Summer camp movies are well-tread territory for comedies and have brought us the framework for memorable films such as Meatballs, Wet Hot American Summer and Heavyweights. The latest movie to offer a twist on this familiar formula is YouthMin, a mockumentary that follows a youth ministry groupâs Bible camp misadventure.
Directed by Jeff Ryan and Arielle Cimino, the film stars Ryan (Orange Is the New Black) as Pastor Dave, a highly competitive youth pastor from New England. The cast also features Tori Grace Hines, Will Martin (The Devil You Know), and a trio of actors (Geena Santiago, Luke Deardorff and Matt Perusse) from Ryanâs 2019 film, Mass Hysteria. The two-minute trailer gives a great feel of what to expect from the 79-minute film, which releases April 28, 2021, on iTunes, Amazon and Vimeo.
Hereâs the official Synopsis from First-Name Films, âDavid Bauer, a young, energetic youth pastor, has the greatest job in the world, and he canât wait to bring his youth group to Bible Camp to win the esteemed camp competitions. His plans are jeopardized by the arrival of an unexpected new co-worker, intense Christian competition, and surly teenage rebellion. David will let nothing stop him from showing everyone that his youth group is the âMost Godly.’â
Check out the official trailer for YouthMin below:
Kris Trindl is an artist that should ring a major memory bell if youâve been keeping up the early EDM bangers of the 2010s. The artist, known more commonly as Rain Man, has teamed up with longtime collaborator Oly to deliver an emotional soundscape in âStill Young.â
On the new single, Rain Man makes a return to form. He delivers a melodic, dance jam that bounces between exhilarating groove and introspective rebellion. With Oly, Rain Man gives the singerâs voice a phenomenal pedestal surrounded by glistened synths and tactful drums. The result in the twoâs latest work is a tune ripe for the summer airwaves that will have concert goers daydreaming of the day concerts are back up and running featuring songs like this.
The team-up also serves as as spiritual successor to their earliest collaboration âBack for the Summerâ from 2016. Since then, Rain Man and Oly have continued to work with each other as shown by their more recent projects as the duo Xaia. While Xaia operates in the melodic bass music side of the EDM-sphere, Rain Manâs music continues to evolve while staying true to his roots from his time in Krewella.
Make sure to check out the new single from Rain Man âStill Youngâ featuring Oly out now.
This is my reaction to Meeting In My Bedroom by Silk! Make sure to like, subscribe and turn on notifications if you enjoyed this video!!!
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Students on the University of Birmingham’s undergraduate degree discuss our broad-ranging programme of events. This includes free cultural trips, lectures from cross-disciplinary scholars and our annual festival for students and staff to celebrate their achievements.
After 11 long years, the wait is almost over for a new Liz Phair album. On June 4, Soberish will officially release on Chrysalis Records, and with it will be the end of the drought of new music from the iconic alternative songwriter since 2010âs Funstyle.
Perhaps more importantly, we now know what the first song on the album will sound like, as Phair released âSpanish Doorsâ to coincide with the announcement. The track comes about two months after the release of her Lou Reed/Laurie Anderson tribute from Soberish called âHey Lou.â
â[âSpanish Doorsâ is] about the fracturing of a beautiful life, when everything you counted on is suddenly thrown up for grabs,â Phair said in a statement. âI drew inspiration from a friend who was going through a divorce, but the actions in the lyrics are my own. I relate to hiding out in the bathroom when everyone around you is having a good time but your life just fell apart. You look at yourself in the mirror and wonder who you are now, shadows of doubt creeping into your eyes. Just a few moments ago you were a whole, confident person and now you wonder how youâll ever get the magic back.â
Teigen, inside the home she shares with her daughter Chrissy and her family. Photo: Michelle Groskopf
It doesnât take long to figure out that Pepper Thai â a.k.a. Pepper Teigen, real name: Vilailuck Teigen â has perhaps the worldâs most appropriate nickname. âAt Thai restaurants, they always ask you, âHow spicy? One through five stars?ââ she says, grinning. âI always tell them, âTen.ââ We are connected via Zoom. Iâm on the East Coast, and Teigen is talking to me from a sunny California kitchen in the home she shares with daughter Chrissy, son-in-law John Legend, and her two grandchildren, Luna and Miles. From the other side of the country, she has agreed to teach me how to make a traditional papaya salad, which of course features two different kinds of Thai peppers.
âWhen I was growing up, I had no choice. We had to eat what my parents ate,â she says of the early, fiery meals she ate while growing up just outside the northern Thai city of Korat. âThere was crying and tears,â she laughs, âbut Mom would say, âItâs gonna get better!ââ
Teigenâs papaya salad calls for two varieties of chiles. Photo: Michelle Groskopf
Many may be familiar with Teigen primarily as the mother of multi-hyphenate Chrissy. But Teigen has become a star in her own right, with an Instagram account boasting over 400,000 followers and her first cookbook, The Pepper Thai Cookbook: Family Recipes From Everyoneâs Favorite Thai Mom, which will be released this week. And while Chrissy has become a force in the food industry with her company Cravings, it would be a mistake to believe that her mother is simply riding the coattails of a daughterâs success.
Teigen, rather, began her cooking journey at the age of 6, when she, as the oldest of her five siblings, accompanied her mother to the market, arriving at two or three oâclock in the morning. Her earliest duty was simply to guard the large basket of food from being stolen, but she soon graduated to slicing and peeling fruit and vegetables. These became the backbone of the ten-plus dishes that her mother would serve at lunchtime, from a stand, to hungry children from the local school. Teigen, meanwhile, would come home from the market around 6 a.m. and then have sit through an entire dayâs worth of her own classes. âI didnât do very well in school at all,â she tells me as she mixes together chili peppers, garlic, cherry tomatoes, and lime for the salad dressing. âAnd my uniform was always green from chopping all the papaya,â she recalls. âThe stains never came out!â
In 1984, with her then-husband Ronald, Teigen moved to America, where she would get her nickname. At Porkyâs Tavern, a bar in Longview, Washington, that the couple owned in the 1980s, she was known for munching on raw chili peppers while mixing up drinks for the incredulous customers. To this day, Teigen keeps them in her purse at all times, along with a mini pantry of emergency ingredients. âI have MSG and chicken bouillon traveling with me â I can do anything!â she says. âI went to a hot pot restaurant and dropped in my own chicken bouillon; it made the soup taste so much better!â
Teigen started learning to cook in the market of her hometown Korat. Photo: Michelle Groskopf
Thatâs not to say she disdains American dishes or ingredients. She loves to add depth to a classic Thai chicken recipe with bottled barbecue sauce. âAnd what is that fish thatâs in a jar?â she asks aloud.
âSardines?â Legend calls as he helpfully places a plate in the sink behind Teigen.
âYeah! I love sardines.â
When she and Ronald ran Porkyâs, she was also in charge of preparing much of the bar food for the customers, mostly dishes that she had never tasted before coming to America, like hamburgers and spaghetti and meatballs. She credits her mother, who never used recipes and cooked by intuition, for giving her the confidence to tackle unknown foods. She did, however, introduce egg rolls to the regulars: âI didnât know people loved them so much,â she says, shaking her head, apparently still in disbelief all these years later.
But her time at Porkyâs wouldnât last long. Ronaldâs job as an electrical engineer meant the family would move every couple of years: first to Utah, where Chrissy was born, and later to California, Seattle, Idaho, and Hawaii, among other stops. âIâm so glad we got to move a lot,â Teigen says. âIt made me learn about people.â (It also gave her fodder for her growing collection of American recipes: The time in Idaho, for example, allowed her to perfect scalloped potatoes, a favorite dish of Chrissyâs that appears in the new cookbook.)
She did not, of course, realize at the time that cooking would lead to any kind of fame. But when she and the family visited Thailand just before the pandemic, she returned not just as the daughter of the school lunch lady, but a celebrity. âPeople recognize me,â she says. âEspecially at the market.â Teigen, Chrissy, and Legend were even given the keys to the city: âWe wanted to go back to Thailand now, but you still have to quarantine,â Teigen explains. âI said, âWhat about our keys to the city?ââ
Shaving green papaya. Photo: Michelle Groskopf
Teigen finishes plating her own salad onto an arrangement of lettuce leaves just as her grandkids come barreling through the door. She helps Luna clamber up onto the counter and prompts her to say âSawadee kaâ â âHelloâ in Thai â and then shows her the freshly made dish, which prompts a âYummy!â from Luna.
Teigen, of course, is teaching both her grandchildren not only how to speak Thai, but how to eat like a Thai as well. She tells me that Luna is just starting to experiment with some heat: âSheâs proud!â Teigen says â visibly proud herself. As weâre about to log off, I ask her whatâs next after the cookbook launch. âI just want to be with my family, take care of the grandkids,â she replies. âThatâs my dream.â
Biggest celebrity hosted live shows and best LA Hip Hop events. TBA Fridays at Playhouse Nightclub – #TBAFridays #PlayhouseHW – Best Hip Hop nightlife in LA on a Friday; located at 6506 Hollywood Blvd.
On Fridays and Saturdays, hip hop fans pack the 13,000 square-foot Playhouse Nightclub on Hollywood Boulevard. Playhouse Hollywood nightclub is located in former Fox Theatre, which originally opened as the Iris Theatre in 1918 and became the Fox in 1968.
With local and national DJs as your ringmasters, the circus-themed club showcases some of the best L.A DJs and biggest celeb nightlife events with gorgeous bartenders who not only serve drinks but also perform aerial and burlesque shows.
Other features include intelligent lighting, go-go dancers flanking the dance floor, and a VIP lounge with a second bar and separate sound system. Open until 3am, dress to impress. Your next great night out in LA starts online at –
Sharifa Murdock has been a fashion mogul in the making since she was a young girl growing up in Brooklyn, N.Y. Now, the CEO of ENVSN and Chief of People and Culture at KITH, Murdock is sharing her story with BET.com to help other young creatives not only thrive but make smart choices that will help them endure some of the challenges that may come along the way.Â
Her story begins like many other Black women who are molded by the inner city looking for a way into an industry that isnât necessarily created for them. As a teen, Murdock was quickly taught about the value of hard work and money. Her first job was in retail and she was eventually hired as a sales associate at Atrium, a contemporary clothing store in Lower Manhattan. It wasnât until that moment that she really began to understand the business of fashion. The storeâs owner, Sam BenÂAvraham, took her under his tutelage, mentoring Murdock as she followed a course of study in Fashion Merchandising and Buying from Wood Tobe Coburn College and eventually into positions at prestigious showrooms for Louis Vuitton and Donna Karen.
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âI know what I could have been growing up in the inner city and I know what I didn’t want,â says Murdock. âI wanted to make sure young women around the world understood that they had choices.â
Her desire to mentor talented young people and her passion for the ever evolving fashion industry birthed the idea for ENVSN, a community committed to the personal and professional development of Gen Z and millennial taste makers. In 2019, she presented the ENVSN Festival, a two-day event full of workshops, panel discussions, and networking experiences couched in between musical performances, DJ sets, and giveaways.
âKids need to be exposed at an earlier age to things that they aren’t normally exposed to,â said Murdock. âI see ENVSN being that platform to open up young peopleâs eyes to see how much further they can go in life and not just believe the story that they are being told.â
Her plan is to empower the next generation of creative geniuses, one-by-one, to take over the world and leave it in a much better place.Â
Watch Sharifa Murdock talk about encouraging todayâs youth movement, her tips on how to break into the fashion industry and her amazing advice on how to stay true to yourself and maintain your positivity no matter where you go in our video below.