
Pop culture covers a broad range of emotions. Sometimes, amidst all the excitement, touching TV plot lines, and breaking news stories, we get a little teary-eyed. We're only human, right? But it's not usually sad tears—we have passion for this stuff and can get a little emotional. The Office ending? Reminicent sobs. A perfectly constructed storyline on Mad Men? Tears of joy. Think of it as a wedding, and who hasn't cried at one of those? OK! News: 5 Reasons to Watch the Billboard Music Awards These are the moments that made us cry a bit! "As soon as Jim told Dwight at his wedding "I can't be your bestest mensch, it has to be someone older" I started to tear up. I knew what was coming! And seeing Steve Carell is enough to make me cry happy tears at any point. Seriously, it almost happened during the Anchorman 2 trailer too." —Lea, Video Editor Photos: The Best-Dressed Celebs This Week "Army parents surprising their kids gets me EVERY time. But this one just made me stop my morning and get in a good, old fashioned happy cry (and want to call my dad in Florida to tell him I miss him)." — Lauren, Site Director Click here to watch the entire video! "I sobbed like a BABY during the Grey's Anatomy finale. Meredith almost died during a complication during her c-section, Avery almost died rescuing a little girl in a fire, and I almost died from hyperventilating. As per usual with Grey's finales, it. Was. Intense. —Haley, Entertainment Editor Watch: Betsey Johnson Gives OK! a Tour of Her Closet "Nashville! Without spoiling anything, this thing happened that was incredibly heart wrenching and Hayden Panettiere played it like a pro—lip quivering to full out hysterics. Definitely the biggest tear jerker of the week for me." —Emily, Social Media Manager "Everything about this episode made me cry. It was probably too emotional for my own good. First of all, Mindy's friendship with Danny has grown exponentially. They hated each other and now their basically besties. You know, hanging out and sharing secrets, and stuff. But the moment that really made me tear up was when Mindy revealed that she chopped off all her hair. She did it in love, and, as a rom-com aficionado, I can't deny its impact." —Victoria, Editorial Assistant "We've been hearing rumors all week, but the weekend was made when it was confirmed that Beyonce is pregnant." —Kaitlin, Senior Editor What pop culture moment made you cry tears of happiness? Tweet @OKMagazine and leave a comment below. Photo credit: NBC/ABC/Getty

Previous: Magnolia Client Rachel McAdams Fires UTA Magnolia Entertainment manager Shelley Browning’s inexplicable and one-sided battle against UTA co-owner Tracey Jacobs rages on. Last month, Browning was behind Rachel McAdams firing UTA after a seven-year stint with Jacobs. Now two Swedish actors who are both Magnolia clients follow: Joel Kinnaman and Noomi Rapace. Since becoming Browning’s client, Rapace has bounced between Hollywood agencies: first UTA, then WME, then back to UTA, and now out of UTA. The only Magnolia client left at UTA is Daniel Espinosa (Safe House) who is directing Kinnaman and Rapace with Tom Hardy in Child 44.

Cottage Country is a dark comedy starring Malin Akerman, Tyler Labine, Daniel Petronijevic and Lucy Punch and directed by Peter Wellington. Victor Elizalde of indie Viva Pictures and Uncork’d Entertainment’s Keith Leopard said today they have acquired U.S. theatrical, VOD, home vid and digital rights while in Cannes. The story centers on Todd (Labine), who wants everything to be just perfect at the family cottage where he plans to propose to Cammie (Akerman). But things go awry with the arrival of Todd’s slacker brother Salinger (Petronijevic) and his free-spirited girlfriend Masha (Punch). When Todd accidentally dispatches his irksome sibling with an axe, Cammie is determined not to let murder stand in the way of their happiness. The pickup is the latest from the companies, which also acquired action film Get Lucky starring Luke Treadaway, Emily Atack and Craig Fairbrass; the comedy The Blackout from director Matt Hish and writer Keith Brown; thriller The Bates Haunting from director Byron Turk, starring Jean Louise O’Sullivan, Ryan Dunn and Zachary Fletcher; and romantic comedy Mariachi Gringo starring Shawn Ashmore, Martha Higareda and Kate Burton.

Emily Rome on ''Avengers'' director and Co. bringing Shakespeare film to Pacific Northwest film fest
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