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Friday's TV highlights: 'Tony Bennett: The Library of Congress Gershwin Prize for Popular Song'

Los Angeles Times

MacGyver Mac (Lucas Till) gets involved in a competition to create robotic vehicles suited for combat, and one competitor – an ex-love interest (guest star Ashley Tisdale) – has her entry hacked, and sent to attack the Pentagon in this new episode. Blindspot Jane (Jaimie Alexander) and her colleagues must locate nuclear warheads that have vanished. Crazy Ex-Girlfriend Rebecca (Rachel Bloom) begins reaching out to the world and helping others. Hawaii Five-0 Grover (Chi McBride) tries to dissuade the main suspect (guest star Devon Sawa) in his own wife's death from suicidal thoughts in the new episode. Taken The series inspired by the Liam Neeson-starring action movies opens its second season, with Clive Standen – as a younger incarnation of the Neeson character, CIA man Bryan Mills – and Jennifer Beals remaining from the first year's cast.


What Female Body Part Do Men Find Sexiest On Women? Guys Prefer Chests Over Behinds, Study Says

International Business Times

Straight men find curvy women more attractive, according to a Dec. 13 survey conducted by fitness equipment review site Fitrated. The survey, which asked over 2,000 straight and gay people what they found to be the sexiest body part on a person, also found that straight men were most attracted to a woman's chest whether she has an average or curvy, but prefer a nice butt on a thin woman. As for the ladies, both straight and gay women found average body types more attractive. Straight women found arms to be the sexiest on men, whether they were average build, muscular or thin. Similar to straight men, gay women found a woman's chest to be her sexiest feature but chest but found both the chest and stomach to be the sexiest body parts on thin women.


Here's A Tragic Thing You Didn't Know About Helen Mirren

Huffington Post - Tech news and opinion

The Luftwaffe would use the doodlebugs to attack London, where actress Helen Mirren's parents lived during the war. "They were by far the worst because [as Mirren's mother told her] you would hear them coming over and if you heard the drone -- the buzz up there in the sky -- if you heard that noise stop, that's when it was dropping its load," said Mirren during a phone interview with The Huffington Post. "So you would just pray it went over your head." Mirren recalled this memory from her family's history as she was promoting her movie "Eye in the Sky," in which she plays a British colonel tasked with deciding whether to use a drone strike in Nairobi, Kenya. Her character has tracked the location of an extremist meeting, but must choose whether to take out the terrorists at the cost of killing a young girl who is selling bread right outside their headquarters.


'Eye in the Sky' film puts the use of drones in the spotlight

PBS NewsHour

JUDY WOODRUFF: A movie thriller being released nationally today delves into the practical, legal and moral issues surrounding drone warfare. HELEN MIRREN, Actress: We need to put a Hellfire through that roof right now. JEFFREY BROWN: It's a new kind of warfare, advanced technology that tracks, identifies, and has the power to destroy enemies by remote control from thousands of miles away. HELEN MIRREN: We have two suicide vests with explosives inside that house. JEFFREY BROWN: But as the film "Eye in the Sky" asks, should it be used?