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 It will be one of the most watched races of 2014, and 
a measure of the rift in the Republican Party between the establishment 
and the Tea Party.Mitch McConnell -- the country's most powerful Republican 
senator, the longest-serving senator in Kentucky history and a five-term 
incumbent -- faces a Tea Party primary challenge from millionaire Louisville 
businessman and Tea Party darling Matt Bevin.The first-time candidate, in 
announcing his bid, ripped McConnell as simply not conservative enough."After 
30 years in Washington, it is clear that Mitch McConnell has lost 
touch with our state, its people and our values," Bevin said.Some Tea 
Partiers call GOP primaries "hunting season for RINOS" -- short for "Republicans-In-Name-Only." 
Bevin's first ad was indeed an attack in that spirit."McConnell has voted 
for higher taxes, bailouts, debt ceiling increases, congressional pay raises 
and liberal judges," the ad says. "I'm Matt Bevin and I approved 
this message because America deserves more than failed leadership."Bevin's 
message, though, clashes with what Democrats have been saying all along, 
and McConnell's own image. For three years, Democrats have accused McConnell 
of pandering to the Tea Party. And he's already been endorsed by 
Kentucky's national Tea Party icon, fellow Sen. Rand Paul. In addition, 
McConnell's campaign manager -- Jesse Benton -- ran the 2012 presidential 
campaign of Paul's father Ron Paul whose 2008 rallies inspired the Tea 
P
 w Girl") said the researchers' work at Washington University 
in St. Louis and later at their own institute was especially important 
for women, allowing them to understand and accept their sexuality as healthy."Before 
Masters and Johnson, no one was telling women that. It was always 
their own fault," Caplan said. "And that's some (baloney)."The series embellished 
some characters but "stuck to the facts very carefully," said producer Michelle 
Ashford. "Certainly (with) the research, we fudged none of that."Masters 
and Johnson became big celebrities who were the topic of late-night talk 
show hosts and on the cover of news magazines. Their work drew 
some criticism, especially in an era when sex was seldom discussed in 
public and certainly not in detail.The cast, asked whether filming sex scenes 
proved embarrassing, said there was a painstaking effort to protect the 
actors by making the production "comfortable and safe," Sheen said.Cast 
member Teddy Sears recalled director John Madden saying, "I want to protect 
your modesty," then mimicked the British Madden giving a stage direction: 
"Grab her bum."Doing repeated takes of one clinical sex scene turned out 
to be "decidedly unsexy after a while," Sears said.The panelists, including 
executive producer Sarah Timberman, said they were not in touch with Johnson 
because they'd wanted to respect her privacy."She wanted to live out her 
the last few years of her life not in the limelight," Caplan 
said
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