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What Book Helped You During Your Depression?

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Sometimes what you need is a good read.

Depression is a very serious subject and something that many people experience.

Depression is a very serious subject and something that many people experience.

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Sometimes it feels like such a heavy burden on your life, and you never think you'll get out of it.

Sometimes it feels like such a heavy burden on your life, and you never think you'll get out of it.

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There are many ways people cope with depression, and one of them can be reading a really good book.

There are many ways people cope with depression, and one of them can be reading a really good book.

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Maybe you escaped into the magical world of Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone and it made you feel less alone.

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35 WTF Books That Actually Exist

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“Old Tractors and the Men Who Love Them.”

This cool tip.

This cool tip.

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This super helpful tip for how to increase your smarts.

These recipes to avoid on a first date.

This cone full of the Lord.

This cone full of the Lord.

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19 Internet Hacks Every Student Should Know

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Study smarter, not harder.

Jenny Chang / BuzzFeed

Don't buy textbooks from your college bookstore. Compare prices online and save a ton of money.

Don't buy textbooks from your college bookstore. Compare prices online and save a ton of money.

Rule #1: Avoid the college bookstore at all costs. Websites like Affordabook, Big Words, and Cheapest Textbooks compare prices from multiple retailers, giving you the best deal.

Half.com offers used, discounted textbooks of varying conditions from other students like you. Barnes and Noble and Amazon Prime have great rental programs with free shipping, easy returns if you drop the class, and flexible renting periods.

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? Get Chipotle delivered to your dorm, save time, study more. ?

Think burritos > pizza? Tapingo is a website and app that delivers food to college students, and they've recently added Chipotle delivery to 40 college campuses this fall. The site will expand to 100 more schools by spring 2016.

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Use a proven studying algorithm called spaced repetition to learn material for the long term.

Use a proven studying algorithm called spaced repetition to learn material for the long term.

If you think you're going to memorize that entire textbook in a week, you've got another thing coming. Use the concept of spaced repetition to learn things forever. It's the idea of reviewing terms, definitions, or formulas regularly so you'll remember them in the long-term, not just for the next 24 hours. It's pretty simple: if you understand the concept well, you'll review it farther in the future and if you don't understand it, you'll review it sooner.

There are a handful of browser add-ons and apps that can remind you to review material using special spaced repetition algorithms. You can create flashcards using Anki (free, web), highlight ideas from any website with Hibou (free, Chrome extension), learn new languages with Readlang (free, Chrome extension and web). You can even find subject-specific apps like Firecracker for med and pre-med students or Brainscape (free, iOS), which offers a variety of pre-packaged subjects.

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A Dad Turned All The Ridiculous Things He Ends Up Saying To His Kids Into A Book

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“Honey, please don’t lick the toaster.”

Nathan Ripperger, a video producer and graphic designer from Iowa, has been posting these pictures online for years, but they only began to go viral last year.

Nathan Ripperger, a video producer and graphic designer from Iowa, has been posting these pictures online for years, but they only began to go viral last year.

Nathan Ripperger / Via Ten Speed Press / Penguin Random House LLC

Nathan Ripperger / Via Ten Speed Press / Penguin Random House LLC

Ripperger is father to five – FIVE – boys.

Ripperger is father to five – FIVE – boys.

Nathan Ripperger / Via Ten Speed Press / Penguin Random House LLC

Nathan Ripperger / Via Ten Speed Press / Penguin Random House LLC


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These Awesome Grandparents Just Changed The Wedding Photo Booth Game

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Bar = raised.

Chances are, you've been to a wedding that has a photo booth.

Chances are, you've been to a wedding that has a photo booth.

It probably had props, a cool background, or even a neato face-in-hole feature.

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But we bet you've never seen a photo booth picture as EPIC as this one.

But we bet you've never seen a photo booth picture as EPIC as this one.

Michael Riddering posted the perfect snapshot to Reddit last night after his friend William Weiss sent it to him. The priceless moment happened at Weiss's girlfriend's brother's wedding last Saturday.

Teale Photography / Via Tealephotography.net

Weiss told BuzzFeed Life that two of the people in the picture — the perfect couple below — are the groom's grandparents. The other folks are longtime friends of the grandparents.

Weiss told BuzzFeed Life that two of the people in the picture — the perfect couple below — are the groom's grandparents. The other folks are longtime friends of the grandparents.

Justin and Teale Gunter of Teale Photography sent it to the bride and groom, who wish to remain anonymous, as a sneak peek at their wedding.

Teale Photography / Via tealephotography.net

"This was the first official wedding photo the bride saw," Weiss said. "She was laughing pretty freaking hard about it. It was sent it with no caption, just a dot dot dot."

"This was the first official wedding photo the bride saw," Weiss said. "She was laughing pretty freaking hard about it. It was sent it with no caption, just a dot dot dot."

Weiss also said that he's known his girlfriend's grandparents for four years, but he never expected to see them take a picture like this one. "It's definitely not their typical behavior. They are very respectful and when I saw the photo, I couldn't believe they did it."

Still, he says he shouldn't have been too surprised. At the Nashville wedding, the groom's grandmother was "a dancing queen, we can just put it that way," Weiss said. "She was out there dancing the entire night, and she was loving dancing with the groomsmen."

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These People Got Facials And Extractions....And It Was Pretty Gross

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“I feel like I’m touching somebody else’s face.”

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Your Favorite "Game Of Thrones" Scene-Stealer Is Stepping Into The Spotlight

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Conleth Hill, who plays Lord Varys on Game of Thrones, talks to BuzzFeed News about his new film, A Patch of Fog, the lies of Wikipedia, and Varys memes.

Conleth Hill in A Patch of Fog.

Courtesy of TIFF

TORONTO — To Game of Thrones fans, Conleth Hill is Lord Varys, the master of whispers, the spider, the eunuch — and one of the show's best characters. He plays the role with a raised eyebrow, a resonant voice, and intelligence. Lovers of George R.R. Martin's books had high expectations for Varys, a fan favorite on the page as well, but the show's creators, D.B. Weiss and David Benioff, cast the part in such a way that no one is complaining.

With his head shaved to play Varys, Hill is unmistakeable looking, but with his full head of hair, he has had a career varied enough that you may have seen him without realizing. Before Game of Thrones, Hill — who is from Northern Ireland — had a prolific career on U.K. television and on stage. (He has been nominated for two Tony Awards.) At the 2015 Toronto International Film Festival, Hill is adding to his CV with A Patch of Fog, in which he plays Sandy, a rich, lauded novelist with a self-destructive pathology: He steals. When Robert (Stephen Graham of Snatch and Boardwalk Empire), a security guard, catches him, Sandy finds himself indebted to Robert — who, unfortunately, is an obsessive, friendless stalker.

Set in Belfast, A Patch of Fog, directed by Michael Lennox, is a stylish, tense showcase for both actors, as their characters vie for power over each other. BuzzFeed News met Hill for an interview to discuss the movie, and, of course, playing Lord Varys. By the end of the interview, we were looking at Tumblr gifs of Varys, causing Hill to exclaim, "It makes me feel like Lady Diana!"

When you first read this screenplay, what did you think of Sandy?

Conleth Hill: Well, to be brutally honest, when I first read it, it was in connection with a different part, which I rejected because it was only one day. Then a week before principle photography started, the original Sandy dropped out. So it was very fortuitous — luck comes into it. But I just thought he was a fascinating character. I knew that there was so much enigma there, which you don't really have to do much to portray, you just play it. What is so clever about it is I think he's equally as lonely and desperate as Robert; he's just in better surroundings and is more affluent, but equally lost. The shoplifting is a major factor, and the fact that his relationship is semi-secret. There was something kind of covert about him, and mysterious about him.

You came in at the last minute, but I'm curious about the kinds of conversations you had with Stephen Graham about the dynamic between your two characters, which constantly shifts throughout.

CH: He's tremendously intelligent about things, and succinct and economical, and that appealed to me as well. All the kind of lack of awareness of space, he brought that all to it — that wasn't scripted per se. And I had no idea how close he would get, or what he would be doing, and then you have to react and still play the scene. It was very exciting, and very educational, I have to say — he taught me so much.

As an American moviegoer, I'm not sure I've seen fancy Belfast in a movie before. Sandy has a nice life he's trying to protect! You're from Northern Ireland — tell me about that aspect of this movie for you.

CH: You know, one of the many disadvantages of making movies in Northern Ireland is that for so long people weren't interested in financing them unless there was a sexy war conflict aspect to it. So yeah, the fact that The Troubles, religion, anything like that aren't mentioned in this movie is basically how most people in Northern Ireland live anyway. That's never been a huge factor for all of us from day to day. That again was an appeal. We know now it's a great location spot for movie-makers because you have an urban center, and then within 15-20 minutes, you can be in the wilds of the country. Anything that shows off where I come from, I'm very proud of.

There were some little things in the screenplay I really liked — a moment when Sandy is pleading with Robert, and he's about to say the "sword of Damocles" is over his head, and then realizes he's talking to someone less educated, and changes it to a "big sword." It's very detailed and layered.

CH: Part of his irritation was Robert's ignorance or misuse of words. He would get quite impatient with that, kind of biting on tinfoil when he used the wrong word — he calls him a "paganist" rather than a "plagiarist" at one stage. Stephen was determined not to make him the caricature-y, stereotypical sort of stalker psycho. There's so much pathos in what he does, and I think that's the strength of it as well. Sometimes you're rooting for Robert; sometimes you feel so much for what he's going through in his loneliness.

Hill and Graham in A Patch of Fog.

Courtesy of TIFF

I never trust Wikipedia, but —

CH: No, don't. When I did Conan O'Brien, the researcher said, "So, I believe your first wife made you go into acting." And I was, like, "First wife?" That implies more than one. I have never been married. But I think someone went in there and had a laugh. But I don't mind.

Is that the bit on your page about how you were once a fisherman and then went into acting?

CH: Yes. I have never been a fisherman.

There's just a full lie on your Wikipedia page.

CH: Yes. I'd love to know who did it. Not for revenge or anything, but to say it's quite funny.

Have you always been an actor, then?

CH: I went to art college for a year, then went to drama school, then started working. I've been working for about 30 years now.

Did you feel you could have a career that would be contained within the U.K.?

CH: I made the decision quite early on to live where I wanted to live, and then go where the work was if I could afford to, because I love where I'm from and I've always lived there. It's worked out very fortuitously. I remember being on Broadway for the first time, and somebody gave me the box set of the first series of The Sopranos. And that white noise over the HBO logo at the beginning, and how brilliant the show was, I went, I'd love to do something like that. I loved the ensemble of it as well. But I'd have to leave home, and make all these changes to my life. I think the lesson is if you wait long enough, they'll come to you. So the fact that I can wrap in Belfast and be in my garden in the afternoon is a bonus.

Game of Thrones literally did come to you, geographically.

CH: I did resist it for so long, I have to say. Because I didn't know anything about the novels. And how it was described to me by my agent at the time, I was like, "I don't want to do that." She persevered, thankfully, and said, "Look, they're in Belfast, go meet them." OK. Then David and Dan were just so brilliant. It's been a nice ride. I don't know how long it will go on — none of us know. Because we're past the books now, so everything is new ground for all of us.

You've said you haven't read the books.

CH: I can't wait to read them when I'm finished. I think he's a genius. And without him, we wouldn't be here. But the reason I didn't is because I wasn't doing the books. I didn't want to read a brilliant scene in the books that wasn't in the TV series and worry about it. Or vice versa.


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