Monday, November 30, 2015

The 24 Most Kobe Bryant Things To Have Ever Happened


Whether he’s your hero or your villain, there's no denying Kobe Bryant is one of the most dominant personalities in NBA history. Known for his clutch shooting and his confidence, his killer instinct and his cockiness, Kobe has made a career out of being unapologetically himself both on and off the court.


So with Bryant’s retirement officially looming on the horizon, we sought to honor the five-time champion for both his play and, uh,  distinctive personality, as he takes one last lap around the NBA’s 29 arenas this season.


Here's to you, Mamba. Behold, 24 moments when Kobe Bryant perfectly played the part of, well, Kobe Bryant:



 


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New Music: Coldplay feat. Beyoncé – ‘Hymn for the Weekend’

Christmas comes early for Beyoncé fans. After a snippet surfaced last week, Queen Bey’s duet with Coldplay has debuted in full. Bey joins frontman Chris Martin on the hook to “Hymn for the Weekend.”

“So drink from me, drink from me / When I was so thirsty,” she sings. “We’re on a symphony / Now I just can’t get enough / Put your wings on me, wings on me / When I was so heavy / We’re on a symphony / When I’m lower, lower, lower, low.”

The song was inspired by Martin’s desire to create a song for the club. “The original kernel was that I was listening to Flo Rida or something, and I thought, it’s such a shame that Coldplay could never have one of those late-night club songs, like ‘Turn Down for What.’ What would we call it if we had one?” he told The Wall Street Journal.

Coldplay bassist Guy Berryman praised Beyoncé. “She came in, she did her thing. She’s unbelievably professional,” he told Annie Mack on BBC Radio 1. “I think she was in and out in five minutes, and we’re just so blessed to have her sing on one of our songs.”

Coldplay’s A Head Full of Dreams is due Dec. 4. The album also features appearances from Blue Ivy and President Obama, who is sampled on “Kaleidoscope.”

'Arrow' and 'Flash' Star Emily Bett Rickards -- Total Felicity Smoak Show (PHOTO)

Emily Bett Rickards swapped her hacker gear for a bikini while vacationing with friends in Maui -- and we're sure "Arrow" fans hope she never switches back. Of course, Emily plays computer expert Felicity Smoak on 2 CW hit shows -- "Arrow" and "The…

'Jessica Jones' Uses Superheroes To Expose The Terror Of Domestic Abuse


As superpowers go, Jessica Jones doesn’t have much to boast home about. She can lift heavy stuff, sure, but only up to a point. She can jump, not fly. But her ability to survive an abusive man who controlled her every move for eight months? That’s goddamn impressive.


In Netflix’s newest Marvel universe television series, "Jessica Jones," we see what happens when a strong woman is controlled by an sadistic, violent man. (This whole article is one big spoiler, so readers beware). The series paints an unflinching portrayal of intimate partner violence, and the accompanying trauma that survivors must learn to live with.


When we first meet Jessica Jones, it’s been a year since she escaped Kilgrave, a villain whose chilling superpower is the ability to control minds. He need only verbally suggest someone do something -- shoot themselves, leave their child on the sidewalk, toss hot coffee in their own face -- and they will do it without hesitation. For eight months, Kilgrave held Jones captive, and without her consent, acted out a romantic relationship with her. He told her what to wear, how to feel and when to smile. He raped her, again and again. And he forced her to hurt others, even compelling her to kill a woman at his behest. He exercised total control over every aspect of Jones’ life.


Abusive relationships are, at their core, about control. Abusers will assert control over their partners any way they can, often employing sophisticated tactics: Manipulating their victims with mental and verbal abuse, scaring them into submission, isolating them from their communities, and ultimately convincing them that the pain and suffering is completely their own fault. Kilgrave does all of this, but through the metaphor of a superpower.


A year after escaping him, Jones is still grappling with the trauma from her experience. She drinks heavily, throws herself into her work as a private investigator, and barely sleeps. She has nightmares and flashbacks. We find out she briefly saw a therapist, but stopped going to sessions, though she learned a simple technique to help manage her panic attacks. Whenever she is overcome with anxiety, she recites the names of the streets by her childhood home to ground herself in the memory of a safe place -- a place, we find out later, that Kilgrave will desecrate too.



Not only did you physically rape me but you violated every cell in my body and every thought in my goddamn head.
Jessica Jones


But her freedom from Kilgrave is short lived. He is not dead, as Jones initially thought. And as often happens after women leave abusive relationships, she gets entrapped in the cycle of abuse again. Kilgrave has taken a new prisoner, a young woman named Hope. With Hope under his spell, he begins to relive the faux courtship that he did with Jones, taking Hope to the same hotel, picking the same restaurant for their one-month anniversary.


Abusive relationships often follow a pattern, and Kilgrave is no different. He flaunts to Jones that he will continue his behavior, and if it is not her who is being controlled, it will be someone else. While Jones succeeds in rescuing Hope, Kilgrave forces the young woman to execute her parents, and she is arrested for the crime.



Hope’s experience after arrest also mirrors what many victims of abusers go through. No one believes Hope's story of mind control. She is written off as a mentally unstable woman, an unreliable narrator of her own experience. And Kilgrave’s powers render him immune to the justice system. No cop can touch him. It’s an experience not unfamiliar to many domestic violence survivors. The justice system may not protect you, and may even incarcerate you for crimes an abuser forced you to commit.


As Jones works to prove Hope’s innocence, Kilgrave sets about making Jones’ life so unbearable that her only choice is to come back to him. While he is not actually controlling her mind, he makes the world around her unpredictable and violent, robbing her of any semblance of safety. She can’t trust anyone, and doesn’t want to get close to anyone for fear that he will use them against her. Kilgrave isolates Jones. Her self-esteem is shot, tormented by the things she did and the person she became while under his control.


What makes Kilgrave such a frightening villain is his familiarity. Many women have met a man who acts like him. He is adept at manipulating people, and ducks all responsibility for the violence he creates. Even as bodies pile up because of his actions, he maintains that he’s never killed anyone. He uses psychological and verbal abuse to control his victims -- a critical element of domestic violence that is less understood than physical abuse. He tells Jones that she is remembering the past incorrectly. That she is crazy, and dramatic. That she really cared from him when they were together, and that she chose to stay. There’s a name for what he’s doing -- gaslighting. Kilgrave distorts the truth of Jones’ experiences in an effort to make her question her own version of reality. In the real world, gaslighting has a disorienting effect and can make survivors mistrust their own instincts.


The series also deftly shows the compromises survivors make to protect themselves and those close to them. In one episode, Kilgrave threatens to hurt someone Jones cares about. To stop him, she agrees to send Kilgrave a smiling selfie every morning at 10 a.m. Survivors know what abusers are capable of, and whether it’s worth it to try to mitigate the damage. They are experts in their own experiences. (Just imagine, for a minute, how those selfies would be used to discredit Jones if they were reported about in the media. The public would ask why a victim would send smiling selfies to an alleged rapist? The images would be used to impugn her character.)



Survivors don’t act like you might expect them to. Sometimes they do things that seem counterintuitive -- returning to their abusers, for example -- but they are doing what they need to do to keep themselves or their loved ones from harm. Sometimes surviving means taking the blow, so your kid doesn’t bear the brunt later. Sometimes surviving means stealing food so that you don’t have to ask your abuser for money. Survivors’ choices can look incomprehensible to outsiders.


There’s a point in "Jessica Jones" where an exhausted and isolated Jones returns to Kilgrave to live with him for a few days. It’s unclear if her plan was always to double-cross him, or if she thought it was her only option to minimize the carnage, or both. But her calculation is clear: Better the devil you know. She is willing to sacrifice herself, rather than let another person get hurt. While at the house, he tries to touch her, and when she resists, he reminds her they used to have sex. She corrects him, and calls it what it was: Rape.


"Which part of staying in 5-star hotels, eating in all the best places, doing whatever the hell you wanted, is rape?" he asks. "The part when I didn’t want to do any of it. Not only did you physically rape me but you violated every cell in my body and every thought in my goddamn head," she says.


In those two sentences, Jones captures what is so insidious about intimate partner violence. It’s much more than just physical violence. Or being called cruel names. Or living with fear. The real damage is how deeply the abuser can get inside your own mind, and control how you think and feel about yourself.


"I want you to say it: ‘None of it is my fault," Jones urges Hope early on in the show, trying to alleviate the young woman’s guilt. But despite her insistence that the things Kilgrave compelled Hope to do aren't her own actions, Jones still spends the remainder of the series trying to believe it herself. "Jessica Jones" is a show about many things, but chief among them is a story of how a woman learns to live with trauma and still persevere. Jones does, and that's what makes her a real hero.


Need help? In the U.S., call 1-800-799-SAFE (7233) for the National Domestic Violence Hotline.


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Melissa Jeltsen covers domestic violence and other issues related to women's health, safety and security. Tips? Feedback? Send an email or follow her on Twitter.


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The 24 Most Kobe Bryant Things To Have Ever Happened


Whether he’s your hero or your villain, there's no denying Kobe Bryant is one of the most dominant personalities in NBA history. Known for his clutch shooting and his confidence, his killer instinct and his cockiness, Kobe has made a career out of being unapologetically himself both on and off the court.


So with Bryant’s retirement officially looming on the horizon, we sought to honor the five-time champion for both his play and, uh,  distinctive personality, as he takes one last lap around the NBA’s 29 arenas this season.


Here's to you, Mamba. Behold, 24 moments when Kobe Bryant perfectly played the part of, well, Kobe Bryant:



 


Also on HuffPost:



-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.











'Fast And The Furious' Stars Pay Tribute To Paul Walker Two Years After His Death

Stars of the "Fast and the Furious" franchise paid tribute to the late Paul Walker on social media Monday, two years after his tragic death.


Vin Diesel, Tyrese, Jordana Brewster and Gal Gadot shared touching messages in memory of their friend and former co-star. 


Diesel, who revealed earlier this year that he named his daughter after Walker, shared an image of the two of them on Instagram with the words "Brotherhood has no limits" written over top. 


"The Last Witch Hunter" star also shared a status on his Facebook page that reads, "No matter where you are in the universe... You will always be my brother." 



A photo posted by Vin Diesel (@vindiesel) on





No matter where you are in this universe...You will always be, my brother.

Posted by Vin Diesel on Monday, November 30, 2015


Tyrese shared a touching note on Instagram, alongside a photo of the two actors on set. 


"Please continue to pray for the Walker family and his real friends who was with him every single day.... They're some of the best and strongest people I know...... I know you're in heaven smiling and rooting for us all," he wrote. 




Brewster, who played Mia (Walker's girlfriend and eventual mother to his child) in the films, posted a photo on Instagram of the late star along with a Ralph Waldo Emerson quote. 




Gadot, who played Gisele, kept her tribute short and sweet. 


"Always in our hearts," she wrote alongside an image of her and Walker on Twitter






Walker died on November 30, 2013 in Valencia, California after a fatal car accident. The car he was riding in -- a Porsche Carrera GT -- crashed into a light pole then burst into flames. The cause of death was confirmed to be a combination of traumatic and thermal injuries


Earlier this month, the actor's father sued Porsche for negligence and wrongful death; he claimed that the car Walker was in lacked safety features that could have saved his life.  Walker's daughter, Meadow, also filed a suit in September, though Porsche denied responsibility for Walker's death


The most recent lawsuit seeks unspecified damages.


 


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America Ferrera Is Thrilled To No Longer Be The Only Latina On Primetime

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In January 2016, America Ferrera will return to television, full-time, as the star of NBC's new comedy Superstore, her first series-regular role since ABC's Emmy-winning Ugly Betty went off the air in 2010. But Ferrera is returning to a television landscape that's very different from the one in which Ugly Betty's Suarezes were one of the only Latino families.

Over the course of the last five years, Jane the Virgin star Gina Rodriguez proved "she can and she did" when she accepted the Golden Globe for Lead Actress in a Comedy/Musical. Cristela Alonzo created, produced, wrote, and starred in her own network sitcom. Sofia Vergara was nominated for four Golden Globes and four Emmys for her role as Gloria Pritchett on Modern Family. And Selena Gomez and Demi Lovato used their respective Disney Channel television shows — Wizards of Waverly Place and Sonny With a Chance — as launchpads to international superstardom.

That kind of high-profile, primetime representation was nearly nonexistent when Ferrera played Betty Suarez — a brilliant but unstylish college graduate who found herself working at Mode magazine, the fashion industry’s (fictional) leading publication. Her crazed, superficial work world was juxtaposed with a satisfying, rich family life; Betty lived in a warm and welcoming Queens home with her father Ignacio (Tony Plana), her older sister Hilda (Ana Ortiz), and her nephew Justin (Mark Indelicato). When it debuted in 2006, the series represented a drastically underserved demographic and, because of that, everyone involved felt the pressure to be inclusive of an identity that means so many different things to so many different people.

Ferrera winning the Emmy in 2007.

Getty Images

“We needed to be really mindful of the choices we were making and the stories we were telling and what we were saying, being as we were the only Latino family on television,” Ferrera told BuzzFeed News of the show, through which she became the first Latina to win an Emmy for Outstanding Lead Actress in a Comedy in 2007. “I can't wait for the day when it's not history for a Latina to win an award or a black woman to win an award or an Asian woman to win an award. The fact that it's almost 2016 and a black woman winning an Emmy is history ... that's appalling. I don't think it brings any of us any joy to be ‘the first’ or ‘the only’ because that represents so much talent and so many voices that have yet to be heard. It's exciting to think of what's to come, but it's also really hard sometimes to think about how hard you always have to fight to get people to see things a different way, that the norm and the status quo is not you.”

The 31-year-old actor is continuing that fight today with Superstore's Amy, the compassionate but no-nonsense boss of Cloud 9, a Target-like big-box store. The half-hour comedy is a time commitment that, while still intense, pales in comparison to Ferrera's grueling workload as the lead of an hourlong series that boasted her character's name in the title.

“I needed a break to feel human again after Ugly Betty and that took a couple of years,” Ferrera said as she stirred her latte at Culina at the Four Seasons Hotel in Los Angeles. “It was a brutal, brutal schedule. ... [But] even on the days when I was so tired, I would wake up every morning just so psyched to go to work because I loved being on the show and I loved my cast and I loved my character."

Plana, Ferrera, and Ortiz on Ugly Betty.

ABC

And everyone loved Ugly Betty. Following its highly rated debut, the dramedy became a cultural lighting rod — Saturday Night Live, Mad TV, Scrubs, and 30 Rock all name-checked the series — and its leading lady garnered just as much attention. In addition to her Emmy win, California Rep. Hilda L. Solis saluted Ferrera for her boundary-breaking work from the floor of the U.S. House of Representatives in 2007 and Time magazine named Ferrera one of 2007’s most influential people.

It was a level of fame Ferrera couldn’t have dreamed of growing up as the youngest of six children in Los Angeles. The self-professed latchkey kid spent hours in front of the television, but was continually frustrated that no one ever looked like her. That dissatisfaction with the lack of representation, however, ended up being dwarfed by Ferrera’s passion for acting. “When I was a teeny tiny little person, my feelings were so big and they needed somewhere to go and what I found in acting was an expression of that,” she said. “In its purest form, acting is just about expressing. I have always been an incredibly emotional, feeling, expressive soul. I think that little America found an outlet for that in acting.”

Ferrera first gained attention — and a Sundance Film Festival Award— for her breakout performance in the 2002 independent film Real Women Have Curves. She followed that in 2005 with the beloved coming of age drama, Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants and its sequel in 2008, which, paired with the popularity of Ugly Betty, turned Ferrera into an unofficial spokesperson for body-confident young women. “My kind of loud mouthedness and my passionate spirit is something that exists in spite of me and so even if I wanted to shut up, it would be really hard to shut myself up,” she said with a laugh. “It's just seizing the opportunity when the opportunity is there to say the thing that needs to be said.”

Ferrera at the EMILY's List 30th Anniversary Gala in March 2015.

Getty Images

To that end, Ferrera has worked tirelessly to encourage Latinos to vote, long championed women’s reproductive rights, and recently wrote a widely shared open letter to Donald Trump after he continually disparaged Latino immigrants in stump speeches on the presidential campaign trail. “A lot of the issues I do get involved in are deeply personal. I talk a lot about immigration because I'm the child of immigrants,” she said of her parents who immigrated to the U.S. in the mid-‘70s. “I'm not out there talking about something that doesn't affect me. Standing up for women and girls and the unique challenges they face and the challenges of being very low income and the challenges you meet when you come from poverty, these are all things I've had firsthand experience with. It's almost more scary and you feel like you have more to lose when it's so deeply personal because you want to be effective … and you want to make a difference because it matters that much.”

That’s one of the reasons why Superstore, created by The Office's Justin Spitzer, drew Ferrera back to primetime network television. On the surface, the series is a half-hour workplace comedy, but a deeper examination reveals something much more socially conscious. “This is a show about the working class. This is a show about corporate America. This is a show about the daily lives of so many people in this country,” Ferrera said, arms wild with enthusiasm. “I grew up watching working-class comedies. I grew up on All in the Family and The Jeffersons and Roseanne. There was a camaraderie in being the working class in America — a real down-home, no BS, stripped-away sense that our lives could be commonplace and everyday, but still be full of humor and laughter and fun. I thought it was wonderful to see that again on television.”

The cast of NBC's Superstore.

NBC

To properly bring that experience to life, it was essential that the Superstore’s actors represent a cross-section of ethnicities. “Justin and the producers were looking to reflect the world and not just focus on what's going to make it on television,” Ferrera said of her co-stars Colton Dunn, Nico Santos, Nichole Bloom, Ben Feldman, Lauren Ash, and Mark McKinney. “People talk about diversity and I get so sick of hearing that word and I get so sick of saying that word because all we mean when we say diversity is not white. And I don't say that with resentment; I say it because that's what we mean. But when we talk about casting diversely most people think about it as diversity for the sake of diversity because it's the right thing to do. And yeah, on some level it is — but the next level is that when you have people that represent different backgrounds, it only enriches what you can say and the stories you can tell.”

Ferrera said she also impressed upon Spitzer the need for the writers room to include women and people of color and was “really earnestly looking for female directors.” Of Superstore’s first 11 episodes, three were directed by women, which is “not nearly enough,” according to Ferrera, but far above the television average, which is currently one of the most hotly discussed issues in Hollywood.

Ferrera speaking at the Clinton Global Initiative University in March 2015.

Getty Images

“Nobody is shocked to know that comedy is very male-dominated and it's hard to break through those commonly held views that women are not as effective in comedy as men are,” she said. “But I am proud of what the show has done and, again, I think we still have further to go. Not for the sake of it but because that will only make our show better.”

Ferrera is equally excited to see NBC embracing nonwhite experiences so wholeheartedly in 2016 as she — and Superstore — are joined by two more shows on the network that are fronted by Latinas: Jennifer Lopez’s cop drama Shades of Blue and Eva Longoria’s campy comedy Telenovela. The broad swath of experiences reflected on these shows and others means that the pressures of representation Ferrera faced last time around with Ugly Betty are less intense today. And that is the most significant sign, she said, that the needle is at long last moving in a positive direction.

“There’s definitely been progress and I think what's wonderful about the progress is now we can go into deeper and deeper layers,” Ferrera said. “It's not just, ‘Oh, you're the one Latino family on television and so everything you do has to be representative of all the people who are looking to you to be the only representation.’ Can you imagine if every white character had to worry about, ‘What are you saying about white people?’ It would be insane! The fact that there are more representations on television means there gets to be different versions of what it means to be Latino. … We aren't just painted with one brush and we aren't under the same umbrella anymore and that’s the real victory.”

NBC will preview the first two episodes of Superstore on Monday, Nov. 30, at 10 p.m. ET/9 CT before it premieres Jan. 4 at 8 p.m. ET/7 CT.


Birdman's Phone Call To Allegedly Sign Slim Jesus Has Surfaced


Listen to a conversation between Slim Jesus and Birdman.
http://www.hotnewhiphop.com/birdmans-phone-call-to-allegedly-sign-slim-jesus-has-surfaced-news.18903.html

ESPN Anchor Asks Why There's No Outrage Over White Player's Dance

ESPN anchor Robert Flores openly wondered why it is that the media tends to get so riled up about some NFL touchdown dances and not others during a Monday episode of "SportsCenter" -- not so subtly implying that the answer boils down to race.


He spoke his truth after showing a clip of Kansas City Chiefs' tight end "hitting the quan" following a touchdown against the Buffalo Bills on Sunday.


"I'm wondering why there's no letters to the editor, or why 'First Take''s not doing, 'Should Travis Kelce be dancing in the end zone?'" Flores rhetorically asked. "Oh, because he's not black."






The ESPN anchor is undoubtedly referring to the the hullabaloo over Carolina Panthers quarterback Cam Newton recent dancing, enjoying the fact that opponents can't stop him from reaching the end zone. You might remember it.




Newton's celebration led to anger, most noticeably in the form of a letter from a Tennessee mom to the editors of The Charlotte Observer, in which she said she would rather have her 9-year-old daughter watch half-naked cheerleaders than *gasp* watch Cam Newton dance. ESPN's Skip Bayless also jumped in too, saying he "thought [the dancing] was a little much for a franchise quarterback" -- hence Flores' "First Take" shout out.


By comparison, there has been near-silence recently when white players or middle-aged coaches have danced to express pleasure recently. But hey, it's only harmless fun when a white guy does it, right?


Moving forward, how about we all enjoy touchdown celebrations no matter who is dancing? That's not too much to ask, is it?



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Cuba Gooding Jr. -- Show Me the Dance Moves! (VIDEO)

Cuba Gooding Jr. got his Rod Tidwell on in a crowded bar ... stealing the spotlight as he put on a dance clinic.  Cuba hit up the very British pub Ye Olde King's Head in Santa Monica, and got loose to Kanye West's "Gold Digger." You…

'Shallow Hal' Actor Joshua Shintani Dead At 32

Joshua Shintani, who appeared in the movie "Shallow Hal," died on Nov. 25 at the age of 32, reports TMZ. 


Shintani's mother told the website that her son was hospitalized last week in Hawaii, where he was diagnosed with an advanced case of pneumonia. 


Fans of the 2001 movie starring Jack Black may remember Shintani as a character called Li'iBoy. He appeared in a memorable scene in which he played "Never Forget Where I'm From" on the ukulele.





Director Peter Farrelly is said to have discovered Shintani while he was vacationing in Hawaii. He spotted him strumming his ukulele outside a library and cast him in the film. 


"This red rental car comes by and the man driving passed me and stared at me and gave me this look, his mouth was open," Shintani previously told The Garden Island newspaper. "All of a sudden he turns around and stops at the corner where I was at and he asked me to come over, and asked me if I want to be in a movie."


 


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How Charlie Sheen Helped Reignite This AIDS Activist's Passion


For decades, actress Sheryl Lee Ralph of Broadway's "Dreamgirls" and TV's "Moesha" and "Ray Donovan" has worked tirelessly as an activist for HIV/AIDS research through her nonprofit, Divinely Inspired Victoriously Aware (D.I.V.A.) Foundation.


Now, 25 years after the launch of her foundation, Ralph told The Huffington Post that she's felt a renewed sense of purpose in raising awareness for HIV/AIDS thanks, in part, to Charlie Sheen's revelation that he was HIV-positive on the “Today” show. Ralph noted that she hopes Sheen's public admission will help the black community pay better attention to the disease.


“No matter how you may feel about Charlie Sheen, I say, ‘Thank God for Charlie Sheen’ cause he came out with his own reality no matter what you might feel about his reality, but I never had so many people wanting to talk about HIV in years, and I mean in years,” she said. “I would love to be able to get more access on black radio to talk about HIV and testing, but you try to reach out to some folks and their shows and they don’t wanna talk about it.”


To commemorate World AIDS Day on December 1, the actress has partnered with OraQuick in-home HIV testing to distribute 10,000 test kits across the South and to some historically black colleges and university campuses.


“My goal for this next year is to get people to understand that testing is powerful,” she said. “Testing saves your life, and ignorance is not bliss. Ignorance can cost you your life. STDs are on the rise and the best way you can commemorate World AIDS Day is to get tested, especially if you're a sexually active person or thinking about being a sexually active person. Get tested. Know your status.”


For more info on World AIDS Day, including HIV testing sites and other service locations, click here.


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