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Read The Heartwarming Letter J.K. Rowling Wrote To A Fan She Met On Twitter

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“That you have turned out to be a compassionate, moral, highly motivated person is high testimony to your courage. Gryffindor for you, my lad…”


Then in July, Johnnie also had the chance to meet Rowling at a book signing for The Silkworm, which she wrote under her pen name, Robert Galbraith.


Then in July, Johnnie also had the chance to meet Rowling at a book signing for The Silkworm, which she wrote under her pen name, Robert Galbraith.


And she remembered him!


"I told Jo, 'Thank you so much, you’ve really changed my life,” in which Jo replied, 'Wow, that’s an amazing thing to say,'" Johnnie told BuzzFeed. "I then told Jo, 'I was the Dobby eyes boy you replied to on Twitter, do you remember me?' and she shouted 'Ahh, it’s you! Of course I remember you!'"


Photo courtesy of Johnnie Blue




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Why I'm Moving Back To South Africa

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Award-winning journalist Jonny Steinberg on the man who inspired him to write his new book, A Man of Good Hope, as well as return to his home country.



Jenny Chang / BuzzFeed


I am not a person prone to smugness. When I say that my life is the sanest and gentlest a person in our times can hope to live, it is with gratitude, not self-satisfaction. My house is near the centre of Oxford, a famously old and beautiful city, and I commute to work each morning on a bicycle alongside a quiet canal. The journey takes no more than seven minutes – eight or nine if I stop to admire the swans; I hardly remember what it is like to sit in traffic or to grind against a stranger on public transport.


I teach at Oxford University where I have a tenured job – a rare privilege in this day and age. The students are clever and hardworking, my colleagues considerate and sane, my days never less than interesting.


Work seldom ends after 7pm. On summer evenings, my partner and I often stroll along the Thames into Port Meadow, cross its 300 acres of ancient pasture, and eat in the village on the other side. The light in the meadow is gorgeous from May through September, turning the grass a luminous green I last saw in childhood dreams.


I have just resigned from this job and am giving up this life. In a couple of months, my partner and I will be moving to Johannesburg, South Africa, where I was born. It is a city that heaves with umbrage. "There is a daily, low-grade civil war at every stop street," the artist, William Kentridge, has recently remarked. Sometimes, the war moves up a grade; many friends and family members have stared down a gun barrel over the years, and each act of violence is relived in conversation a hundred times over. It is a city where being white or well-heeled attracts some to beg from you and others to insult you; where life is so palpably unfair that the rich live in a state of astonishing denial while among the poor antipathy runs so deep that if you listen you can hear it hum.



Jenny Chang / BuzzFeed


Make no mistake: I am not going to a life of hardship. I will have another tenured job at an institute staffed by some of the smartest people I know; the work is bound to be fulfilling. Labour in South Africa being cheap, we will employ somebody to dust our furniture and polish our floors. And, yet, what we are doing goes against the grain. Between my siblings and my first cousins, there are eleven of us in my generation and nine live abroad, all in rock-solid places like Canada and Australia. I am a Jew. My kind tends to sniff out trouble generations in advance. We like the foundations beneath our feet to run deep. While my move is by no means crazy, I am swimming in the opposite direction.


None of us understands ourselves especially well. We are dark inside and were we to light the whole place up we would go mad. My reflections on my move are no doubt riddled with self-justifications of which I'm barely aware.


There is nonetheless something for which I know I ache, and it is only to be found in my native land. When I lock eyes with a stranger on Johannesburg's streets, there is a flicker, a flash communication, so fast it is invisible, yet so laden that no words might describe it. This stranger may be a man in a coat and tie, or a woman who wears the cotton uniform of a maid, or a construction worker stripped to the waist. Whoever he is, he clocks me as I pass, and reads me and my parents and my grandparents; and I, too, conjure, in an instant, the past from which he came. As we brush shoulders the world we share rumbles around us, its echoes resounding through generations. He may look at me with resentment, or longing, or with the twistedness that comes with hating; he may catch me smiling to myself and grin. I am left with a feeling, both sweet and sore, that I am not in control of who I am. I am defined by the eyes that see me on the street. I cannot escape them. I cannot change what they see. We may one day fight each other or even kill each other, yet our souls are entwined because we have made another.




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Fifty Shades Of Gandalf The Grey

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“I’m looking for someone to share in an adventure…”



Jarry Lee / BuzzFeed / Warner Bros.


Click play and scroll down!



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"So this is just an interview for the newspaper..."


"So this is just an interview for the newspaper..."


Universal Pictures


"Gandalf? Yes."


"Gandalf? Yes."


Warner Bros.




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This 75-Year-Old Man Proposed To His Ex-Wife 43 Years After They Got Divorced

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Louis Demetriades made the grand gesture at a Walmart on Valentine’s Day.


A Walmart employee in Arkansas received quite the surprise on Valentine’s Day – a proposal from her ex-husband, who she divorced over 40 years ago.



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Renate Stumpf was working at the store in Fort Smith on Saturday when 75-year-old Louis Demetriades walked in, declared "Hey good lookin'”, and held up a sign that read: “Happy Valentine’s Day! Will you marry me?” KFSM 5 News reported.


Renate Stumpf was working at the store in Fort Smith on Saturday when 75-year-old Louis Demetriades walked in, declared "Hey good lookin'”, and held up a sign that read: “Happy Valentine’s Day! Will you marry me?” KFSM 5 News reported.


Stumpf, also 75, initially teased Demetriades by saying no, but then declared: “Yes, but not today!”


KFSM 5 News


The couple met on an army base in Germany in 1959, when they were both 18.


The couple met on an army base in Germany in 1959, when they were both 18.


They later got married, but after 12 years as man and wife they separated.


Stumpf revealed to ABC News that they had both remarried but their second spouses had recently died.


The pair had three children together and after not speaking for decades finally got back in contact in December when Demetriades reportedly tried to contact their daughter through Facebook.


KFSM 5 News


"When we saw each other again last December, we knew right then we still loved each other for sure," Stumpf said. "That love has never passed."


"When we saw each other again last December, we knew right then we still loved each other for sure," Stumpf said. "That love has never passed."


Talking about the proposal, Stumpf told KFSM 5 News: “Forty-three years is a long time to say ‘yes’ right away. I’m going to have to test him a little bit first! I will marry him though, because he’s a good man.”


Demetriades also revealed why he chose Walmart for the proposal.


“She has so many friends here and I knew she would like to share that with them,” he said.


KFSM 5 News




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MMA Or 50 Shades Of Grey?

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Are these terms from Martial Arts or BDSM? See how many you get right!



We Know Which Superhero You Are

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It’s a bird… it’s a plane… it’s a quiz!



Ira Madison III for BuzzFeed / Via Thinkstock / Marvel Entertainment