Healthy lifestyle

A healthy lifestyle is one which helps to keep and improve people's health and well-being.Many governments and non-governmental organizations have made big efforts in healthy lifestyle and health promotion.

Mental Health

Mental health can be considered a very important factor of physical health for the effects it produces on bodily functions. This type of health concerns emotional and cognitive well-being or an absence of mental disorder.

Public health

Public health can be defined in a variety of ways. It can be presented as "the study of the physical, psychosocial and socio-cultural determinants of population health and actions to improve the health of the population.

Reproductive Health

For the UN, reproductive health is a right, like other human rights. This recent concept evokes the good transmission of the genetic heritage from one generation to the next.

Health

Health is a state of complete physical, mental and social well-being, and not merely the absence of disease or infirmity.

dimanche 1 avril 2018

Severus Snape Is Kind of an Assh*le (Dodges Tomatoes)

Snape was . . . a huge assh*le. He was cunning, and brilliant, and dynamic, and he was a HUGE assh*le. I love him, yes. He is one of my favorite characters in the Harry Potter series. But I also have never quite understood the ease with which we all went from hating Snape to raising him up on a pedestal that he simply doesn't belong on. Here's the thing: no one belongs on one, Snape least of all.

Severus Snape teaches us the ultimate lesson: that just because we've done bad things, it's never too late to seek and find redemption and forgiveness. His unwavering love for Lily is a testament to the power of the sentiment, to the mountains it can move, and to the lasting effect it can have on one person, and on the world as a whole.

But Snape was also a bully. He was cruel to Harry. He spent most of his childhood and adolescence on a dark path that culminated in his initiation as a Death Eater. Part of why he lost Lily's friendship in the first place is because he sought the company of future Death Eaters at Hogwarts.

In the epic Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Prince's Tale chapter, so much about Snape's past is revealed, and not all of it is pretty. This conversation from Lily and Snape's days at Hogwarts showed their friendship unraveling.

". . . thought we were supposed to be friends?" Snape was saying, "Best friends?"

"We are, Sev, but I don't like some of the people you're hanging round with! I'm sorry, but I detest Avery and Mulciber! Mulciber! What do you see in him, Sev, he's creepy! D'you know what he tried to do to Mary MacDonald the other day?" Lily had reached a pillar and leaned against it, looking up into the thin, sallow face.

"That was nothing," said Snape. "It was a laugh, that's all -"

"It was Dark Magic, and if you think that's funny -"

Harry kept his distance this time . . . He watched as Lily joined the group and went to Snape's defense. Distantly he heard Snape shout at her in his humiliation and his fury, the unforgivable word: "Mudblood."

This moment still makes my stomach turn. Yes, Snape was hurt, and yes we all say and do things that we don't mean in that state. But his deep-seated disrespect for "lesser" people wasn't present only in his moments of frustration; it showed in the countless choices he made as he grew up, and in who he chose to cultivate relationships with - as in, future Death Eaters and Voldemort himself.

He took out his hatred for a grown man (who was long dead) on his son - an 11-year-old boy who was completely innocent. Neville Longbottom's boggart was Snape, for god's sake. He laughed in Hermione's face when she was cursed and openly belittled her intelligence for years. He constantly allied himself with the likes of Slytherin students like Malfoy whose sole purpose was to make others miserable. He sat idly by while Voldemort murdered Professor Burbage for the crime of teaching Muggle Studies. You can't tell me that we can blame all of this on the mere fact that he had it out for James Potter. Nor can you convince me that all of this was to maintain the guise that Snape was indeed still loyal to Voldemort. No, Snape wasn't a terrible person, but he certainly had darkness within him, and without someone like Lily Potter to keep it in check, that fire was fueled further. Snape's hatred of James and his friends coupled with his utterly unrequited love for Lily twisted him into something that, in many ways, was terrible. Even when he knew that Lily's entire family - a baby included - was targeted by Voldemort, he thought only of Lily, and in turn, only of himself:

"You disgust me," said Dumbledore, and Harry had never heard so much contempt in his voice. Snape seemed to shrink a little, "You do not care, then, about the deaths of her husband and child? They can die, as long as you have what you want?"

Snape said nothing, but merely looked up at Dumbledore.

"Hide them all, then," he croaked. "Keep her - them - safe. Please."

And so Dumbledore did keep Harry safe. And so Snape used his love for Lily as a reason for protecting Harry, and he put everything he had into doing just that. His devotion to this promise is incredibly admirable, and it is this service to her memory that often paints him as a martyr of sorts among fans. But this doesn't mean he was kind. It doesn't mean he did what he did happily, because Harry was, after all, James Potter's son. He begrudgingly, and yes, bravely, upheld his bargain to Dumbledore and to the woman he loved. More than anything, Snape was very brave.

"Karkaroff intends to flee if the Mark burns."

"Does he?" said Dumbledore softly, as Fleur Delacour and Roger Davies came giggling in from the grounds. "And are you tempted to join him?"

"No," said Snape, his black eyes on Fleur's and Roger's retreating figures. "I am not such a coward."

"No," agreed Dumbledore. "You are a braver man by far than Igor Karkaroff. You know, I sometimes think we Sort too soon . . . "

The idea that Hogwarts Sorts too soon is important, because I really believe that a lot of who Snape became is due to where he came from and who he fell in with in Slytherin. Maybe if he'd been in Gryffindor with Lily's goodness to guide him, everything would have been different. But he wasn't, and who he was is due in large part to this. Maybe he never really had the chance to foster the part of him that could love the way he loved Lily. Maybe, like Tom Riddle, Snape is yet another character who proves that had someone given them love they so desperately needed (and deserved), something else entirely would have come to pass.

Whatever his reasons for protecting Harry were, he didn't waver in his task once he agreed to it. Above everything, I think this is what I admire most about him. He did whatever it took to keep Lily's son alive. And in the end, I do believe he cared for Harry. Somewhere along the way, Snape was able to throw off the cloak of cold hatred he had wrapped himself in years before and objectively see that Harry wasn't so much like James after all, at least not in the ways he always expected to find, and therefore saw. The moment I realized that it wasn't only about Lily anymore was when he found out Dumbledore's devastating plan.

"I have spied for you and lied for you, put myself in mortal danger for you. Everything was supposed to be to keep Lily Potter's son safe. Now you tell me you have been raising him like a pig for slaughter -"

"But this is touching, Severus," said Dumbledore seriously. "Have you grown to care for the boy, after all?"

"For him?" shouted Snape. "Expecto Patronum!"

From the tip of his wand burst the silver doe. She landed on the office floor, bounded once across the office, and soared out of the window. Dumbledore watched her fly away, and as her silvery glow faded he turned back to Snape, and his eyes were full of tears.

"After all this time?"

"Always," said Snape.

Stubborn until the bitter end, Snape still couldn't bring himself to admit that what he did was for anyone but Lily. And maybe that's true. Maybe his motives were selfish, and maybe he's an overall sh*tty guy whose attempt at fulfilling a promise in honor of the memory of a woman he loved just happened to, by default, have wonderful results. I don't think so. But maybe it doesn't really matter why he did what he did.

No, I don't think Snape was a great person, but I certainly think Snape did great things. Snape is one of my favorite characters because he was so imperfect. His motives were never pure, he was majorly flawed, he was born and raised in darkness and could have clung to it - and in many ways did. But somewhere deep down he realized - I think in part because of his relationship with Dumbledore - what it truly meant to fight on the side of good. Despite everything he'd been through in his rather bleak life, he was capable of a love so deep, it literally changed the tide of a war. He played his part in saving Harry's life, and in turn, he played his part in saving the wizarding world from something far more terrible than the decades-old grudge of a sad and lonely man.

I think we romanticize Snape, we raise him up on that pedestal - one he can't ever live up to because the stains of his past will always be a part of him. But I love Snape, stains and all, because he epitomizes what these books stand for. The strength of bravery, the reality of failure and the hope of forgiveness, the importance of perseverance, the beauty of unwavering loyalty, the reassurance that light can and will drive out the darkness. And most of all, the monumental power of love. Always, love.

How an Award-Winning Broadway Designer Uses Costumes to Tell an Entirely Different Story on Stage


Image Source: Getty / Dia Dipasupil

I've seen quite a few Broadway shows in my day. I consider myself a huge fan of theater and feel fortunate to frequent the Great White Way. While I have a deep appreciation for every last musical and play, once in a while, for one reason or another, a show will stay with me long after the final bow. Most recently, it was the show Once on This Island, and beyond the singing and the acting and the atmosphere and the story, one thing really stood out: the costumes.

Image Source: Getty / Dimitrios KambourisClint Ramos

Clint Ramos, the mastermind behind the costumes for the 2017 revival of the show, told an entire tale of his own through the clothes the characters wore in each scene. "The creative team went to Haiti to take pictures, so every costume you see is based on a real picture of a real person in Haiti," he told POPSUGAR. "It was a matter of taking those photographs and going to find those clothes, but in some instances, we made them. Then we took them and distressed them to make them look like they'd been worn forever."

Once on This Island tells a story within a story, all of which unfolds on the island of Haiti. The folktale at the heart of the plot is centered on a poor girl named Ti Moune, who falls in love with a rich boy from the other side of the island. To help her along the way are four island gods, and they - along with their costumes - are the true stars of this show.

The creative team drew heavily on Haiti's recent hurricane devastation to craft the sets and the costumes, and that fact is apparent from top to bottom. For the gods in particular, Ramos set out to tell Haiti's story through the evolution of their costumes. "It sort of acknowledges the ravages and detritus as materials to compose the costumes," he said. "Take Papa Ge [the Demon of Death]; it's, like, this crazy homeless person who is collecting Coca-Cola cans for recycling in the beginning, and we reconstituted the cans as the god's spiked spine. And she's originally seen with her goat and [the god's] horns are fashioned after that."

During the parts of the show where the main characters are not gods, they are portrayed as commoners in Haiti - but each costume references the other. For Asaka, Mother of the Earth, she begins by taking care of the townspeople and feeding them. As she transforms into the goddess role, her costume turns into a ballgown made of a tablecloth and the same athletic jersey from the beginning. Ramos wanted to be sure to have subtle nods between the characters so the audience could really connect them.

That was not the case, though, with Ti Moune's iconic red dress - the costume that she wears throughout the story. It starts as a plain red sundress, but ultimately evolves into different dresses as the story progresses. "As she gains divinity, as she becomes more and more pronounced in the musical, ultimately ending up being a goddess, why not make that red dress grow and transform into different things?" Ramos said of her ever-evolving costume.

"I'm an immigrant, so I love those stories about being an outsider trying to fit in and make sense of their new world."

The costumes on display in Once on This Island are what's generating buzz right now, and it's with good reason - it's far from Ramos's first foray into Broadway costume design. In fact, he took home the Tony Award for his work in the play Eclipsed, written by Danai Gurira and starring Lupita Nyong'o. Eclipsed tells the real story of five Liberian women trying to survive the Second Liberian Civil War. "Part of my job was to honor these women," Ramos noted. "And the only way I could honor them was to make sure that I got the way they appeared right."

The creative team for Eclipsed, like Once on This Island, went to Africa for background research and shot photos for Ramos to work with when designing his costumes. "We created this ironic dissonance with these mundane American t-shirts mixed with this traditional African garb. For instance, you'd see a photograph of a woman running because her village is being burned and she's wearing a traditional African skirt, yelling for help, but she's wearing this old giveaway t-shirt from a f*cking dental office in Ohio," he said. Ramos also noted that so many of the clothes in Africa were American discards and described a level of "f*cked-upness" that's almost hard to imagine.

Ramos, who is a Filipino immigrant, said that Eclipsed was one of his favorite projects ever because he feels drawn to stories that have a message of change. "I'm an immigrant, so I love those stories about being an outsider trying to fit in and make sense of their new world," he said, referencing the struggles the characters face in Eclipsed. "That show was also the first time in Broadway history that the creative team and cast were all black women, so it's an extremely important show." And as the first person of color to take home the Tony for costume design, that message is one that resonates deeply within him.

You can see Ramos's work live on Broadway now in Once on This Island.

30 Screenshots That Prove Old People Are the Best Part of Facebook

It's a wonderful thing when senior citizens keep up with the times - there are so many great tools available to them online! From games that exercise the brain to the latest world news, the Internet is an awesome resource for people of all ages. But social media is a brave new world, and it can lead to serious confusion for many of the elderly users who are bold enough to create accounts. While there are tons of grandparents who are active on Facebook, there will always be a few who don't quite get it . . . and luckily, the results are often hilarious. These 30 screenshots from Reddit's OldPeopleFacebook subreddit prove that seniors are the funniest part of Facebook, and they don't give a damn. Get it, Grandmaster Flash - I mean, Grandma.

Meow! The 47 Best Cat GIFs of All Time

Not like you needed a reason to look at adorable, hilarious cats, but it's 100 percent proven fact that they make you happy. So, to exponentially improve your life, we found the best feline GIFs the Internet has seen. Peep them, love them, live them.

Source: Getty

The Best iPhone 8 Plus Cases of 2018

If there's one thing we can say for certain, it's that no new iPhone is complete without the perfect case. But at the same time, actually finding the perfect case can be one of the most tizzy-inducing experiences of our modern lives. But never fear! We've gone through all of the best cases currently available for purchase and found all of the ones that are unquestionably worth the money (and will jazz up your style). We'll be continuing to add to this list as the year goes on, but ahead, find all the cases we're certain you'll fall in love with - and be sure to check back to see what else 2018 has in store for your iPhone 8 Plus!

Play All Your Favorite '80s and '90s Video Games Online For Free

Your inner child is going to totally freak out once you find out that almost 2,400 MS-DOS games are available to play online for free. Straight from the '80s and '90s, games like Oregon Trail, Master of Orion, and Donkey Kong are just a click away thanks to the Internet Archive. The site is best known for its Wayback Machine, a repository filled with pictures of old websites. Now you have instant access to thousands of favorite computer games from the past - just try not to die from typhoid or cholera as you ride your wagon to the west.

The Stunning View You Get at Horseshoe Bend Is Unlike Any Other in the World

The Grand Canyon is a natural wonder that can literally take your breath away when you first lay eyes on it. It holds secrets you could spend a lifetime discovering, and travelers from around the world have it at the top of their bucket lists for good reason. One of the most unique - and photo-worthy - parts of the canyon is just seven miles north of mile zero. Horseshoe Bend, a rocky island-like formation of sandstone surrounded by the Colorado River, stuns in beauty.

You can walk to the edge of Horseshoe Bend and look down 1,000 feet of the sandstone to the river (and then take your fill of photos). Hiking to the edge is relatively easy; the trailhead is located just outside of Page, AZ. Check out the gorgeous images ahead.

Drapple Is a Thing All Harry Potter Fans Need to Know About Right F*cking Now

Harry Potter fans are many things. Creative, brilliant, hilarious, and sometimes, we're a little weird. I talked with Tom Felton aka Draco Malfoy at the opening of the Wizarding World of Harry Potter Hollywood, and I obviously had to ask him the most important hard-hitting question of all: what's his favorite pair to ship in the Harry Potter world? When he asked me if I knew what "Drapple" was, everything I thought I knew about Harry Potter, Harry Potter fans, the internet, and life in general flew out the window. Basically, Drapple is a romantic relationship pairing that fans ship, or pull for, and it involves Draco Malfoy and an apple. A green one, like the one that started this madness in a scene in Prizoner of Azkaban. I actually felt like a terrible fan for not knowing about this, um, unique ship, which people argue is canon because, OK technically it is.

He does caress one lovingly in The Half-Blood Prince as he pulls it out of the Vanishing Cabinet. And the way he bites into that crisp, juicy fruit in The Prisoner of Azkaban does seem sexy, I guess? Sh*t, I think I've spent too much time in the depths of Tumblr . . . because am I shipping Drapple now too? No, for me, it's Dramione for life. Here's some of the internet's most creative Drapple memes, GIFs, and fan art that may have you weirdly shipping the pair but will definitely have you laughing out loud.

7 Spell-Binding Documentaries About Drugs to Watch on Netflix

Whether you're intrigued by the drug trade or simply want to educate yourself through documentaries, you might have guessed you can do that from the safety of your own home. Netflix's recommendations are not always easy to navigate, so we've gathered the best movies about drugs you can enjoy.

Severus Snape Is Kind of an Assh*le (Dodges Tomatoes)

Snape was . . . a huge assh*le. He was cunning, and brilliant, and dynamic, and he was a HUGE assh*le. I love him, yes. He is one of my favorite characters in the Harry Potter series. But I also have never quite understood the ease with which we all went from hating Snape to raising him up on a pedestal that he simply doesn't belong on. Here's the thing: no one belongs on one, Snape least of all.

Severus Snape teaches us the ultimate lesson: that just because we've done bad things, it's never too late to seek and find redemption and forgiveness. His unwavering love for Lily is a testament to the power of the sentiment, to the mountains it can move, and to the lasting effect it can have on one person, and on the world as a whole.

But Snape was also a bully. He was cruel to Harry. He spent most of his childhood and adolescence on a dark path that culminated in his initiation as a Death Eater. Part of why he lost Lily's friendship in the first place is because he sought the company of future Death Eaters at Hogwarts.

In the epic Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Prince's Tale chapter, so much about Snape's past is revealed, and not all of it is pretty. This conversation from Lily and Snape's days at Hogwarts showed their friendship unraveling.

". . . thought we were supposed to be friends?" Snape was saying, "Best friends?"

"We are, Sev, but I don't like some of the people you're hanging round with! I'm sorry, but I detest Avery and Mulciber! Mulciber! What do you see in him, Sev, he's creepy! D'you know what he tried to do to Mary MacDonald the other day?" Lily had reached a pillar and leaned against it, looking up into the thin, sallow face.

"That was nothing," said Snape. "It was a laugh, that's all -"

"It was Dark Magic, and if you think that's funny -"

Harry kept his distance this time . . . He watched as Lily joined the group and went to Snape's defense. Distantly he heard Snape shout at her in his humiliation and his fury, the unforgivable word: "Mudblood."

This moment still makes my stomach turn. Yes, Snape was hurt, and yes we all say and do things that we don't mean in that state. But his deep-seated disrespect for "lesser" people wasn't present only in his moments of frustration; it showed in the countless choices he made as he grew up, and in who he chose to cultivate relationships with - as in, future Death Eaters and Voldemort himself.

He took out his hatred for a grown man (who was long dead) on his son - an 11-year-old boy who was completely innocent. Neville Longbottom's boggart was Snape, for god's sake. He laughed in Hermione's face when she was cursed and openly belittled her intelligence for years. He constantly allied himself with the likes of Slytherin students like Malfoy whose sole purpose was to make others miserable. He sat idly by while Voldemort murdered Professor Burbage for the crime of teaching Muggle Studies. You can't tell me that we can blame all of this on the mere fact that he had it out for James Potter. Nor can you convince me that all of this was to maintain the guise that Snape was indeed still loyal to Voldemort. No, Snape wasn't a terrible person, but he certainly had darkness within him, and without someone like Lily Potter to keep it in check, that fire was fueled further. Snape's hatred of James and his friends coupled with his utterly unrequited love for Lily twisted him into something that, in many ways, was terrible. Even when he knew that Lily's entire family - a baby included - was targeted by Voldemort, he thought only of Lily, and in turn, only of himself:

"You disgust me," said Dumbledore, and Harry had never heard so much contempt in his voice. Snape seemed to shrink a little, "You do not care, then, about the deaths of her husband and child? They can die, as long as you have what you want?"

Snape said nothing, but merely looked up at Dumbledore.

"Hide them all, then," he croaked. "Keep her - them - safe. Please."

And so Dumbledore did keep Harry safe. And so Snape used his love for Lily as a reason for protecting Harry, and he put everything he had into doing just that. His devotion to this promise is incredibly admirable, and it is this service to her memory that often paints him as a martyr of sorts among fans. But this doesn't mean he was kind. It doesn't mean he did what he did happily, because Harry was, after all, James Potter's son. He begrudgingly, and yes, bravely, upheld his bargain to Dumbledore and to the woman he loved. More than anything, Snape was very brave.

"Karkaroff intends to flee if the Mark burns."

"Does he?" said Dumbledore softly, as Fleur Delacour and Roger Davies came giggling in from the grounds. "And are you tempted to join him?"

"No," said Snape, his black eyes on Fleur's and Roger's retreating figures. "I am not such a coward."

"No," agreed Dumbledore. "You are a braver man by far than Igor Karkaroff. You know, I sometimes think we Sort too soon . . . "

The idea that Hogwarts Sorts too soon is important, because I really believe that a lot of who Snape became is due to where he came from and who he fell in with in Slytherin. Maybe if he'd been in Gryffindor with Lily's goodness to guide him, everything would have been different. But he wasn't, and who he was is due in large part to this. Maybe he never really had the chance to foster the part of him that could love the way he loved Lily. Maybe, like Tom Riddle, Snape is yet another character who proves that had someone given them love they so desperately needed (and deserved), something else entirely would have come to pass.

Whatever his reasons for protecting Harry were, he didn't waver in his task once he agreed to it. Above everything, I think this is what I admire most about him. He did whatever it took to keep Lily's son alive. And in the end, I do believe he cared for Harry. Somewhere along the way, Snape was able to throw off the cloak of cold hatred he had wrapped himself in years before and objectively see that Harry wasn't so much like James after all, at least not in the ways he always expected to find, and therefore saw. The moment I realized that it wasn't only about Lily anymore was when he found out Dumbledore's devastating plan.

"I have spied for you and lied for you, put myself in mortal danger for you. Everything was supposed to be to keep Lily Potter's son safe. Now you tell me you have been raising him like a pig for slaughter -"

"But this is touching, Severus," said Dumbledore seriously. "Have you grown to care for the boy, after all?"

"For him?" shouted Snape. "Expecto Patronum!"

From the tip of his wand burst the silver doe. She landed on the office floor, bounded once across the office, and soared out of the window. Dumbledore watched her fly away, and as her silvery glow faded he turned back to Snape, and his eyes were full of tears.

"After all this time?"

"Always," said Snape.

Stubborn until the bitter end, Snape still couldn't bring himself to admit that what he did was for anyone but Lily. And maybe that's true. Maybe his motives were selfish, and maybe he's an overall sh*tty guy whose attempt at fulfilling a promise in honor of the memory of a woman he loved just happened to, by default, have wonderful results. I don't think so. But maybe it doesn't really matter why he did what he did.

No, I don't think Snape was a great person, but I certainly think Snape did great things. Snape is one of my favorite characters because he was so imperfect. His motives were never pure, he was majorly flawed, he was born and raised in darkness and could have clung to it - and in many ways did. But somewhere deep down he realized - I think in part because of his relationship with Dumbledore - what it truly meant to fight on the side of good. Despite everything he'd been through in his rather bleak life, he was capable of a love so deep, it literally changed the tide of a war. He played his part in saving Harry's life, and in turn, he played his part in saving the wizarding world from something far more terrible than the decades-old grudge of a sad and lonely man.

I think we romanticize Snape, we raise him up on that pedestal - one he can't ever live up to because the stains of his past will always be a part of him. But I love Snape, stains and all, because he epitomizes what these books stand for. The strength of bravery, the reality of failure and the hope of forgiveness, the importance of perseverance, the beauty of unwavering loyalty, the reassurance that light can and will drive out the darkness. And most of all, the monumental power of love. Always, love.

A Series of Unfortunate Events: We Can't Be the Only Ones Wondering How Old This Kid Is

The end of season one of A Series of Unfortunate Events introduced us to another set of orphans waiting at Prufrock Prepratory. Dylan Kingwell plays Duncan and Quigley in A Series of Unfortunate Events (er, played), but he has had several diverse roles throughout his young life.

Kingwell boasts an impressive resume; he has had TV roles on The Good Doctor, The Returned, and even on Supernatural! Not only has Kingwell had success in TV, he has had roles in numerous TV Movies. He has worked for Nickelodeon, Hallmark, and Lifetime bringing him to over ten roles across all genres of film. This is doubly impressive as Dylan Kingwell is only 13! (Malina Weissman, aka Violet, is 15, while Louis Hynes, aka Klaus, is 16.)

Kingwell was born in July of 2004, and he hails from Vancouver. According to his IMDb, he loves academics, reading, and has a curious mind for science - sounds like the perfect basis for his role on ASOUE. For someone so young in years, he is wholly dedicated to his craft. Kingwell's Instagram feed is full of stills and pictures from his spots on various shows. His Twitter feed is the same much the same proving he is professional, posed, and primed for huge success.

Dylan Kingwell is clearly a motivated actor who knows exactly where he wants his career to go. He already has made a splash in the entertainment community in his fourteen years of life, and we can't wait to see where his career takes him next!

A Series Of Unfortunate Events: Yep, That Quagmire Was on The Good Doctor

The Baudelaire children aren't the only orphans, or set of three siblings, in A Series of Unfortunate Events. There's also the Quagmire triplets: Duncan, Isadora, and Quigley. The two sets of orphans become friends at Prufrock Prepartory, bonding over spyglasses and hunting down the meaning of the mysterious VFD.

Though Dylan Kingwell and Avi Lake are not as well known as some of the other guest stars on the series like Nathan Fillion, Tony Hale, Sara Rue, and Lucy Punch, the two young actors already have several acting credits under their belts.

You aren't seeing double at the end of season one - Kingwell plays Duncan Quigley as well as Quigley Quagmire, but in season two due to an unfortunate fire at the Quagmire's mansion, he just has the role of Duncan. Kingwell, born in Vancouver, started acting with TV commercials. If you're a fan of made-for-TV Christmas movies (and who isn't), you recognize him from Wish Upon A Christmas on Lifetime and The Christmas Note on Hallmark. He played the young Sam Winchester in an episode of Supernatural season 11, starred in the U.S. version of The Returned (pictured above), and he had a multi-episode arc on ABC's The Good Doctor.

Texas-born actor Lake hit the big screen at age six as the little girl with the dog alongside Samuel L. Jackson and Luke Wilson in Meeting Evil. In the more family-friendly The One I Wrote For You (pictured above), she plays the daughter who helps jump start her father's singer, song-writer career. The Texas born actor also plays Imogene, the niece of Officer Kim Burgess, on the season 2 crossover of Chicago P.D. and Chicago Fire.

While the Quagmires literally fly away during season 2, if the Netflix series stays close to the plotline of the books, there's a possibility that we might get to see Lake and Kingwell as the Quagmires again. Until then and/or if not, you can keep up with the lives of the young actors on their active Instagram accounts: @Avi_Lake and @dylan.kingwell.

In a Truly Stunning Turn of Events, Leonardo DiCaprio Has Emerged With a New Model Girlfriend

Guess what: Leonardo DiCaprio is dating a model! The Oscar winner was photographed with 20-year-old Camila Morrone in LA on Wednesday. The couple, who have reportedly been dating since late last year, showed subtle PDA as they walked arm in arm while leaving breakfast together. It might actually be the first confirmed relationship for Leo since he split with Sports Illustrated stunner Nina Agdal in May 2017, though he was also linked to Lorena Rae and Juliette Perkins, both - you guessed it! - models.

Camila is a Miami-based model of Argentinian descent who also has Hollywood ties that likely brought her into Leo's world; her mother, Lucila Solá, has dated legendary actor Al Pacino - a longtime friend of Leo's. Camila - "Cami" to most - also runs in young model circles along with Kaia Gerber, Bella Hadid, Kendall Jenner, and Hailey Baldwin.

Sophia Bush Comes to Hilarie Burton's Defense Over "Exploitative" One Tree Hill Convention

Image Source: Getty / Lawrence Lucier

Sophia Bush and Hilarie Burton have been friends ever since they starred together on One Tree Hill, so you bet they have each other's backs. Earlier this week, Hilarie took to Twitter to explain why she isn't attending any of the EyeCon Convention reunions this year, saying she "personally feel[s] exploited by their 'girl power' angle" and that "they're using our sisterhood as a sales gimmick."

Of course, it didn't take very long for Hilarie to receive backlash for criticizing the convention's theme. Luckily, Sophia jumped to her friend's defense. "@HilarieBurton is my sister," Sophia wrote. "Don't f*ck with her. Period."

Back in November, 18 former cast and crew members from the beloved show came forward to accuse former showrunner Mark Schwahn of sexual harassment during the filming of the series, which aired from 2003 to 2012.

EyeCon has since released an apology.

Prince Philip Cancels His Annual Appearance With Queen Elizabeth II Due to Hip Problems

Every year we're used to seeing Prince Philip accompany Queen Elizabeth II to the Maundy church service, but this year, things were a little bit different. Even though the 96-year-old royal was listed in the Order of Service as a guest, Philip canceled his appearance last minute. "The Order of Service was printed some weeks ago when it was hoped the Duke would be able to take part," a palace spokesperson told People. "HRH has since decided not to attend."

While Philip did initially intend on going, a royal source revealed that he ultimately chose not to because he's been experiencing some "trouble with his hip." It's also possible that his hip trouble is what caused him to skip out on Prince Andrew's appointment as the new Colonel of the Grenadier Guards last week.

In August 2017, Philip stepped down from his royal duties and officially retired from his public engagements. Prince Harry and Meghan Markle also reportedly expedited their wedding to May to ensure that Philip can attend. We hope Philip feels better soon!

The Way They Were: A Day-by-Day Look Back of Selena and The Weeknd's Whirlwind Romance

Selena Gomez and The Weeknd called it quits after almost a year of dating back in October 2017, but the R&B singer's latest EP, My Dear Melancholy, has sparked renewed interest in their relationship. Even though the two may not even be friends anymore (they stopped following each other on Instagram), we thought we'd take a nostalgic look back at the way they used to be. From trips around the world to PDA-filled red carpets, here's a day-by-day timeline of Selena and The Weeknd's romance.

Whoa - Santa Clarita Diet Slipped a GIANT Season 2 Spoiler Into the Start of Season 1

Warning: Major (depending on how important sitcom plotlines are to you) season two Santa Clarita Diet spoilers ahead.

Season two of Netflix's Santa Clarita Diet picks up right where season one leaves off, but this time, the gory comedy doesn't pull any punches. Not only is it full of even more hilarious jokes - including an extended bit with Nathan Fillion's severed head - but it also clues us into the reason Sheila (Drew Barrymore) became an undead, human-eating machine in the first place. Can The Walking Dead get on Santa Clarita Diet's level, or what?

Season two kicks off with Sheila, her husband, Joel (Timothy Olyphant), and teenage daughter Abby (Liv Hewson) focusing on two main goals: keeping her from going full-on feral and also finding out what in the hell caused her to become a zombie in season one. As for the latter, it turns out we've known since episode two of the first season - Netflix completely spoiled the whole reveal, but no one could have known at the time.

At the end of season one's second episode, "We Can't Kill People!," Sheila has discovered that she prefers the taste of fresh human flesh, which is quite the predicament for her and her Yelp aficionado husband, Joel. Lying in bed, reflecting on the first 24 hours of her undead life, Sheila starts to really wonder: "Why is this happening to me?" The rest of their conversation continues:

"I don't know," Joel, ever-insightful, responds.

"Do you think it could be those clams I had at Japopo's?"

"I don't know," Joel mumbles again. "Shouldn't go back there anyway, the food's never been great."

And there you have it, folks: one of season two's biggest reveals - that Ruby's devil-red clams from Serbia that were served at Japopo's started this whole undead mess - is casually glossed over during an early pillow-talking sesh in the series. Can you imagine all the twists and turns the writers are going to go on in season three?!

"The Pants Are Happening All Over Again": Amber Tamblyn on the Sisterhood's Next Generation

The sisterhood lasts forever, and not even a decade can change that! In a recent interview with Us Weekly, Amber Tamblyn sweetly spoke about how close the Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants costars still are. They even keep in touch over group text!

Amber, Blake Lively, America Ferrera, and Alexis Bledel have seen enormous success in their careers since 2005, but that's not all they have in common anymore: they're now all moms (or soon-to-be)! With Blake's two daughters James and Ines, Alexis's son, Amber's daughter Marlow, and America's baby on the way, there's bound to be a lot more sisterhood baby bonding in the future . . . and maybe a pair of shareable jeans?

Amber realized the friends will have to get the tiniest pants for their kiddos to share. "The pants are happening all over again, another generation," she said.

While the members of the younger generation try the pants on for size, will the original crew ever reunite for another film? Well, once upon a time, Alexis Bledel said they were "working on it." We certainly hope there's another movie in the works, and while we haven't heard much since then, we'll never forget what's really important: the pants, the sisterhood, and now, the next generation.

Kim Kardashian and Millie Bobby Brown Finally Met and Blessed Us With These FIRE Selfies

Kim Kardashian and Millie Bobby Brown worlds finally collided and it's everything we imagined it would be. In November, the Stranger Things star revealed her over-the-top Kardashian obsession during an appearance on The Tonight Show and Kim immediately returned the compliment. "OMG @milliebbrown we love you bible!!!!" the reality star tweeted at the time. "BEST DAY EVER! Life complete ❤️" Millie wrote back. As fate would have it, Millie got to meet Kim on Friday and take some selfies with the selfie guru. Read on to see more photos of their adorable encounter. They're basically BFFs now, right?

Ryan Reynolds Says He "Could Use a Little Me Time" After False Report About His Marriage

Ryan Reynolds and Blake Lively have been going strong ever since tying the knot back in 2012. The couple has welcomed two children together, daughters James and Ines, born December 2014 and September 2016, respectively, while managing to juggle successful acting careers.

One would assume the picture-perfect duo manages to make time for each other in their busy schedules, but according to a recent report from International Business Times India, Ryan and Blake are "struggling to spend 'quality time'" with one another. Fortunately, the outlet tagged the Deadpool star in a tweet along with the article, which he graciously responded to, with humor, of course.

Ryan's hilarious reply not only effectively debunked the silly rumor, it was also another addition to his other funny tweets we've come to love him for. For now, it appears his marriage to Blake is still intact. They were last spotted looking cozy together at the New York City premiere of Final Portrait on March 22. We can't wait to see Blake's response to Ryan's joke about wanting more "me time." If it's anything like her birthday wish to him last year, it's sure to be epic.

A Full Music Video For the "I Want Your Cray Cray" Song From Jessica Jones Exists, FYI

Try as I might, I couldn't get through the second season of Jessica Jones without incurring a deep, personal shame for my love of "I Want Your Cray Cray." Yes - the earworm that previgilante Trish sings in her Patsy days is ridiculous and has some of the worst lyrics of all time, but is it catchy? Did I find myself humming it over and over again while also thinking about the nightmarish IGH group and Jessica's emotional struggle with her mother? Did I maybe check iTunes to see if it was available for download? I'm not at liberty to say.

What I will say is a big thank you to Netflix, who graciously released the full-length music video for the track, which features Patsy (aka Trish aka actress Rachael Taylor) in all her "Oops!... I Did It Again"-era glory. There are also a few pop-up-video-style blurbs included, just in case you want to know even more about "I Want Your Cray Cray."

Prince William and Kate Middleton's Third Child Has a Royal Title, but There's a Catch

Prince William and Kate Middleton's third child is expected to arrive in mid-April, and there is already talk about what his or her title will be. Prince George and Princess Charlotte's younger sibling will undoubtedly steal the spotlight as the newest member of the British royal family, and now we know exactly how to address the tiny tot when he or she arrives.

According to royal historian Marlene Koenig, the third baby's official title will be His Royal Highness Prince [name] of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland, or Her Royal Highness Princess [name] of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland.

But not so fast. Since Prince William and Kate Middleton are technically the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge, the newcomer will be addressed as His/Her Royal Highness Prince/Princess [name] of Cambridge. "Royal children are 'styled' differently if they are the children of a royal duke," Marlene explained of the subtle title differences to Town & Country.

The new royal baby will be the fifth in line to the throne behind big sister Princess Charlotte, as previously reported, due to a new succession law put in place in March 2015 that bases succession on birth order and not sex. Now that we have that settled, find out what Meghan Markle's title will be once she ties the knot with Prince Harry in May.

An Extremely Grim New Trailer For The Handmaid's Tale Season 2 Is Here

We've already seen all the haunting pictures, but now we have a ton of official (and officially grim) footage from season two of Hulu's award-winning series The Handmaid's Tale. It's an extremely harrowing look into what Offred (Elisabeth Moss) will go through in the new episodes now that she's carrying Nick's child, and will no doubt answer the question that we were all wondering at the end of season one: who took her? On top of that, season two will feature what life is like for women exiled to the colonies, scenes that will involve new cast members Marisa Tomei and Cherry Jones. Sound like something out of your nightmares? We thought so. Watch the trailer and new teaser, then check out everything we know about the second season of the dystopian drama, which premieres April 25.

Official Trailer:

Teaser:

16 Things We Know About The Handmaid's Tale Season 2

We're officially in some new fresh hell in 2018, and when it comes to The Handmaid's Tale, we're already looking ahead. If you read the book, you'll know that the first season finale ends in the same frustrating way the book ends: June is taken into a mysterious van and carted off to a mysterious future somewhere else. In this case, though, we don't have to wonder endlessly. How much can we uncover about the show's next chapter? Well, blessed be the fruit - we've got a lot to go over. Let's see what we could uncover (under his eye).

1. It's Going to Be Longer

While the first season was 10 episodes, the second has been extended to 13.

2. Alexis Bledel Will Reprise Her Role

Thought you'd seen the last of Ofglen/Emily? Not so fast. Bledel has been confirmed as part of season two's cast! We'll get a glimpse of Ofglen in the Colonies, the toxic wasteland where women who commit crimes are sent as punishment. "We get to see the colonies. It's a terrible place where they send Unwomen to work them to death," executive producer Bruce Miller said during a pre-Emmy panel in August. Bledel also commented on her character's new situation, saying, "I'm very interested to see what that looks like because it's a completely different world we haven't seen on the show yet - and I'm scared."

3. The Colonies Are Even Bleaker and Darker Than They Sound

A new feature by Marie Claire describes the Colonies in all their grim glory. As a refresher, the Colonies are where deviants (known as Unwomen) get sent for misbehaving. The new story describes the Colonies as "a dark and grime-filled wasteland." Costume designer Ane Crabtree offered a bit more insight. "The Unwomen are kind of the new Handmaids in season two. They're turning over soil, trying to move radiation, so they get filthy," she revealed. "They have probably six months - at best two years - to live. We're trying to show that humanity in their costumes. I made beautiful sheer pieces to be worn under their outfits since they strip down, as their clothing is full of radiation." Yikes.

4. The Trailer Is DARK

Here, we get a glimpse of all the mayhem that lies ahead. Offred is covered in blood and lighting things on fire! The Colonies are here, and they look f*cking awful! Tension is surely bubbling over, and we can't imagine what else this next bank of episodes might hold.

5. Surprise, Surprise: The President Has Inspired Parts of the Season

While season one of the show was planned before the 2016 election, the same is not true for season two. When it comes to some of Trump's "draconian policies," as Marie Claire phrases it, creator Bruce Miller can't help but incorporate today's reality into the fabric of the show. "Oh, I think we can't help but let it influence us," he said. "We have let it influence us. And there are a lot of issues we brought up last year that we want to address this year in ways we never had time to."

6. Things Are Only Going to Get Worse All Around

Earlier this month, The Pool interviewed Elisabeth Moss and grilled her on what's to come. "Wait till you see what's coming! It's going to get worse, girl. Season two is going to be bad too, really dark." Here we were, thinking June might have been rescued from the Waterfords. Maybe it's not that simple.

7. June Is Covered in Blood in a First Photo

You might remember how ruthlessly June is whisked away at the end of season one. We have no idea who takes her or where she even ends up. But if the first pictures of the season are any indication, she is certainly not safe. We're rooting for you, June!

8. June's Romance With Nick May Intensify

Elle ran a profile of Moss in early June, and she dropped a small tidbit about her Gilead lover, Nick. "It's part of the reason that I'm really excited about a season two, she's in this position where she might be in love with two people," Moss said, "Honestly, I think she does love Nick - if I can speak for her - but I don't know if she knows that she does yet. But she has a husband who she also loves, who's the father of Hannah, who she also now knows is alive."

9. Pay Attention to the Marthas

Showrunner Bruce Miller noted, "The Marthas in general in Gilead are kind of invisible . . . it's been great for us that it's been such a slow and careful building of a relationship between Rita and Offred. That slow and careful build-up in season one leads to a payoff so that we can use her more in season two."

10. We Might See Aunt Lydia's Backstory

Meanwhile, Miller also spoke to The New York Times about season two. Aunt Lydia could still play a key role in the show's next chapter. "Aunt Lydia is one of my most fascinating characters," Miller said. "We would like to explore her back story, and what the lives of the aunts are like."

11. The Mayday Resistance Is Another Key Component, but Let's Not Get Too Excited

It's easy to assume Mayday means salvation for the Handmaids, but not so fast. "The Mayday resistance is going to be a big part of Season two," Miller admitted. "The part that I've been thinking about is that Mayday is not the handmaid rescue organization - it's the anti-Gilead organization. And the anti-Gilead organization is not necessarily a friend to June or a friend to Handmaids. If I was going to try to hurt Gilead, the first thing I might do is kill all the handmaids. You're trying to weaken the state."

12. The Waterfords Aren't Necessarily Going Away

After the finale, Miller talked about what's to come. In regards to the Waterfords, he said, "They're still a part of our plans for season two but in interesting ways."

13. We Will Meet June's Mother

Miller also explained how June's parentage could factor into the story. Miller spoke about June's mother: "We've been thinking about her a lot. June's mother is a big character in the book and representative of an interesting kind of feminism that was seemingly more of that time."

14. The Theme

"At the end of season one, we find out June was pregnant. The theme of season two is motherhood and what it means to be a mother," Miller explained at The Handmaid's Tale panel in August. "It's the way we mother our good friends and the people in our lives."

15. Luke and Moira Might Attempt a Daring Rescue

During the panel in August, Samira Wiley discussed the new possibilities season two holds since it's going beyond the story of the book. "The [first] season ends exactly where the book ends, and to be able to go in season two not knowing what's going to happen and to be in this completely new country with Luke who's the only family I have, it's exciting to see what's going to happen," she said.

16. The Premiere Date Has Been Set

The second season is going to drop on April 25. Are you ready for it?

Meghan Markle's Father Will Receive a Special Royal Honor Ahead of His Daughter's Wedding

Meghan Markle will officially become a royal when she marries Prince Harry in May, but it's her father, Thomas Markle, who's getting a special gift ahead of his daughter's big day. According to People, the former lighting director is set to receive a family coat of arms. The crest is traditionally given to the father of the bride before a royal wedding and features a design that is unique to the individual or family.

"Every Coat of Arms has been designed to identify a person, school or organization, and is to last forever," Thomas Woodcock, Garter King of Arms at the College of Arms, explained to People back in 2011. "Heraldry is Europe's oldest, most visual and strictly regulated form of identity and it surrounds us in Britain, giving clues to our history and surroundings." While Kensington Palace and the College of Arms (creators of the coats of arms) have yet to publicly announce anything, it's likely that the tradition will be followed.

For Kate Middleton and Prince William's wedding back in 2011, Kate's father, Michael Middleton, was honored with his coat of arms just days before her wedding. The crest featured three acorns, which represented the family's kids - Kate, Pippa, and James - and a gold stripe that was a tribute to Kate's mother, Carole, whose maiden name is Goldsmith.

Once Harry and Meghan are husband and wife, the couple will get their own "conjugal coat of arms." William and Kate's was unveiled two years after their wedding in September 2013, so it's likely that Harry and Meghan's will also make its debut a few years after theirs.

4 Philosophy Professors Weigh In on Why The Good Place Is So Forking Funny - and Important

There's a scene in the second season of The Good Place where, in order to illustrate the classic moral dilemma known as The Trolley Problem, the characters are forced to live it. The famous thought experiment, which asks different variations of whether you would steer an unstoppable trolley into one person to avoid killing five, has long been a go-to for ethics scholars - but watching the show's hilariously gory take on it brought the lesson to life in a way Agnes Callard, an associate professor of philosophy at the University of Chicago, hadn't considered before. "There's something very violent about the thought experiment itself, like, we're asking them to imagine murdering people," Callard told POPSUGAR. "And the show just takes that really seriously, like, 'OK, let's really imagine it.'"

All four professors said they don't really see it as being about heaven or hell. Instead it's about the kinds of questions philosophy aims to answer: What makes someone good or bad? What matters? How should we treat other people?

It's just one of the ways tuning into the NBC sitcom has been a fun first for philosophy and ethics professors like Callard, who aren't used to seeing their area of expertise at the center of a hit network comedy. Callard and the three other philosophy professors/The Good Place fans we talked to said that while pop culture has always reflected on philosophical themes, they don't remember a show or movie ever examining specific theories and works this explicitly. The little Easter eggs creator Michael Schur has included in the series so far go beyond sneaky references to the Parks and Rec universe. There are plenty of nods to the world of academic philosophy, too. Season one introduced the show's philosophical foundation by way of actual mini lectures on how to be a good person from ethics professor Chidi (William Jackson Harper). But after the just-finished season two's even deeper dive into questions of what it means to be good, the real-life philosophers said they can't wait for season three.

Back in the fall of 2015, UCLA ethics professor Pamela Hieronymi says she got an email from Schur asking if she would be willing to discuss some ideas he had for a new project. "He wanted to pick my brain about ethics," Hieronymi told POPSUGAR. "And I think that's because he saw a paper on my website that sounded like the issues he was interested in about the motives for becoming a better person and whether it's possible to become a better person." The two spent about three hours chatting over coffee, Hieronymi said. About a year later, she spotted a billboard for The Good Place. After reaching back out to Schur to congratulate him, Hieronymi has occasionally served as a philosophical sounding board for the show's writers, even visiting the studio at one point to teach them about The Trolley Problem and other lessons.

"The philosophy is working at two levels," Hieronymi said of the show, which she's watched from the beginning. "So, there's the obvious level where Chidi is giving little lessons and namedropping both classic philosophers like Plato and Aristotle and Kierkegaard and contemporary philosophers, which is really kind of wild . . . but then there's the actual more serious exploration of those issues that are taking place in the story line and with the characters." Though the show is set in the afterlife - a topic that's been examined by philosophers for centuries - all four professors said they don't really see it as being about heaven or hell. Instead it's about the kinds of questions philosophy aims to answer: What makes someone good or bad? What matters? How should we treat other people?

That last question comes up a lot, specifically in references to philosopher T.M. Scanlon's book What We Owe to Each Other" (it's even part of the clue to help Eleanor and Chidi reconnect after the season one twist). The idea that the show uses modern-day philosophers like Scanlon, a professor emeritus at Harvard, has been especially exciting for fans in the academic community. Jason Bridges, an associate professor at the University of Chicago who specializes in the philosophy of action and the philosophy of the mind, studied under Scanlon, and said that specificity has been one of the highlights of watching the show. "Certainly I've never seen a show where books that are on my shelf, and not just classic works, recent works of philosophical ethics, keep popping up as props," Bridges said to POPSUGAR.

Seeing the life of an ethics professor on the small screen is another treat, according to the professors, but they had mixed feelings on whether they identified with the neurotic Chidi. Bridges said he likes the character but doesn't see a big connection between Chidi's neuroses and his interest in philosophy (though he did admit "moral philosophers may be more prone to stomachaches than the average person."). Callard, too, said the portrayal of Chidi as being nerdy and boring doesn't represent the philosophers she knows. ("I much more identify with Eleanor," Callard said.) But fellow University of Chicago professor Candace Vogler said the idea of a philosopher "actually taking ordinary choices fairly seriously" is familiar. And Hieronymi said she has seen other philosophy professors post joking warnings on Facebook for colleagues to strive not to be like Chidi. "The indecisiveness is a real phenomena," Hieronymi said. No one took offense at the show's running joke that everyone hates moral philosophy professors. Chidi's portrayal also just gives average viewers a playful peek into the world of a philosophy academic, Hieronymi said. "This show is more of what [The] Big Bang [Theory] was for science graduate students."

For viewers who've never taken a philosophy class, the professors agreed that the show is giving the field some potentially valuable exposure, even if Eleanor does complain about her ethics lessons being boring. Vogler said she's recommended The Good Place to introductory-level students. Hieronymi's heard about other professors using the show itself as a teaching tool. Though Callard, Hieronymi, Bridges, and Vogler recognize that Chidi's teachings are extreme simplifications of the complicated, nuanced theories they teach, and some of them had picked up on small issues (Vogler wasn't a fan of Chidi's reading of Kant, for example), the bigger-picture questions the characters address show that philosophical thinking can be practical - and compelling - for everyone. "Philosophy seems like a rarified thing to study," Bridges said. "It seems like perhaps an impractical thing to major in, but what it does, if you study it, is cultivate ways of thinking and writing and communicating that are of general value and of use to a whole range of careers and human endeavors, and so this show helps illustrate that."

Bridges says he thinks the topic of free will would be a no-brainer for season three, which we can maybe expect in the Fall. Hieronymi would be interested in seeing the show dig deeper into the timely issue of people getting defensive and having trouble taking constructive criticism about their actions. Whatever direction the show's writers take, the professors said they've loved seeing the creative team take the public's growing interest in self-reflection and run with it in such imaginative, accessible ways.

"Just the fact that the central problem for the characters is to try to figure out how to be better people and the thought that selfishness and narcissism are huge obstacles that people have to overcome in order to become better people," Vogler said. "That's profound."

The Surprising Nicknames the British Royal Family Call Each Other Behind Palace Doors

Yes, members of the British royal family may hold several fancy titles and only use their first names, but they are also just like us and have nicknames. In fact, some of them even have multiple monikers like Queen Elizabeth II, Kate Middleton, Prince William, and Prince Harry - and they're pretty hilarious, too! Remember when Kate revealed that George calls her majesty "Gan-Gan"? Well, that's just the tip of the iceberg. From "Squeak" to "Cabbage" to "Spike Wells," keep reading to find out what nicknames the British royal family have given each other. And who knows, maybe Meghan Markle will get one when she marries Harry in May.

Are Justin Theroux and Aubrey Plaza Dating? Not So Fast

It's been a month since Justin Theroux and Jennifer Aniston announced their separation after two years of marriage, but is the actor already jumping back in the dating pool? Since splitting from Jennifer, the 46-year-old has been "doing his thing" in NYC, and over the weekend, he was photographed on a stroll with 33-year-old Parks and Recreation actress Aubrey Plaza.

Given that Justin and Aubrey didn't show any sort of PDA and have known each other for quite a few years now (Justin guest-starred on a few seasons of Parks and Recreation in 2010), it's safe to assume they are just friends. According to the Daily Mail, "They went for a walk around after meeting and discussing a potential work project."

Aubrey has also been dating screenwriter Jeff Baena since 2011, though they haven't made a public appearance since June 2017.

12 Quotes from Selena That Will Make You Fall in Love With Her Even More

Selena is everyone's icon on so many levels! The late singer was talented, of course, but also always one to give advice to fans, talking about her journey, but never forgetting her roots and staying true to herself. My favorite thing about Selena was how she never let anything stop her - she knew she had a dream and she was going to make that happen, no matter what.

It's only fitting that through the years, Selena blessed us with inspirational words we hold close to our hearts. Everyone take note because these quotes will stick with you forever!

Selena Gomez Created Not 1 but 2 Items in Her First Design Collaboration With Puma

Selena Gomez's first design collaboration with Puma is here, and boy did she deliver. The singer and Puma brand ambassador is a huge fan of wearing sneakers, so it was only natural for her to get into designing them. The Phenom Lux training shoe ($110) is an all-white leather sneaker featuring gold details and a removable anklet. Selena loves to rock anklets so the fact that she incorporated one into this sneaker gives fans a chance to wear them just like she would.

"It has that chain that makes me feel womanly and makes me feel cool," she told Vogue. "It gives you a little bit of sparkle, and it can make you feel like you're dressed up even when you're in sweats."

That's not all, though! The 25-year-old singer also helped design fierce sheer windowpane socks ($14) that you could rock with the Phenom Luxes or any other shoe. The sneakers and socks are set to go on sale April 6. If that wasn't enough, Puma has pledged $100,000 from sales of the collaboration to the Lupus Research Alliance. The nonprofit's goal is to find a cure for lupus, an autoimmune disease Selena has been living with for some time now. Keep scrolling to see Selena looking fabulous and her equally edgy Puma sneakers.

50 of the Sexiest Latinas in Hollywood

Salma Hayek, Jennifer Lopez, Eva Mendes - that's just a few names that come to mind as some of the sexiest women to have ever walked this planet; and, yes, they all just happen to be Latina.

These stars' level of sexy is out of this world, so you will need to be seated before you start scrolling through our list of the hottest Latinas on the spotlight. It is that intense. No, we're not exaggerating.

But before you get it all wrong. These celebrities are not all sex appeal. They work hard and have paved their way in Hollywood through major achievements in film, music, and even behind the scenes as producers and directors. You'll see what we mean.