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A London Hotel Is Letting Guests Stay In A Hogwarts-Style Bedroom Just Like 'Harry Potter'

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Harry Potter themed Georgian House hotel 2

The Georgian House Hotel, a boutique bed and breakfast in Victoria, Central London, is offering guests the chance to stay in a Hogwarts-style bedroom just like Harry Potter would have.

The "Wizarding Chamber" is a gothic twist on the typical visit to London. The rooms include four-poster beds, stone wash basins, potion bottles, and cauldrons.

There are also other "unexpected wizardly details," according to the website, such as a spell book and trunks artfully placed throughout the rooms.

A full English breakfast is included with every stay, sans "bogey flavoured Bertie Botts Every Flavour Beans." 

Harry Potter themed Georgian House hotel 4There are also packages that include a "Muggle Walking Tour," which takes you around the sights of central London where the films were shot, including the famous platform 9 3/4 at King's Cross Station.

A separate package has guests boarding a bus bound for the Warner Bros Studio for The Making of Harry Potter Tour.

Harry Potter themed Georgian House hotel 3A day in the life of Harry Potter doesn't come cheap, though: A night in the Wizard Chambers for two, breakfast, Muggle and Studio Tour tickets will run you $585. Without the tours, the price still comes to $337.

Besides the two Harry Potter-themed rooms, the 4-star Georgian also offers the less-magical Belgravia Boutique and Victorian Classic rooms.

Since the website has already been having trouble loading since announcing the new promotion, we're guessing if you're interested in renting a room, you better do it fast.

Harry Potter themed Georgian House hotel

SEE ALSO: The 25 Best Hotels In Europe

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12 Things We Learned From Daniel Radcliffe's AMA

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daniel radcliffeOn Tuesday evening, Harry Potter star Daniel Radcliffe took to Reddit to connect with fans in the internet-honoured way: an Ask Me Anything (AMA) webchat. The 25-year-old actor was polite and funny, but he also gave away loads of information about growing up on a film set and being mistaken for Elijah Wood.

Here is what we learned:

1. Radcliffe would like to work with Jennifer Lawrence

When asked who he would like to work with, Radcliffe said : "George Clooney... Jennifer Lawrence... I just think they'd be really cool, Paul Rudd, I met him and was like "You're awesome!" I just want to work with people you can get on with, and you have a good rapport with, and those are definitely some of them."

Perhaps Katniss Everdeen and Harry Potter could exist in a realm outside fan fiction after all. Radcliffe also said he would like to work with filmmakers including Coen brothers, Wes Anderson, Paul Thomas Anderson and Christopher Nolan.

2. Russell Brand is his new best friend

As part of a conversation about what he enjoys watching on YouTube, Radcliffe revealed : "Normally I immediately distrust actors as soon as they are talking about politics, because I think it's quite self-serving, but [Brand]'s very sincere, and I really got on with him when I met him."

3. Alan Rickman was a bit like a real-life Severus Snape...

...as Radcliffe's intimidating but ultimately kind mentor – Just without the fake allegiance to the Dark Arts. Radcliffe posted : "The first few years I was genuinely quite intimidated by Alan [...] but as I grew up, I realised he was one of the kindest and most supportive members of that cast to me.

"Alan has cut short holidays to come and see me in plays, and take me out for dinner afterwards to talk to me about stuff, I think when he realised how serious I was about wanting to be an actor, and he knew what a particular world the Potter set was to grow up in - he just really wanted to help us all and has been very helpful to me, certainly."

Writing about pranks pulled on set, Radcliffe disclosed that in the third Harry Potter film: "There's a shot of all the kids sleeping in the Great Hall, and the camera starts very wide, and comes in so that it's an inch from my face, a very long developing set. Alan Rickman decided he would plant one of those fart machines in my sleeping bag, and they waited until the camera had come in for this huge DRAMATIC developing shot, and then unleashed this tremendous noise in the great hall.

I immediately thought: 'This is one of the other kids f---ing around, and we were going to get in trouble.'

But as it turns out, it was one of the members of Britain's acting royalty."

4. This is his favorite internet meme:

daniel radcliffe meme

When asked by one knowing user, "How do you feel about being compared to Daniel Boringcliffe?", Radcliffe replied : "I've been shown that meme by a few friends, and obviously there are quite a few Harry Potter related memes and I have to say that one really made me laugh! It made me enjoy my name way more than I ever have before. So obviously Daniel Radcliffe beats Daniel Boringcliffe 100% of the time."

Radcliffe was then very polite, and thanked "whomever made that particular meme, because it really is very good."

5. Even as a child, Radcliffe respected Richard Harris's way with the ladies

Radcliffe pays his respects to the late Professor Dumbledore actor : "He was just such a sweet man... Relentlessly charming with women, I think I'm pretty sure I saw him flirting with female journalists at press conferences, I remember being a young child in awe of it..."

6. WWF taught him how to do an American accent

Among sitcoms such as Frasier and the influence of director Chris Columbus, Radcliffe attributes his American accent to giving his wrestling action figures American accents when he was used to play with them as a child.

7. Radcliffe wasn't allowed to put his name into the Goblet of Fire

The actor didn't seize the opportunity to put his own name into the selection cup for the lethal wizarding games, not out of fear, but because his handwriting was too poor : "I think that by that point, they had figured out my handwriting was so bad that they would never let it be seen in the film. So I'm pretty sure one of the props guys wrote 'Harry Potter' neatly on a piece of paper for me to put in."

8. Nobody has ever asked him what Horcrux he would use

Because why would Harry Potter ever indulge in such dark magic?! Regardless, Radcliffe has his answer well thought out : "I would put it inside an album on the iPod, so you'd have to open that album. So I somehow want it to be connected to a particular album that means something, like Ziggy Stardust. So that's how I'd want to do that."

9. He listened to heavy metal to prepare for his role in the new horror film Horns

In particular, Metallica and Megadeth, as Radcliffe's makeup artists/horn applicators "were both big metal heads".

10. He has never been approached for Game of Thrones

But would"totally would side with the Starks, though, because their symbol is a wolf."

11. Radcliffe is philosophical about sharks

He would like to be a shark, but in particular :"Maybe a Hammerhead because they are more social. Because I like the power of being a shark, but i don't like the isolation of a Great White's life."

Deep.

12. He likes toast

This is why AMAs can be brilliant.

dan radcliffe AMA

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JK Rowling Reveals The Inspiration For A Despised 'Harry Potter' Character

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JK Rowling

LONDON (Reuters) - As a Halloween treat for her fans, J.K. Rowling has revealed that the much-hated character Dolores Umbridge from her "Harry Potter" stories is based on a teacher to whom she took an instant dislike - but whose name she has not disclosed.

Umbridge, played by actress Imelda Staunton in the film adaptations of the hugely popular fantasy series, is the seemingly sweet but innately vicious teacher at Hogwarts who bans young Harry from playing Quidditch and forces him to write the words "I must not tell lies" on the back of his hand.

In an essay posted on Friday on her Pottermore.com website, Rowling says that the character of Umbridge was based on a person "whom I disliked intensely on sight".

"The woman in question returned my antipathy with interest. Why we took against each other so instantly, heartily and (on my side, at least) irrationally, I honestly cannot say," she writes.

Like Umbridge, the person had a "pronounced taste for twee accessories...(including) a tiny little plastic bow slide, pale lemon in color".

Elsewhere, without revealing the person's name, she describes her as someone who had been her teacher "long ago...in a certain skill or subject".

"Dolores...is one of the characters for whom I feel the purest dislike," Rowling writes in the essay's conclusion.

Umbridge_Office

"Her desire to control, to punish, and to inflict pain, all in the name of law and order, are, I think, every bit as reprehensible as Lord Voldemort’s unvarnished espousal of evil,” she adds, referring to Harry Potter's arch enemy.

Rowling posted the essay and other new writing on Pottermore at Halloween in conjunction with the launch of "Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix", the fifth novel in the series, on the website.

 (Reporting by Michael Roddy; Editing by Angus MacSwan)

SEE ALSO: 12 Things We Learned From Daniel Radcliffe's AMA

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JK Rowling Says This Little Known Character Is The Only One She's Ever Regretted Killing Off

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jk rowling reading harry potterAlthough JK Rowling's Harry Potter series is adored by children worldwide, the novels are not without their unjust and tragic plot lines as characters die from the effects of dark magic.

However, in a new short essay uploaded onto Pottermore, Rowling has revealed that she only feels guilty about writing in the death of one character: the little-known Florean Fortescue.

The character ran an ice cream parlour and meets Harry in the third novel, Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban, when he gives the Boy Wizard free ice creams.

He is then mentioned in the sixth book, The Order of the Phoenix, when Bill Weasley, the brother of Harry's best friend Ron, explains that Florean was "dragged off" after upsetting the dangerous and draconian Death Eaters, servants of Voldemort.

On the Harry Potter publishing site, Rowling writes: "I seemed to have him kidnapped and killed for no good reason. He is not the first wizard whom Voldemort murdered because he knew too much (or too little), but he is the only one I feel guilty about, because it was all my fault."

Rowling explains that she had originally imagined Florean to help Potter in the final book, The Deathly Hallows, but his role became redundant when other characters became more helpful.

In another piece of writing, Rowling tells the humorous history of the wizarding pub, The Leaky Cauldron, which allows witches and wizards to enter the Oxford Street of the wizarding world, Diagon Alley.

The author explains that she chose to locate the tavern on Charing Cross Road because the street is famous for its bookshops: "This is why I wanted it to be the place where those in the know go to enter a different world."

The updates are part of the Pottermore Christmas experience, in which 12 new surprises and pieces of writing are being uploaded onto the site between 12th and 23rd of December.

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Steven Spielberg Turned Down Directing 'Harry Potter' For Another Movie

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steven spielberg

Imagine if Steven Spielberg had directed Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone? It could have happened, as Spielberg was offered the job, but he turned it down, deciding to take his career in "another direction." That direction, as it happened, was Minority Report and A.I. Artificial Intelligence. 

As you may or may not remember, it was around this time, fifteen years ago, that Spielberg's name was linked to the anticipated Philosophers/Sorcerer's Stone adaptation. This was back when J.K. Rowling's now-beloved magical series was only just starting to generate real buzz stateside. Take a look at this recently resurfaced news clipping, which announces that Steven Spielberg would not be directing Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone... 

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We have the Academy of Motion Pictures Arts and Sciences and Oscars.org to thank for showcasing this 15-year-old clipping. It's included in the new Harry Potter Highlights page, which was recently added to the site's Collections feature. The page features photos and clippings related to the making of the Harry Potter movies, one of which is the above "Morning Report" from the L.A. Times, which notes that Spielberg opted out of adapting Harry Potter for the screen, in favor of the sci-fi thriller Minority Report, which starred Tom Cruise and grossed more than $35 million domestically in its opening weekend (beating Disney's Lilo & Stitch by a narrow margin). 

The LA Times clipping is dated February 2000. For a bit of perspective on the buzz that was circulating at that time, you can look at an article L.A. Times posted just a month prior, which noted that "the buzz is that Spielberg's next project will be a Harry Potter film for Warner Bros." The January article goes on to note that Spielberg's office issued a statement that denied any decision was made yet. And sure enough, a month later, it was announced that Spielberg was out. Then In March, news broke that Chris Columbus was confirmed to helm what would go on to be the first of eight Harry Potter movies. The rest is Harry Potter history.
harry potter old

So, what if Steven Spielberg had directed Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone? It's possible we would've gotten a series of animated movies. Back in 2010, right around the time that Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Part 1 was set to arrive in theaters, LA Times ran an article recounting the history of the franchise, which included a comment from Alan Horn that revealed Spielberg's plans for the adaptation. That included combining some of the books and making it animated. 

...One of the notions of Dreamworks' and Steven’s was, ‘Let’s combine a couple of the books, let’s make it animated,’ and that was because of the [visual effects and] Pixar had demonstrated that animated movies could be extremely successful. Because of the wizardry involved, they were very effects-laden. So I don’t blame them. But I did not want to combine the movie and I wanted it to be live action."

In retrospect, it's hard to argue with Horn's preference for live-action and separate films. Heck, I doubt fans of the books would've argued with him back then either, as I can't imagine book fans would've appreciated the stories being condensed even more than they ended up having to be from page to screen. 

Did it all work out for the best? As an openly geeky fan of the books, I'm going to say yes, but it's a gray-area yes. We got the live action films, and they gave each book its own movie. Deathly Hallows actually ended up getting split into two movies, which is pretty much the opposite of combining books. And yet, we can still nitpick over the aspects of the story that were condensed, altered or altogether written out -- Respectful nod in the general direction of Peeves, wherever he's hovering. -- in the feature adaptations. 

Minority Report computer screenAnd as a Minority Report fan, I don't entirely regret Spielberg's decision not to direct Harry Potter, even if WB had been able to convince him that live action and separate movies would be the right approach. Still, who knows what Spielberg would have made from the Harry Potter books, had he chosen to pursue the adaptation(s). 

Steven Spielberg also went on to make A.I. Artificial Intelligence. He did not, however, direct the adaptation of Arthur Golden's Memoirs of a Geisha, which was also eying back in 2000. (Rob Marshall ended up directing that one.) 

It's interesting to look back at the history of bringing Harry Potter to the screen, particularly now as Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them is in the works, with Harry Potter and the Order of the PhoenixHalf-Blood Prince and Deathly Hallows director David Yates attached to helm. Will the spinoff, which is being penned by J.K. Rowling herself, go on to be as huge as the Harry Potter franchise? Will we someday look back and wonder what might have been had the rumor about Alfonso Cuaron possibly directing been true? Perhaps, if the film(s) leave as big an imprint on pop culture as Harry Potter has. Fantastic Beasts is expected to begin filming this summer. 

In the meantime, you can look back at some of the Harry Potter franchise highlights at Oscar.org. And if you're a fan of "can you imagine?" scenarios, be sure to check out the news clipping about Tim Roth, who was originally on board to play Professor Snape, but decided to star in Tim Burton's Planet of the Apes instead. 

SEE ALSO: How Steven Spielberg Made Millions Off 'Star Wars' After A 1977 Bet With George Lucas

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The surprising similarity between Voldemort and climate change

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voldemort harry potter

For Oscar Wilde and his fellow aesthetes of Victorian England, there was the love that dare not speak its name.

For the wary wizards and witches of Harry Potter’s world, there was he-who-must-not-be-named.

And for Florida bureaucrats, there is the phenomenon that cannot be named, in spite of the fact many of them are attempting to prepare for its inevitable effects on the low-lying land.

An in-depth report by the Florida Center for Investigative Reporting, published Sunday in the Miami Herald, reports officials in the state’s Department of Environmental Protection “have been ordered not to use the term ‘climate change’ or ‘global warming’ in any communications, e-mails, or reports.”

The unwritten but broadly enforced policy went into effect after Governor Rick Scott, who “is not convinced that climate change is caused by human activity,” took office in 2011.

When Bron Taylor, a University of Florida professor who focuses on the intersection of religion, politics, and the environment, learned this news, “I first thought of (1984 author George) Orwell,” he says. “Then I thought that an even more apt description for this bizarre directive is, 'Hear no evil, see no evil, speak no evil.'”

“This is, of course, exactly what enables great evil to flourish,” Taylor says. “Although evil is a word that should be used sparingly, lest it lose the full force of its condemnation, given the suffering unfolding from climate disruption, nothing less will do in this case.”

Miami Climate Change

The psychological term for refusing to acknowledge the presence of evil—or any unpleasant reality—is “denial.” The lingo has made its way into the public lexicon, thanks to catchphrases such as “denial is not just a river in Egypt.” (A river that, incidentally, will flood more often in the future due to climate change, according to a 2013 study.)

On his Psych Central website, psychologist John Grohol lists denial as the first of 15 common defense mechanisms. “Denial is the refusal to accept reality or fact, acting as if a painful event, thought, or feeling did not exist,” he writes. “It is considered one of the most primitive of the defense mechanisms because it is characteristic of early childhood development.”

So if your initial reaction to the Florida news was “This is childish,” you hit it right on the head.

“Refusing to talk about something will not magically make it go away,” says Craig Chalquist, department chair of East-West Psychology at the California Institute of Integral Studies. “But it will prevent people from getting ready for it in time to adapt.”

Researcher Renee Lertzman, who specializes in communicating environmental messages, phrases it just a bit differently. “It is natural to want to disavow, ignore and deny bad news,” she says. “The decision to remove reference to ‘climate change’ or ‘global warming’ reflects what psychoanalysts would call ‘wish fulfillment.’”

Miami Climate ChangeThe defense mechanism allows “what we see, hear, and experience” to be dominated by “our unconscious fantasies about how we want reality to be,” Lertzman says. While this reflex can help with short-term coping, “it becomes lethal when it’s applied to ecological and biotic contexts, which is exactly what is happening.”

Lertzman adds that, when mandated by the government, this sort of decree is “a way of exercising control over what is said and not said, which is the ultimate form of coercion and control. Our capacities to articulate, speak, and name is the basis for any kind of social change. The effects this can have include fostering what (sociologist) Kari Norgaard refers to as the social production of denial.”

That last point seems particularly pertinent to the Florida policy. If you can’t name something, it tends to remain vague and difficult to grasp—and you can’t combat a problem you can't define in a clear, lucid way. When information puts the profits of powerful people at risk, obscuring it by denying it a name can be an effective way to derail potential action.

WARMINGIt’s now clear that “global warming” was a terrible initial attempt at naming the phenomenon. For many people, that wording implied things would be getting hotter everywhere, all the time. Just a week ago, a United States Senator brought a snowball into the Capitol and used it as “evidence” that global warming is a myth—a ridiculous stunt that was only possible because of bad early branding.

Research has shown people are more receptive to the term “climate change.” But that wording doesn’t imply a sense of urgency, which helps explain why voters consistently rank it at or near the bottom of their list of concerns.

Lertzman sees some potential benefit in the news out of Florida: She argues that it “may help signal the degree and severity of our collective paralysis, and help mobilize the climate advocacy communities to specifically target and address the underlying psychological dimensions of climate change.”

Let’s hope so. In the words of University of Victoria psychologist Robert Gifford, who has outlined the many psychological barriers that are getting in the way of seriously addressing climate change: “Putting your head in the sand—I mean Everglades—won’t make it go away.”

Findings is a daily column by Pacific Standard staff writer Tom Jacobs, who scours the psychological-research journals to discover new insights into human behavior, ranging from the origins of our political beliefs to the cultivation of creativity.

SEE ALSO: The new Republican majority in Congress can't stand that the Pentagon and CIA are worried about climate change

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NOW WATCH: Bill Nye Reveals Why Climate Change Is So Hard To Stop

JK Rowling's response to this Harry Potter actor's racy photo shoot is absolute gold

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skitch hot neville

Neville Longbottom is all grown up and JK Rowling has something to say about it. 

Actor Matthew Lewis is best known for his portrayal of Gryffindor dork Neville Longbottom in the "Harry Potter" movies. The much-beloved character was babied by his grandmother and terrified of potions-master Professor Snape. 

But in this month's cover feature for Attitude Magazine, Lewis seems like a different person. Although his character was the most awkward boy in his year, Lewis himself has blossomed into a buff young man who isn't shy about taking his shirt off.

Still, he told Attitude, "I’ve never considered myself to be good-looking at all. Just average."

However average Lewis may believe he looks, the internet thinks otherwise. Social-media outlets are buzzing with the photos and everyone is weighing in on them — even "Harry Potter" author JK Rowling.

In response to the photos, Rowling admonished Lewis via Twitter: 

Lewis responded with an apology, which Rowling accepted: 

Rounding out the online repartee, here's a tweet from Jason Isaacs, a.k.a. Lucius Malfoy: 

Although electronics were known to malfunction at Hogwarts, it looks like the wizarding community is flourishing on Twitter.

Here are a few more photos of what the actor formerly known as Neville Longbottom looks like today.

hot neville

hot neville

 hot neville

SEE ALSO: 28 things you never knew about how the Harry Potter movies were made

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NOW WATCH: Here's the powerful trailer for the Batkid documentary — the story of a cancer patient who Make-A-Wish turned into a superhero

Oscar winner Eddie Redmayne will star in the 'Harry Potter' spinoff movie

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Eddie Redmayne oscarsIt's official. Following reports that Oscar winner Eddie Redmayne was in talks to play the lead role in the anticipated "Harry Potter" spinoff film "Fantastic Beasts and Where To Find Them" comes official confirmation from Warner Bros. that Redmayne will, in fact, play Newt Scamander in the film.  

In addition to confirming Eddie Redmayne's casting, Warner Bros. describes the character as: 

"Newt Scamander, the Wizarding World’s preeminent magizoologist, who in his travels has encountered and documented a myriad of magical creatures, ultimately leading to his penning the Hogwarts School textbook 'Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them.'"

Eddie Redmayne is one of a few names that made the rounds when speculation and reports about "Fantastic Beasts"' casting began to circulate. Matt Smith and Nicholas Hoult were also said to be eyed for the role.

However, the more recent reports suggested Redmayne was signing on, and WB's announcement confirms it. Eddie Redmayne's credits include "Les Miserables,""Jupiter Ascending" and an Oscar-winning performance in "The Theory of Everything." 

This marks the first official bit of casting for the highly anticipated feature adaptation of J.K. Rowling's magical creature reference guide. It's been reported that there are four additional lead characters, two male and two female, and recent reports listed Kate Upton, Dakota Fanning and Saoirse Ronan among the actors potentially being eyed for the roles.  

Back when Variety reported that Eddie Redmayne was in talks for the part of Newt Scamander, the trade noted that the additional four stars were American characters. That falls in line with what we know about the plot of the film, which J.K. Rowling herself has confirmed takes place in New York.

Kate Upton

Beyond that, and knowing what little we do about Newt Scamander, we don't have a lot to go on in terms of the plot of "Fantastic Beasts." The title and the reference guide penned by the character obviously suggests that there will be fantastic beasts of the magical variety. We're hoping that includes dragons.  

Though the story is set in the same universe as the "Harry Potter" series, "Fantastic Beasts and Where To Find Them" will take place some seventy years before Harry Potter attended Hogwarts. So we might not expect many -- if any -- direct connections between this new story and the "Harry Potter" series.

With that said, J.K. Rowling is penning the screenplay for "Fantastic Beasts," and Warner Bros. notes that she's developed the character Newt Scamander "to further explore the unique wizarding world she has crafted in print and bring it to life on screen."

JK Rowling

With this new story picking up in a different time period and on a different continent, there's enough distance between "Fantastic Beasts" and "Harry Potter" to allow "Fantastic Beasts" to stand completely on its own if that's Rowling's plan. But is it too much to hope for a tie-in or two? That remains to be seen. (Albus Dumbledore was, after all, alive and well back during this time period. Just saying.) 

With Redmayne's casting officially announced, hopefully we'll begin hearing confirmation and details about other roles in the film. Directed by David Yates, "Fantastic Beasts and Where To Find Them" will arrive in theaters (including IMAX and 3D) on November 18, 2016.  

SEE ALSO: The Velociraptors in the 'Jurassic Park' movies are nothing like their real-life counterparts

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NOW WATCH: George R.R. Martin reveals which inconsistencies in 'Game of Thrones' are actually deliberate


Facebook's hottest product was inspired by a newspaper in 'Harry Potter' (FB)

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harry potter daniel radcliffe hogwarts wizard teenager TEEN

Facebook's video business is hot stuff right now. Users are watching 4 billion videos a day— shooting up from just 1 billion in September 2014.

And the key feature driving that growth was inspired by teen fantasy series "Harry Potter," Facebook chief product officer Chris Cox has revealed.

In an interview with Fortune's Erin Griffith, Cox discusses the early days of video on the social network.

Engineers were struggling to get users to actually click on and watch videos — and then, "one day, the team remembered the 'Daily Prophet' newspaper from the Harry Potter movies."

Here's how the Daily Prophet looks:

daily prophet gif harry potter

As seen above, the Daily Prophet's images are magical, with their subjects moving around on the page — more like video than a traditional photograph. The engineering team drew inspiration from this. "News Feed should clearly be alive and move in your hands on smartphones,"Cox told Fortune— and Daily Prophet-style autoplay was the obvious way to achieve this.

In December 2013, autoplay was added— and views skyrocketed, transforming Facebook into the video behemoth it is today. Elsewhere in the Fortune story it's revealed that Facebook enjoyed 10 billion views of "Ice Bucket Challenge" videos — that's 10 times as many as on YouTube.

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NOW WATCH: 5 cool tricks your iPhone can do with the latest iOS update

These 20 stars from blockbuster movies were replaced in the sequels — here's why

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Vegas Vacation chevy chase

When it comes to building franchises, Hollywood tries desperately to stay consistent. If the first movie is a hit, studios will try their hardest to keep the same directors and actors on board as long as possible.

But there are instances in which change is necessary. Sometimes for the betterment of a movie, but sometimes they leave viewers scratching their heads.

From "Batman" to The National Lampoon "Vacation" franchise, check out the most notable recastings in movie history.

In 1980's "Star Wars: The Empire Strikes Back" we see the Emperor for the first time as he speaks to Darth Vader via holograph. The Emperor was actually played by Elaine Baker, then wife of special makeup effects legend Rick Baker. The voice was done by New Zealand actor Clive Revill.



For the next film in the saga, "Return of the Jedi," George Lucas recast the role with Scottish actor Ian McDiarmid, who not only went on to play the Emperor in the prequels, but was placed into the "Empire" scene when Lucas updated the films in the early 2000s.



Though Anthony Hopkins won an Oscar for his performance as Hannibal Lecter in "The Silence of the Lambs" (and would play the part two more times), he wasn't the first to star as the good doctor.



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

These 20 stars from blockbuster movies were replaced in the sequels — here's why

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Vegas Vacation chevy chase

When it comes to building franchises, Hollywood tries desperately to stay consistent. If the first movie is a hit, studios will try their hardest to keep the same directors and actors on board as long as possible.

But there are instances in which change is necessary. Sometimes for the betterment of a movie, but sometimes they leave viewers scratching their heads.

From "Batman" to The National Lampoon "Vacation" franchise, check out the most notable recastings in movie history.

In 1980's "Star Wars: The Empire Strikes Back" we see the Emperor for the first time as he speaks to Darth Vader via holograph. The Emperor was actually played by Elaine Baker, then wife of special makeup effects legend Rick Baker. The voice was done by New Zealand actor Clive Revill.



For the next film in the saga, "Return of the Jedi," George Lucas recast the role with Scottish actor Ian McDiarmid, who not only went on to play the Emperor in the prequels, but was placed into the "Empire" scene when Lucas updated the films in the early 2000s.



Though Anthony Hopkins won an Oscar for his performance as Hannibal Lecter in "The Silence of the Lambs" (and would play the part two more times), he wasn't the first to star as the good doctor.



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

China's castle-like 'Hogwarts' school just graduated its first class

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The Hebei Academy of Fine Arts campus in Xinle, Hebei province, pictured during a graduation ceremony on June 16, 2015

Xinle (China) (AFP) - A Chinese university has earned comparisons with Harry Potter's Hogwarts due to its bizarre castle campus, but local traditions supplied the magic at a Confucian-style ceremony for its degree graduates.

The gigantic grey towers, stone walls and turrets of the Hebei Academy of Fine Arts' castle complex dominate surrounding wheat fields near Xinle city in northern China.

The university, which has more than 8,000 students, made headlines last year when overseas media compared its new campus building to the Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry from the Harry Potter series of children's novels.

"This castle has boosted the reputation of our academy across the world," straggle-bearded college head Zhen Zhongyi told AFP as he stood in the brick and concrete building's shadow.RTR3QWDI

"I aim to allow students to appreciate Western architecture without leaving the country," he said, adding that he had invested 1.7 billion yuan ($274 million) in the academy so far.

The school's first crop of Bachelor degree students graduated Tuesday, after enrolling at the institution four years ago, when the campus castle was little more than a fantasy.

"We saw all these buildings gradually rising up over the last few years," said new graduate Wang Xiaotian. "Obviously I'm very proud of that".

At a ceremony inspired by ancient traditions, Wang and more than 1,000 others donned flowing white gowns outside a red-beamed temple on the campus dedicated to ancient sage Confucius.

Ceremonies inspired by Confucian tradition and Chinese "Hanfu" gowns with gaping sleeves have become increasingly popular in the country in recent years.RTR3QWBE

A college official patted each student with a white brush before they bowed in front of headmaster Zhen, who wore a black gown and his greying hair in a bun.

After a golf-cart ride back to the castle, new graduates -- some changing into wedding gowns -- posed for pictures and selfies in the fairytale surroundings.

Some seemed nervous about the future.

"I don't want to leave college. My friends are all here. The school is great," said Deng Cui, from the academy's urban design school, who wore a white Hanfu gown with green trimming.RTR3QW9P

Most Chinese universities are state-run, but Zhen's academy is one of a growing number of private institutions.

The painter-turned-scholar said he raised his initial investment from trading art in the 1990s, and plans to expand the campus with a Baroque cathedral and a Middle Eastern-style mosque.

Zhen became aware of the Harry Potter series last year, he said, adding he noticed the building's style is "pretty much the same" as Hogwarts'.

Asked about comparisons with the wizarding school's charismatic headmaster Albus Dumbledore, he replied enigmatically: "I think our style of thinking is somewhat similar."

 

SEE ALSO: The last village in China that's still allowed to have guns

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13 famous father and son duos who have appeared together in movies

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Happy Father's Day!

There are a lot of fathers and sons in Hollywood, but not all of them have starred together in the same movie.

Then there's Ben and Jerry Stiller who have appeared together in a total of four films.

In celebration of Father's Day, here are 13 fathers who starred in movies with their sons. 

Additional reporting by Ana Douglas and Melia Robinson

Will Smith and son Jaden both appeared in 2013's sci-fi movie "After Earth."



Comedic father-and-son duo, Ben and Jerry Stiller have appeared together in "The Heartbreak Kid,""Zoolander,""Heavyweights," and "Hot Pursuit."

 



Three generations of the Douglas clan—Kirk, Michael and Cameron—starred together in "It Runs in the Family."



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

A Harry Potter stage show is set to take over London's West End next year

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harry potter daniel radcliffe hogwarts wizard teenager TEEN

LONDON (AP) — There may not be any new Harry Potter novels in the works, but the famed boy wizard will be on the London stage in a new play set to open next summer.

Author J.K. Rowling tweeted Friday that she is "very excited" to confirm that a new play to be called "Harry Potter and the Cursed Child" will be produced.

It is based on a new original story by Rowling, Jack Thorne and John Tiffany. The play is expected to premiere at London's Palace Theatre.

Thorne has written the play, which will be directed by Tiffany. It is the first play about Harry Potter.

Rowling has written seven Harry Potter novels, which have achieved global success and been turned into successful films.

Tickets will go on sale this fall.

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JK Rowling dropped a bombshell on Harry Potter fans and everyone is out of their minds trying to figure it out

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J.K. Rowling reading Harry Potter at White House

Big news for “Harry Potter” fans everywhere — J.K. Rowling has announced she will be extending the wizarding universe with a new play.

The author took to Twitter to share with her followers on Friday that she has written a play called “Harry Potter and the Cursed Child” that will be coming to London’s West End in the summer of 2016.

Rowling made the announcement on the anniversary of the first book’s — “Harry Potter and the Philosopher’s Stone” — publication date in the United Kingdom 18 years ago.

“I will tell a new story, which is the result of a collaboration between writer Jack Thorne, director John Tiffany, and myself,” Rowling tweeted on Friday.

“I don’t want to say too much more, because I don’t want to spoil what I know will be a real treat for fans,” she continued. “However, I can say that it is not a prequel!” 

harry potter daniel radcliffe hogwarts wizard teenager TEENThe play is collaboration between Rowling herself as well as writer Jack Thorne and director John Tiffany. It will be producedby Sonia Friedman Productions, Colin Callender’s Playground Entertainment, and Harry Potter Theatrical Productions, according to the new website for the production.

Rowling says the new extension into Harry’s universe isn’t a novel because a play was the “only proper medium for the story.” Intriguing!

Though no one knows what the plot will officially be, The Daily Mail reporter Baz Bamigboye wrote Thursday that it would focus on Harry’s parents and the events that happened before they were killed by Lord Voldemort.

This seems unlikely given what Rowling tweeted Friday about the play not being a prequel.

Reading Harry potterFans immediately began favoriting and retweeting J.K. Rowling’s tweets. Her original tweet announcing the title of the play has been retweeted over 27,000 times and favorited over 33,000 times.

Fans were also tweeting their support and excitement at the author. 

 

A few people were even asking J.K. Rowling if they could be in the play itself. The Daily Mail reported that casting has already begun and tickets will go on sale by the fall.

Rowling is famous among her fandom for releasing new information about the “Harry Potter” universe, including character backstories, middle names, and storylines after the book series ended both on Twitter as well as through her website Pottermore.

harry potter gambonMost famously, Rowling said at a book reading in 2007 that Harry’s headmaster Albus Dumbledore was gay. Her website Pottermore has also delved into the lives of characters like Dolores Umbridge, Professor McGonagall, and most recently Harry's relatives the Dursleys that he lived with after his parents were murdered.

To register for more information about “Harry Potter and the Cursed Child” as well as when ticketing will be available, you can sign up hereKeep scrolling to see all of J.K. Rowling’s announcement tweets below.

SEE ALSO: J.K. Rowling Just Published A New Harry Potter Short Story

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JK Rowling is frantically trying to debunk a rumor about her new Harry Potter play

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J.K. Rowling announced on Friday that she was extending the wizarding universe with a new play that would be a part of the official canon — “Harry Potter and the Cursed Child.”

 

The author shared her news with her 4.84 million Twitter followers and racked up an impressive 43,000 favorites and 35,000 retweets at the time of this post.

“I will tell a new story, which is the result of a collaboration between writer Jack Thorne, director John Tiffany, and myself,” Rowling tweeted.

“I don’t want to say too much more, because I don’t want to spoil what I know will be a real treat for fans,” she continued. “However, I can say that it is not a prequel!” 

But a day before Rowling broke the news officially, The Daily Mail reporter Baz Bamigboye wrote about the play and said that it would focus on Harry’s parents and the events that happened before they were killed by Lord Voldemort"

daily mail not a prequel

CNBC World and The Independent also reported that the “Cursed Child” production would be a prequel. Rowling quickly shut them down on Twitter.

 

Then, because her followers kept wondering what the new “prequel” would be about, Rowling decided she really needed to drive the point home that the “Cursed Child” play was not a prequel.

A tweet storm from the author ensued:

 

Though we still have no idea what the play will be about — Harry Potter’s career as an Auror? Another prophecy involving The Boy Who Lived? — one thing’s for sure: The “Cursed Child” is a sequel.

SEE ALSO: JK Rowling dropped a bombshell on Harry Potter fans and everyone is out of their minds trying to figure it out

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Fascinating facts about 10 of the world's best-selling products

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The scale of global consumption is staggering, especially when it comes to some of the world's most popular products, such as Coca-Cola and iPads. 

The absurdly addictive Angry Birds game, for example, has been downloaded 2 billion times, which is equal to nearly 30% of the world's population, according to Finances Online, a personal finance website.

Finances Online compiled a list of similarly surprising facts about other leading consumer products to illustrate just how much we consume.

Check out the graphic below to see the full list, which is based on sales figures within specific categories, such as beverages and electronics.

world best selling book

SEE ALSO: 10 companies that control almost everything we eat

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The Amazon preorders for Harper Lee's new book are rivaling that of the last Harry Potter book

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Harper Lee

NEW YORK (Reuters) - "Go Set a Watchman," the much-anticipated second novel by "To Kill a Mockingbird" author Harper Lee, is the most pre-ordered print title on Amazon.com since the last book in the "Harry Potter" series, Amazon said on Thursday.

The online retailer said the novel, to be published on July 14, 55 years after Lee's classic "To Kill a Mockingbird," was already the No. 1 best-selling book on the website.

It is the most pre-ordered book on Amazon.comsince J.K. Rowling's "Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows" in 2007 - the seventh and final novel about the British teenage boy wizard.

Amazon did not provide figures for either book but publisher Harper, an imprint of HarperCollins, said it had ordered an initial U.S. print run of 2 million for "Go Set a Watchman."

Harper astonished the literary world in February when it announced it would publish a book that only a few people knew existed.

Harper said at the time that the manuscript came to light recently after Lee's lawyer discovered it in a safety deposit box with the original manuscript of "To Kill a Mockingbird."

It was written in the 1950s before Lee, now 89 and in an assisted-living facility in her home state of Alabama, penned her 1960 Pulitzer Prize-winning masterpiece. She then largely retired from public life.

"Watchman" features lawyer Atticus Finch 20 years after the events depicted in "Mockingbird" as his adult daughter Scout returns to visit him in the fictional town of Maycomb, Alabama.

"To Kill a Mockingbird," about racism and injustice in the American South, became an instant best-seller and has sold an estimated 40 million copies worldwide. It was also made into an Oscar-winning film starring Gregory Peck as Atticus Finch.

Lee's home town of Monroeville, Alabama, is marking Tuesday's publication by recreating a 1950s feel and organizing walking tours of the town that inspired the two novels. U.S. bookstores are holding readings and some are opening at midnight.

Lee, who suffered a stroke in 2007 and is reported to have difficulty seeing and hearing, is not expected to appear to promote the book.

The Wall Street Journal, which like HarperCollins is owned by News Corp, will publish an advance first chapter of "Watchman" on Friday, along with Britain's Guardian newspaper. 

(Editing by Bill Trott)

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'Game of Thrones' star Maisie Williams posted the ultimate fan selfie at Comic-Con

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Some of the biggest stars of TV and big screen were roaming around this past week's San Diego Comic-Con.

And, it's expected that they'll combine in certain ways when they happen to be at the same place at the same time. But once in a while, fans hit the real jackpot.

This happened on Sunday — the last day of the convention — when Maisie Williams, who plays the brave Arya Stark on HBO's "Game of Thrones," posted a group selfie on instagram that just blew fans' minds.

Not only was Williams joined by "GOT" co-star Hannah Murray, who plays Gilly, but to Murray's right was Jenna Coleman — the current "Doctor Who" companion — and to her right... "Harry Potter" star Daniel Radcliffe!

Let the screams begin:

 on

 Williams knew what she was doing. She wrote, "I think this photo is gonna make the world implode....."

She was right. The photo currently has 106,000 likes. 

SEE ALSO: 'Game of Thrones' actress Maisie Williams is nervous about how she'll handle the big twist to her character next season

MORE: 'Game of Thrones' season finale breaks series' viewership record

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10 times JK Rowling's flawless Twitter game shut down the conversation

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J.K. Rowling

J. K. Rowling has captivated people around the world with her "Harry Potter" books, but the 46-year-old author is also gaining serious attention for her shorter writings too ... on Twitter. 

Rowling joined Twitter in 2009, after discovering she was being impersonated on the social media site, the Telegraph reported

Though the author has only tweeted 1,356 times in six years, she's managed to pick up 4.97 million followers, Washington Post noted

In addition to followers, Rowling has also gained a reputation for using the social media platform to defend and discuss important social issues. 

Recently, Rowling made headlines after a Twitter troll dissed the 2015 Wimbledon champion, Serena Williams.

Here's a look at Rowling's reaction to a user who said Williams is "built like a man."

Williams isn't the only person Rowling has supported on Twitter.

After Madonna fell onstage during a performance at the 2015 Brit Awards, Rowling praised the singer for getting back up and continuing to perform. She even used the hashtag #TeamMadonna. 

 The author has also used her 140-character powers to support of the LGBTQ community.

When one Twitter user asked, "I wonder why you said that Dumbledore is a gay because I can’t see him in that way," Rowling didn't miss a trick. 

Here's Rowling's response. The original tweet has since been deleted, Time reported

 She also tweeted to let her readers know that Hogwarts was a safe space for all wizards and witches. 

In celebration of Ireland's legalization of gay marriage, Rowling tweeted about a wedding between Albus Dumbledore and and Gandalf from "The Lord of the Rings."

 When the Westboro Baptist Church threatened to picket such an event (a bit strange given that both Dumbledore and Gandalf are fictional wizards), Rowling reacted perfectly. 

In January, Rowling disagreed with Rupert Murdoch's commentary on the Charlie Hebdo shooting and she made sure to let Twitter know. 

Rowling has little tolerance for Twitter users trolling her. 

In May, a Twitter user called the author nasty names including "JK B----face," after they were upset by Rowling's political opinions. The initial tweets have since been deleted, Mic reported.

Here she is annihilating her internet hater.

This spring, Rowling used her Twitter popularity for social good. In an attempt to help find missing persons, she retweeted multiple pictures and descriptions of missing people from throughout the United Kingdom. 

Rowling's Twitter game also shows of the author's keen sense of humor.

When actor Matthew Lewis, best known for playing dorky wizard Neville Longbottom in the "Harry Potter" film, posed half-dressed in a magazine spread, Rowling jokingly chided the former child-star.

"Now go put some clothes on," Rowling tweeted at Lewis. 

SEE ALSO: JK Rowling's response to this Harry Potter actor's racy photo shoot is absolute gold

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