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Fantastic Dessert Recipes || Cake Decor Ideas And Hacks

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Amazing ideas to include to your kitchen!
Fresh dessert ideas that will freshen up your cooking skills and amaze your guests!
Learn how to make the coolest desserts and how to impress people with your cooking and mixing skills!
Create fruit lollipops with ether sugar or chocolate on top! Use dragon fruit slices to create lollipops and bananas to cover with chocolate!
The coolest ides for cake shapes! Did you know you can make any cake shape you can imagine? From burger shaped cape to toilet paper shaped cake! Corn shaped and red bell pepper cake! Literally anything you can imagine you can create!
Tips on how to create your own homemade ice-cream and enjoy it on a warm and sunny day! Plus how to create chocolate cones for your deserts!
Keep your imagination open and your tummy full!

1:45 – Dragon fruit lollipop
3:11 – Toilet paper shaped cake
4:45 – Banana and peanut butter bites
8:55 – Homemade ice cream
10:10 – Awesome chocolate

This video is made for entertainment purposes. We do not make any warranties about the completeness, safety and reliability. Any action you take upon the information on this video is strictly at your own risk, and we will not be liable for any damages or losses. It is the viewer’s responsibility to use judgment, care and precautions if one plans to replicate.

The following video might feature activity performed by our actors within controlled environment- please use judgment, care, and precaution if you plan to replicate.

All product and company names shown in the video are trademarksℱ or registered¼ trademarks of their respective holders. Use of them does not imply any affiliation with or endorsement by them.

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Marina Abramović and Hugo Huerta Marin Come Face to Face

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In the wise words of our very own Andy Warhol, “the idea is not to live forever, it is to create something that will.” This sentiment is an apt summary of Portrait of an Artist: Conversations with Trailblazing Creative Women, the latest book by Hugo Huerta Marin. The New York City-based artist, whose practice is dedicated to excavating the constructs of gender and cultural identity in an increasingly global society, turns his eye in Portrait of an Artist toward the legacies of 25 women. Through a compilation of pictures and interviews with the likes of Miuccia Prada, Agnes Barda, FKA Twigs, Juliane Moore, Yoko Ono, and Jenny Holzer (to name a few), Huerta Marin explores the inner workings of creative minds that have transformed culture. Late last month, Huerta Marin sat down with Marina Abramović, also featured in the book, for an intimate conversation about legacy, the myth of success, and tapping into creativity at the Portrait of an Artist launch event at Fotografiska New York. If you missed the event, don’t fear. Below, take a look at the pair’s conversation, exclusive to Interview, along with some Polaroids taken by Huerta Marin moments before the event began. 

———

HUGO HUERTA MARIN: First of all, I really want to thank everyone for being here. I feel very honored. You’re here with me to celebrate the book that I worked on for seven years, and it’s finally coming out to the light. I’m even more honored to have this conversation today with one of my favorite artists, but also one of my favorite humans, Marina. I wanted to start this conversation light, with this quote that Marina sent to me some months ago. We were working on the book, and she said, “We should use this quote for this book.” She didn’t say anything else. I’m going to read this quote for you — it’s from Gandhi. It says, “First, they ignore you. Then they laugh at you. Then they fight you. Then you win.” What does this quote mean to you, Marina?

MARINA ABRAMOVIC: When I read this quote, it was like somebody was talking to me. “They ignore you,” is like the synthesis of my own life. When I started doing my performance work in ex-Yugoslavia in the early 1970s, it was so difficult. It was like being the first woman walking the moon. Not only do they ignore you, but also they think you’re not an artist. That you should be put in a mental hospital. This is ridiculous, this is total bullshit. The criticism was so bad that if I really took them seriously, I would never leave my room. It was so difficult. 

Then, they start fighting you because you start actually having status and [your] performance starts becoming important. Then you start winning.  This happened after 50 years of my career. It was a long time.

HUERTA MARIN: It’s not easy, and actually I relate to it, because when I started this project, I told some friends, “I want to interview Yoko Ono, or Marina.” everybody laughed at me, like, “You’re crazy and good luck with that.” Then it happens. This took me 7 years, not 50 years. For someone that has such an extraordinary career, like you, what kind of recognition do you value the most nowadays?

ABRAMOVIC: Honestly, being humble, because I think it’s dangerous for an artist to become a god, and [have an] ego higher than the Himalayas. Woody Allen once said, “Today, I’m a star; tomorrow, I’m a black hole.” It’s a good perspective. You have to really understand to be humble, it’s not you who’s important. It’s the work. It’s the message. It’s the content.

© Hugo Huerta Marin and Marina Abramović.

HUERTA MARIN: But, for example, many journalists ask me, “How is it to interview these idols, or these icons?”  I don’t like the concept of the icon or the idol. How do you relate to this concept?

ABRAMOVIC: I can only talk about my own personal perspective. First of all, as a performance artist, and doing the work of art for so many years, I was nowhere [near being] any kind of icon. But something changed really radically and it was traumatic for me. It was a museum show in MoMA, with artists present. From one day to another day, I got 850,000 visitors and people sleeping on the street to come to the museum.  Americans are very strange people. They like to discover you because you come from nowhere. I come from ex-Yugoslavia. In those times, it was like the fifth world. Here, they like to discover you because you’re doing things that nobody else is doing. And then they worship you. And then they start actually blaming you for becoming an icon. But I didn’t put myself in this place to start with. I’m the same as always. It’s a very, very, very uncomfortable position. If I think, ” If I’m going to die tomorrow, what am I leaving behind me?” I really think that one important thing is that I am one of the people responsible for making performance art into mainstream art. But I’m not ready to die.

HUERTA MARIN: I have muses in my life. My mother was my first Muse when I was very little. Do you have a Muse?

ABRAMOVIC: I don’t think I have any Muse. People asked me, “Who were the artists who inspired this?” And I don’t like to be inspired by other artists because all of us artists are always inspired by somebody or something. That means when you inspire another artist, it is a second-hand inspiration. Let’s go to the source. For me, it definitely is nature. Nature is magic. Waterfalls, volcanoes, running water, the tops of the mountains, trees. And [also] the old cultures. Anything to do with shamanism, the aborigines of Australia, the Indians, Tibetan monks, they have so much wisdom to learn from. I always believed that in my position as an artist, I’m the bridge between the Western and Eastern world.

Agnes Varda, © Hugo Huerta Marin.

But in my life, I have very few true friends that are very important to me. One person who was very important to me was John Cage. I loved John Cage so much. He had this incredible house in west Manhattan, full of cactuses.  He would be in the kitchen making macrobiotic food. Those times in the kitchen with him were so important to me. I would go there and cut the garlic for him, and he would tell me wisdom and talk about me. And he really was the most humble person that I ever met.

HUERTA MARIN: Excuse me, you just made an opera based on Maria Callas. Isn’t she your Muse?

ABRAMOVIC: Somebody told me, “To do opera as a conceptual artist and very radical performance artist, you’re totally crazy.” Opera is such a dinosaur-ish art form. Who is making opera these days? But, I never give up. It took me eight years to get permission from the Chinese government to walk the Great Wall of China. Doing the Seven Easy Pieces at the Guggenheim Museum? It took me 12 years to get permission for anything else afterwards. And this piece? 32 years. When I was 14 years old, I was sitting in a kitchen with my grandmother, which is actually the most important kitchen in my childhood. That’s where everything happened. I was having breakfast and we had an old Bakelite radio. There comes the sound of this voice, and I remember standing up in the middle of the kitchen and starting crying. It was incredibly emotional, my relationship to that voice. And then later on, the speaker on the radio said, “This was Maria Callas.” This kind of relation to her never left me. I always wanted to deconstruct opera in a different way and create something new. I understood that in every opera, women die for love. So in Seven Deaths of Maria Callas, I chose seven operas and I only showed the dying. There’s no story, only the dying, one after another. Strangulation, burning in fire, radiation, heart attack, knifing, madness.

HUERTA MARIN: And would you say this project is a self-portrait?

ABRAMOVIC: When I start working on a performance, I have to start from the body. It becomes my main subject and object of my work. Body becomes the main center, and I only know one body, my own body. So, in the body’s universe, scientists think that we use 30% of the brain, maybe only 20%. I took my body as the center of that world. Not because I want to make a self-portrait, but because the subject is an experiment, I can push my body physically, mentally to different limits, which I don’t expect anybody else to do. I am responsible for my own decisions.

FKA Twigs, © Hugo Huerta Marin.

HUERTA MARIN: You’ve been going against the grain for a long time, and being really daring when it comes to performance and your work. I think many people are really afraid of what happens if you go further. So, for you, how far is too far?

ABRAMOVIC: In performance, it’s all about energy, and energy’s invisible. You have to feel energy. People in the room have to feel that energy. What is important is how much of yourself you give to the public. If you’re stingy and you give 30%, you get 30% back. It’s mathematical. If you give 100%, you get 100%. But if you give 150%, my dear, now we are talking here. Because that 50% more, it creates something else. You are actually giving energy from every molecule of your being. And nothing is left in you. The public feels that, and can communicate with that kind of energy. This is so important because you have to be open and vulnerable and accessible. That’s the only way.

Debbie Harry, © Hugo Huerta Marin.

HUERTA MARIN: Sometimes pain is involved. Physical pain, mental pain.

ABRAMOVIC: Who cares? You know, this is the whole thing that everybody’s always talking about. “Oh, my god, it’s painful; oh, my god, it’s uncomfortable. Oh, my god
” People are afraid of pain, afraid of suffering, and of mortality. And these three basic subjects are what all of art is busy with. To me, the pain is so interesting because if you open the door of the pain, you go to the other side and the pain doesn’t exist. But it’s too easy to tell you. You have to experience it. It’s incredible what can happen. You actually have to be not to be afraid, to have courage. To go somewhere where you have never been. It’s so easy to do things you like. Do something that you have never done before, and then see what happens.

HUERTA MARIN: Do you think the mindset of an artist changes with success or fame or money?

ABRAMOVIC: Of course. That’s a huge danger. This acceptance, it’s so uncreative. The worst part is when the artist becomes a commodity and starts selling and repeating the same work and they’re producing the same thing because the public likes it. To  be full of curiosity is the key to everything. This is one of the reasons I want to do opera. I mean, why should I risk so much to do an opera that I have never done and I can have rotten potatoes and eggs thrown at me because people are incredibly critical? I don’t care.

HUERTA MARIN: And what is next for you?

ABRAMOVIC: God, what is next for me
 I think I’m finished with dying, because I made the big theater piece The Life and Death of Marina Abramovic, and now Seven Deaths of Maria Callas. I think I’m going to focus on living right now. What is next for you?

HUERTA MARIN: Well, after I finished this book, I was like, “I will never do an interview again. I’m done with interviews and taking pictures.” But a very big question popped up. It included a trans woman and a trans woman of color in this book, and I realized it was a completely different topic. It’s a very important thing as a gay, brown Mexican artist to have inclusion. So making another book about LGBTQ+ artists that shifted the culture is what’s next.

DVF, © Hugo Huerta Marin.

Anjelica Houston, © Hugo Huerta Marin.

Jenny Holzer, © Hugo Huerta Marin.

Mae Weems, © Hugo Huerta Marin.



R. Kelly – Down Low (Nobody Has To Know) ft. Ronald Isley, Ernie Isley

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R. Kelly’s official music video for ‘Down Low (Nobody Has To Know)’ ft. Ronald Isley. Click to listen to R. Kelly on Spotify: As …

Chico Debarge talks "Addiction" , Auto-tune artists, and his thoughts on Michael Jackson

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Chico Debarge sits down with Ms. Drama to talk about his new album “Addiction”. He talks about auto-tune artists, his six years from the game, the possibility of a supergroup and his Michael Jackson connection. For more exclusive interviews check out:

The Standard Spa, Miami Beach Re-emerges with an Enhanced Spa Experience and the new Café Standard and Monterrey Bar

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The Standard Spa, Miami Beach, the private, bayfront paradise that has long been recognized as a place for holistic rejuvenation and fun, has completed an extensive architectural renovation of its Spa and an expanded culinary offering, with the launch of CafĂ© Standard and Monterrey Bar. All three concepts, designed by Shawn Hausman Design in collaboration with The Standard’s in-house design team, are set to open this Fall.

 

“We are excited to show off the refresh of The Standard Spa, Miami Beach, with a thoughtful and loving update our team undertook with our long-time design partner, Shawn Hausman,” said Standard International CEO, Amar Lalvani. “Our local clientele adores the property and stood by us throughout this difficult time. It feels wonderful to give them something in return.”

 

Situated on the second floor, the approximately 4,500 sq. ft. Spa now includes a refreshed Turkish Hammam, plus a cedar-clad cocoon Sauna that provides detoxification and immunity-boosting benefits and features eye-shaped windows allowing guests to look out onto Biscayne Bay. A Cold Room has also been added, which reduces muscle tension and inflammation. The space is topped off with an ice cream bar sofa.

 

“We’ve undertaken significant architectural works in the Spa to create a feeling of expansiveness.” noted Shawn Hausman, Principal of Shawn Hausman Design and long-time Standard collaborator. “We’ve added a number of panoramic windows to bring the stunning Bay setting inside & a new central staircase from the gym to the Spa includes fitness in a more holistic sense of wellness.”

 

The Spa menu includes new treatments such as Acupuncture Facial Rejuvenation which utilizes fine needles, microcurrents, and herbs to achieve dramatic anti-aging results (90 min, $250), and Sea Change featuring yuzu mimosa sea algae to cleanse and exfoliate, refreshing the mind, body, and spirit (60 min, $190). The revamped treatment rooms are enlivened with Elan Vital wallpaper by Flavor Paper depicting flower vines and moonlit palatial scenes by Pierre Frey.

 

Post-treatment, guests can relax in the new spa lounge, reclining in a Danish rattan daybed, under vintage, free-form, shell-shaped, glass sconces, while enjoying views of the bay. House of Hackney’s leafy Limerence print also adorn the spa lounge walls, window treatments, and ceiling, enveloping guests in an immersive painterly, flora interior landscape. The main spa bathrooms have tiles designed by Gio Ponti.

 

In addition to the Spa revitalization, The Standard Spa, Miami Beach introduces Café Standard and Monterrey Bar, both helmed by Executive Chef Andrew Gilbert. Accessible from the lobby, Café Standard is a casual neighborhood spot where guests and locals can start the day with a cold-pressed juice, specialty coffee, vegan mylk, or a Blue Majik Bowl. Café Standard features an Omega Salad, Falafel Bowl, and Veggie Bahn Mi. The spa focused menu offers vegetarian, vegan and gluten free options. The bright fare is complemented by the joyful, colorful space featuring a Scandinavian aesthetic with diagonally paneled pine walls and tropical flourishes. Guests can dine under the playful Mario Lopez Torres pendant with dangling monkeys, taking in the vintage tapestry with the surreal artwork of Corneille, or perch at the Arthur Umanoff mid-century inspired bar or custom enamel topped tables.

 

Beyond CafĂ© Standard lies the new cocktail lounge, Monterrey Bar, celebrating twists on classic cocktails. The name Monterrey Bar pays homage to the hotel’s namesake roots The Monterrey Motel which opened at 40 Island Avenue in 1953 and was originally designed by Architect Norman Giller. The bar features the Lido Gin Martini (Americano Vermouth, Lemon Zest, and Herb Oil) and Root Chakra (Blanco Tequila, Campari, Dried Chili Reduction, Fresh Lime, and Sage). Cocktails pair with dishes such as Butter Poached Prime Fillet Carpaccio with Turnip Puree and Treacle, Sea Scallop Crudo with Corn and Truffle, or Truffled Tater Tots with Porcini Aioli. Images of cocktails here (Photo Credit: Chris Carter).

 

The T-shaped bar with Amazonite stone is a dramatic focal point and provides an intimate place to gather. Afromosia wall paneling and plush carpet emulating the ocean are tied together beneath a Murano glass chandelier. The shelves are playfully lined with a pop art collection of 1980s ‘Frozen Moments’ by artist Geoffrey Rose.

 

Alongside the remodeled Spa, Café Standard and Monterrey Bar, tropical gardens, bayside views, and the infinity pool remain as beautiful as ever. The Standard Spa, Miami Beach is situated on Belle Isle and located at 40 Island Ave, Miami Beach, FL 33139. For more information: https://www.standardhotels.com/miami/properties/miami-beach

 

ABOUT THE STANDARD SPA, MIAMI BEACH

Located on Belle Isle, steps away from the action of South Beach, The Standard Spa, Miami Beach is its own private paradise set amidst peaceful tropical gardens and the Biscayne Bay. The 100-breezy, soothing guest rooms feature private terraces, many with outdoor soaking tubs. Spa services meld the traditional with the holistic with a variety of treatments from facials and massages to astrology and health coaching. The Gardens offer a place to lounge in the swings or by the fire pit. The main pool is the center of its outdoor hydrotherapy playground also featuring an infinity pool, arctic plunge pool, Roman waterfall hot tub, and mud baths. The Lido Bayside Grill offers a perfect warm-weather, sun-kissed global-inspired menu with incredible views. For more information about The Standard, visit StandardHotels.com and Instagram, @thestandard.



Happy New Year | Tamil

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Happy New Year | Tamil

A team of losers attempt to pull off mass revenge against a past traitor; required to win a dance competition as part of the plan, they get entangled with the presence of a somewhat unintelligent local dance performer who cannot learn the backstory of the betrayal.

Charlie, a fighter enters a dance competition to take revenge on his old enemy as he had sent his father to jail by blaming him to have stolen costly diamonds. Charlie and his group of friends take a dancer’s help to perfect the art.

They get to the finals, and according to the plan they steal the diamonds with a mysterious plan. They also win the finals and take a trophy back home along with diamonds.

A team of losers win the love of millions in their quest to pull off the biggest diamond heist ever by team India.

Shop Kate Spade’s Early Black Friday Sale Today & Save Up to 40% Off

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We independently selected these deals and products because we love them, and we think you might like them at these prices. E! has affiliate relationships, so we may get a commission if you purchase something through our links. Items are sold by the retailer, not E!.

As you know, we love a good sale. This weekend, we have one you’ll definitely want to shop. 

Kate Spade is having a major early Black Friday sale where you can save up to 40% off your entire order with the code GIFTSZN. Already reduced items are also included in the sale, so you can score some really great deals on a brand new work tote, a stylish satchel or a crossbody that’s perfect for being on-the-go. 

This is a buy more, save more type of sale event. If you add $200 worth of items to your cart, you can save 20% off your order, $400 and over will get you 30% off, and $600 will save you 40%. That means you can get $600 worth of cute Kate Spade bags for under $400.

It’s a really great sale that you don’t want to miss out on, especially since there’s so many great things available right now. If you want to know what we have our eye on, check out our must-haves below.

Why Uncharted Can Succeed Where Other Video Game Adaptions Haven’t

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Here’s a fun exercise: go to any search engine and type “Best Big Screen Video Game Adaptations” and peruse the lists that pop up. Would you believe that Sonic the Hedgehog consistently ranks in the top ten? Along with the recent Tomb Raider with Alicia Vikander (which scored just over 50% on Rotten Tomatoes), that cheesy 1995 Mortal Kombat flick, and even 1993’s Super Mario Bros., which has over the last five years suddenly become everyone’s favorite 90s action film?

That’s the state of big-screen video game adaptations, which continue to squander big-name titles like Resident Evil, Prince of Persia, and Doom despite the seemingly endless cinematic possibilities each presents.

Part of the problem lies with the medium. How do you transfer one visual style to another without seeming redundant? A direct translation typically leaves casual audiences in the dust — see 2010’s big-budget Prince of Persia — while a complete reimagining alienates fans of the games, ala 2005’s Doom, starring The Rock and Karl Urban. In either case, you’re forcing directors, writers, actors, and creative artists to replicate something many people have already seen. The results are often stilted, even if the visual cues and homages are spot on.

RELATED: Uncharted Trailer Officially Released, Showcases Scene Ripped From Third Game

So, now we come to Uncharted, a film based on the extremely successful video game chronicling the many adventures of treasure hunters Nathan Drake and Victor Sullivan, played by Tom Holland and Mark Wahlberg, respectively. We recently got our first real look at the film and so far online reactions have been 
 ah 
 good-ish, with some praising the film for looking just like the game and others complaining that it differs too much from the game.

Here’s the movie trailer in case you missed it:

Then for visual reference, here’s the trailer to Uncharted 4: A Thief’s End:

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I’m a huge fan of the Uncharted series. In fact, I’m replaying them right now on my PS4. What always strikes me is how engrossing the story and characters are. Most of the game is of the crouch and shoot variety, but all the painstaking platforming, swinging, fighting and often frustrating gameplay are worth it because Nathan Drake and Co. are such a fun group of characters to hang around with, brought to life via excellent voice actors and solid dialogue. You genuinely want to see where their latest adventure takes us.

Now, the film has gone through production hell since it was first announced way back in 2008. A handful of directors jumped on board, including the renowned David O. Russell, who planned to rework the characters into a story that was more to his liking — a family of treasure hunters led by Mark Wahlberg’s Nathan Drake and featuring Robert DeNiro and Joe Pesci. Fans balked at the notion, and eventually, Russell was replaced by Neil Burger, then Seth Gordon, then Shawn Levy, then Dan Trachtenberg, then Travis Knight 
 even Joe Carnahan was brought on board to punch up the script at one point, so sacred was this big-budget project.

Finally, Sony Pictures tapped Ruben Fleischer, who eventually helmed the final product.

Personally, I think the film looks good and has a chance to succeed where so many others have failed. Obviously, we’re only judging from a two-minute trailer, but from everything I’ve seen thus far, it looks as though Fleischer has struck the right balance between direct-game adaptation and big-screen reimagining.

For starters, the casting is decidedly unique. Tom Holland is certainly not the first name that comes to mind when I think of Nathan Drake; while he sports the outfits and wiseass quips, the actor looks like he’s going for a fresh new (Peter Parker-heavy) spin on the character. Which, when you think about it, is actually quite smart on behalf of the producers.

Think of it this way: we have four 20+ hour Uncharted video games featuring a specific iteration of Drake. Seeing that character on the big screen would be nice, sure, but, if we’re being honest, also unnecessary. The Uncharted video game series ended with A Thief’s End. We saw Drake’s story play out and received a fitting epilogue that featured the treasure hunter enjoying the spoils of war.

Does the studio completely reboot the series on the big screen via a direct adaptation that copies the stories and set pieces we’ve already seen, which would be the equivalent of watching someone else play Uncharted 1-4, or continue Drake’s story beyond A Thief’s End, in which case you have a character with a storied history roughly 15 million people know about — a big number sure, but not compared to the 330 million people in the U.S. or seven billion people around the world? (Consider also that an estimated 100 million people saw Avengers: Endgame during its opening weekend and gamers should understand why video game adaptations present such a challenge beyond catering to the population that played the game.) Or does the studio start fresh with a completely different take that repackages the characters and basic setup of the game into a more generic, though still entertaining, product?

If you were a studio head, would you rather cast Nathan Fillion in a role specifically because he looks like a character from a video game that, again, general audiences aren’t aware of, or would you rather have that kid currently starring in a billion-dollar Spider-Man franchise?

Likewise, Mark Wahlberg doesn’t even look like he’s trying to channel the Sully gamers know and love from the game, but, honestly, that’s probably okay because he’s Mark Wahlberg, one of the most high-profile stars ever featured in a video game adaptation. I love that Wahlberg wears a wife-beater, sports enormous pecs, and looks about as far removed from the cigar-chewing, gut-packing Sully of the video game as possible. (In hindsight, Wahlberg certainly fits the part of Drake, making that aborted David O. Russell project all the more upsetting.)

RELATED: Sony Announces State of Play for Next Week

In other words, the cast actually makes me want to see this more. If done correctly, there’s a chance Holland and Wahlberg’s takes on Drake and Sully surpass those made famous by voice actors Nolan North and Richard McGonagle — it’s a stretch, but you never know.

On top of that, the action looks terrific. The plane sequence, taken from Uncharted 3, I think, looks like a fun callback that still does enough to merit standalone value. I loved the shot of Drake swinging on the lights in that blue-tinted nightclub, and dig the exotic locales, namely Valencia, Spain, and the coastal town of XĂ bia.

Basically, this looks enough like Uncharted to satisfy my inner geek, but different enough to pique my interest. Unlike, say, Doom, which turned a pretty radical one-man-versus Hell action-adventure game into a generic zombie movie starring The Rock, or Prince of Persia which basically copy and pasted the game on the big screen and clearly overestimated the entertainment value of its source material, Uncharted looks like it strikes that perfect balance between the two mediums and should make for an exciting weekend at the movies.

Bailo Drops Electrifying Single “EAGLE VZN” Off Forthcoming ‘Trapped Out II’ EP

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When it comes to trap, BAILO is a household name. He’s paved his own lane in the industry, known for booming 808’s and electrifying arrangements that have earned him a massive global fanbase.

Last year, BAILO spearheaded the movement to bring back the original trap sound with the release of his Trapped Out EP via Slow Roast Records, garnering support from heavy-hitters like Zeds Dead, Alison Wonderland, What So Not, GTA, and Clozee. 

The movement continues with “EAGLE VZN,” where listeners can bask in the nostalgia of BAILO’s tried and true sound, embellished with modern production techniques. You can’t help but be hooked instantly as rhythmic synths loop hypnotically, building into a thunderous drop that hits just as hard in your home speakers as it would live. 

BAILO continues to amaze us with his versatility and talent in the studio and we cannot wait to hear his forthcoming ‘Trapped Out II’ EP! Listen to “EAGLE VZN” below.

 



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