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Your daily cup of WTF?
ScreenGrab
The Hooksexup Film Blog
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Each month a new artist; each image a new angle. This month: Transgressica.
ScreenGrab
The Hooksexup Film Blog
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A fashionable L.A. photo editor exploring all manner of hyper-sexual girls down south.
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Almost everything you want.
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A San Francisco photographer on the eternal search for the girls of summer.
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Houston neighbors pull back the curtains and expose each other's lives.
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The creator of Supercult.com poses his pretty posse.
The Remote Island
Hooksexup's TV blog.
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A California boy capturing beach parties, sunsets and plenty of skin.
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Smarter gaming.
Date Machine
Putting your baggage to good use.

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  • "Fringe" Does The One Thing Guaranteed To Make Us Furious


    An OK episode of Fringe last night – microwaves, headbursting – but the concerns that we voiced last week about Agent Dunham being the hardcore center of the show were in full bloom last night, as we were deeply bored by the supposedly deep backstory involving Olivia shooting her stepdad on her birthday. What are we, in Gremlins here?

    More importantly, though, the writers gave us a scene so hackneyed, so annoying – and of such grave portent to the rest of the series unfurling in an original, intelligent fashion – that whether we like it or not, Fringe is now officially on our shitlist.

    What happened? Click through to find out.

    Read More...


  • "Fringe": New "X-Files", New Clooney? Yeah, Maybe So.


    OK, so, despite the fact that an airline pilot's face dissolves to the point that his inferior maxillary bone drops right off his face, we can't quite call Fringe's pilot "jawdropping." It's excellent, intriguing, absorbing... but it didn't blow us away. Which is fine by us. Because that means we're not dealing with a Lost-type situation here. The first 45 frenzied minutes of that show's pilot were so strange and affecting that we sometimes think we're still under their sway, particularly when we find ourselves trying to reconcile all the magnetism, ghosts, and clockwork monsters made of smoke on that damned island.

    But Fringe is content to work with milieus and characters that we've seen before: the mad scientist, the broken family, the federal agent searching for the truth in a vast single-wing conspiracy. Does it sound like we're disappointed?  We're not. Fringe may do what it can to color in the lines, but man, what vibrant colors it chooses to color with.

    Read More...


  • Top Ten New Shows: #1 - "Fringe"


    The new fall season is almost here. Starting next week, the cable and broadcast networks will begin rolling out their new shows to see if they take off like castaways on an island or singing casino managers. Here, then, are the top ten new shows we're most looking forward to seeing.

     

    You tell us, kids. Are we supposed to not be pins-and-needles about a show that's half-X-Files, half-every-J.J. Abrams-show ever?

    Read More...



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Bryan Christian has worked as a writer for Epicurious, GenArt and ID magazine; a web producer for WWD and Condé Nast; and a cameraman for his friends. He's married with roommate and lives in Clinton Hill, Brooklyn.

Lindy Parker has worked as a ghostwriter, editor, dance instructor and a purveyor of dreams, one beer at a time. She loves Charles Dickens and Gabriel Garcia Marquez and also, straight-to-video releases with Mary-Kate and Ashley Olsen. It's possible she reads more teen fiction than she should. She hails from Los Angeles, her hometown and soul mate, but she lives in Brooklyn, the fling she'll never forget.

Olivia Purnell left Ohio for sunny Los Angeles; then found that she couldn’t ignore New York City’s call, and brought herself to Brooklyn where she has worked with GenArt, BlackBook, the School of American Ballet, and finished an M.A. in Creative Writing from N.Y.U. She loves one-liners with sting and hates the stench of the subway in the summer. That said, she can’t get enough of either.

Jake Kalish is a freelance journalist and humorist whose work has appeared in Details, Maxim, Stuff, New York Press, Spin, Blender, Men's Fitness, Poets and Writers, and Playboy, among other publications. He is also the author of Santa vs. Satan: The Official Compendium of Imaginary Fights.

Contributors


Ben Kallen is an entertainment, health and humor writer who's been lectured to by Sidney Poitier, argued with by Lea Thompson and smiled at by Jennifer Connelly. He's the coauthor of The No S Diet and author of The Year in Weird, along with hundreds of magazine articles. He lives near the beach in Los Angeles, just like the gang from Three's Company.

Nicole Ankowski has lived in Ohio, Oakland, and on the high plains of South Dakota, but is now proud to call Brooklyn home. She wrote for alternative weekly papers in the first two states, and tried to learn Lakota in the last. (The vowels can be tricky.) She just earned her MFA in Creative Writing and has been published in Beeswax literary journal. She is unable to resist good writing or bad TV.

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