Categories
Women's Fashion

How Lockdown Has Impacted Our Shopping Habits

Here’s what brands and products we’ve all been searching over the past three months.

There’s no denying that the COVID-19 pandemic has had an incredible impact on all of our lives, and the changes we’re experiencing as a result have had a huge effect on our spending, too. Online fashion aggregator Lyst recently released its Q2 report, which detailed the hottest brands over the past three months, as well as different trends in shopping habits during lockdown – and the results paint an interesting picture of our new “normal”. Here are the top six takeaways from the report:

1. A non-luxury brand snagged the top brand spot for the first time in the report’s history

Nike has emerged victorious, according to the Lyst report, snagging the coveted number one spot on the ‘Hottest Brands’ round-up. It is the first time a non-luxury brand has taken out the top spot since the report began, and marks a two spot rise for the sportswear giant. The report notes that Nike’s ascension was “propelled by a 106 per cent increase in demand for loungewear and activewear, as consumers sought comfortable clothes to wear at home, as well as attire for exercise and outdoor activities.” It also had various online successes, including the Air Jordan x Dior sneaker raffle and its anti-racism video on Instagram which racked up more than five million likes.

2.  Genderless products have ruled in lockdown

The report details how Birkenstock’s Arizona sandals were the hottest shoe in the world over the past quarter. Searches for the item rose 225 per cent in that time. A designer version of the slides by Brunello Cucinelli also made it into the men’s top 10 list. Unisex combat boots are also on the rise, thanks to Timothée Chalamet, Evan Mock and Soko all sporting Alexander McQueen’s Tread Slick boots.

3. Summer-ready dresses were also big

As we longed for summer days, we began to search for the ‘it’ dress of the season – and as it turns out, there’s two we all gravitated towards. Cult Gaia’s Serita cut-out dress came in at number five on the women’s hottest products list following a 22 per cent rise in searches for the piece. Plus, H&M’s puff-sleeve, fuchsia pink midi dress came in at number nine after selling out just days after it was released.

4. Basics are also key across the men’s and women’s hottest products listings

From Calvin Klein bralettes, padded shoulder tees, gold earrings and boxing shorts to a Gucci baseball cap and Yeezy cotton trousers, we’ve all been longing for good quality basics over the past few months it would seem. In fact, searches for baseball caps increased 49 per cent this quarter, with Gucci leading the pack, followed by Nike, Prada and Palm Angels.

5. Harry Styles remains a big influencer

First it was pearl necklaces, and now it’s chunky knit cardigans – Harry Styles is officially the world’s wardrobe muse. After wearing a JW Anderson, multi-coloured knit cardigan back in February, Styles sparked a viral TikTok challenge in late June, called the #HarryStylesCardigan challenge, which saw searches for the piece increase 166 per cent.

6. All of our TV bingeing has impacted our wardrobes

Just as in Q1 when our Tiger King obsession led us all to search Anine Bing’s tiger sweatshirt, our TV binges have continued to impact our quarantine (and post-quarantine) wardrobes in a big way. Within days of the release of The Last Dance on Netflix, searches for Nike Air Jordan sneakers rose 36 per cent, and the Nike Air Jordan 4 retro flyknit sneaker came in at number nine on the men’s hottest products list. Sally Rooney’s Normal People was also a big influencer, as it pushed men’s chain necklaces into the spotlight. Searches for chains increased, and men’s jewellery searches increased 75 per cent overall during this time.

See the full report here.

Categories
Fitness

3 Uncomfortable Things You Should Tell Your Therapist, According to a Therapist

@mashmushe

What are you scared to tell your therapist? #tiktoktherapist #tiktokpartner #learnontiktok #therapist

♬ Acoustic Guitar Stroll – Dow Brain

It can take time to find the right therapist. And even if you do have a connection with the mental health professional you’ve chosen, there are still certain conversations that might feel awkward or difficult to bring up. Licensed mental health counselor Micheline Maalouf is here on TikTok (with over 300K followers) to explain three uncomfortable things you should actually talk about with your therapist.

Uncomfortable Convo #1: You Want Something Different

Telling your therapist you’re looking for something different than what’s happening in your sessions is important. “Maybe you want them to listen more and be less directive or vice versa,” Maalouf said. Communication is key.

Uncomfortable Convo #2: That 1 Thing You Haven’t Told Anyone

If there’s something that’s bringing you a lot of shame or feelings of hurt, especially if you’ve been keeping it to yourself, you should tell your therapist. “I know it’s uncomfortable, but they can help you process it and work through it,” Maalouf noted.

Uncomfortable Convo #3: Lack of Progress

If you feel like you haven’t made progress recently, it’s a good idea to tell your therapist. You can lose motivation during therapy — that’s normal — but stating this to your therapist can be a positive thing, as you both can brainstorm new ways to get back to that progress.

Watch the full video from Maalouf above. And the next time you’re struggling with your words, consider being as candid as possible about your feelings and how your therapy sessions are going. When in doubt, bring it up — chances are your therapist probably wants you to.

Categories
Life & Love

COVID-19 Is Making Everybody’s Cyberchondria Worse

About two months ago, my dad began to experience a series of strange neurological symptoms. He regularly felt pain radiate up and down his right arm, and occasionally into his neck and jaw. Sometimes his fingers on his right hand would tingle or go numb. The nerve pain was so uncomfortable that he had to take over the counter pain medication twice a day and once before bed so he could sleep. This went on for weeks.

Ever the medical practitioner (he’s a retired oral surgeon), my dad tracked his symptoms closely, and believes they stemmed from a spider bite he received while doing pushups in the basement.

After he showed me a picture of his bright red shoulder where he’d felt the bite, I immediately dove into exhaustive internet research on spider bite toxins, symptoms, and treatments. I am a science journalist and this sort of investigation is not out of the norm for me, but for a few fleeting moments my anxiety-addled brain took over: “What if this is somehow related to COVID-19?” I thought. When I began Googling “nerve pain” and “coronavirus” and seeing correlations I’d hoped not to, I knew I’d reached cyberchondria territory.

Cyberchondria—anxiety stoked by scouring the internet for clues to potential health issue—has been around since at least the day WebMD launched in 1996. But this unprecedented pandemic has caused a noticeable uptick in cases, according to a recent study.

The constant health threat, along with all the rapidly changing information surrounding it, is a prime breeding ground for this sort of hypochondriasis, and it’s hitting people with health anxiety the hardest.

“Anyone who has anxiety or a vulnerability to respond in an overly anxious way might be vulnerable to concerns about what’s going on now,” says Dr. Michael Mayer, Director and Co-Founder of The Reed Center, which specializes in Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) as treatment for anxiety-related disorders.

Psychiatrists like Mayer are also noticing that cyberchondria is now manifesting in people who never had a history of anxiety. “We’ve seen [people] who haven’t manifested anxieties in any problematic way, are, in some cases, now experiencing that, and I think [it’s] because there’s a lot of information out there that’s kind of confusing.”

Psychiatrists like Mayer are also noticing that cyberchondria is now manifesting in people who never had a history of anxiety.

Information about the novel coronavirus changes daily. While that’s understandable for a virus the medical community knows so little about, the lack of stable, concrete information is enough to rattle even the calmest of minds.

It’s natural to want to try to gain some control in such an unpredictable environment by unearthing as much information as possible—even if that information only serves to alarm you further. And the more people excessively consume virus-related media, the more their anxiety impacts their daily lives, the study confirmed.

Cyberchondria boils down to a compulsive disorder, according to Maher. The compulsion is a response intended to reduce fear or anxiety, even though it often results in a heightening of those feelings.

Like any compulsion or addiction, it can be difficult to curtail the behavior, especially if you believe you’re getting something out of it. In the case of the pandemic, for example, you may be inciting your anxiety, but you may also be getting some important information that could help keep you safe, making it easy to justify the compulsion.

But as any CBT advocate will tell you, this vicious cycle can be broken. All it takes is a little brain rewiring.

“CBT teaches people to recognize the relationship between their thoughts, feelings, and behaviors,” says Dr. Stacia Casillo, Director of the Ross Center in New York. “It helps them to understand that it is not the situation itself that causes their anxiety; instead, it is how they interpret and then respond to a situation that contributes to their negative feelings.”

A therapist might employ CBT by assessing the client’s “anxiety cycle,” as Casillo calls it. “The client and therapist create a conceptualization of the thoughts, feelings, and behaviors that are typical of their anxiety reaction and the thoughts and behaviors that keep that cycle going. A treatment plan would consist of providing psychoeducation on health anxiety, teaching skills to challenge anxious thinking, replacing maladaptive coping behaviors with healthy coping skills, and promoting distress tolerance and acceptance of what they do and do not have control over.”

It’s natural to want to try to gain some control in such an unpredictable environment by unearthing as much information as possible—even if that information only serves to alarm you further.

Clinicians like Casillo and Mayer have had much success using CBT to treat patients with cyberchondria and various other health anxieties. But what about people who can’t afford a therapist or don’t have insurance? A recent study published in the Journal of Psychiatric Disorders suggests an alternative form of CBT that doesn’t involve traditional therapy, and may be just as—if not more—successful at treating cyberchondria.

iCBT, or internet CBT, is an online CBT program designed to give you all the same lessons and tools you might gain working one-on-one with a CBT-trained therapist. The study looked at The Health Anxiety Course, which is a research tool from the Virtual Clinic,an Australian-based mental health research center.

The course is made up of 6 lessons taken over 12 weeks, and teaches skills including “challenging negative thinking patterns about bodily symptoms, exposure to feared situations and sensations” and behavioral strategies to reduce internet searching. It even offers a lesson plan on why less accurate, alarmist health news often comes up first in Google searches (hint: search engine optimization).

getty images

At the end of the study, researchers found that those who participated in the iCBT course showed a “significantly greater reduction” in cyberchondria than the control group who received psychoeducation pamphlets, periodic monitoring, and optional support from a clinician.

This is not to say that traditional CBT treatment isn’t as beneficial. The iCBT version may have been effective in this instance simply because it was a more guided experience. What’s clear, though, is how useful CBT can be for anyone with cyberchondria or health anxiety right now.

If you’ve found yourself unable to look away from the New York Times case tracking map, below are some CBT coping techniques that might be helpful for you.

Limit your health searching

“Pick one reputable online medical resource (i.e. Mayo Clinic) to engage in online symptom checking,” says Casillo.

Reduce the number of times (and amount of time) you conduct searches. Try getting it down to once a day for 10 minutes.

Recognize and delay the impulse

If you feel the need to look up something health-related, don’t immediately act on that impulse. Wait an hour and see if the urge is still there at that point.

Put down the phone

It can be much harder to ignore an impulse to search if you’re sitting in front of a screen. Casillo suggests engaging in other activities when you’re feeling anxious that promote well being like exercising, taking a walk outside, playing a game, watching a fun show, or cooking.

Challenge your thinking

“While your initial instinct may be to imagine the worst-case scenario, look for alternative, more neutral reasons why you may be experiencing those symptoms,” says Casillo.

If reading health news scares you, try looking at it from a more subjective place rather than a personal/emotional place.

Get comfortable with the uncomfortable

Uncertainty, especially now, is going to be there no matter what, so we have to find a way to live with it without letting it take over. Mayer likens it to gardening when you know there are bees around. You should be aware of them, but that awareness shouldn’t stop you from doing the thing you enjoy.

“What we want to do is help people respond more effectively by making room for the uncertainty, so they can get back to their life, back to their family, to their friends, to things that they care about,” he says.

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Categories
Culture

A Complete Timeline of The Umbrella Academy Season 2

At one point in The Umbrella Academy season 2, Diego manages to sneak into The Infinite Switchboard, a mysterious screen-filled room at The Commission’s headquarters that allows agents to step out of time and monitor every single point in the space-time continuum. In other words, it offers an overview of the show’s entire twisty-turny timeline. If you found yourself wishing you had your own Infinite Switchboard on hand as you binged the season, you’re not alone. Below, we’ve got the next best thing—an exhaustive guide to the increasingly complicated timeline of The Umbrella Academy season 2, which finds our reluctant heroes scattered throughout the early 1960s as Number Five (Aidan Gallagher) tries frantically to reunite them all in order to prevent yet another apocalypse.

1960

At an unspecified date during this year, Klaus (Robert Sheehan) and Ben (Justin H. Min) crash-land in an alleyway in Dallas, Texas, after Number Five whisks all the siblings back in time just seconds before the apocalypse strikes in 2019. Although Five clearly intended for all the siblings to land at the same point in time, he has a track record of less-than-perfect time travel efforts, so it’s not really a surprise that most members of the Hargreeves crew end up separated by several years.

Klaus becomes the leader of a cult named “Destiny’s Children,” because of course he does, and throughout the next three years he and his harem galavant through Baja, Mexico; Varanasi, India; and San Francisco.

1961

Alison (Emmy Raver-Lampman) lands in the alleyway a year after Klaus and Ben, and is immediately harassed by a group of racist men who chase her through the streets. She finds safe haven at a Black-owned beauty salon, where she eventually takes a job—and meets her future husband, civil rights activist Raymond Chestnut (Yusuf Gatewood).

1962

Luther (Tom Hopper) lands in the alley sometime in the year 1962, and spends a few sad hours plaintively calling for his lost siblings before accepting that he’s all alone yet again. Having already spent way too many years isolated on the moon, he doesn’t take this well, and ends up spending much of his time punching the pain away at an underground fight ring, working for nightclub owner Jack Ruby (John Kapelos).

Elsewhere in the same year, the siblings’ future father, Sir Reginald Hargreeves (Colm Feore), is conducting experiments on Pogo the chimpanzee, helped by a colleague named Grace (Jordan Claire Robbins), who will eventually be used as the model for the robot mother Hargreeves creates to raise his children in the future.

the umbrella academy l to r david castaÑeda as diego hargreeves and aidan gallagher as number five in episode 210 of the umbrella academy cr christos kalohoridisnetflix © 2020

CHRISTOS KALOHORIDIS/NETFLIX

September 1, 1963

Diego (David Castañeda) arrives from the future, and hits the alleyway just in time to see footage from JFK’s famous “Ask not what your country can do for you—ask what you can do for your country” inaugural address in a TV storefront. Realizing that the president’s assassination is just a couple months away, Diego becomes hellbent on changing history and saving JFK.

At some point around this same time, Klaus grows weary of the cult leader lifestyle and skips out on his followers, returning to Dallas in time to join up with the rest of the family—and try to reunite with his long-lost soldier love, Dave (Cody Ray Thompson).

October 12, 1963

It’s Vanya’s (Ellen Page) turn to crash land. She’s fresh off a villainous turn in which she lost control of her faculties and transformed into the super-powered agent of destruction known as The White Violin, so she’s a little disoriented. So much so that she staggers right out of the alley and gets hit by a car driven by a young housewife named Sissy (Marin Ireland). Vanya has complete amnesia and ends up moving in with Sissy and her son Harlan (Justin Paul Kelly) and falls in love with her.

November 15, 1963

After Five witnesses a nuclear holocaust on November 25, reformed assassin Hazel (Cameron Britton) shows up just in time to save him from the blast that destroys everything else on earth. Hazel brings Five back ten days into the past, to November 15, giving him plenty of time to “restore the timeline,” correct whatever mistake has led to the apocalypse, and save the world.

Five catches up with Diego, who’s imprisoned on a psych ward after being arrested outside Lee Harvey Oswald’s house, and finds Luther at the underground fight club. Both of his brothers are deeply uninterested in helping him save the world.

The main action of season 2 takes place over a two-week period beginning on this date. This includes the siblings’ dinner with Sir Reginald, where they try to get his help with preventing the apocalypse and returning home, as well as uncover his involvement in the plan to assassinate JFK.

umbrella academy season 2

Netflix

November 22, 1963

Diego, having been removed from the 1963 timeline and taken to The Commission, breaks into the Infinite Switchboard to watch the day of JFK’s assassination, still hoping to change history. But surprise—on the switchboard, he sees the day has already been changed, because moments before Kennedy is supposed to die, the Dallas FBI building explodes. This prompts Kennedy’s motorcade to drive away immediately with the president safely inside. The Soviets are blamed for the attack on the FBI building (which actually turns out to be Vanya in another moment of uncontrollable rage, natch), and the resulting conflict is what causes the nuclear holocaust.

Diego goes to his siblings to get help in preventing Vanya’s explosion, and Ben, having discovered a new power, is able to get through to Vanya in a way their other siblings failed to last season. His compassion is enough to stop her from losing control and destroying the FBI building. The downside to this touching moment of victory is that it corrects the timeline, so JFK is still assassinated despite Diego’s best efforts to intervene.

November 25, 1963

Had the timeline not been corrected, this is the day the world would have ended. Number Five crash-lands in the past on this date, in the same alleyway as the rest of his family—only instead of a sedate street full of diners and small stores, it’s a war zone. Soviet soldiers have invaded and are tearing the city apart, but the Hargreeves siblings’ combined powers are more than a match for them. Just as things are starting to look hopeful, though, a nuclear missile strike wipes out the entire gang, save for Number Five, who’s transported away by Hazel.

the umbrella academy l to r emmy raver lampman as allison hargreeves, ellen page as vanya hargreeves, aidan gallagher as number five, robert sheehan as klaus hargreeves and tom hopper as luther hargreeves in episode 210 of the umbrella academy cr christos kalohoridisnetflix © 2020

CHRISTOS KALOHORIDIS/NETFLIX

February 21, 1968

Although this date isn’t actually depicted in season 2, it’s significant because it’s the day that Dave, Klaus’s military lover, is supposed to die in Vietnam. Back in the early ’60s, Klaus brings up the date as he’s trying to persuade a confused Dave not to enlist. But as is always the case with time paradoxes, Klaus’s plan backfires and Dave ends up enlisting even earlier than he’d planned thanks to Klaus’s intervention. Could this timeline change be enough to alter Dave’s fate?

1982

Number Five briefly travels to Wisconsin in 1982 to kill the entirety of The Commission’s board at the behest of The Handler (Kate Walsh). In exchange, he gets a powerful briefcase which will enable him to transport himself and his siblings back to 2019. Five rationalizes this brutal series of executions by claiming that if he doesn’t get hold of the briefcase, he and his siblings will never get back to the present day and the world will end.

1993

On an assignment in London, Five kills Lila’s (Ritu Arya) parents, and The Handler adopts Lila and raises her to be an assassin. Lila is later revealed to be one of the 43 super-powered children born on October 1, 1989.

April 2, 2019

After saving the world in the past, the Hargreeves siblings tear themselves away from their respective 1960s love interests and are transported back into the future. They land on April 2, the day after the apocalypse caused by Vanya at the very end of season 1. The gang are briefly overjoyed to discover that the world is still intact, but quickly notice that something isn’t quite right. By messing around with their own history—and specifically meeting their own father during the 1960s—they’ve created an entirely new timeline in which they’re possibly not supposed to exist, having been replaced by The Sparrow Academy.

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Categories
Beauty

Jackie Aina Wants You To Play Sade, Drake, and City Girls While You Burn Her Candles

When you’ve been at the top of the YouTube beauty game for 11 years, your name starts to ring bells. But very few names reverberate through the industry like Jackie (Jackie, Jackie, Jackie) Aina. Before the Too Faced and Anastasia Beverly Hills collaborations—both designed to cater to Black skin; before winning NAACP’s YouTuber of the Year Award in 2018; before boldly holding brands accountable for their past faults and calling out the disparities still very present in the beauty industry in her videos, it was just a young Aina and her camera with some MAC Cosmetic pigments posting step-by-step guides on how to achieve a turquoise and green smokey eye. But, as she tells me over the phone, “my interests and responsibilities are shifting.” Aina isn’t clocking out of YouTube, per se, she’s just added another hyphen to her name that has an even better ring to it: founder.

Caked Up

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forvrmood.com

$35.00

Enter: Forvr Mood. Aina’s new lifestyle brand with her co-founder and fiancé Dennis Asamoah. Forvr Mood’s goal is to provide comfort amid chaos. “The most important thing to do right now is to take care of yourself, physically, emotionally, and spiritually.” she says. “You can’t be your best self if you’re not stopping to take breaks and taking the time to put yourself first. When you do, it feels good, and candles play a huge part in providing that sense of stillness.”

The collection, available today, includes four different “moods” to choose from: Cuffing Season, Matcha Business, Left on Read, and Caked Up, all priced at $35 a pop ($125 for the set).

Below, Aina chats with ELLE.com about her move away from beauty YouTube, her approach to content creation, and the ultimate playlist to listen to while you burn each candle.

With the launch of Forvr Mood, will YouTube be taking a backseat?

To be honest with you, this year would be my 11th year on YouTube. I love creating content, I absolutely do, and I foresee myself doing that for years to come. I will do this until I get sick of it. I also feel like I want to shift some of where my main career focuses are. I genuinely feel like I’ve accomplished so much in the social media space that I want to think bigger. I want to think more long-term. I’m just shifting my responsibilities. To me, that looks like fewer uploads, less frequency in uploads, and I know people have seen it because they’re always cussing me out on Twitter, like, “We need content.” That’s the sacrifice that you make when you start a brand. People have been asking me to start a brand for years. Well, you guys aren’t going to get the same consistency and the same energy from both. I have to make some sacrifices, and in the phase of the career that I’m in now, I ultimately feel like it’s time. It’s time for me to put myself in the shoes of a brand owner.

I want to go back to creating content that I can do what I feel like it. The hustle of having to be the first to upload when a new product launch is fun, but that’s not the only thing that I want to commit to anymore. I want to be able to upload freely. Hopefully, Forvr Mood will allow me to do that better so that I don’t have to keep running on the social media wheel just to maintain. I wanted to find a different way to express myself so that I can go back to just organically creating content that I enjoy.

jackie aina forvr mood

Brandon Lundby

When did you first imagine Forvr Mood?

We thought about doing these candles back in 2018, and that was when we started to talk with manufacturers. We began getting samples, and it was not where I needed it to be. The candles were first developed without a name, and we didn’t even have branding ideas yet.

We just wanted to find a product that I loved. Then, the candles that were produced weren’t on par with my standard. I am a candle lover. I require a certain standard. So, we put it on hold until 2019, fast forward to late last year, things started to pick up again. Then, boom, we get stuck with this pandemic. I started thinking that we should just kick it into high gear even more now because I don’t know about y’all, but I’m burning candles now more than I ever have.

Is it safe to call Forvr Mood a home goods line?

I wouldn’t call it home goods. I would consider it more lifestyle because we’re launching with the candles and the candle fragrance will be our main hero product. Along with the candles, we have silk headbands and silk pillowcases because it is all about the lifestyle. It’s all about things that make my life easier, something that will make other people’s lives easier in general. These are just must-haves for me. Whenever I travel, I always bring a piece of home with me, and that’s a silk pillowcase to protect my hair and my skin and a candle. The headband the silk pillowcases are great for those with natural or curly hair because the silk in them helps protect your hair while you’re doing your skincare. They’re really cute, very functional, and make people’s lives easier.

When people think about Forvr Mood, what are the feelings and associations you want them to have with the candles?

I want it to be a vibe. I want them to feel flirty. I want them to feel relaxed. I want them to feel beautiful. Taken care of, at-home, maybe nostalgic, comforted. Those are the things that I feel when I light a candle, I feel comforted. The first word that comes to mind when I’m burning my candles is comfort, because it reminds me of my home. I literally feel like I breathe my soul into every candle. When people walk into my home, I want them to leave being like, “Damn, I remember feeling really good in her home.” For me, that’s what fragrance does and I want everybody else to experience that too.

When thinking of the creative process behind the candles, how does it differ from how you create and develop a makeup palette or a foundation collection?

There are similarities in everything that I create. I always think, “How is it going to make people feel?” If it doesn’t make people feel very good, then I can’t put that out there. Whatever I do has to make people feel positive, it has to make you laugh or remind you of something pleasant. Or it has to educate you. With Forvr Mood, I was constantly thinking, “Are they’re going to be empowered when they use the products?” “Are they going to be inspired by this product?” When it comes to makeup, you’ve got to create different shades to make sure that the shades are wearable. You have to make sure that the product is safe to put on the skin; it’s tested for compatibility in the packaging. The candle creation process is faster, but not easier.

Similar to the names in your ABH palette, the entire collection has fun, punny names like Caked Up, Matcha Business, Left on Read and Cuffing Season. How’d you land on those?

The inspiration behind the names was both how they looked and who the candle should speak to. For example, when I was getting feedback about Cuffing Season, I noticed that Cuffing Season was the one that seemed to be the most gender-neutral, it’s not too masculine or feminine. I noticed that everyone that tested this candle liked it universally. That made me feel like this is a candle that you can burn as a couple, so it’s the candle you and your SO can enjoy together. It burns so well and lights up a room incredibly.

Matcha Business is based on the color of the candle. The candle smells more like hazelnut coffee. There’s a hint of lavender in there, and a little bit of matcha inspiration, but it was more a visual thing. Then Caked Up is one that reminds me of a bakery cake pop. It’s very sticky and sweet. Caked Up is one that I would burn with my girlfriends because it’s the more flirty one. Left on Read is the one that I was truly blown away by. The scent leans towards the nuttier, coconut milk side. It’s kind of tropical.

As a big music lover, if you were to pick a song for each candle to set the mood, what song would you pick for each candle?

Cuffing Season:

I would probably want some Sade. When my fiance proposed to me, we were in Greece, and he had hired a saxophonist to play one of my favorite Sade songs. I’d probably put on Sade’s “Nothing Can Come Between Us” because that song plus the candle is just really romantic. You want to play something that makes you feel good. For me, it’s a lot of Sade or Jill Scott “Golden.”

Left on Read:

You know what? Left on Read is probably my Afrobeats candle. I’m into a lot of Afrobeats music and because the candle is kind of tropical and sweet at the same time, I’m going to say this candle needs a Tiwa Savage moment. Tiwa Savage “Attention” for sure.

Matcha Business:

There’s honestly a Drake song for all of these candles. But I’m going to pick a song off of Scorpion, “Mob Ties.” Matcha Business is the candle for when you’re running up on somebody like, “Mind ya business. Matcha Business.” You know what I mean? Mob Ties is kind of the same song.

Caked Up:

Caked Up is definitely probably a City Girl candle, because when we were coming up with a name, I thought Caked Up meant somebody that had a big butt. Like, “Oh, you’re caked up. Like you got all that cake right there.” Everyone else said that Caked Up means you have a lot of money. I was like, “Okay, well, I mean, two things can exist at the same time.” When I think of Caked Up, I think of the feel good candle, the turn up candle, just walking into a club with a wad of cash knowing you’re that girl. City Girl’s “Pussy Talk” is that song.

Courtesy

Gift Set

forvrmood.com

$125.00

This interview has been condensed and edited for clarity.

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Categories
Women's Fashion

Here’s Why Meghan Markle is Asking, Instead of Answering, Questions in Her Next Interview

Photo by Samir Hussein/WireImage

Tune in August 14 at 4.30pm EST.

2020 marks the centennial of women’s right to vote in the United States and in honour of the milestone—as well as in acknowledgement of the work still left to do—nonprofit newsroom The 19th* is hosting a virtual summit this week, which will close with an interview with Meghan Markle.

In this case, however, the Duchess of Sussex will be the one asking the questions. On August 14, she will be interviewing Emily Ramshaw, cofounder and CEO of the news platform (named for the 19th amendment that granted American women suffrage) that focuses on the intersection of gender and politics.

“The 19th*’s commitment to reporting and storytelling that lifts up those who are too often underrepresented in the media has never been more important,” the Duchess said in a statement to Glamour. “I’m looking forward to asking the cofounder what it means to build a media outlet with gender equity, diversity, and community at its core.”

Ramshaw says it was the Duchess who first reached out to them to discuss involvement after learning about the 19th*’s mission. “She told us that our vision for The 19th*—building a truly diverse and representative newsroom that covers women with nuance—spoke to her immediately.”

This is the second virtual summit the Duchess will be participating in this summer, the first being the Girl Up Global Leadership Summit last month. This latest summit, titled The 19th* Represents, kicked off today and consists of a series of live-streamed conversations between prominent women in politics, civics, journalism, and the arts. Participants lined up for the event include Senator Kamala Harris, Hillary Clinton, Madame Gandhi, Zoe Saldana and Meryl Streep.

The 19th* Represents is free to attend online with registration, and the session led by Meghan Markle will stream at approximately 4.30pm EST on Friday, August 14.

Categories
Beauty

TikTok Made Me Buy These Viral Beauty Products

From faux freckles to plumping lipgloss

To absolutely no one’s surprise, I downloaded TikTok a couple of months back in an effort to escape quarantine boredom and kids, SHE HAS BEEN INFLUENCED. While the social media platform dominated by Gen Z is known for endless dance routines, Timothée Chalamet stan compilations and hilarious Kardashian voiceovers, what really tickled my pickle was some life-changing beauty tutorials, challenges and reviews. 

The app has seriously changed the game when it comes to discovering beauty products and dictating trends. The hashtag #BeautyTips has over two billion views, and the biggest and most-followed TikTok stars, Addison Rae and sister act Charli and Dixie D’Amelio, are even launching their own makeup lines. So naturally, we had to put the most viral TikTok beauty buys to the test. From a heart-shaped blush stamp and a pocket-sized cleanser to a chapstick that promises to change the pH level of your lips, shop my favourite TikTok-approved beauty obsessions here. 

tiktok beauty products: essence

Essence

Kiss The Black Sheep Lipstick, $5, essencemakeup.com

@katrina_hongIt’s called Essence Kiss the Black Sheep lipstick.♬ original sound – katrina_hong

This chapstick ~allegedly~ changes the pH of your lips and turns them pink. While I haven’t swiped the product on just yet, there are endless videos on TikTok showcasing its v. promising effects. Fun fact: Because no two pouts are the same, the pink shade will look different on everyone!

tiktok beauty products: freck

Freck

Freck OG The Original Freckle, $29, freckbeauty.com

@imtaramichelleEasiest way to get those cute lil freckles!! ##xyzbca ##tutorial ##fauxfreckles ##freckles ##happyeaster♬ original sound – imtaramichelle

For as long as I can remember it has been my personal mission to attain freckles, though I’m not willing to endure sun damage to get them. *Sigh.* Alas, Freck is making my dreams come true with their buildable, pigmented formula that creates realistic, long-lasting clusters of dots on my visage. It’s seriously so easy to use and feels like paint by numbers for your face.

Read this next: Everything You Need to Know About “Maskne”

tiktok beauty products: elf

E.l.f.

Poreless Putty Primer, $11, elfcosmetics.com

@lucki_starrDo you believe in magic ✨ @elfyeah ##elfcosmetics ##ElfMagicAct ##eyeslipsface ##elfembassador ##ad♬ Magic Act (e.l.f.) feat Poreless Putty – M. Maggie, Tie Hixton

Real talk, I haven’t actually tried this primer but she’s in my cart and ready to go. E.l.f.’s putty has been widely celebrated using the viral hashtag #elfMagicAct for its velvety texture that’s said to help minimize pores and last all day long. Not only do TikTok superstars like Lil Huddy and Avani represent the brand, but at around $11 CAD, the primer won’t break the bank either. 

tiktok beauty products: glossier

Glossier

Skywash in Lawn, $22, glossier.com

@sarah_novioGlossier Skywash in Lawn ##glossier ##glossiercheck ##makeup ##whatthissays ##healthyrecipe ##UltraSmoothMoves ##foryou ##foryoupage ##fyp♬ Put your head on my shoulder cover by karlo – karlogutierrez

Oop, there goes Glossier with another beauty innovation. Skywash, which comes in seven dreamy shades, isn’t your average eyeshadow. The luscious, liquid-to-powder formula dries completely, blends seamlessly and doesn’t budge or crease throughout the day. Am I fully stockpiling the shade Lawn? 100%.

tiktok beauty products: supergoop

Supergoop!

Play Everyday Lotion, $29, sephora.com

@bondenavantout here fighting the good fight against pigment spots ##amysspftips ##amysantiagingtips ##sunscreen ##skincaretips ##beauty ##supergoop ##keepingbusy ##spf♬ Level Up – Ciara

I’ve been a fan of Supergoop! for awhile but finally decided to take the plunge thanks to the hashtag #supergoop which garnered over 1.2 million views on TikTok and countless phenomenal reviews stating that the magical SPF formula absorbs well and doesn’t cause breakouts. After wearing this sunscreen all summer I can confirm the non-greasy, sweat-resistant lotion both protects against the sun’s harmful UV rays and doesn’t clog my pores. Win win. 

tiktok beauty products: kaja

Kaja

Cheeky Stamp Blendable Blush, $32, sephora.com

@beautyreviewmandalee##beauty ##kaja ##kajamakeup ##blush ##20s♬ original sound – manda.lee.smith

Add a little love to your cheeks with this pretty pink blush that comes with a heart-shaped applicator that stamps a light wash of product onto the skin. Not only is it totally fun to apply, but it also leaves a flirty flush of colour to your cheeks!

Read this next: 16 Mask-Friendly Makeup Products That Won’t Budge (or Smudge)!

tiktok beauty products: foreo

Foreo

Luna Mini 3, $209, foreo.com

@maryam__alkhMy Night skin care routine with FOREO Luna mini 3 is the best ##foreo ##skincare افضل جهاز للحصول على بشرة نظيفة وخالية من الشوائب ماستغني عنة❤️♬ original sound – bilshinee

The Foreo Luna Mini 3 takes facial cleansing to the next level. With twelve adjustable massage modes, it leaves skin feeling squeaky clean and the vibrations make you low-key feel like you’ve just had a delightful spa experience.

tiktok beauty products: starface

Starface

Hydro-Stars, $27 (for 32), starface.world

@addisonreTHANK YOU SO MUCH FOR 34 MILLION WE LOVE YALL @sherinicolee♬ DJ Yames Mashup 6 – dj_yames

Created by former beauty editor Julie Schott, these hydrocolloid patches are a spot treatment clinically proven to say bye-bye to pimples while also preventing skin picking. Did I drink dairy milk knowing full well that I’d break out simply to test these skincare stickers? Maybe. But if both Charli D’Amelio and Addison Rae have been spotted sporting the intergalactic patches, you know it’s a bop. And after a successful spot treating experiment, I have three words: Buy these stars.

tiktok beauty products: glow recipe

Glow Recipe

Watermelon Sleeping Mask, $60, glowrecipe.com

@dxdtokPt2 of scooping jelly goodness ##fyp ##foryoupage ##glowrecipe ##skincare♬ original sound – stxllaslife

The hashtag #glowrecipe has over 12.4 million views on TikTok and now I know why. After trying this juicy overnight mask filled with amino acid-rich watermelon extract, hydrating hyaluronic acid and pore refining AHAs, my skin has truly never felt softer and or looked dewier. 

Read this next: Jen Atkin Told Us Her Top Summer Haircare Tips

tiktok beauty products: drunk elephant

Drunk Elephant

D-Bronzi Anti-Pollution Sunshine Drops, $48, sephora.com

@brynnferguson10Never not owning this again ##drunkelephant ##dbronzi ##skincare♬ original sound – brynnferguson10

Forget baking in the sun to get your next beachy glow. Drunk Elephant’s serum is the newest addition to the skincare fam and with a dreamy formula that protects against harmful pollutants while mimicking a legit tan, I’m in love. Pro tip: I mix these drops with my moisturizer for a dewy, just returned from Saint-Tropez, sun-kissed look. 

too faced

Too Faced 

Lip Injection Extreme Lip Plumper, $38, toofaced.com

@mxceiva omg!!!! Regardez j’ai mis quoi sur mes lèvres! J’aime trop Vous en pensez quoi? ##toofaced ##toofacedpartner @toofaced♬ original sound – rebeccawilhoit

I was quick to judge this lip plumper—how much fuller could my lips really get without actual filler? Quite a bit, as it turns out. The formula pretty much instantly enhanced the glossy lewk of my lips and all I can say is the results were insane—noticeably plumped and ready to pout with the best of them.

Categories
Fitness

21 Incredible Women Athletes We Want to Watch at Tokyo 2021

There were hundreds of incredible athletes lined up and ready to qualify for the Tokyo 2020 Olympics, right up until sports were shut down. Now we’re talking about the Tokyo 2021 Olympics, and athletes are adapting and adjusting their plans as we speak. It’s a long way off and the majority of sports have yet to hold their qualifying competitions, which means we don’t know exactly who we’ll see at the Opening Ceremony next year — but it also means there are even more athletes to keep your eye on as they look to fulfill their Olympic dreams. Ahead, check out just a small sampling (in no particular order) of the female athletes we’re hoping to see in Tokyo next year, from familiar gold medal favorites to new faces looking to take the sports world by storm.

Categories
Culture

Joe Jonas Shares First New Photo With Sophie Turner Since Welcoming Baby Willa

Joe Jonas and Sophie Turner quietly welcomed their baby girl Willa on July 22 and have since been silent on social media about her birth. But Jonas shared the first new photo of him and his wife since their daughter was born on his Instagram Story this weekend. The two appear at home and using the Vogue cover challenge filter, the couple shared a PSA to everyone getting cavalier about wearing masks during the ongoing coronavirus pandemic.

“WEAR A MASK THATS THE TEA,” the cover line said of their selfie shot together.

sophie and joe

Instagram

While Turner and Jonas have not announced their baby’s birth on social media, their reps confirmed that she arrived. “Sophie Turner and Joe Jonas are delighted to announce the birth of their baby,” they said in a statement to People released on Monday, July 27.

Additionally, Entertainment Tonight spoke to a source about the couple’s first days with Willa on the day news of her birth emerged. “Joe and Sophie welcomed a baby girl last Wednesday in LA and are over the moon,” its source said. “The couple is already obsessed and can’t stop gloating about their new addition. The couple is taking time to enjoy this special moment and have only shared the news and updates with family and friends. With the pandemic, Joe and Sophie have been very cautious about who is around them and their little girl.”

E! got additional insight later that week about how the couple was doing. “They are home and getting settled,” E!’s source said. “Joe is very hands on and involved. He wants to do everything he can and loves being with the baby and helping Sophie.”

The couple is “so excited to be parents,” the source added. Turner and Jonas have “been texting pictures to friends and calling on FaceTime to show her off. Everyone is very excited for them.”

This content is created and maintained by a third party, and imported onto this page to help users provide their email addresses. You may be able to find more information about this and similar content at piano.io

Categories
Beauty

What I Learned From Decolonizing My Beauty Routine

I am a skincare fanatic. Just like you, I want to look like a sexy, dewy, baby angel for eternity. I would even dabble in the dark arts if you told me it would make me look poreless, sunkissed, and forever 23 well into the twilight of my life. But to avoid summoning the likes of Marie Laveau when I’m shopping for products, I read every review, every ingredient, and then five more reviews before I finally make a purchase.

Because the majority of the Instagram influencer spon-con I am served is largely white, the reviews that pop up on my Google search bar are from white-owned businesses. Those same brands also flood my feed with black squares and Nelson Mandela quotes, figurative pimple patches on the unsightly racial injustice Black Americans experience everyday. It’s like putting a sheet mask on an open wound, when what we actually need to heal is the arrest of the murderers of Breonna Taylor: Jonathan Mattingly, Brett Hankison, and Myles Cosgrove.

Meanwhile, there are Black beauty brands doing the actual work. Brands like Uoma Beauty, founded by Sharon Chuter. With her Pull Up or Shut Up initiative, Chuter is challenging large beauty and skincare brands to reevaluate their company metrics so they mirror the real world. To date, the UOMA Beauty founder has reported that only 8 percent of people employed in white collar professions are Black, and only 3.2 percent are in executive or senior management level roles. For me, a side effect from the Pull Up or Shut Up initiative is reckoning with the fact that whiteness presides over the boardrooms of major brands I’ve long been loyal to. And with the application of my Vitamin C or serum, I’m realizing that the companies behind them could barely proclaim that my life matters.

a beauty bottle breaking

Mia Feitel

When I had this epiphany, I felt sunk. Sunk like Daniel Kaluuya the moment his Get Out character finds all the photographs of the other Black men and women in the sunken place. It was all so obvious and apparent, but something I subconsciously chose to ignore. What I held onto was this idea of beauty and everlasting youth, which really hit different when I got to my big little age of 30. Three decades into this life, I understood that I hadn’t just been frivolous with my money, but careless about who I’d been giving it to. While trying in other ways to upend a system built to oppress me, I had not taken into account the economic aspects of my beauty routine. And so began my deep, and then deeper, look into where my money was going.

Pivoting away from my usual dive into a beauty product’s review and ingredients, I’ve applied my Virgo research tactics to the brand first. I think of it as decolonizing my beauty routine. Skin care did not come here on the Nina, the Pinta, or the Santa Maria. It came from the universal desire to feel beautiful in our own skin. Every person has the right to that. Every person has skin! And so I can no longer give another Sacagawea to any brands that would likely never have a person the shade of Sacagawea in their boardrooms.

This decolonization journey has brought me to some incredible Black-owned and largely female-owned skincare brands. A lot of them are natural, with beautifully clean ingredients. I have found many of them on yes, Instagram. If you look away from the white influencer spon-con, there is a rich community of Black-led brands all following each other, commenting on each other’s posts, and promoting other Black and POC labels on their own feeds. I have found that there is a wider range of inclusivity among their Instagram profiles. Together, they are a small but mighty group of businesses fighting to stay visible in the shadow of larger companies who wield an outsized economic advantage in both their advertising and production.

“Three decades into this life, I understood that I hadn’t just been frivolous with my money, but careless about who I’d been giving it to.”

And what’s more than that, they are welcoming. Like all that is great in Blackness and community, every experience I’ve had with a Black skincare brand on social media has been met with love and gratitude. Lesley Thornton of Klur sent me informative voice notes in response to my questions about her products. Nola Skinsentials personally thanked me for supporting them coupled with heart emojis. The Established has given me a “yassss hunni!” in response to an Instagram story of my glowing skin in their product. Base Butter, Ilera Apothecary, and 54 Thrones have all sent me direct messages thanking me for sharing, and subsequently re-shared my posts on their Instagram. To be clear, I am just a regular gal who lives in Brooklyn. I am not an influencer seeking an audience for my nightly routine. I am just the average consumer, yet these brands have made it a point to connect with me and other customers like me.

The fact is, we need each other. It’s risky for a Black business to simply exist. The same historical and systemic structures working to keep Black people oppressed also keep these businesses in their own lanes. It’s gatekeeping at its core; every product I have purchased or researched with the intent to purchase is as good or even better than anything on any “best of” beauty list. And in de-Christopher Columbus-ing my skincare, I am not just getting great products but supporting—and engaging with—my community in a way that hits different.

To Aba Love Apothecary, Absolute Joi, Acarre Beauty, Alaffia,Altogether Lovely Afrotanicals, Anita Grant, Antik Lakay, Beneath Your Mask,Beneath Your Mask,Black Girl Sunscreen, Bolden Skincare, Brown and Coconut, Amenda Beauty, Buttah Skin, Dehiya Beauty, EPARA, Essentials by Temi, Gilded Body, Glory Skincare, Golde, Grn Goods, Hanahana Beauty,House of Linnic, Hyper Skin,Jade & Fox Co., Kissed By A Bee Organics, KNC Beauty, Lauren Napier Beauty, Liha Beauty, Nyakio Beauty, NBU Bath Botanicals, Oyin Handmade, Papa Rozier, Pholk Beauty,Pinkness Co., Plant Apothecary, Redoux, ROSE Ingleton MD, Rosen Skincare, SDOT Beauty, SKOT Beaute, Skindom, Tallwah Cosmetics,The Butter Bar Skincare, Urthly Kreations Apothecary, epi.logic, and any other Black skincare businesses I have not mentioned: Thank you for existing!

This content is created and maintained by a third party, and imported onto this page to help users provide their email addresses. You may be able to find more information about this and similar content at piano.io

Categories
Women's Fashion

How Holographic Hair Became the Hottest Trend for 2020

Photography by Sandro Altamirano. Jacket, $90, Gap. Top, $10 and bottom earring, $10, H&M. Middle earring, $65, Jenny Bird. Top earring, Chloe’s own.

And how to get it in just a few minutes at home.

What do the likes of Katy Perry, Kylie Jenner, Khloe Kardashian, Emily Ratajkowski and Elsa Hosk have in common? Aside from names beginning with the same letter and enviable cheekbones, they’re also not afraid to experiment with their hair colours. Ranging from blue to pink and purple, dipped ends to full colour, pastel to powerhouse metallics, these stars have switched up their locks with stunning results. And thanks to these transformations, holographic hair has become the biggest hair trend for 2020.

“Holographic hair is characterized by a mixture of high-gloss multi-dimensional pastel highlights that essentially appear to change colours before your very eyes,” according to L’Oréal Paris. “The colours are expertly placed to create a 3D holographic effect throughout your mane.”

Coloured hair has had a makeover in recent years, moving from rebellious teenager to free-spirited college student to empowered adult with agency over her own look. This change in societal perception, and the ease with which we’re now able to experiment with our hair, makes trying trends all the more enticing. Plus, as we’ve all been spending more time at home in recent, more of us are trying our hand at bold, at-home colour.

Feeling inspired? See some of our favourite celebrity holographic hair looks below:

If you’re ready to try the trend and want to ease in, L’Oréal Paris’ Colorista Hair Makeup Temporary 1-Day Hair Colour is the way to go. All you need to do is apply the product on the parts of your hair you’d like to colour et voila: on-trend tresses with zero commitment (the colour washes out with just one shampoo). Depending on your base colour, the style will look slightly different on each person meaning your look is unique to you.

Watch our how-to video below for a more detailed look on how to apply Colorista at-home:

Styling by ELIZA GROSSMAN. Creative direction by GEORGE ANTONOPOULOS. Photography by SANDRO ALTAMIRANO. Videography by BEN REYES. Makeup by JODI URICHUK. Hair by VICTORIA HUNTER

Categories
Fitness

We’re All About Strength and Self-Love With This Week’s Instagram Live Workouts

A good week of workouts is one with lots of variety: it’s fun, you don’t get bored, and you work your body in different ways, which helps to avoid injury. But if finding different workouts is a challenge lately, we get it — and we’re here to help with our ongoing series of Instagram Live workouts on @popsugarfitness. You can tune in this week for live yoga, strength training, Pilates, and toning workouts led by certified trainers who will push you through every move. Check out the full schedule ahead, add it to your Google Calendar so you don’t miss a session, and catch up with our previous Instagram Live workouts on the free Active by POPSUGAR app.

  • 30-Minute Low-Impact Toning Workout With Samantha Jade: Monday, Aug. 10, at 9 a.m. PT/12 p.m. ET
  • 20-Minute Body Love Yoga Sequence With BK Yoga Club Founder Paris Alexandra: Tuesday, Aug. 11, at 9 a.m. PT/12 p.m. ET
  • 35-Minute No-Equipment Barry’s Workout With Sarah Otey: Wednesday, Aug. 12, at 10 a.m. PT/1 p.m. ET
  • 45-Minute Total-Body Strength Workout With LIT Method: Thursday, Aug. 13, at 9 a.m. PT/12 p.m. ET (equipment recommended: a mini- or regular-sized resistance band)
  • 30-Minute Strength Workout With Kehinde Anjorin, Founder of Power in Movement: Friday, Aug. 14, at 9 a.m. PT/12 p.m. ET
  • 30-Minute Rev It Up Pilates Circuit Workout With Kit Rich: Saturday, Aug. 15, at 9 a.m. PT/12 p.m. ET

Image Source: POPSUGAR Photography

Categories
Culture

Gayle Rankin on the Many Faces of Humanity in Perry Mason

A fusty, nearly century-old franchise may not seem like an obvious vehicle for a show about inequality and police corruption, but HBO’s new series Perry Mason has managed to turn a 1930s pulp-fiction protagonist into a mouthpiece for our time. Granted, it takes some liberties with the source material: The titular criminal defense attorney is downgraded to a private investigator (Matthew Rhys), hired by defense lawyer E.B. Jonathan (John Lithgow) to dig up dirt that will vindicate clients Matthew and Emily Dodson (Nate Corddry and Gayle Rankin). As a longtime fan of the original books, I approached the new show with caution, wary of the possibility that the reboot’s whole dark-and-gritty vibe would turn my favorite character into someone I didn’t recognize. In fact, it did—and I realized that was exactly what Perry Mason needed.

Within a few episodes, it becomes clear that Rankin’s Emily Dodson is the key to understanding this reimagined version of Perry. The mousy housewife is the first person we see in the series: She and her working-class husband Matthew are arranging a ransom pickup over the phone with the kidnappers who took their infant son Charlie. Viewers watch panic, hope, and fear flash across Emily’s face in quick succession as the couple hurriedly pull together $100,000 in ransom for Charlie—a pretty penny, and even more so in the show’s 1931 Los Angeles setting. Through their window, Emily and Matthew catch a glimpse of one of the kidnappers on the Angels Flight Railway, wide-eyed baby Charlie in his arms, and we feel the relief wash over Emily as she realizes her boy is safe. We watch her race out of the apartment and onto the railway, desperate to hold her baby in her arms, only to dissolve into an animal sort of grief when she discovers that every mother’s worst nightmare has come true: Charlie is already dead, his eyelids stitched open with black thread to give the illusion of life from a distance.

After that kind of tragedy, it’s hard to imagine Emily finding salvation in a divorced, drunken private detective like Perry. From the beginning, he’s disinclined to treat Emily with the same kid-gloved care as everyone else, and when Matthew is accused of orchestrating Charlie’s kidnapping, Mason gladly throws Emily to the wolves to vindicate her husband. Over time, though, Perry becomes Emily’s fiercest advocate—and it becomes clear that each is the other’s perfect foil. Rankin agrees. “They see each other,” she says of Emily and Perry. “They recognize that they are connected.” I caught up with Rankin over Zoom to discuss Emily and Perry’s bond and the experience of releasing the show in the middle of our current moment.

It’s a really interesting time for this show to come out, because it’s a detective show that isn’t from the perspective of the police. It feels really suited to the moment.

I feel so thankful we are promoting something that is in discussion with exactly what’s going on. It’s been a good use of time and a good use of being an actor. I’m always looking for my way as a human being to be engaged in social justice and trying to find ways as an actor to contribute. This feels like I’m a part of something that is engaged in the conversation of exactly what’s going on in the world.

Has the upsurge in momentum for the Black Lives Matter movement affected how you view the show?

Yes and no. I don’t think it’s possible to be alive right now and not look at everything with an even more urgent sense of the need for action, and I can understand why this show suddenly seems very relevant. But our approach was never [to try to be relevant]. Our approach was to always tell the truth. Unfortunately, the truth can be really painful and we’ve repeated history so much. There’s still a lot of work to do.

gayle rankin in perry mason

Gayle Rankin as Emily Dodson in Perry Mason.

HBO

Did you have any knowledge of Perry Mason before you got involved with the new show? Did you dive into it at all once you were cast?

It was important to get an understanding of the general time period, and I dove into a lot of movies of that period to get a general sense of the tone and style of the time. I grew up in Scotland, so Perry Mason wasn’t a staple in the U.K., but I did jump into watching old episodes [of the original show] as soon as I knew I was going to be a part of it. It was an important step to go back to the source material, even though I knew this was an origin story for Perry and we weren’t going to meet the same man.

I think his relationship to Emily Dodson is such a huge part of that—in this version, I don’t think he would become anyone close to the original Perry Mason if he hadn’t met her. How would Emily reconcile the fact that Perry basically ruined her life, but then turns out to be the only person willing to fight for her?

In some ways, I think Emily wants to be outed. I think that Emily, too, is interested in the real truth, and she also doesn’t want to be in her situation. I don’t think she wants to be living her life in the way she was: She isn’t comfortable in her marriage, she engages in an affair, and she wants out. In some very backwards way, I think, Perry actually helps her—even though she goes to jail, even though her life is ruined. But then her life is also in pieces when her child is taken from her and murdered—that’s when her life is really over. I don’t think the affair is the part that destroys her, and I think Perry in some ways knows that. It sounds cheesy, but the truth is really the only thing that is going to set you free, and I don’t know if Emily would actually survive if all this didn’t happen. In some very complex, human way, he does her the biggest favor of her life, and they recognize they are connected. They go through such wild injustices to then hopefully reach a higher peace.

“The amount you can learn from women then—it took me aback. You look at it on paper, and a young wife in the 1930s is not what I want to be doing in 2020.”

The show takes us back to this incredibly stylish, stylized place and time in American history, this sort of noir-ish old-L.A., but at the same time it’s peeling back the curtain a little bit: This is what it was like to be a woman, this is what it was like to be Black, this is what it was like to be gay at that time.

Yeah, it is. I think we are very lucky in this moment to have people’s eyes on it at a time when we as human beings are now absorbing entertainment with a keener eye and higher standards and greater expectations of the media at large to represent life as it has always been. I was watching Disclosure last night on Netflix, and it’s extremely eye-opening, just how long it’s taken for the media to catch up with the idea of representing things truthfully. I’m very proud of how representative this show was and how truthful it is.

What was your favorite part of working on the show?

I really loved the challenge of this role. This woman’s journey is really complicated, and I always really enjoy unpacking that and bringing my own brand of complexity to everything I work on. I really love the challenge of having to play a woman in the 1930s and actually do it and not wink or nod at, like, “I’m a woman in the 1930s, but I’m a feminist.” The amount you can learn from women then—it took me aback. You look at it on paper, and a young wife in the 1930s is not what I want to be doing in 2020, you know? It was such an honor to play her. I learned a lot from the amount of grace, strength, intelligence, complexity, and fight she had in her, and that was actually surprising, because I was being judgmental before I came into the process. I was like, oh, she’s got a lot to learn from me, but actually, it was the opposite. It was emotionally the hardest job I’d ever done, but we had a lot of fun, and we laughed a lot. Matthew is the greatest leader of all time, in my opinion—I haven’t worked with another actor this intimately for this length of a period on television who was so generous.

perry mason

With Tatiana Maslany as Sister Alice.

HBO

All the female characters on the show are so complex, and you sort of have these three main female characters—Emily and Sister Alice and Della—who are all living such different lives. And the dynamics between them are so interesting.

The power dynamics within the female storylines are—chef’s kiss. I’ve never worked on a project where the female dynamics had very complex power exchanges. We should go back in time and try and learn from some of these women, because we don’t give them enough credit. I certainly didn’t. When you’re living in a generation, you’re always assuming that we’ve learned more, that we have progressed more, we are more powerful. That’s why I love working on period pieces.

Do you know anything about Sister Aimee, the real-life televangelist on whom Sister Alice was based?

I mean, I read books about her, because I had to understand why the church is such a huge part of who Emily is, and why Sister Alice. They have a kinship, and it’s not totally dissimilar from Emily’s relationship with Perry. Something happens when they all meet one another: it takes one to know one, and these three people have certainly experienced real trauma and injustice, and they’re all fighting in different ways.

gayle rankin

Niall O’Brien

Did you go into lockdown right off Perry Mason? Or had you already started production on the next season of GLOW?

We were a couple episodes into season 4 of GLOW, and then we had to shut down because of the pandemic. It was a quick transition between shows. I was like, “I’m gonna go on holiday—oh, okay, I’m gonna go straight to training.”

It’s difficult to imagine that transition, because Emily and Sheila are such different characters, but now that I’m thinking about it, there’s a lot they have in common, too.

[Laughs] No, you’re onto me! I was talking to someone the other day who said he’d seen a throughline in my work about playing characters who have a lot of empathy, and he’s not wrong. That’s definitely something I look for in characters and work, but I’m actually kind of hungry to change direction and attack some other ways of experiencing humanity.

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WNBA Players Are Wearing “Vote Warnock” Shirts to Take a Stand For Black Lives Matter

The WNBA has dedicated its 2020 season to social justice, supporting “Black Lives Matter” on shirts and courts, stitching “#SayHerName” onto the backs of jerseys, and giving players a platform to speak up for an urgent cause. In June, Sen. Kelly Loeffler, a coowner of the Atlanta Dream, wrote to Commissioner Cathy Engelbert to oppose these moves. Supporting a “particular political agenda undermines the potential of the sport and sends a message of exclusion,” she said, prompting an outcry from players and fans. (She has since stated that she believes that all Black lives matter but does not support the Black Lives Matter organization.)

Since then, Dream players have made a point to avoid talking about Sen. Loeffler and her comments. “We didn’t want to feel like we were pawns,” Dream forward Elizabeth Williams told ESPN. “We can only control so much about what the league does [in regard to Loeffler], and so for us, we wanted it to be bigger than that.”

Instead, players coordinated a response to create change. Rather than promoting Sen. Loeffler’s name and agenda, players are now wearing “Vote Warnock” shirts as they arrive at games — a statement in support of Rev. Raphael Warnock, an Atlanta pastor running as a Democrat against Sen. Loeffler. “Rev. Warnock is somebody who supports everything that we support and just happens to be running in that seat,” Williams explained. “It just worked out really well.”

The idea came from Seattle Storm guard Sue Bird, Williams said. Bird told ESPN, “Very quickly we started to realize that [the publicity around Loeffler’s comments] was only happening for her political gain. This was something that she wanted. And the more noise we made, whether it was a tweet saying to get her out, that was just playing into her hands.”

Bird saw the shirts as a way to encourage voting, “get the word out about this man, and hopefully put him in the Senate. And, if he’s in the Senate, you know who’s not,” she continued. “And I’ll just leave it at that.”

Participation in the campaign is voluntary, Bird told ESPN, and the idea was discussed by players via Zoom calls while in the WNBA bubble at IMG Academy in Bradenton, FL. According to Bird’s Seattle Storm teammate Breanna Stewart, players also had two Zoom calls with Rev. Warnock. “I think he’s someone who’s fighting to create change and fighting to be on the right side of things,” she told ESPN.

“We definitely decided to wear it because he’s for Black Lives Matter,” Dream guard Chennedy Carter told ESPN. “He supports the league and the movement, and we support him. We’re voting for Warnock.”

In response, Warnock said he was “honored and humbled by the overwhelming support from the WNBA players,” according to a statement from his campaign on Twitter. “This movement gives us the opportunity to fight for what we believe in, and I stand by all athletes promoting social justice on and off the court.” Sen. Loeffler and “those like her, who seek to silence and dismiss others when they speak up for justice, have planted themselves on the wrong side of history,” he added, according to ESPN. “We are in a moment of generational, transformative change, and there is no place in that movement for bigotry. We celebrate the courage and resolve of these players standing for justice, and I am proud to stand with them.”

In a statement of her own, Sen. Loeffler said, “This is just more proof that the out-of-control cancel culture wants to shut out anyone who disagrees with them.” Adding, “It’s clear that the league is more concerned with playing politics than basketball, and I stand by what I wrote in June.”

According to players, Sen. Loeffler doesn’t support the very athletes competing on a team she co-owns. Loeffler and her beliefs don’t represent WNBA players, Dream guard Sami Whitcomb told ESPN. “She doesn’t represent our voices — not in this league, not in the community,” she said. “Rev. Warnock does, so we’re putting our support behind him because of the person that he is and the type of legislation that he stands for. You can call it politics. We call it supporting the human race and morals.”

“For effective change to happen, there has to be policy changes,” Williams added. “If we’re going to sit here and talk about wanting justice reform, part of that is making sure that we have officials in office that understand that.”

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Culture

Selena Gomez and David Henrie Are Having a Mini Wizards of Waverly Place Reunion

Alex and Justin Russo are spending their Sunday together…and they’d like you to know something big may be coming from it. The actors behind the iconic Wizards of Waverly Place characters, Selena Gomez and David Henrie, both just posted a video of themselves together (separated by just a wall) on their social media. Gomez shared an Instagram Story, and Henrie shared an Instagram grid post and TikTok of the video. “Hmm @selenagomez,” Henrie captioned his IG. They both say “hmm…” in the clip.

It’s a real tease, and it may be for a bigger reunion. Co-star Gregg Sulkin, who played Mason in the show, just commented “Hmmmmm” on the post too. He and Henrie have done Wizard of Waverly Place reunions (sans Gomez) before:

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sulkin's comment on henrie's post

Sulkin’s comment on Henrie’s post.

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Henrie and Gomez have remained good friends since they worked on the Disney Channel series as teenagers. In 2017, Gomez attended Henrie’s wedding to Maria Cahill. “Very much in my feelings about my big brother getting married,” Gomez captioned a shot of the show’s cast at the wedding. “Even though we for sure knew it would be him first. May God bless you and your beautiful wife Henrie! 💕” Gomez even went to Italy with Cahill, Henrie, and their other friends in June 2018.

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In September 2019, Henrie spoke about how he and Gomez have discussed what a Wizards of Waverly Place reboot would be like. “It’s not formal,” he told Entertainment Tonight. “But, Selena and I sit and talk about what would the reboot be, and we have a whole take. We have a whole thing.”

“We want to start the show like a few years later,” he continued. “Start them off at the worst place ever so that way throughout the series you give them a nice, beautiful arch of reuniting. Start them off divided. Alex is a fashionista, off killing it in some other part of the realm. Justin’s, like, the principal [of WizTech] who has a family now… [Jake T. Austin’s] Max has the sub shop, but it’s run down. Start us all completely discombobulated and then throughout the course of the series you bring us all together.”

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Fitness

4 Trainer-Approved Tips For Making Plyometric Moves Less Demanding on Your Knees

If you suffer with knee pain or any other knee concerns, you shouldn’t jump blindly into jump training, otherwise known as plyometrics. (But, for the record, no one should!)

First, clear the training modality with your doctor, then follow some of these plyo best practices from celebrity and NCSF-certified personal trainer Ridge Davis. The good news: according to Davis, those with knee concerns can complete common plyometric moves safely — it’s all about making modifications, maintaining proper form, and doing your workout homework. You can start by checking out Ridge’s top tips and exercise swaps below.

Assess Your Workout Surface

To soften the impact of plyometric training on your knees, Davis suggests avoiding hard surfaces, like concrete or asphalt, and opting for flat (important!) grass fields or astroturf instead. Rubber flooring can also work — but you should check in with your trainer to ensure you’re purchasing the proper product.

Choose a Shoe With Shock Absorption

Different workouts call for different shoes, and opting for the right type of shoe is especially important during plyo workouts. For plyometric moves, Davis suggests choosing a shoe that has proper shock absorption, as well as sufficient heel and arch support. Davis says the shock absorption will prevent the knees from taking aggressive impact, while the heel and arch support will help keep the ankle stable in landings, preventing the knees from collapsing in landings.

Work on Your Soft Landings

Whether you’ve taken 300 or only three HIIT classes, chances are you’ve heard this phrase come out of your workout instructor’s mouth: “Soft landings!”

And yes, they’re reminding you for a very good reason. “The main focus for jump-focused plyometric moves is a soft and secure landing,” Davis said. This also includes making sure your glutes are strong — Davis explains that if your glutes are weak, your knees could cave in and create a torque on the knee joint, leading to injury or pain. “Focus on the landing, staying in the heel and knees pushing outward,” Davis added.

Drop the Jumping and Modify

While plyometric training might refer to jump training, you actually don’t have to jump to complete a plyometric workout. “Plyometric moves are moves that can be quick and explosive,” Davis said, and he suggested omitting jumping moves altogether as an option to make your plyo workout less demanding on the knees. “Kettlebell/DB swings, medicine-ball slams, and battle-ropes slams are fantastic plyo moves that get overlooked,” he explains.

You can also edit and modify traditional jumping moves — ahead, Davis demonstrates three knee-friendly modifications to consider adding to your routine.

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Culture

Megan Thee Stallion Opens Up About Healing After Being Shot: ‘I Just Felt Very Betrayed by a Friend’

megan thee stallion

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Megan Thee Stallion has opened up a little more to her Instagram followers about how she is healing both physically and emotionally after being shot multiple times in the foot and having surgery to get the bullets removed. She said she felt “very betrayed” by a friend during an Instagram Live Q&A Thursday night, according to Entertainment Tonight, but is determined to be strong, upbeat, and move forward.

Megan previously spoke out when rumors circulated that she had been arrested. Instead, fellow performer Tory Lanez was arrested and charged with carrying a concealed weapon. TMZ reports he allegedly shot Megan. Megan explained police actually drove her to the hospital.

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A fan asked Megan in her new Instagram Live how she felt after getting shot. “I felt, like, really crazy,” she said. “I felt like, why did I get shot? Like, what did I do? It was insane. But shit was crazy, and I feel like some people think that it’s funny, and I feel like some people think that it’s a joke, and I feel like some people think that they’re saying it to get to me. But I’m not ashamed of who I am, and I’m not ashamed of what I’ve been through, and I’m not scared to say anything about anything.”

“It’s not fun, bitch,” she added. “I don’t understand. I just felt very betrayed by a friend. I felt very betrayed by all my friends. I felt very shocked, very scared. But the one thing that y’all need to know about me is, I’m not a person who is able to be down for a long time. … I don’t like to be victimized. I don’t like to feel like, ‘Oh my God, Megan, something’s wrong.’ I like to be upbeat. I like to be happy.”

Megan previously addressed her experience in an emotional Instagram Live in late July. It was her first time speaking about what happened to her that night. “I was shot in both of my feet and I had to get surgery to get the shit taken out, to get the bullets taken out, and it was super scary,” she said, pausing and then crying. “Oh, I didn’t think I was gonna cry,” she said, composing herself. “I had to get surgery. It was super scary. It was just the worst experience of my life, and it’s not funny, it’s nothing to joke about. It was nothing for y’all to go and be making fake stories about.”

“I didn’t put my hands on nobody,” she continued. “I didn’t deserve to get shot. I didn’t do shit. And thank God that the bullets didn’t touch bones. They didn’t break tendons. I know my mama and my daddy and granny had to be looking out for me, ’cause where the bullets hit at, they missed everything, but the motherf*ckers were in there.”

She touched on what the incident taught her about choosing friends who reciprocate the good energy she gives them. “I’m so nice,” she said. “Imagine being 25 and you don’t have both your parents. My mama was my best. I’m still really not over that so you like, you gotta try to fill like your space with a bunch of people who you think are making you happy,” she started to cry again and then paused and composed herself. “I just feel like I was trying to—I was moving really fast, I was moving too fast,” she said. “I wasn’t taking enough time for myself. I thought I was ready to be around a bunch of motherf*ckers. I thought I was ready to be—y’know, I thought I was ready to give good energy to other people, but other people weren’t ready to give good energy to me. But I definitely had to sit my ass down and pray on it. And I do feel a lot better and thank god for the people I have around me who are actually here for me and are actually my friends…[people] who wouldn’t make up stories about me to save face.”

Megan ended that Instagram Live video by telling her fans that she is focused on her future now and moving past the incident: “I just want y’all to know a bitch is alive and well and strong as f*ck and you know, I’m ready to get back to regular programming with my own hot girl shit.”

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Fitness

Michelle Obama Speaks Candidly About Her Mental Health During This Difficult Time

WASHINGTON, DC - OCTOBER 11:  First Lady of the United States Michelle Obama speaks during a panel discussion at Glamour Hosts

Image Source: Getty / Paul Morigi

Michelle Obama is also learning how to manage the emotional highs and lows brought on by the ongoing pandemic and period of racial unrest. In the second episode of The Michelle Obama Podcast featuring her longtime friend journalist Michele Norris, the former first lady candidly spoke about the state of her mental health during this difficult time. “Spiritually, these are not fulfilling times,” she said.

Though these certainly aren’t the first unusual circumstances Michelle has weathered, she previously relied heavily on a routine, which of course has been disrupted these past few months. Michelle said, “For Barack and I, we’ve lived outside of the norm of regular life for quite some time, and what we learned early on in the White House is that in order to stay sane and feel like the human that you once were, you have to have a schedule and a routine that’s pretty lockstep.”

“I’ve gone through those emotional highs and lows that I think everybody feels.”

Michelle went on to share how her sleep and exercise schedules have suffered lately. “I’m going to bed a little bit later, and I’m waking up in the middle of the night ’cause I’m worrying about something or there’s a heaviness,” she said. “I try to get a workout in, although there have been periods throughout this quarantine where I just have felt too low. I’ve gone through those emotional highs and lows that I think everybody feels, where you just don’t feel yourself. There’s been a week or so where I had to surrender to that, and not be so hard on myself, and say, ‘You know what? You’re just not feeling that treadmill right now.'”

Michelle described feeling “out of body” and “out of mind” as a result of the onslaught of disheartening news. She explained, “I know that I am dealing with some form of low-grade depression — not just because of the quarantine, but because of the racial strife. Just seeing this administration, watching the hypocrisy of it, day in and day out, is dispiriting.” Michelle later added, “I’d be remiss to say that part of this depression is also a result of what we’re seeing in terms of the protests, the continued racial unrest that has plagued this country since its birth . . . It is exhausting. It has led to a weight that I haven’t felt in my life in a while.”

Ultimately, Michelle has given herself permission to feel those feelings, while also turning to her family for support and pockets of joy. “I have had to kind of give myself that: those days, those moments. But for the most part, staying in a routine, getting a workout in, trying to get outside; schedule has been key, and having a regular dinner time,” she said. “I’m finding that in quarantine, we look forward to that.”

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Culture

Taylor Swift’s Boyfriend Joe Alwyn Shared a Rare Look at Their Secret Utah Vacation

Taylor Swift’s British actor boyfriend of over three years, Joe Alwyn, isn’t the type to reveal much about their life together, especially on social media. But he gave the world a small glimpse at the Utah vacation they just took together on his Instagram on August 6, posting a shot of him, presumably taken by Swift, hiking in the mountains.

“⛰,” he captioned it simply, disabling comments. A source connected the dots to E!, confirming that Swift and Alwyn spent a few days in Utah before heading west to Los Angeles, where Swift has one of her homes. “Taylor has been based in Nashville, but she just went to Park City, Utah for a few days with Joe,” the source told the outlet. “They’re back in LA.”

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The vacation shot comes around the same time Swift released the final bonus track from her new album folklore, “the lakes.” It’s only available on deluxe physical editions of folklore, but the song’s lyrics, posted online, seem to be about how Swift envisions her future with her “muse,” Alwyn, by her side (“I’m setting off, but not without my muse / No, not without you”). News of the trip also confirms that Swift and Alwyn are still very much together and that the breakup songs on folklore really weren’t about their relationship.

Taylor Swift’s ‘folklore’ Deluxe Album

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Swift and Alwyn have been together for almost four years now; they first began dating in fall 2016. Alwyn has made a point not to talk about Swift in interviews. In January 2019, he took offense at the two being called “strangely private” for keeping their relationship under the wraps.

Alwyn was asked whether he feels he has had to fight more for his privacy now, given his Mr. Taylor Swift status by Mr. Porter’s The Journal magazine. “I don’t think more than anyone else,” he said. “I don’t think anyone you meet on the streets would just spill their guts out to you, therefore why should I? And then that is defined as being ‘strangely private’. Fine. But I don’t think it is. I think it’s normal.”

Swift explained to The Guardian last August why she chooses not to talk about Alwyn in interviews. “I’ve learned that if I do, people think it’s up for discussion, and our relationship isn’t up for discussion,” she said with a laugh. “If you and I were having a glass of wine right now, we’d be talking about it—but it’s just that it goes out into the world. That’s where the boundary is, and that’s where my life has become manageable. I really want to keep it feeling manageable.”

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Fitness

Runner Nia Akins Is Winning Races and Raising Her Voice Off the Track

Nia Akins’s first race as a pro was at a scenic, “middle-of-nowhere” track in Oregon, with empty stands, masks on everyone who wasn’t competing, and cones separating competitors at a safe distance. “It kind of felt the way that most of the US feels right now,” Akins told POPSUGAR, a few days after the July 17 track meet. “Lots of masks, lots of social distancing. It feels weird to have that in a track meet because you’re used to more chaos and more people.”

But as soon as the gun went off, Akins said, none of that made a difference. “I zoned into the race. It didn’t really matter what the environment was at the end of the day — it was still a great competition.”

It was especially great for Akins, who became the first 2020 NCAA track athlete to go pro after graduating from the University of Pennsylvania in May. Only two runners were racing against her in the 600 meters, and the race was tight until the end, but Akins eventually came from behind to win. “It felt a lot more like an 800, toward the end there,” she joked. “I think we were all losing steam a little bit, so it was kind of like, ‘Who will slow down the least?’ But it was really great to have such a close race.”

Before officially joining the Brooks Beasts pro track club, Akins was a star runner at Penn and a two-time NCAA runner-up in the 800 meters. She was robbed of the chance to make a run for the title this year when the coronavirus pandemic shut down college sports.

“It’s about rolling with the punches.”

“It was definitely a difficult time,” Akins said. She had stuck Post-It notes on the walls of her room at Penn, laying out her goals for her indoor and outdoor seasons. “Taking them down was weird,” Akins remembered, knowing she wouldn’t have the chance to go after those goals. But the hardest part of the college shutdown wasn’t about track: it was saying goodbye to her friends, “not knowing if and when all we would exist in the same space again,” said Akins. “Senior year, with graduation and all of the events . . . I was really looking forward to that. I think that’s kind of what hits hardest for me.”

The transition from NCAA to pro was also tough because Akins lost most of her resources at Penn. “Everything was kind of taken away,” she said. “I took a pretty extensive break to figure out what I could do, without a track, without a weight room. It was really back to the basics.” Now working out with the Brooks Beasts, she said the situation is similar due to the safety precautions the team is taking. Instead of going into the gym, Akins said it’s been a lot of equipment-light workouts like medicine ball circuits alongside team runs. Akins, who majored in nursing at Penn, is also studying for her board exams and figuring out what kind of position will be feasible with her running career.

Akins transitioned to the pros not only in the midst of a pandemic, but also during the wave of racial justice protests that swept across the country following the killing of George Floyd. The movement motivated Akins to share her own recent and harrowing experience with racism, which occurred on the day of her virtual graduation ceremony from Penn.

Akins remembered feeling “on top of the world” following the inspirational ceremony, and went to a park on campus to run afterward. She was relaxing under a tree when she heard a man yelling racial slurs from a distance — so unexpected that Akins first thought it was a mistake. “I started to panic,” she said, especially when the man began walking closer. She hurried to the nearby campus security office, where an officer helped her and eventually took the man in for trespassing. The experience left her shaken.

“I don’t think people understand that when you hear racial slurs like that, it’s very demoralizing,” Akins said. “And there’s nothing you can do about it. You have to respond with silence. You have to be the bigger person, because as a Black individual, you will always be perceived as the more dangerous person.”

As protests around the deaths of George Floyd, Breonna Taylor, and Ahmaud Arbery began to gain momentum, Akins realized that silence wasn’t her only option. As she talked with roommates, teammates, and coaches about the protests, she sensed the distance they were putting between the killings and their own lives. “They were not really taking it seriously. They didn’t think it was something that was tangible in our community.” Sharing her own experience was a way to end that illusion. “There were people around me who thought that we were different, or that this doesn’t happen to us because of our socioeconomic status or our education level or our community. It’s just not true,” Akins stated. “It’s an everywhere problem.”

Moving forward, Akins said she wants to see more substantive conversations around racism. At her track meet, she said, “Somebody yelled out, ‘I don’t know if you care, but Black lives matter.’ That was very supportive, but also very targeted. It was uncomfortable for some reason. It bothered me, but I couldn’t pinpoint why.” She said there should be conversations around that, too. “We need to understand how things are received and being dished out.” The goal, Akins said, should be inclusivity.

As for Akins, she’s still training and setting her sights on big goals, even with uncertainty surrounding sports in the near future. She wants to break two minutes in the 800 meters and compete in the Olympics. “Right now it’s hard to formulate more specific goals without a more specific timeline,” she admitted; her current objective is to race as best she can, when she can. “It’s about rolling with the punches,” Akins said. “Trusting the process and hoping we’ll get to where we need to be, whenever that will be.”


Image Source: Jeffrey Horner

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Culture

Priyanka Chopra and Nick Jonas Just Expanded Their Family With New Rescue Dog Panda

Priyanka Chopra and Nick Jonas are now a family of five: The actress and singer announced this afternoon that they have adopted a third dog, Panda. “Welcome to the family Panda! Panda is a Husky Australian Shepard mix rescue and we’re already in love ❤️,” Jonas wrote on his Instagram.

Chopra shared the same shot on her own account, writing, “Our new family portrait! Welcome to the family, Panda! We adopted this little rescue (soon he won’t be so little) just a few weeks ago. We can’t be sure but he seems to be a Husky Australian Shepard mix…. and those eyes… and the ears!!! ❤️😍❤️🐼❤️🐶 ”

She also admitted they photoshopped her dog Diana in the photo. “BTW @diariesofdiana wasn’t around for our little photoshoot, but we couldn’t leave our #1 girl out…so…we made it work! 😂  😉”

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On Friday, Chopra opened up to Entertainment Tonight about how she is doing “okay” in quarantine with Jonas.

“I have to say, I feel very blessed to be in such a good spot compared to so many people in the world,” Priyanka told the outlet. “We’re healthy, friends and family are healthy, and I’ve had time to really be creative. So I have to say this has been a blessing.”

She hopes that ultimately as a society, we can look back at this time and make positive longterm changes because of it. “I think all of us are going to look back and wonder [how] we were at home for six months,” Chopra started. “It’s almost been six, seven months, we’re in August already, and that’s crazy.”

“You look back and see how adversity has affected so many parts of the world and so many people in the world who had to deal with poverty, hunger, more than even COVID,” she continued. “It’s an insane, intense time but this is the time to show our humanity I feel. This is the time for humanity to come together, and in 10 years, we’ll look back at this time and really question and wonder, who reacted and how? This is a testament to what the human spirit can do. I think it’s really great to steer in the direction of helping and positivity.”

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Fitness

Now You Have No Excuse Not to Try the Low-Carb Diet, Because You Can Eat Bagels!

Bagels are a Sunday staple; no matter how you like yours, they always provide nourishment and comfort. If you’ve been considering trying out the low-carb diet, you may have been deterred by a bagel-free existence, but no more! We found six bagels that are decidedly low-carb, and they’re all available on Amazon. Consider your life changed.

Sometimes I want a peanut butter and jelly bagel, sometimes I was a classic bagel with cream cheese and lox, and sometimes I want a pizza bagel. The nice thing is, I can satisfy all my cravings and then some with these six options. If you’re stuck on what to eat for lunch, might I recommend a bagel?

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Culture

Court Rules Several Anti-Abortion Measures Can Go Into Effect in Arkansas

On Friday, the 8th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals lifted a judge’s ruling that previously blocked four abortion restrictions in Arkansas, the Associated Press reports. According to the AP and a 2017 report from the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette, the measures that can now go into effect later this month include a ban on a common second-trimester procedure, dilation and evacuation; a law that could require a third party (such as the patient’s partner) to decide how to dispose of the remaining tissue from an abortion; a requirement for doctors to notify local law enforcement when someone 16 years or younger has an abortion procedure; and a requirement for doctors to obtain a patient’s medical records if they know the sex of the fetus in order to ban abortions based on the fetus’s sex. The ACLU and the Center for Reproductive Rights had previously challenged these measures in the state.

CBS News reporter Kate Smith tweeted an explanation about how this ruling relates to June’s Supreme Court ruling on a Louisiana abortion law, which many saw as a win for abortion rights advocates. Smith writes that the appeals court based its decision off the SCOTUS ruling, where Chief Justice John Roberts voted to strike down the anti-abortion law but then wrote in his opinion about whether it was the court’s place to weigh in about “undue burden.” Smith writes, “It’s significant to me that a federal court is using what was painted as a win for abortion rights groups to allow abortion restrictions to be implemented.”

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The AP reports that Arkansas Attorney General Leslie Rutledge responded to the ruling, saying, “Arkansas has taken a strong stance to protect the unborn from inhumane treatment. As Arkansas’s chief legal officer, I have always advocated for the lives of unborn children and will continue to defend our state’s legal right to protect the unborn.”

Holly Dickson, interim executive director and legal director of the ACLU of Arkansas, said in a statement, via the AP, “This ruling is a reminder that the fight against these extreme abortion restrictions is far from won. We are evaluating our next steps and will continue to fight to ensure these harmful and unconstitutional laws do not take effect.”

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Women's Fashion

Everything You Need to Know About Selena Gomez’s Beauty Line, Rare Beauty – Including Its Launch Date

Photography via Axelle/Getty

The latest updates on the brand.

Update: If you’ve been glued to your phones waiting for news of an official release date for Selena Gomez’s Rare Beauty line, then you’re in luck because the multi-hyphenate has finally announced when the collection will be dropping. In a post shared to Instagram, Gomez wrote, “I’m SO excited to finally share that Rare Beauty will be launching September 3rd only at Sephora US, Sephora Canada, Sephora Mexico and RareBeauty.com.” She added, “I’ve had so much creating everything and can’t wait for y’all to try it all! I hope you love it as much as I do.”

The news comes a few weeks after the announcement that Gomez is launching the Rare Impact Fund, a mental health focused initiative, as part of Rare Beauty. The goal is to raise $100 million over the next 10 years, and one per cent of annual Rare Beauty sales will contribute to this amount.

Update (14/04/20): More details have come to light about Selena Gomez’s upcoming beauty line, Rare Beauty. Scheduled to launch in Sephora this summer, the line will launch with a whopping 48 shades of foundation and concealer. In a new piece for Interview magazine for which she was interviewed by friend Amy Schumer, Gomez said of the products, “It’s all very clean and easy. I wanted people to feel safe.”

She added, “I wanted to start a conversation about how you can make yourself feel great. It’s not necessarily about needing these things to make yourself feel beautiful. People of my generation have all this pressure to look a certain way, and I wanted to make a line that took away a bit of that pressure.”

Schumer then asked if the Lose You to Love Me singer could “make a mascara that doesn’t clump” to which Gomez replied, “Yes, I’ll be sure to.”

Watch this space.

Original (05/02/20): Last year, rumours began to circulate that Selena Gomez was gearing up to launch her own beauty line after she filed trademark paperwork. Now, the pop star has confirmed they were indeed true, launching the Instagram page for her new line, called Rare Beauty, this week.

The page currently only has three posts introducing the range, however it’s message of self-acceptance and inclusivity is abundantly clear. One caption reads, “Our mission is to shape conversations around beauty, self-acceptance, and mental health. We want to help more people get access to support and services, and help people feel more authentically connected to one another and less alone in the world.”

In a video, Gomez talks about the purpose of the new line, saying, “Being rare is about being comfortable in yourself. I’ve stopped trying to be perfect. I just want to be me. I think Rare Beauty can be more than a beauty brand. I want us all to stop comparing ourselves to each other and start embrace our uniqueness. You’re not defined by a photo, a like or a comment. Rare Beauty isn’t about how other people see you, but how you see yourself.”

The singer has always been very open about her mental health. In a January interview with WSJ Magazine, Gomez said, “I had low self-esteem, and that’s something I work on continuously. But I feel so empowered because I’ve gained so much knowledge about what was going on mentally. My highs were really high, and my lows would take me out for weeks at a time. I found out I do suffer from mental health issues. And, honestly, that was such a relief. I realized that there was a way to get help and to find people that you trust. I got on the right medication, and my life has been completely changed.”

In the one minute long clip, Gomez can be seen sampling products including eyeshadow, lip colours and complexion. At one point, Gomez says, “I’m so nervous!”

The brand will launch exclusively in Sephora this summer. Stay tuned for more updates.