuffPost. When alarmed parents approached the principal saying their students’ teacher was injecting political bias into a public school curriculum, Volitich said she had a simple solution : She lied and escaped with her job.

But the ruse would not endure, and Volitich became the latest educator to face accusations of being a white nationalist .

Last year an assistant principal at a Texas Middle School was fired when he wrote a children’s book that featured Pepe the frog , a character that has been adopted as a mascot of the alt - right — a small , far -right movement that seeks a whites -only state — and associated with white nationalism .

The book’s plot makes allusions to incendiary race and class struggles, political issues jammed into an innocuous - sounding story about two animals trying to save their farm. The antagonist is a bearded alligator named Alkah . Pepe’s sidekick is a cartoon centipede that also happens to share a name people on a Donald Trump -themed Reddit board use to refer to each other.

In June , a New Orleans principal was fired from his job after a video showed him at a protest against the removal of a statue of Confederate Gen. Robert E. Lee , according to the New Orleans Times- Picayune. He initially said he visited the protest as a student of history, but the video showed him wearing rings associated with the Nazi movement and white nationalism .

It ’s unclear if those educators tried to expose those beliefs to the children in their care .
According to HuffPost, Volitich made a game of it .

She wouldn’t tell inquiring students who she was voting for in the 2016 presidential election, for fear that she’d be fired , the news organization reported . But she turned their curiosity into a learning exercise , promising to reward the class if they could deduce her vote from statements she made in class.

Those students, she said, became de facto accomplices to her plans to convince her colleagues and bosses that she didn ’t have ulterior motives .

“ I told the kids, I said when ( observers ) are in there, I’m going to be different than how they are used to ,” she said on one podcast . “ The first time it happened they were like ‘What the hell is happening right now , because I totally turned into a different teacher . I put on my nice voice .”

Volitich is not the first person to claim white nationalist statements were satire .

Chris Cantwell , who gained national notoriety during the violent Charlottesville rallies , once described himself in a dating profile as not being a fascist but instead “ a podcaster ‘specializing in controversial political satire .’”

Hundreds Flood Court to Contest Speed Camera Tickets

More than 2.6K ticket appeals were on the docket in Providence, RI, Monday

Rhode Island's Providence Municipal Court has the joyful task Monday of addressing more than 2,600 speeding tickets. The tickets are just a fraction of the 12,000 that were generated within the first 33 days after speed cameras were installed in the city in January, WPRI reports. Outrage over the $95-a-pop tickets has ensued, with thousands contesting them. Typically, the court has just 300 people on the docket on any given day. Not everyone who is appealing their ticket is expected to actually appear in court, though the
AP reports hundreds of people did show up.

Per the AP, "many" of the tickets have been dismissed so far due to errors like signs that give conflicting information as to the actual speed limit. A state representative has introduced a bill to end the use of traffic cameras in the state, calling the system "a government cash grab," but it's not clear whether the bill will find success in the Democratic-controlled legislature. Also Monday, Providence is set to install six more speed cameras; the city currently has five.

Oscar Ratings Plunge to Record Low

They were down 20% from last year

Viewership for the Academy Awards plunged 20% from last year to a record-low 26.5 million, the first time on record the Oscars reached fewer than 30 million people, the AP reports. The Oscars are often the most-watched TV show after the Super Bowl. Not this time: the opening ceremonies of the Winter Olympics last month was seen by 27.8 million. Television viewership in general is declining, but Oscar ratings are often tied to the popularity of the movies that are celebrating, and this doesn't say much for The Shape of Water , which won best picture on Sunday night.

The previous low-water mark for the Oscars came in 2008, when No Country For Old Men won best picture. Last year's show, also hosted by Jimmy Kimmel, reached 33 million viewers.

US Has First New Gun Law Since Florida Shooting

Oregon bill bans domestic abusers from owning firearms

A bill prohibiting domestic abusers and people under restraining orders from owning firearms has become America's first new gun control law since the Feb. 14 Florida high school massacre. "Well done Oregon," Democratic Gov. Kate Brown exclaimed Monday after signing the law on the steps of the state Capitol as some 200 people, including victims of domestic abuse and high school students, applauded and cheered. State Sen. Floyd Prozanski, whose sister was fatally shot by her boyfriend, and Rep. Janeen Sollman, who fled her home as a child when her father was in a violent rage, hugged as they stood behind the governor, the AP reports.

Students from a high school in the Portland suburb of Lake Oswego traveled 40 miles Monday morning to stage a gun-control rally in the state capital, Salem. "We are empowered youth," they chanted, while holding signs that read "End gun violence, our lives matter," and "Together we can end gun violence." The bill that Brown signed Monday closes a loophole in a 2015 law that excluded some abusers from the ban on buying or owning guns and ammunition, such as people who say they don't live with the partner they're abusing or threatening, and those under restraining orders. The measure was introduced before the Florida shooting, but Brown emphasized the bloodshed as she lobbied the Oregon Legislature for passage and signed the bill. (Major retailers are tightening rules on gun sales.)

Snow Buries Mom, Son Feet Away From Front Door

It was a tragic freak accident, police in California say

A massive block of snow fell from a roof and buried a mother and her 7-year-old son just feet from the front door of their Northern California mountain condo, authorities say. Olga Perkovic and her son Aaron Goodstein had been skiing in the Sierra Nevada near the Nevada state line, the Alpine County Sheriff's Department says. They were returning home Sunday when a chunk about the size of a trailer fell from the roof, burying them under about 3 feet of snow. "It was a freak accident," Undersheriff Spencer Pace tells the AP . He says warming temperatures often cause snow to slide off roofs, occasionally injuring people. But he said neither he nor the sheriff can recall sliding snow ever killing anyone in the three decades they've been there.

Pace said Perkovic's mother, who was staying in the condo with the family of five, reported the pair missing at about 6:40pm Sunday. Rescuers searched the nearby Kirkwood Ski Resort for hours because the pair's last known location was a ski lift where they had scanned their tickets at about 4pm. Pace said it appears the two skied an "alternate" route home from the slopes that took them between buildings on a path that is unpaved in the summer. At about 9pm, a neighbor spotted ski gloves next to the condo, realized they were beneath the snow and called 911. The mother, 50, and son from San Francisco were airlifted to a hospital, where they were declared dead, Pace says.

Monday, March 5, 2018

2018 Oscars: The Best, Worst and Weirdest Moments of the Night

The 90th Annual Academy Awards aired Sunday, with Jimmy Kimmel at the helm for the second time following last year's shocking Best Picture mix-up, and the talented host deftly handled the multitude of political controversies that have rocked Hollywood over the last year, while ushering the show along with quick wit and charm.
The star-studded show was filled with some incredibly close races and a few genuinely surprising upsets, not to mention a slew of emotionally charged acceptance speeches and hilarious moments of touching comedy.

In honor of Hollywood's biggest night, here is a look at some of the best, worst and absolutely weirdest moments from this year's Oscars
In honor of this Oscar's milestone anniversary, Kimmel kicked the show off in the style of a retro 1940s newsreel. Shot in black-and-white and narrated (by Kimmel) in an old-timey radio voice, he highlighted a few of the night's biggest stars sitting in the audience, including Meryl Streep, Gary Oldman, Salma Hayek and Lupita Nyong'o, who he introduced by sharing, "She was born in Mexico and raised in Kenya. Let the tweetstorm from the president's toilet begin!"

Kimmel once again proved his Oscar-hosting chops with his hilarious opening monologue that managed to nudge the envelope with jokes about a spate of awful stories of sexual harassment and abuse of power without offending everyone (a lesson
James Corden could have used before hosting the amfAR gala back in October). Kimmel turned his razor-sharp wit toward Oscar himself, explaining, "Oscar is the most beloved and respected man in Hollywood, and there's a good reason. Just look at him. He keeps his hands where you can see them, never says a rude word, and most importantly, no penis at all."

Rita Moreno Proves She's Just the Best
The 86-year-old West Side Story star won in just about every way imaginable at this year's Oscars. She rocked the same dress she was wearing when she earned her Best Supporting Actress Oscar in 1962, she appeared to be enjoying quite a few drinks backstage and she was generally just flawless at every turn.

Allison Janney's Great Opening Line
The I, Tonya star took to the stage after winning the Oscar for Best Supporting Actress and delivered one of the greatest opening lines of any acceptance speech ever: "I did it all by myself." After the laughter died down, Janney smiled and added, "There's nothing further from the truth," before earnestly thanking her co-stars, friends and family. This was Janney's first nomination and win, but it's still hard not to wish she stuck with her joke and walked off stage after accepting all the credit.

Tiffany Haddish Stuns in Her Favorite Dress
The Girls Trip star presented alongside Maya Rudolph during the Oscars, and she looked absolutely flawless in her gorgeous Alexander McQueen dress. In fact, she's looked flawless in it every time she's worn it, which is quite a lot. Haddish even wore it while hosting
Saturday Night Live earlier this season, and explained that she loves the dress because it looks great on her and she bought it herself and she doesn't see any reason not to wear it every chance she gets. It was an absolutely perfect choice for making her debut on the Oscars stage.

'In Memoriam' Honors Late Stars
Eddie Vedder provided the emotional musical accompaniment for this year's "In Memoriam" segment, where he performed a cover of Tom Petty's "Room at the Top" in honor of the late musician. The touching segment celebrated the lives and legacies of such late Hollywood luminaries as Harry Dean Stanton, director George A. Romero, James Bond star Roger Moore, Martin Landau, John Heard, Sam Shepard and Don Rickles, among many others.

Keala Settle Slays 'This Is Me'
The amazing singer delivered a live performance of the Best Original Song nominee "This Is Me" from The Greatest Showman, and she brought the entire room to their feet (and to the verge of tears) with the amazing number. The song might not have won the Oscar, but the performance definitely stole the spotlight at the show.

Frances McDormand Takes a Stand
The outspoken actress took home the golden statuette for Best Actress for her role in Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri, and she used her time onstage to make an important statement. McDormand asked every female Oscar nominee in the audience to stand up, and during the emotionally charged demonstration of unity, McDormand asked every executive watching to help female filmmakers and stars tell their stories on the big screen. She then finished her speech with two important words: "Inclusion rider." The term refers to a stipulation in an actor's contract that requires the cast and crew on the films they're acting in to be diverse, or risk losing the star. It was a powerful moment and one that will undoubtedly go down in Oscars history.

THE WORST

The Over-the-Top Ice Palace Set
While the Academy Awards tries something different every year when it comes to its set design, we couldn't help but feel like they were staging a production of Frozen. It looked like Superman's Fortress of Solitude got a glittery makeover, or the inside of a particularly ostentatious geode. Every time someone stood onstage, they looked like they were about to get eaten by a shark that had its teeth replaced with diamonds. It was just too much all the time.

Kimmel Brings Out His 9-year-old Self
In a joke that just fell flat, Kimmel brought out a young kid who was playing himself as a child. The exchange allowed a few funny jokes about how old the host looks (with the kid assuming Kimmel is his 60-year-old future version, when Kimmel is only 50). But given how often he joked about wanting to keep the show moving along, this felt like a very unnecessary bit that took time away from what could have been better moments.

Not Giving BB-8 His Due
Star Wars: The Last Jedi co-stars Oscar Isaac, Mark Hamill and Kelly Marie Tran took the stage alongside everyone's favorite rolling droid, but while the three stars had awkward banter that elicited polite laughter (at best), BB-8 was relegated to the sidelines. His adorable beeping would have unfortunately been better than whatever it was we got from the human stars.

THE WEIRDEST

Lakeith Stanfield's Wonderful Awkwardness
In an ongoing effort to keep acceptance speeches short, Kimmel revealed that stars who rambled on too long wouldn't get played off by the orchestra, instead they would get chased off by Stanfield, reprising his unsettling role from Get Out , who ran out from behind the stage dressed in the same wardrobe as his character in the film, madly screaming "Get out!" The bit was hilarious, but the perpetually fascinating Atlanta star elevated the comedy to the next surreal level when he just sort of stayed onstage before slowly walking back behind the set as Kimmel laughed at his deliberate brand of awkwardness. It was a weird moment, but that doesn't necessarily mean it wasn't a strong highlight.

- Jimmy Kimmel Brings Stars to the People
In a reverse of Kimmel's stunt from last year -- when he brought random people from off the street into the Dolby Theatre to meet the night's big stars -- Kimmel filled the theater next door with people who were watching a sneak preview of A Wrinkle in Time, and then surprised them when he brought a cadre of A-listers into the theater to meet them. Margot Robbie, Ansel Elgort, Armie Hammer, Gal Gadot and others were among those who joined in on the fun by passing out movie concessions and firing off hot dog cannons (which are exactly what they sound like) into the overjoyed theater of screaming fans. While there was a certain fun, chaotic energy to the bit, it proved to be far less bizarrely fun than last year's stunt and ended up just feeling like an ill-conceived attempt at being weird for weirdness sake.

'In Memoriam' Snubs

Every year, the Oscars draw heat for the stars they forget (or choose to not include) in their "In Memoriam" segment, and this year was no different. Among the snubs that drew the most viewer anger were actors Powers Boothe, Robert Guillaume, John Hillerman, Adam West, Jim Nabors, John Mahoney, Rose Marie and Jerry Van Dyke, among many others.

visit toooknow.blogspot.com for more