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How Anti-Rapper Vince Staples Went Big With ‘Prima Donna’

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Few would accuse Vince Staples of having a big head. You wouldn’t suspect so, anyways. But at 23 years, Staples carries with him an air of living multiple lives. He’s a rapper for start, a very adept one at that, but his career began out of necessity to leave his 2N Gangsta Crip past. His rhymes weave with such earnest bluntness and a conflicted heavy heart. On “Like It Is” from his Summertime ’06 debut album, he rapped: “No matter what we grow into, we never gon’ escape our past.” Pretty bleak outlook for a then 21-year-old kid.

His music often sounds like gangsta rap, but with none of the bravado. There are no heroes in Vince’s stories. “Nate,” a hard-eyed ode to his father locked up when Vince was a first grader, succinctly sums it up: “Knew he was the villain never been a fan of Superman.”

In online circles most know Vince as a funny man. And for good reason—dude’s hilarious. His caustic wit and no bullshit demeanor heard in his raps carry over to his jokes. There’s his “Ray J is a top 5 west coast rapper” legitimate (once-you-hear-it) theory and how Sprite could end rap beefs. GQ partnered with him for videos even; proof enough his jokes are lucrative online. But he blasts internet culture routinely and threatens to leave the online world just as frequently.

Vince Staples could be high on himself, but he chooses levelheadedness at all turns is what I mean. To NPR last year, he said “My job is not for sales. My job is to keep my sanity.” From the outside, he seemed to be succeeding.

So why did this even-keeled, anti-rap rapper Vince Staples go ahead and decide to inflate his head? Especially a guy who boasts about never drinking and never smoking? Had something changed, had he succumbed to the fame, fast women, fast cars?

His recent Prima Donna EP features an artificially big-headed Vince on its cover. That big head tilts sideways, too big for its body, the way a baby’s head is. The expression’s deadpan, bored, perhaps numbed to pain, fame, and everything in between. He just doesn’t seem to give a shit anymore.

The EP begins with a bang. Vince sings a downright lugubrious version of “This Little Light of Mine,” prior to a gunshot going off. It’s a suicide and this character’s light has been extinguished. Only after a few listens do you realize Prima Donna tells its story in reverse order: A rapper achieves stardom following a successful banger (“Big Time”), establishing a bad-ass persona of some kind. This rapper starts to believe he is his persona (“Prima Donna”), but can’t duplicate the glory, skidding into a macabre insanity. Listening to the EP in reverse order, the gunshot almost comes as relief, putting this character out of his misery.

The music marks a leap in artistry and complexity for Vince. He spits furious after furious fusillade on tracks like “Loco” and “War Ready” while deftly navigating chaotic, bust-your-head-open production, thanks in bulk to DJ Dahi and one-time Kanye mentor No I.D. Special recognition goes to James Blake and the head-bopping “Big Time,” surely the hardest beat Blake’s ever created (that retro video game sample during the bridge drives me insane).

The emotions, the journey told on this EP feel personal, and Vince’s appeal has always been his personality, hilarious and candid even trapped within violence and drama. He never postures and almost ruthlessly mocks rappers who do. “I ain’t paying homage to nobody with no bodies,” he raps on “Big Time.” So again: Why the big head, Vince?

Vince also released a short film, also called Prima Donna, which he wrote, to coincide with the EP. It opens with Vince, again with that big head, bobbing between two twerking booties. He doesn’t appear happy. But it’s part of a music video shoot for “Big Time,” the director yells cut, and Vince’s head shrinks back to normal. He leaves the shoot and the film follows Vince’s descent into madness: cab drivers sing his songs without prompting to him, a woman dances and gropes him on an elevator ride, screaming fans materialize around corners to glimpse him.

In his hotel room, the four walls collapse as the hotel attendant pounds on the door, and an audience rips open the doors, demanding more Vince. You get the sense Vince believes this is how outsiders see him, the fame-hungry rapper, despite insistent evidence to the contrary. Just like listening to the EP backwards, when the gunshot fires, it relieves as much as it startles.

But Vince shoots a mirrored image of himself. The camera rushes into the destruction, passing through a stage, until it returns to an earlier shot of Vince laying on his back, staring up at the sun amidst idyllic trees and fallen leaves. Blood pools around his head, so viscous and vibrant, and the film cuts to black.

A slew of visual albums and/or short films have released in 2016. As the streaming wars heat up, and more great music releases, artists almost need to go, well, artsy to demand your attention and respect. Frank Ocean went full-blown pretentious art kid. Radiohead got Paul Thomas Anderson. Kanye invited you into his laboratory to experience his mad genius process alongside him. Rihanna pulled us in further by receding more, her enigma growing. Drake (kind of) did his same thing and was lambasted.

But of all the side projects, of all the rollouts to the main meat that is the album, I’ve only returned to Beyoncé’s Lemonade visuals and Vince’s short film. Beyoncé invites listeners in, exposing her story of the backstage drama and messy relationships we’ve all heard/suspected was going on. Plus, who am I kidding: it’s pure ecstasy watching Bey smash that bat around.

Vince is different; he’s pulling back a curtain we never knew was there. The conclusion reached is twofold: he’s playing out a version of the rapper he could’ve been, a character he could still be. You start wondering if part of him wishes to be that guy now. And that this whole artistic exercise was a mean to killing off that undesired part of himself.

That’s all speculation, though. Vince Staples remains that clear-eyed, unpretentious spitter rap needs. It’s a form of hip hop that might never make him a superstar; it’s too honest, too personal. Vince will likely never be a real prima donna. But, man, it sure was fun to pretend.

Your State-By-State Guide To Where Marijuana Will Be Legalized In November

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This November, voters in at least nine states will check a box for either full cannabis legalization or  a medical marijuana program. Never before in our history have so many voters had the opportunity to have their voices heard on this issue.

Five states will vote on full legalization of recreational cannabis, while voters in four (more, depending on last-minute legal challenges) will decide on whether to allow medical marijuana.

Here, in order of likelihood, are where cannabis enthusiasts will celebrate on the morning of Nov. 9:

California: Full legalization

This vote is the big enchilada. The Golden State is the world’s sixth largest economic engine and is home to the most cannabis farms in the U.S. As California goes, so goes the nation. Proposition 64 — the Adult Use of Marijuana Act — will allow adults (21 and older) to possess and grow small amounts of cannabis for personal use.

California was the first state to allow for medical marijuana back in 1996 and that program generates nearly $3 billion. This is the state’s second attempt at full legalization; it failed in a contentious 2010 campaign that didn’t garner the support of longtime cannabis growers in California’s northern region. This year, Proposition 64  is comfortably ahead in the polls and looks headed for certain victory.

The Sunshine State appears poised to join the growing number of states with a fully functioning medical marijuana program.

Florida: Medical 

The Sunshine State appears poised to join the growing number of states with a fully functioning medical marijuana program. Amendment 2 — United For Care  — will allow patients with certain qualifying conditions to consume cannabis without fear of arrest. There is no provision for growing your own plants. Most statewide news organizations have endorsed the measure and polling shows that more than 75 percent of likely voters support it. Just two years ago, a similar amendment received 58 percent of the vote. Unfortunately, it required 60 percent to pass.

Nevada: Full legalization 

Question 2 — Regulate Marijuana Like Alcohol — will achieve what the title of the measure clearly states: Make marijuana legal for adults 21 years of age and older and establish a system in which marijuana is regulated and taxed similarly to alcohol. The ballot initiative is based on Colorado’s successful 2012 campaign and polling suggests a clear path to victory. Clearly, Las Vegas — long considered the nation’s Sin City — is poised to benefit financially from full cannabis legalization. Reno, with its proximity to California and Lake Tahoe ski resorts, is also gearing up for a new industry.

Only 2.8 million people live in Nevada, but more than 40 million tourists head to the state annually. Legalization here will have a broader impact than most smaller states.

Sheldon Adelson, the conservative billionaire who funded Florida’s anti-cannabis forces in 2014 with a $5 million contribution, is the new owner of the Las Vegas Review-Tribune and is once again fighting against marijuana.

Maine: Full legalization 

Mainers will get a chance to legalize cannabis — and at the same time repudiate embattled anti-marijuana Gov. Paul LePage — this November.

LePage, along with New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, have been two of the most ardent anti-marijuana politicians in the nation. But both governors appear out of step with the will of their states’ voters.

Question 1 — Regulate and Tax Marijuana — allows adults 21 years of age and older to possess a limited amount of marijuana, grow a limited number of marijuana plants in their homes, and possess the marijuana produced by those plants. It will remain illegal to use marijuana in public. Recent polling data shows 55 percent support the ballot measure; 41 percent lean against it.

Maine was one of the early states to decriminalize cannabis back in the 1970s and legalizing medical marijuana in 1999.

Arkansas: Medical  

Well, Arkansas is currently a bit of a mess. There are two competing measures on the ballot which could lead to voter confusion. If both measures — pass, the one with the highest number of yes votes will be enacted. Yes, it’s an electoral mess.

A medical marijuana victory in Arkansas would be huge.

Four years ago, Arkansans voted against a similar measure in a close vote. This year, polling suggests that nearly 60 percent of likely voters will support it.

But a medical marijuana victory in Arkansas would be huge. It will be the first state in the south to enact a program designed to assist patients who want and need cannabis as a medicine. It likely will force other southern states to consider adopting similar laws.

Arkansas Business, a statewide publication, describes how the AMCA snd the AMMA differ.

Massachusetts: Full legalization 

The Bay State proves that cannabis legislation is not a blue-red, Democratic-Republican, conservative-progressive issue. The perennially liberal state will most likely reject the legalization of marijuana this year.

Question 4 — the Tax and Regulate Marijuana ballot measure — is polling at 41 percent in favor, according to the latest data.

Meanwhile, the “No on 4” campaign has garnered support from Gov. Charlie Baker and Boston Mayor Martin Walsh.

New England states have become a key battleground for the legalization movement. Because of the proximity of the cluster of states, most advocates believe that once one or two states legalize the entire region will jump aboard the tax revenue train. But, as of now, 2016 does not bode well for those supporting legal weed.

North Dakota: Medical 

This ballot measure — the North Dakota Compassionate Care Act of 2016 — is a real wild card. Polling in North Dakota is as sparse as the state’s population — the latest data from two years ago suggests narrow support.

The state’s conservative political leaders have fought hard to keep this off the ballot, but cannabis advocates scrambled to get enough signatures in August to qualify for the ballot.

Trying to predict an outcome here is essentially like flipping a coin.

Arizona: Full legalization 

It is highly unlikely that Arizonans will vote for full legalization of cannabis. Proposition 205 — Regulate Marijuana Like Alcohol — is polling at less than 40 percent approval, according to a July survey.

The measure is similar to Nevada’s and Maine’s, but Arizona is still a deep red conservative state. It would take a a miracle for this state to pass full legalization.

Oklahoma: Medical 

Another long shot for patients in Oklahoma. Proponents in this state, a grassroots organization called Oklahomans for Health, have submitted signatures that are currently being verified. Even though a 2013 poll showed that 71 percent of residents of the state agreed with the concept of “joining … other states who now have laws allowing seriously ill patients to possess marijuana for medical purposes,” the chances of a measure on the ballot in time is unlikely.

This may not be the year here, but the winds in Oklahoma are shifting on the issue.

Oklahoma is a deep-red state and Republicans dominate the statehouse, but a majority of GOP voters support medical marijuana. This may not be the year here, but the winds in Oklahoma are shifting on the issue.

Montana: Medical 

Montana’s medical marijuana situation is like its weather: Unpredictable and wild. The state already approved an MMJ program 12 years ago, but the conservative legislature has been gutting it ever since. In 2011, the state essentially outlawed dispensaries and led patients back into the black market for their cannabis.

Initiative 182 — Montana’s New Medical Marijuana Initiative — promises responsible access for patients and ensures accountability.

There is no polling data available in the state and advocates continue to fight an uphill battle with state legislators who appear hard-bent on keeping marijuana out of the state.

NOTE: Missouri and Michigan do not have initiatives currently on the ballot, but there is still a remote chance of a last-minute addition. But don’t get your hopes up too high.

 

Could Cannabis Help Cure Hillary Clinton’s Case Of Pneumonia?

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Being sick sucks. This is not a partisan matter. So, whether you are a bitter but starry-eyed Bernie fan (no judgement!), a know-it-all libertarian (some judgement), or an insurgent Trumpist (*bites tongue*), we hope you will join with us in wishing Hillary Clinton a speedy and compete recovery from her pneumonia!

But is there something we can do beyond offering our sympathy? Yes. We can explore whether or not marijuana could aid in the recovery from pneumonia. It’s not beyond the realm of possibility. In fact, marijuana has been shown in instances to help lung function: The same quality that swells your blood vessels and gives you red eye also opens up the bronchial passages. Obviously, smoke is an irritant, so there has been some interest in a THC spray to treat asthma.

As far as pneumonia goes, however, there are no targeted cannabis studies. When pneumonia does get mentioned in the medical literature, it’s almost exclusively to note that a research subject has died from it during the course of a study. This is a rare event—so there’s that. In fact, a review of adverse effects of medical cannabinoids found no statistical difference in pneumonia deaths between weed-users and non-users. Score one for team cannabis?

In a handful of cases, weed tainted with aspergillus mold has caused a form of pneumonia—but that wasn’t the weed’s fault: It was just a vehicle for that bastard aspergillus. (Lesson: Know your source.)

OK, so weed doesn’t necessarily hurt—but does it help?

Again, there’s no evidence. But we can walk you through a thought experiment. If weed cannot outright kill the microbes that cause pneumonia (and there’s absolutely no evidence it can), then the plant’s anti-inflammatory property would be the most likely benefit. Inflammation is linked to a host of common maladies, including heart attack, arthritis, Alzheimer’s, diabetes, and Crohn’s disease. Maybe easing the inflammation of a pneumonia-stricken lung could be healing?

Alas, no. It’s chronic inflammation that is the problem. In the short term, inflammation is a good thing: It’s a sign that the immune system is doing its job. When marijuana soothes inflammation, it’s actually suppressing the immune system. And that’s a really, really bad idea when you’re fighting a serious infection like pneumonia.

So, should Hillary Clinton smoke some chronic? Our prescription is: Definitely! It won’t do anything to cure her pneumonia, but it might help her mellow out already and connect with voters.

5 Strange, Macabre, And Horny Roald Dahl Characters You Probably Haven’t Heard Of

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Roald Dahl would have been 100 years old today. Born in 1916, his books sold more than 250 million copies worldwide, and is widely considered one of the 20th century’s greatest children’s storytellers. (He was also sort of a bigot, but it’s his birthday so let’s brush over that for now!)

We already know the characters brought to life by Gene Wilder and Mara Wilson, but what about those who’ve only seen a light grazing of the spotlight?

https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File%3ARoald_Dahl_Bibliotheek.JPG

Vermicious Knids

These recurring baddies are found in Charlie and the Great Glass Elevator and James and the Giant Peach. Dahl dreamed them up as destroyers of worlds: carnivorous egg-shaped aliens that move at a casual pace of 1,000,000 miles per day and devoured the peaceful civilizations that once lived on other planets in the Solar System. The only thing sparing Earth from the same fate is its atmosphere, which burns Knids up into shooting stars.

Oswald Hendryks Cornelius

All of this talk of peaches and chocolate is about to make sense. Switch Bitch, Dahl’s collection of short stories for Playboy magazine in 1965, is as imaginative and absurd as his writing for children, but with an unbridled eroticism that makes for characters like horny old Uncle Oswald. In “Bitch,” Oswald transforms himself into a seven-foot space penis and declares, “But tell me truly, did you ever see / a sexual organ quite so grand as me?” This story also includes an amazing description of orgasm from Oswald:

…the two of us were millions of miles up in outer space, flying through the universe in a shower of meteorites all red and gold. I was riding her bareback… “Faster!” I shouted, jabbing long spurs into her flanks. “Go faster!” Faster and still faster she flew, spurting and spinning around the rim of the sky, her mane streaming with sun, and snow waving out of her tail. The sense of power I had was overwhelming. I was unassailable, supreme. I was the Lord of the Universe, scattering the planets and catching the stars in the palm of my hand…

Oh, ecstasy and ravishment! Oh, Jericho and Tyre and Sidon! The walls came tumbling down and the firmament disintegrated, and out of the smoke and fire of the explosion, the sitting-room in the Waldorf Towers came swimming slowly back into my consciousness like a rainy day…

Drioli

In the short story “Skin,” an old man whose now-deceased friend was a famous artist. Before his death, the artist tattooed a painting onto his back. Down on his luck in old age, Drioli considers auctioning off his back-canvas for art collectors. After agreeing to live in a gallery as a walking exhibit, Drioli mysteriously disappears, but the painting that adorned his back is seen for sale at auction. Dubious:

It wasn’t more than a few weeks later that a picture by Soutine, of a woman’s head, painted in an unusual manner, nicely framed and heavily varnished, turned up for sale in Buenos Aires. That – and the fact that there is no hotel in Cannes called Bristol – causes one to wonder a little, and to pray for the old man’s health, and to hope fervently that wherever he may be at this moment, there is a plump attractive girl to manicure the nails of his fingers, and a maid to bring him his breakfast in bed in the mornings.

Prince Pondicherry

This dude had style, we’ll give him that. The Indian prince called Willy Wonka to build a chocolate palace, which Wonka advised him to eat immediately. Pondicherry was all, “Nah, I’m gonna live in this chocolate deathtrap” until it melted in the hot sun. Because it required too many special effects for the 1971 film adaptation, we don’t see this feat of hubris go down until the 2005 version of Charlie and the Chocolate Factory:

Cyril Boggis

Like many of Dahl’s characters, Boggis suffers from arrogance and general old-bastard-itis that eventually leads to his undoing. Appearing in Parson’s Pleasure, written for a 1958 issue of Esquire, he’s a scam artist posing as a parson, going from barn to barn and relieving country people of their valuable furniture to resell for thousands. He’d convince them that a particular piece was shoddily made and steal away with his haul like the 1950’s version of American Pickers.

‘The time and trouble that some mortals will go to in order to deceive the inno­cent!’ Mr Boggis cried. ‘It’s perfectly dis­gusting!

No question that Dahl could be drawn to darker impulses. But today, many fans are remembering the master yarn spinner as a gentle old grandpa, who seemingly could’ve had a successful career as a life coach or inspirational speaker.

 

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Carrie Brownstein Debuts Short Film Parodying The Social Media Era

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Carrie Brownstein, of Sleater-Kinney and Portlandia fame, has created a short film called The Realest Real as part of KENZO’s fall-winter campaign. It had a premiere during KENZO’s New York Fashion Week show, and follows in line with the recent KENZO short film My Mutant Brain directed by Spike Jonze and starring Margaret Qualley.

However, Brownstein’s film has a much different focus than bonkers dance fun; its target is the social media world. The Institute of the Really Real has the power to literalize phrases like “followers” and “mom” and “the cloud.” We see one guy who comments “wife” on a post by Sonic Youth’s Kim Gordon, wife her as a result.

The film also stars Mahershala Ali, Laura Harrier, Rowan Blanchard, and Natasha Lyonne. Brownstein both wrote and directed The Realest Real.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VbfSRa5BRhk

This project is just the latest one for the multi-tasking cultural force that is Brownstein. Earlier this year she and Fred Armisen released Season 6 of their hit IFC show. On the rock front, Brownstein and her band, pop-punk heroes Sleater-Kinney, are busier than ever. Last year, they put out a new collection of twitchy-catchy rock on an album called No Cities To Love. They followed that up with live shows, including playing this weekend at Chicago’s Riot Fest, sharing stage time with what is essentially an encyclopedia’s worth or indie, alt, and punk rock legends: The Flaming Lips, Morrissey, Death Cab For Cutie, Ween, Gwar, Meat Puppets, and on and on and on. If you’ve got the strength, it’s sure to be one of the most memorable three days of rock-face-making you’ll ever have.

Speaking of strength–know who has buckets of it? Yep, Carrie Brownstein. How else to explain the fact that on top of all this music and movie business, she found time and energy to crank out the very well-received memoir Hunger Makes Me A Modern Girl last fall.

All of this vast output makes us wonder if there is anything Brownstein is terrible at? Seriously, anyone know if she has skillz when it comes to the following things?

 

  1. Putting up dry-wall.
  2. Cooking a whole fish.
  3. Roller blading.
  4. Deconstructing Sartre.
  5. Folding fitted sheets.

Actually, you know what? Don’t tell us; we don’t want to know. This post has made us feel totally un-talented compared to Carrie. Let’s just move on now.

Kevin Harlan’s Must-Hear Call Of Live Streaker On Monday Night Football

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Some men just want to be seen. And some men want to be seen so desperately they sneak onto a football field during an NFL game as security guards chase him around the field, causing an entire spectacle of the thing. And some men, well, some men are Kevin Harlan. And men like Kevin Harlan just want to commentate a scene like that.

He got his chance Monday Night in a game between the San Francisco 49ers and Los Angeles Rams. If you weren’t excited by football already, this incredible call will remind you why love the sport. I lost it when, mid-call, he delivered the line, “The guy is drunk!”

Watch this play-by-play call.

https://twitter.com/JMKTV/status/775573086330556416

And while that was a thing of beauty, reading this transcription of Harlan’s call is also a treat. Especially with lines like, “They are surrounding him like he…like he just robbed a bank!”

To borrow Harlan’s word, let’s all give much thanks to this “goofball.”

Protestors Rush Stage During Ryan Lochte’s ‘Dancing With The Stars’ Debut

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The Ryan Lochte summer from hell won’t end. A month after the fiasco he created in Rio and days after his 10-month suspension from swimming, anti-Lochte protestors rushed the stage just after the Olympic champion’s first performance on Dancing With the Stars.

Sam Sododeh, 48, and Barzeen Soroudi, 40, allegedly stormed the stage as judge Carrie Ann Inaba was reviewing Lochte’s dance routine with partner Cheryl Burke. NBC News reports that security quickly tackled the duo, and the LAPD arrested the two on “pending charges on suspicion of trespassing.”

A handful of women wearing the same anti-Lochte shirts were escorted out of the studio for shouting “liar.

The broadcast didn’t show Sododeh and Soroudi taking the stage—viewers only saw a split screen of a clearly shocked Inaba pleading with the two to “back off”—but U.S. swimmer Eddie Moses shot an Instagram video that captures some of the chaos following the incident.

https://www.instagram.com/p/BKR2npzgxhb/

ABC News also released footage filmed from a different angle.

As for Lochte, he seemed shaken but mostly unfazed by the protest.

“I’m doing good,” he told host Tom Bergeron when the show returned from commercial break. “So many feelings are going through my head right now. A little hurt.”

“I came out here and wanted to do something I’m completely not comfortable with, and I did, and I came out here with a big smile.”

Posted By: Taylor Berman

The Good, The Bad, And The Sucky About Cannabis And Mad Cow Disease

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Today’s flashback takes you to 1995, the year when the noontime luster of Cool Britannia (embodied in this classic Pulp track) was dimmed by the shadow of mad cow disease, which had claimed its first ever human victim, just outside of London.

Creuztfeldt-Jakob disease, which, as anyone in the mid-‘90s could have told you, is the more correct name for the human variant of mad cow, is part of the family of transmissible spongiform encephalopathies (TSE), which attack the brain, rendering it into a soggy, tattered mess, like an old kitchen sponge. TSEs can take years to present symptoms, but once they do the poor victim will experience memory loss, hallucinations, tics and seizures, growing dementia, then death.

You catch TSEs from eating brains or nerves. Creuztfeldt-Jakob comes from cows. If you eat a person, you might catch a kuru, like New Zealand’s Foré people did back in the early 20th century. (One more reason not to eat a person—even if it’s consensual.)

There is no treatment for TSEs. Once they get going, there’s no stopping them. The good news is that it is very difficult to catch them. Just don’t eat people. (Did we already tell you that?) And don’t eat cervelle de veau from an infected animal. (Steak, however, is A-OK.)

We tend to think of diseases as invading organisms that want to feast on our insides or, at the least, make a home of them. But TSEs are caused by prions, which are simply proteins. Proteins with bad attitudes. To function properly, proteins have to be folded in very precise ways. But prions are slovenly, and their mere presence gives other proteins…ideas. Like that troupe of mean girls you daughter fell in with in junior high who introduced her to fashion that made you feel prudish and music that made you feel old, prions entice the proteins in your brain to twist themselves in strange and provocative ways.

A corkscrew will work whether it twists clockwise or the reverse. Not so our brains. When the proteins in our head all twist the wrong way, we don’t suddenly develop Genghis Khan goatees and a taste for mayhem, like anti-world Spock does. No indeed. We look just the same; we just end up dead.

A growing body of literature shows that cannabis can protect the brain against degenerative diseases, such as Parkinson’s and Alzheimer’s. However, only one study so far has tested its effect on TSE. Researchers observed the effect of the cannabinoid CBD on both tissue samples and living mice that had been infected by a TSE called scrapie, that typically affects sheep. The results showed that CBD both slowed the migration of prions into the brain and extended life for mice already infected, in each case by about 6 percent. Six percent is hardly a figure for celebration, but considering that there is absolutely no current treatment, it’s better than chopped liver.

However, there is one big problem: CBD is most effective against prions when it taken directly after infection—but TSEs can take years to manifest. In addition to that, there are myriad “little” problems, including the fact that scrapie is not Creutzfeld-Jakob and mice are not people.

If you’d like to stroll into the scientific weeds of this subject, read the initial study and this accessible critique by the Prion Alliance.

Spotlight Shone Bright For Trans Stars Alexis Arquette And Lady Chablis

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Lady Chablis and Alexis Arquette, both well-known icons in the trans community, passed away this weekend.

Chablis came to prominence following a prominent role in John Berendt’s bestselling, 1994 non-fiction novel Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil, which focused on Savannah and its people, including a spotlight on Club One, where Chablis performed.

Much to her own insistence, Chablis would go on to star as herself in the 1997 Clint Eastwood film adaptation Midnight, which also starred John Cusack, Kevin Spacey, and Jude Law.

Chablis wrote a memoir of her own, titled Hiding My Candy. In the book, she forwarded not to have undergone gender reassignment surgery, though she publically referred to herself with female pronouns and legally changed her name to Lady Chablis.

The Associated Press reported she died from pneumonia, and had been hospitalized for the past month. She was 59.

https://www.instagram.com/p/BKGg2hoAxJ2/

Alexis Arquette had various and memorable roles in films like Pulp Fiction and The Wedding Singer. She is reported to have passed away with members of the Arquette family surrounding her as David Bowie’s “Starman” was playing. A cause of death was not specified.

Arquette also starred in a documentary about her transition into becoming a woman in a 2007 film Alexis Arquette: She’s My Brother, which was popular on the film festival circuit.

In February, her brother David Arquette revealed on a Kocktails with Khloe appearance that Alexis had stopped referring to herself as transgender.

“She was like, ‘Yeah, sometimes I’ll be a man, sometimes I’ll be a woman. I like to refer to myself as gender suspicious,'” David said.

Just like with Lady Chablis, various celebrities took to Twitter to voice their condolences.

https://twitter.com/therealroseanne/status/775028566207582208

https://twitter.com/DavidArquette/status/775071588790120448

Martha Stewart Says She’ll Eat Edibles On Her New Show With Snoop Dogg

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Have you heard about the upcoming show Martha Stewart and Snoop Dogg are hosting? It’s called “Martha and Snoop’s Potluck Dinner Party,” and it has all the makings of the best frat party you ever did attend, minus the sticky floors.

Each week, Martha and Snoop will entertain new celebrity guests, like 50 Cent, Robin Thicke, and Keke Palmer, who will be assisting with cocktail and food prep. And hopefully conversation.

Recently, TMZ caught up with Martha at LAX. They asked the obvious question, which was basically, “Are you and Snoop going to get high on camera, pretty please?” She gave a dodgy “yes.”

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jjG2qs0KQ_E
No premiere date has been set, but the show will air on VH1.

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