Categories
Fitness

I Had the Worst Knot in My Calf Muscle Until I Hit It With This $150 Massager

I always thought knots were primarily an issue in the back and neck muscles. That is, until I discovered a painful knot in my calf. It was so deep in the muscle and so sensitive to the touch that self-massage was not an option.

I remember the exact moment I found it. I was lying on the couch watching TV with my boyfriend and he reached over and grabbed my right calf, giving it a gentle, loving squeeze. Rather than smile at this show of affection, I jumped back in pain. My reaction surprised us both. “Why did that hurt so much?” I asked, as I started gently poking around my calf to find the source of the pain. When he replied that I must have a knot, I almost didn’t believe him. In my calf?

It made sense. Most of my workouts are high intensity, which means a lot of jumping and use of my calf muscles. But I was shocked something so sensitive could be there without me noticing. It never bothered me throughout the day. I never felt it while walking or even while working out. It was only painful to the touch.

I had a feeling this knot wouldn’t go easy so I brought in professional help — the PUREWAVE GEN II Advanced Dual-Mode Massager ($150). This dual-motor body massager comes with seven attachments and features two separate modes: one end vibrates for delicate tissue and pressure points, and the other end is percussion therapy for deep tissue tension relief and dissolving knots. Bingo!

I created my own deep tissue massage experience, alternating between three of the percussion tips. I started with the wide arch pivot tip to warm up my muscle before really targeting the knot with the point tip. After several (painful!) rounds with the point tip, I tried to make amends with my muscles using the six-head tip designed for deep tissue massage. The multi-speed control allowed me to ease into the knot and increase the intensity as I wanted. And the extended handle made it easy for me to sit comfortably on the couch while working on my muscles.

It wasn’t the relaxing, feel-good massage you get at a spa, but it was exactly what I needed. My calf was sore for the next couple days, but now I feel no pain. The knot is gone, and my partner can grab my legs without me wincing. Take this as a cautionary tale that muscle knots can be lurking anywhere. If you find one, the PUREWAVE GEN II can help you work it out.


PUREWAVE GEN II Advanced Dual-Mode Massager

PUREWAVE GEN II Advanced Dual-Mode Massager

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Categories
Culture

How Meghan Markle and Her Team Feel About the High Court’s Decision to Delay U.K. Tabloid Trial

Judge Mark Warby has granted Meghan Markle a 10-month adjournment until fall 2021 in her High Court case against the U.K.’s Mail on Sunday and Associated Newspapers Group on Thursday. The Duchess of Sussex’s case was due to be heard on January 11th, but her legal team filed an application for a delay in the case.

Meghan is suing Associated Newspapers over five articles published, two in the Mail on Sunday and three in the Mail Online, that included contents of a private letter she sent to her father in August 2018 without her permission. Her team is suing the group for breach of privacy, including copyright infringement, misuse of private information, and breach of the U.K.’s Data Protection Act.

A confidential hearing took place Thursday morning in London with the judge hearing evidence from both sides. After reviewing the motions privately, Judge Warby ruled, “the right decision in all the circumstances is to grant the application to adjourn. That means the trial date of January 11, 2021 will be vacated and the trial will be revised for a new date in the autumn.” The judge added, “I’m confident that we’ll be able to find a time in the autumn in October or November in which the trial can be conducted.”

The Duchess’s legal team is confident in their case based on the facts of laws, a source close to Meghan shared with ELLE.com: “We do not believe that the defense’s case has chance of succeeding, and do not believe there is a compelling reason for trial.”

Meghan’s legal team was also granted permission to apply for a summary judgement in the case at an additional hearing, now scheduled for mid-January. If granted, Judge Warby would have the latitude to throw out the case based on the law and its merits or have the case heard privately. A private trial would not require Meghan or her friends to be called as witnesses and testify publicly.

“We are confident in our case and therefore believe it should be determined on a summary basis, and will make that case at the hearing in January,” a source close to the Duchess shared with ELLE.com.

While the decision was greeted favorably by Meghan’s team, Meghan’s father Thomas Markle submitted a statement through the defendant’s lawyers that he preferred the trial to proceed on the initial timetable. “I am a realist and I could die tomorrow,” Thomas said in the statement. “The sooner this case takes place the better.“ Thomas, who missed his daughter’s wedding to Prince Harry due to a heart attack and stents being installed, asked the Court to proceed on the initial timetable.

Thomas’ comments were revealed in a statement provided by Elizabeth Hartley, group legal director of Associated Newspapers, and published in the Daily Mail. Thomas gave her permission to share his remarks.

Thomas said, “This case is causing me anxiety, and I want to get it over with as quickly as possible. I am 76 years old and as a result of my heart condition and surgery, I am on blood thinners, which have had an effect on my breathing.”

“I am unable to walk far or up many stairs,” he continued. “I can’t take more than 30 or 40 steps without getting winded and needing to slow down until I have caught my breath. I have had a cold for three to four years, which is connected to my heart and lung issues. I am clinically obese, and I have gained more weight during the past months because I have been unable to leave my house to take any exercise. I am pre-diabetic.”

Thomas was scheduled to give evidence at the trial. It will likely be the first time the Duke and Duchess of Sussex have seen Meghan’s father since he sold a series of photographs to a number of tabloid outlets ahead of their nuptials, which contributed to a breakdown in Markle’s relationship with his daughter.

A source close to Meghan shared their concern that in recent months, the Mail on Sunday and Associated Newspaper Group have expanded the case beyond the original filing. Just last month at a pre-trail hearing, the publications’ legal team petitioned the court to incorporate the biography Finding Freedom: Harry and Meghan and the Making of a Modern Royal Family by royal reporters Omid Scobie and Carolyn Durand as part of its defense. The newspaper claims the Duke and Duchess authorized information and provided access to the authors through their friends and associates. The Duchess appealed to have that ruling vacated on Thursday but was denied.

A source close to Meghan told ELLE.com that the opposing counsel trying to include details of the Duchess’s friends, people who worked for her, and even members of the royal family is a distraction and that it’s time to refocus the case on what actually matters.

The case will now be heard at the earliest in October 2021 if the judge doesn’t make a summary ruling sooner. A similar ruling for summary judgment by a member of the royal family took place in 2006, when Prince Charles was granted a summary judgment against the Mail on Sunday. For now, both sides plan to argue their cases vigorously.

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Women's Fashion

In Conversation With: Burberry’s Global Beauty Director Isamaya Ffrench

Photograph courtesy of Burberry

Here’s what she had to say about starting a new job in lockdown and how to perfect mask makeup.

In May, Isamaya Ffrench was named as the Global Beauty Director for Burberry – and starting a new job amidst a global pandemic is undoubtedly strange but Ffrench has taken it all in her stride. When we ask her what it’s been like she says, “A beacon of light!” with a laugh adding that its been “great because it meant that we could do a lot of talking and planning. It meant that I could really get stuck into something whilst looking forward to creating things once everything was back to normal.” And whilst we’re still in our new ‘normal’ at present, Ffrench did get to make her debut for the brand during its S/S21 show earlier in September.

Read on to find out more about the beauty inspiration for the show, her top tips for nailing mask makeup, as well as the unconventional beauty trick she recently tried…

What was it like working on your first show for Burberry under these exceptional circumstances?

It wasn’t usual show circumstances obviously but it was really amazing because it meant that I could actually go and watch the show myself. We [also] had a lot of time to prep for it. Normally, you get a very short amount of time to work with the models – and we had [a lot more]. It was just really nice and a lot more relaxed. For me, I felt really lucky that it was just kind of the perfect circumstances – no stress, really exciting, you could watch it, and the show was amazing anyway, so it was lovely.

Where did you get your inspiration for the beauty look?

The show look was, in a way, quite sort of simple. Obviously it was this very elevated, polished look but we had a lot of performers in the show because Riccardo was working with an artist called Anne Imhof and her vibe is a little bit grungey but very natural, very intense. I’m pretty sure none of her dancers were wearing much makeup and we wanted to keep some kind of continuity. We wanted to elevate [the models’] skin a little bit and treat them like models so we tried to keep that balance between looking very natural and fresh, but also having that intensity that the dancers bought.

What has working with Riccardo been like?

I just feel very lucky that we have a very strong vision guiding the brand. I’ve worked with many brands before and it’s quite rare that you have the fashion house and the beauty house trying to be as close as possible in terms of mood/vibe/message. He really oversees everything we do, he will approve things, he will give direction. So for me it makes my job a lot easier and lot more rewarding because I feel like everything we’re doing is really creating this 360 vision, his vision of the brand.

The brand recently launched the Essentials Glow Palette – why is this a key piece in your kit?

Palettes are key because they’re so useful and it’s great to get a lot of possibilities in one small thing. For me, the Glow Palette is your everyday palette but it is a very well-thought-out palette in that it’s a mixture of cream-based and powder-based products. I’m really into gradients, I really like things that work beautifully together [like this palette]. It creates a really beautiful, quiet subtle finish to the skin.

Photograph courtesy of Burberry

How would you describe your overall beauty philosophy?

That’s quite a hard question because I never like to tell people what to do – I like to give advice or my opinion. I think this relates back to Burberry’s beauty philosophy – obviously a great foundation is key but it’s really about confidence, your own personal identity and using makeup as a way to enhance yourself and your features, not to create a mask.

What have become your makeup staples during the pandemic?

I’ve always really been into natural skin but it really made me rethink my approach to skin and become even more detailed oriented because people aren’t going for big looks anymore. They’re spending more time on their skin and trying to be healthy. My makeup is normally very, very creative but it’s so important to have a really polished and elevated base to carry anything so I sort of went back to basics in lockdown. I also took time to do my makeup which I never do because I’m on the go [laughs].

What are your top tips for makeup application now that we’re all in face masks?

In terms of base – because everybody is getting a bit oilier and a bit sweatier with this mask situation – to have a product that you can really rely on to mattify you throughout the day is key. One product we’ve had a lot of feedback on is our Matte Glow Foundation.

You recently shared an image on Instagram of you using ketchup to tone your eyebrows. How did that work out?

That’s supposed to be one of those old wives tales where when you bleach your hair and it goes green you put a load of ketchup in it and it sort of colour corrects it [laughs]. It kind of had a desired effect but to be honest I wasn’t really up for stinking of vinegar – I forgot that that’s what happens when you put ketchup on your face so I had it on for about five minutes and then I thought, I’ll just use a toner. [laughs].

What’s coming up next?

We have an extensive Kisses collection and we’re going to be renovating that line, introducing new colours and formulas – we have a matte formula, a really lovely satin formula with a couple of interesting colours. People have been very eye-focused because of all of this mask stuff but actually lips is still a really huge part of most beauty brands and people don’t stop wearing lipstick, so I’m really excited to be working on that.

Categories
Fitness

Remember When Kim Kardashian Claimed She Can Smell Cavities? Well, Here’s the Truth

Female patient with open mouth  receiving dental inspection at dentist's office

I’m basically a walking Keeping Up With the Kardashians encyclopedia. My résumé includes watching (and rewatching!) the show habitually since I was in the 7th grade. Now at 25 years old — with 19 seasons under my belt — I can recall almost every iconic moment from the series. And, wow, there are a lot — like the time Kim Kardashian claimed she could smell when someone has a cavity.

Yup, in an episode from 2012, Kardashian revealed this secret talent and later confirmed it in an interview with Harper’s Bazaar, too! And while I’m usually loyal to the family, I’m calling her bluff on the claim.

But I wouldn’t be so bold as to call Kardashian out without a reliable source to back me, which is where Dr. Golda Erdfarb, DDS, an associate professor at Touro College of Dental Medicine, comes in.

“I love Kim Kardashian as much as the next person — I even got my nails done with her once (true story!) — but as talented as she is, I do not believe it is possible to smell when someone has a single cavity.”

Plenty of people with cavities have fresh breath, Dr. Erdfarb says. She adds that the only way to truly know the condition of your teeth is to get a professional X-ray, as some cavities are so small and hidden that they can only be detected with such diagnostic tools.

That’s not to say Kardashian isn’t getting a whiff of something, though — it’s probably just the bacteria in the mouth, not the cavity itself.

According to Dr. Erdfarb, cavities are holes in teeth — they are primarily caused by bacteria called Streptococcus mutans, which feed off carbohydrates. If not cleaned away, the byproducts this bacteria produces can demineralize a tooth’s structure, creating cavities.

Although you can have cavities and fresh breath, having bad breath can indicate that one has an increased number of bad bacteria in their mouth, she adds.

“Saliva plays a very important role in washing away bad bacteria. If someone has dry mouth, also known as xerostomia, food debris and bad bacteria can be sitting around longer than we would like and cause bad breath and tooth decay.”

“There is a smell associated with someone with gum disease, too, and people who have gum disease can have a higher incidence of cavities,” Dr. Erdfarb adds.

And while a bad smell doesn’t make the list of cavity symptoms, Dr. Erdfarb points out that pain and sensitivity to hot or cold foods and drinks do, along with appearances of brownish-black holes seen on teeth.

Case closed here — now you know it’s best to talk to your dentist if concerned over bad breath or possible cavities instead of taking Kardashian’s word for it.

Click here for more health and wellness stories, tips, and news.

Categories
Culture

Is This the Year of the Republican Woman?

On January 3, 2019, a record-shattering 102 women were sworn in as members of the U.S. House of Representatives. The Democratic side of the aisle—with 35 brand-new female members—sparkled with vibrant skirts and blouses; one member wore a hijab, another a traditional Pueblo dress. On the Republican side, a sea of navy, gray, and black reigned—mostly suits, and mostly men. The disparity, like the fashion, was stark: Just 13 GOP women were sworn in, only one of them newly elected. (By comparison, there are 16 male GOP House members named “Michael” or “Mike” alone.)

The abysmal numbers were impossible to ignore. “It was a significant wake-up call,” says Representative Susan Brooks of Indiana, the recruitment chair of the National Republican Congressional Committee (NRCC), the party’s campaign arm in the House. New York representative Elise Stefanik, the youngest GOP woman in Congress, called it a “crisis.” Republican women, in short, realized they needed a serious reset. And for many, the gains women on the left had made were inspirational: If Democratic women could run and win, why couldn’t they?

They were also galvanized to prove that those women—Democratic socialists and staunch pro-choice advocates among them—didn’t represent all women. “I give the Democrat women a lot of credit for stepping up and owning their voices,” says Genevieve Collins, a first-time candidate running for Congress in Texas’s 32nd District. “I want to be counted, too.”

at the swearing in of the 116th united states congress, the gop side of the aisle was mostly suits, and mostly men

At the swearing in of the 116th United States Congress, the GOP side of the aisle was mostly suits, and mostly men.

Win McNamee

Later that year, from her home office in Dallas, Collins was crunching the numbers in an Excel spreadsheet, trying to determine if she had a path to victory in the district, where George W. Bush has lived since the end of his presidency. As the head of corporate strategy for an education technology firm, Collins often advocated for education policy with state and federal legislators. Few of those she interacted with came from a business background. She realized that her experience—both as a millennial woman and a business leader—was sorely needed. “I just thought, I want to see someone who looks like me in Congress,” she says. “And I don’t.”

So she printed out a large-scale map of the 32nd on chart paper and used different-colored highlighters to code the precincts. As she laid the papers out on the floor, her cat, Pancake, ran around beside her. After two days of work, she looked at her tactical arts and crafts project, and a way to win emerged. She thought, I can do this.

 ”I give the Democrat women credit for stepping up and owning their voices–I want to be counted, too.” —Genevieve Collins

But she couldn’t do it alone. Luckily for Collins, over the past few election cycles and particularly since 2018, the Republican Party, led by its female members—and sometimes against the wishes of its male leaders—has made electing women like her a priority. Several organizations now exist to help conservative women with everything from launching their platforms to fundraising and securing endorsements, and the efforts have paid off. Over the summer, the Republican Party announced a record 227 women had filed to run for U.S. House seats, and 94 had made it through to the general election. While that’s still not as many as Democratic women—206 of whom will be on the ballot this November—the total is nearly double the GOP’s numbers from 2018, when just 52 women secured the party’s nomination. Two years after the Democrats’ Year of the Woman, it’s Republican women’s turn to make history.

Stefanik learned the hard way that electing more women isn’t at the top of everyone’s to-do list. In 2018, when she served as the NRCC’s first female head of recruitment, she enlisted more than 100 women to run. When only one candidate, West Virginia’s Carol Miller, won, she had to rethink her strategy. She quit her role as recruitment chair to chart her own course, announcing she wanted to “play big in the primaries”—that is, make endorsements and spend money to help candidates win. Shortly after, the chairman of the NRCC, Minnesota representative Tom Emmer, called her plan to get involved in primaries a “mistake.” She hit back, tweeting with siren emojis: “NEWSFLASH: I wasn’t asking for permission.” (Stefanik says party leaders have since embraced her efforts.)

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In January 2019, the same month she watched as a historic number of Democratic women were sworn in, Stefanik relaunched her political action committee, Elevate PAC (E-PAC for short), with a focus on supporting female GOP candidates in primaries, which the national party officially stays out of. “Oftentimes getting through the primary is the toughest challenge for Republican women candidates,” she has said. “I made the decision to identify top female candidates early.” Of the 11 candidates in E-PAC’s first round of endorsements—including Collins—all but one earned the nomination and will be on the ballot this fall.

Because women need to work harder than men to prove they are strong candidates, early money and support are critical. “Playing in primaries is essential if you’re going to elect Republican women,” says Julie Conway, executive director of Value in Electing Women PAC, or VIEW PAC, which has supported female GOP candidates for two decades. That proved true for Stephanie Bice, an Oklahoma state senator running for Congress, who will face one of the most competitive races in the country as she challenges freshman Rep. Kendra Horn, who was elected in 2018 and is the first Democrat to represent the district in 44 years. To give Bice an edge, Winning for Women, a group focused on electing right-of-center female candidates, launched a six-figure TV and digital ad campaign on her behalf in August that heralded her as “a fighter who shares our values” over a twangy country music track. E-PAC and VIEW PAC also donated to her campaign. The support from such groups “provided exposure we may not have had otherwise,” Bice says.

But cutting a check isn’t the only way to help women running for office. Both Stefanik and Brooks say they have spent hours on the phone recruiting women to run, and offering advice and mentorship once they’ve taken the plunge. They get into the nitty-gritty of running a campaign, from budgeting to building email lists to talking to reporters. When Brooks heard that Bice was interested in running, the congresswoman gave her a call. “We talked for almost an hour about the realities of family life and being a member of Congress, and how you can navigate those waters,” says Bice, a mother of two. “She was able to really give me good perspective on how she balanced family and work life—and also a lot of encouragement.”

That encouragement goes a long way. According to research from political scientist Richard Fox of Loyola Marymount University, women are less likely to consider themselves qualified for elected office—and often have to be asked multiple times before they’ll seriously consider it. (Men, on the other hand, are much more likely to throw their hat in the ring without anyone asking.) That’s why Brooks, as the House Republicans’ recruitment chair, called on members of Congress to be more proactive about identifying female candidates. “We asked them to encourage women who they thought could be really good candidates to actually run,” she says. “That has made a difference.” (National Republicans aren’t celebrating every female recruit, however: Marjorie Taylor Greene, the Republican nominee in Georgia’s 14th District, fervently supports the groundless QAnon conspiracy theory and has said Muslims don’t belong in government. Earlier this year, House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy said he found her bigoted comments “appalling,” though President Donald Trump tweeted after her primary win that she is a “future Republican star.”)

Women are less likely to consider themselves qualified for elected office—and often have to be asked multiple times before they’ll seriously consider it.

During the first months of the pandemic, when campaigning as usual was impossible, VIEW PAC held regular meetings for candidates to share ideas. On one of those calls, Rosemary Becchi, a tax attorney running for Congress in New Jersey, says someone had the idea of checking in with supporters to see how they were holding up. “We were in a moment when it was a little hard to fundraise,” says Becchi, 53. Rather than asking for money during an economically uncertain time, she went down the list of everyone who’d donated to the campaign previously and made what she calls “wellness checks.” It was a hit, helping her sign up volunteers and bring in funds.

Though Becchi is now running in New Jersey’s 11th District, she launched a campaign last year to run in the state’s 7th, where she lives. But the NRCC already had a candidate—a man—in mind for the seat, so they asked her to get out of the race. When she refused, the Republican National Committeeman sent emails to prospective donors urging them not to contribute to her campaign. “It’s a boys’ club,” Becchi said at the time. (She’s more diplomatic about the fracas now: “I would say there was a lot of division about the best approach and the best candidate,” she tells me.)

Republican Women for Progress, another group focused on supporting GOP women, publicly rebuked the Republican National Committeeman for trying to stop Becchi. Though she eventually opted to move her candidacy to the 11th District (members of Congress are not required to live in the district they represent, and Becchi says it’s where her kids go to school), she is grateful for the support. “When no one in Washington was willing to give me money or be helpful,” Becchi says, “they saw the value of having women elected.”

That hasn’t always been the case. Getting more women into office “hasn’t been a focus of the party,” says Meghan Milloy, the executive director of Republican Women for Progress. That is in sharp contrast with the left, which has made recruiting and electing women a priority for decades. The right has lacked a group like EMILY’s List, which works to elect pro-choice, progressive women by recruiting candidates at all levels, training them on the nuts and bolts of campaigning, and mentoring them throughout the election. Most importantly, the group is a fundraising powerhouse, dwarfing its Republican counterparts in dollars spent on behalf of candidates: In the 2018 election, EMILY’s List spent a jaw-dropping $46 million, while VIEW PAC spent just $1.9 million, for example.

That’s partly because of a long-standing belief in the GOP that the best candidate will rise to the top, regardless of whether that person is a woman or an immigrant or someone with a disability. And Republican voters aren’t worried about the party’s minuscule number of women in office. In a December 2018 survey of GOP voters, a majority—71 percent—said they were not concerned that there were just 13 Republican women in the House. That puts organizations focused on electing more Republican women at odds with conservative beliefs. “It’s a conundrum for them,” says Debbie Walsh, director of the nonpartisan Center for American Women and Politics at Rutgers University. “If you can go out and make the case in a very explicit way that it matters to have more women in office, it’s easier to raise the dollars.”

There’s an old saying that men run for Congress to be someone, and women run for Congress to do something.

Patricia Russo, the executive director of the Campaign School for women at Yale University, says the program has always had more interest from Democrats than Republicans. When she would promote her training to local GOP leaders or the Republican National Committee, she says it wasn’t clear to party officials why women-specific coaching was necessary. “This is what I would get: ‘Well, make the case for me.’ And I’d say, ‘Well, how many women do you have running? Don’t you think that’s a problem?’” But since last year, she says, many more Republican women have reached out for training, and the school has hosted two sessions just for them. The party has also started to elevate more women nationally: Former United Nations ambassador Nikki Haley and South Dakota governor Kristi Noem spoke at the Republican National Convention this year, and they’re already generating buzz that they will run for president in 2024.

The candidates themselves have also gotten more comfortable bringing their gender to the fore. During her primary, Bice faced attacks from the Club for Growth, a conservative policy group that aired TV ads attempting to tie her to convicted rapist and former media mogul Harvey Weinstein because she voted to expand a tax incentive for the film industry in Oklahoma. Another ad lambasted her for supporting Carly Fiorina in the 2016 Republican primary race against Donald Trump. “There are too few Republican women in Washington right now,” she said in response. “Sexism in attacks from groups like this is one of the biggest reasons why.”

elise stefanik speaks with reporters before president donald trump's impeachment trial resumes at the us capitol in january 2020 in washington, dc

Stefanik speaks with reporters before President Donald Trump’s impeachment trial resumes at the U.S. Capitol in January 2020 in Washington, D.C.

Mark WilsonGetty Images

Some are also leaning into studies that have shown women are better leaders because they are more likely to compromise. “Women are very effective communicators,” Stefanik has told me. “If you look at policy records in Congress, women, historically, are more bipartisan.” One small, but telling, example: On the congressional baseball team, male legislators play Democrats versus Republicans, while on the softball team, the women in Congress join together to play the press corps. “Women are able to build coalitions, really work together, understand what our experiences are, and listen,” Collins says.

The Center for American Women and Politics has found that on both sides of the aisle, women are more likely to prioritize issues that affect women, families, and children. Brooks points to her work with Democrats addressing the country’s high rate of maternal mortality, increasing funding for the early detection of breast cancer, and helping ensure the passage of a bill, in the wake of the USA Gymnastics sexual abuse scandal, to protect young athletes from victimization—problems, she says, that wouldn’t get attention without women to tackle them. “There’s an old saying that men run for Congress to be someone, and women run for Congress to do something,” says Conway of VIEW PAC. “I believe that.”

And ultimately, the women running for office know there’s power in seeing yourself in elected leaders. When Stefanik was first running, in 2014, parents brought their young daughters to her campaign events. “They would say to me, ‘We’ve never been to a political event,’” Stefanik has said. “‘But we think it’s awesome and a great role model for our daughter to see.’” The more women around the country see leaders like them, the more they could be inspired to run themselves. Even if the gains this year are incremental, Republican women are building the foundation on which more little girls—on both sides of the aisle—can say, I can do that, too.

This story appears in the November 2020 issue.

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Categories
Women's Fashion

Here’s All the Fashion News You Missed This Week

Photography courtesy of Vieren.

Canadian designer Sunny Fong has co-founded a line of luxury unisex watches, Club Monaco is now available at Hudson’s Bay, and Sentaler just kicked off a new year of #SENTALER4SickKids.

Say hello to the Canadian-founded luxury watch brand called Vieren

vieren
Photography courtesy of Vieren.

Co-founded by Canadian fashion designer Sunny Fong and entrepreneur Jessica Chow, the new Swiss-made watch brand Vieren just launched four unisex hand-crafted inaugural styles that feature automatic movements and take six months to craft. If you want to get your hands on one, hurry – only 100 pieces in each look have been made.

You can now get Club Monaco’s pieces through Hudson’s Bay

fashion news
Photography courtesty of PRNewsfoto/Hudson’s Bay.

In need of a one-stop shopping experience? Canadian retail icons Hudson’s Bay and Club Monaco have joined forces, meaning a selection of Club’s minimalist-minded wares are now available at 21 Hudson’s Bay stores as well as online. Expect to find closet essentials from cashmere sweaters and tailored trousers to WFH must-haves like hoodies and tees.

Métis artist Christi Belcourt has collaborated with Montreal-based label Katrin Leblond

fashion news
Photography courtesy of Katrin Leblond.

Using former Valentino collaborator Christi Belcourt’s happy-making Bee print, designer Katrin Leblond developed a capsule of playful basics including leggings, track pants, a tunic and more. “Something I’ve wanted to do for a while is fabric design,” Belcourt explained in a press release, adding, “I’ve always wanted to have pieces that I myself would want to wear. I am a plus sized person and am now 54. I wanted to be part of creating clothing that I would find accessible, comfortable and beautiful for all ages, sizes, shapes and occasions.” Leblonds adds, “Fashion for me is about making wearable art. It’s a way to make art that’s affordable.” A portion of proceeds from the collection’s sales will go to Nimkii Aazhibikong, a year-round, land-based Anishinaabeg language and traditional arts camp that Belcourt is actively involved in.

Sentaler kicked off its current #SENTALER4SickKids campaign

fashion news
Photography courtesy of Sentaler.

This week, Toronto-based outerwear and accessory brand Sentaler began the fifth instalment of its #SENTALER4SickKids initiative, meaning proceeds from the brand’s signature ribbed accessories sold from now until March 30th, 2021 will go to the SickKids Foundation. “In our children’s ‘new normal’, they can no longer play closely together as they once could,” Bojana Sentaler wrote in a letter about the launch. “They cannot hug or hold hands with their friends. Often, they cannot even see when their teachers are smiling at them from behind their masks. These are just the surface effects on healthy children who are attending socially distanced schools or learning virtually from home. But what about those who were already fighting their own battle? What about the children who were already facing health challenges before COVID-19 impacted our lives?” In an added gesture of kindness for those who need it most, Sentaler has also sketched colouring book pages to distribute to SickKids patients.

The Goodee Hoodie now comes in three new colours

fashion news
Photography courtesy of Goodee.

Known for being a marketplace for ethical wares from around the globe, B-Corp certified and Black-owned Montreal-based business Goodee just released a new batch of its Goodee Hoodie in three fresh colours: a dusty rose, cheerful yellow and buoyant blue. Each hoodie is made in partnership with Kotn, meaning they’re fabricated from super-soft Egyptian cotton. Time to get cozy!

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Inclusive e-tailer Juniper UNLTD is here

Sustainability-minded Montreal brands Call It Spring and Noize have launched a curated winter collection

A Quebec-based brand took home a top prize in the Etsy Design Awards

Unisex Vancouver brand Sevin Kasran just launched a new collection that features upcycled fabrics

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Video

73 Questions With Margot Robbie | Vogue

For this round of 73 Questions, Margot Robbie welcomes us in and talks about her acting career, playing Sharon Tate, and working with Quentin Tarantino.

Directed by Joe Sabia
Producer: Marina Cukeric
DP: Jess Dunlap
PM: Josh Young
Edit and Color: Ryan Powell
Post Sound: Bang World
Styling: Kate Young

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Vogue is the authority on fashion news, culture trends, beauty coverage, videos, celebrity style, and fashion week updates.

73 Questions With Margot Robbie | Vogue

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Video

Jon Hamm and Michael Sheen Teach You St. Louis and Welsh Slang | Vanity Fair

On this episode of “Slang School,” Jon Hamm and Michael Sheen teach you St. Louis and Welsh slang. Jon and Michael star in “Good Omens” which premieres on Amazon Prime Friday May 31st.

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Arts and entertainment, business and media, politics, and world affairs—Vanity Fair’s features and exclusive videos capture the people, places, and ideas that define modern culture.

Jon Hamm and Michael Sheen Teach You St. Louis and Welsh Slang | Vanity Fair

Categories
Fitness

For-Profit Healthcare Shortchanges Us All, but It’s Failing Black Queer Youth En Masse

For-profit healthcare short-changes virtually everyone, but according to new evidence, Black queer youth are among those who suffer the most.

A new study from The Trevor Project led by Myeshia Price-Feeney, PhD, found that 44 percent of Black queer youth seriously considered suicide in the past 12 months, including 59 percent of Black transgender and nonbinary youth. In a survey of 2,586 self-identified Black queer youth between the ages of 13 and 24, key risk factors for poor mental health included: discrimination on the basis of race, ethnicity, or queer identity; homelessness or having been kicked out or run away; threat of physical harm; and having undergone conversion therapy.

An astounding 49 percent of Black queer youth reported wanting psychological or emotional counseling from a mental health professional in the past 12 months, but not being able to get it.

“The reality is that there are so many Black LGBTQ youth who want and need mental healthcare, but can’t receive it because it’s just unaffordable for them. And, really, that’s beyond us,” said Dr. Price-Feeney. “It should force us all to question the systems that allow all of these disparities to persist in the first place.”

And question the systems we will. After conducting the interview with Dr. Price-Feeney that follows, I took some time to sit with these numbers and do just that. Looking back, what strikes me is how the given risk factors represent symptoms of structural inequality that are at once ever-present yet entirely preventable in material terms. In essence, it’s all frustratingly unnecessary.

“When a life is only as valuable as it represents in profit, that is a society’s failure. When copays and deductibles are left to decide who lives or dies, that is a society’s failure.”

It’s what Malcolm X called “a statistic that didn’t need to be” — one thats existence represents “a society’s failure, hypocrisy, greed, and lack of mercy and compassion.”

And how that rings true today. When a life is only as valuable as it represents in profit, that is a society’s failure. When copays and deductibles are left to decide who lives or dies, that is a society’s failure. When we would rather deny the humanity of others than disrupt the peace, that is a society’s failure.

As Tressie McMillan Cottom so brilliantly put it: “We are people, with free will, circumscribed to different degrees by histories that shape who we are allowed to become.” When histories are defined by exclusion, that too is a failure, and structural inequities like mass poverty and discrimination are the byproducts.

That’s precisely why it’s vital we center Black queer youth in any discussion of mental health: because systems of power do not. We can’t ignore that the arithmetic of access is not a lottery: it’s one that systemically devalues the lives of marginalized people, of Black and non-white people, by design.

Almost half of Black queer youth want access to life-saving care they do not have, yet so desperately need. We can’t accept that. We are called to do better by them in the capacities we are able to, and to work collectively until there is no limit to what they can become. Remember that it’s when we choose understanding over apathy that social healing begins.

On a call with POPSUGAR, Dr. Price-Feeney discussed the study’s findings and the protective value that support plays in the lives of at-risk Black queer youth, at The Trevor Project and in everyday life.

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Culture

Inside the Making of Kim Kardashian’s $6,400 Group ‘Tiger King’ Costume by Alejandro Collection

Few people go as all out for Halloween than the Kardashian-Jenner family. Last night, Kim Kardashian debuted her family’s first costume of the season, and it was Tiger King-themed. Kardashian dressed as Carole Baskin, while Jonathan Cheban went as Baskin’s rival Joe Exotic. Kardashian’s four children North, Saint, Chicago, and Psalm West were tigers.

How does an intricate group costume like that come together—and how much did it cost? Every piece is custom-made, in Kardashian’s case, and altogether, the costumes are worth $6,400. Kardashian tapped designer Alejandro Peraza’s Alejandro Collection to create the outfits. The design house detailed to ELLE.com what went into every piece.

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“Kim is always super involved in the looks we create for her,” the team said. “For Halloween, the devil is truly in the details. She likes to get as close as possible to the idea we are executing for her. If she has any doubts about whether something will work, we make multiple options she has choices.”

kim's kids in tiger makeup

Instagram

north as a tiger

Instagram

“For this Halloween, Kim wanted the kids matching in tiger onesies with custom-stuffed tails and ears,” they added. “Each outfit took around six hours to create in totality and a pattern was made for each of the kids’ sizes. Kim’s look went from research to completion in about 24 hours total, which was spread out over a four-day period: from making the perfect flower crown options to draping the blouse just right to achieve the ‘Carole Baskin’ Effect. The jeans also had to be perfection, down to the trim and fabric on the hem line.”

kim and north

Instagram

kim and her kids posing in their tiger king costumes

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In the case of Cheban’s Joe Exotic look, “Jonathan’s fabric took forever and a day to source, followed by around a dozen broken needles being that it is an Italian beaded mesh. Tailoring to perfection and create a beautiful designer piece took two days,” the team said.

The team had a couple weeks to make all the costumes, and each look ended up taking a few days, they said. The outfits themselves have varying estimated values: Kardashian’s Carole Baskin outfit is worth $2,200; Cheban’s Joe Exotic look is $1,800; and the kids’ tiger costumes are worth about $600. At four tiger costumes, that’s $2,400 total.

joe exotic jacket made by alejandro collection

Courtesy of Alejandro Collection

the tiger costumes

Courtesy of Alejandro Collection

kim's costume

Courtesy of Alejandro Collection

This process wasn’t months in the making; it came together fast. “Kim got her first options a week in advance, and the second options a handful of days before Halloween,” the team said.

The ongoing coronavirus pandemic did change the way they did business for these costumes and with all their online orders. “COVID has definitely changed the way we work—we are more cautious about people we bring into our inner circle, however, our work load has more than doubled!” the team said. “Our online sales went through the roof and people are home and love to shop our collection. The most interesting thing was sourcing more fabric after it runs out, and having friends FaceTime from the fabric store, selecting the fabric shade just for one more yard for the sole purpose of meeting the deadline. Working with new materials that we haven’t worked before can also be an interesting experience.”

This isn’t the first time Alejandro Collection has designed Halloween costumes for the family, by the way. The team was behind Jenner’s first Halloween costume with Stormi: a cloud and lightning in 2018.

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You can shop Alejandro Collection here.

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Women's Fashion

15 Fashionable Horror Movies and Shows to Binge This Weekend

Image courtesy HBO

Just hit play for, dare we say it, killer style.

When it comes to horror movies or TV shows, stylish or fashionable isn’t always the first thing that comes to mind. But nothing sets a creepy or foreboding tone quite like a costume designed to elicit fear, confusion or apprehension. Who can forget the blue nightgown in Rosemary’s Baby or Delia Deetz’s kooky ensembles in Beetlejuice? Read on for our picks of the most fashionable horror movies and shows to binge this Halloween weekend.

Lovecraft Country
This HBO miniseries is set in the segregated United States but thanks to the supernatural premise and plotlines involving time travel, the story weaves from the 1950s to the ’20s to the late 1800s; from Chicago to Tulsa to Korea; from Jim Crow America to Jazz Age Paris. Accordingly, the fashion on the show spans various time periods and influences, resulting in a rich and wide-ranging costume wardrobe.

fashionable horror movies shows
image courtesy hbo

In Fabric
This British horror-comedy follows a haunted red dress as it torments various owners, like a twisted take on The Sisterhood of the Travelling Pants. Purchased during sale season in London in January 1993, the dress in question comes with a message— “You who wear me will know me” —sewn right into it. “I think clothing is inherently haunted to some degree,” director Peter Strickland said in an interview. “Once it’s been worn by someone it contains its own power, whether it’s the power to disgust you, the power to turn you on, or the power to make you cry.” Watch at your own risk.

The Craft
This ’90s cult classic centering around the story of four young witches in high school has remained an iconic fashion film for its tartan skirts, leather chokers and chunky boots. 2020 saw the release of a sequel to the hit film, focusing on a new modern-day quartet. Instead of looking back at ’90s fashion, costume designer Avery Plewes created contemporary bold looks of her own. In a recent interview, Plewes tells FASHION how she she built a current, Wiccan-worthy wardrobe. The starting point: “Crystals for each of the four main cast members – ones that connect to the ‘elements of ritual’ each girl symbolizes (earth, fire, air, water).”

image courtesy of columbia pictures

The Cell
Legendary costume designer Eiko Ishioka created the bold looks worn by Jennifer Lopez in this psychological thriller. Lopez plays a child psychologist who, when hooked up to an experimental machine, enters the “dreamscape” of a serial killer, where she appears dressed in ornate head pieces and jewellery, sheer dresses and even a Virgin Mary-esque ensemble in crimson.

fashionable horror movies
image courtesy of new line media

Midsommar
Ari Aster’s second horror film (following his breakout hit Hereditary) explores themes of the occult, revolving around the rituals of a pagan cult in a remote Swedish village. Florence Pugh stars as a young American woman caught in the middle of it all, with a nightmare of epic proportions unfolding against picturesque fields and flower-adorned pastoral outfits.

image courtesy of A24

Twin Peaks
One of David Lynch’s most enduring works, this ’90s-era sci-fi series is packed with memorable outfits: preppy pleated skirts worn with oxfords and socks; oversized cardigans; plaid shirts tucked into high-waisted trousers; and many a leather jacket.

image courtesy of ABC photo archives

Suspiria
Like Dario Argento’s original 1977 film, Luca Guadagnino’s 2018 remake is set at a prestigious dance academy in Berlin run by a coven of witches. Awash in disquieting shades of red, the film’s 1970s setting is evoked through dramatic caftans, printed pussy-bow blouses, midi skirts and patchwork cloaks. Oh, plus there are some dresses “made out of real human hair extensions.”

image courtesy of amazon studios

Rosemary’s Baby
This 1968 horror movie sees Mia Farrow dressed in mod frocks and blouses with Peter Pan collars, all in angelic pastel hues. Despite her chic outfits, rounded out with berets and leather satchels, Rosemary Woodhouse’s most iconic look, arguably, is probably her blue nightgown.

image courtesy of paramount pictures

Swallow
Released last year, this psychological thriller follows a neglected pregnant housewife who begins ingesting all manner of inedible objects—from batteries to thumbtacks to marbles. Suffering from a psychological disorder known as pica, the woman nevertheless tries to keep up outward appearances, dressed in tailored separates and surrounded by sleek midcentury-modern furniture.

image courtesy of ifc films

Persona
Swedish filmmaker Ingmar Bergman’s 1966 psychological drama centres around two main characters: a renowned actress, who is sent by her doctor to a cottage by the sea to recover from a strange affliction, and the young nurse tasked with looking after her. Stills from the film are impossibly chic—think black turtlenecks, cat-eye sunglasses and boater hats—but they belie the tensions of identity and self-image swirling underneath.

image courtesy of AB Svensk Filmindustri

Queen of the Damned
In her last film role before her death in 2001, R&B singer Aaliyah plays vampire queen Akasha decked out in regal, Cleopatra-inspired outfits. Think ornate head pieces, chunky jewellery, and long skirts worn with a body-armour-like bodice.

image courtesy of warner bros.

The Hunger
Catherine Deneuve, David Bowie and Susan Sarandon star in this 1983 erotic horror film, which went on to inspire Alexander McQueen’s Spring/Summer 1996 collection. ’80s power shoulders, bold hats, and leather jackets made up Deneuve’s wardrobe, which was provided by Yves Saint Laurent.

fashionable horror movies shows
image courtesy of MGM Studios

Bram Stoker’s Dracula
This gothic horror by Francis Ford Coppola won an Academy Award for Best Costume Design in 1993. Spearheaded by Eiko Ishioka, the wardrobe comprised of gilded gowns, tailored suiting, embroidered robes and sculptural accessories.

image courtesy of columbia pictures

Beetlejuice
The most family-friendly pick of the bunch, this 1988 cult hit created several sartorial icons: Catherine O’Hara’s Delia Deetz, dressed in monochrome with whimsical accessories (who can forget the glove-as-headband?); Winona Ryder’s Lydia, outfitted in head-to-toe black; and Michael Keaton’s Betelgeuse, who wore his dandy suits with a darkly comic flair.

fashionable horror movies shows
image courtesy of warner bros.

Crimson Peak
Jessica Chastain, Mia Wasikowska and Tom Hiddleston spend their screen time in Guillermo del Toro’s gothic romance walking around in elaborate Victorian costumes. Although the world around them is dark and bleak, their costumes are rich and sumptuous—heavy silks and velvets in shades of ochre, midnight blue and of course crimson.

image courtesy of universal pictures

When you’re ready to take a break from binge-watching horror films, check out our other ideas for a safe Halloween at home.

Categories
Fitness

This 20-Minute Outdoor HIIT Running Workout Is the Ultimate Test of Your Speed and Endurance

HIIT (high-intensity interval training) routines are always tough, but outdoor HIIT running workouts are on another level. “Performing high intensity intervals will require you to dig deep and find your max effort for short periods of time,” Danielle Hirt, a NASM-certified personal trainer and RRCA Level 1 certified running coach, told POPSUGAR. You’re pushing your body to the limit of its speed, which is a big ask of your lungs and legs, but it’s also incredibly satisfying when you finish (and can finally collapse in a puddle on the ground).

This outdoor HIIT running workout is just 20 minutes long, so it’s a good one to start with if you’re new to this style of training. Hirt said the workout is meant to get your heart pumping and burn calories, something HIIT does with a ton of efficiency; the alternating fast and slow intervals allow you to maintain a faster pace than you would if you were trying to go fast the whole time. HIIT-style workouts also stimulate your body to continue burning a modest amount calories after the workout is completed, otherwise known as the EPOC (excess postexercise oxygen consumption) effect.

“Performing high-intensity intervals will require you to dig deep and find your max effort for short periods of time,” Hirt said. For each fast interval, your goal is to run at 85, 90, or 95 percent of your fastest sprint (more on that below). “This effort-based workout will be tough, so take the recovery intervals as you need,” she added, whether that’s walking or a light jog. “You should be able to start each run interval strong!”

In the workout below, Hirt references three different speeds, which will be slightly different for everyone:

  • 85 percent of max speed: A hard effort. You should be able to talk in very short phrases or words.
  • 90 percent of max speed: A tough effort. You should not be able to respond in conversation and be very focused on breathing.
  • 95 percent of max speed: Your hardest effort. You should be going so hard, you need to walk during your recovery intervals.

Since this workout is high-intensity, Hirt recommends doing it only once or twice per week. Make sure to take rest days in between, too. If you’re ready, grab your running shoes, fill up your water, and let’s get it.

20-Minute HIIT Running Workout

Directions: First, complete the warmup below in addition to these dynamic warmup moves. Then do the 20-minute workout, following the pacing directions as listed. Complete the cooldown stretches afterward. Keep reading for instructions on how to do each warmup and cooldown move.

Warm-up Stretch Time/Reps
High knees or standing marches 30 seconds
Butt kicks 30 seconds


Time Pace Example Pace
0:00-2:00 Fast walk, doing 10 shoulder rolls forwards and 10 backwards 15 min/mile
2:01-4:00 Conversational run 12 min/mile
4:01-5:30 Faster than conversational (85%) 9:14 min/mile
5:31-6:30 Recovery walk or jog 15 min/mile
6:31-7:30 Run (90%) 8:34 min/mile
7:31-8:30 Recovery walk or jog 15 min/mile
8:31-9:00 Sprint (95%) 8 min/mile
9:01-10:00 Recovery walk or jog 15 min/mile
10:01-11:00 Run (90%) 9:14 min/mile
11:01-11:30 Recovery walk or jog 15 min/mile
11:31-12:00 Sprint (95%) 8 min/mile
12:01-12:30 Recovery walk or jog 15 min/mile
12:31-13:30 Run (90%) 9:14 min/mile
13:31-14:00 Recovery walk or jog 15 min/mile
14:01-14:30 Sprint (95%) 8 min/mile
14:31-15:00 Recovery walk or jog 15 min/mile
15:01-15:30 Sprint (95%) 8 min/mile
15:31-16:00 Recovery walk or jog 15 min/mile
16:01-16:20 Sprint (95%) 8 min/mile
16:21-16:40 Recovery walk or jog 15 min/mile
16:41-17:00 Sprint (95%) 8 min/mile
17:01-20:00 Recovery walk or jog 15 min/mile


Cooldown Stretch Time/Reps
Standing hamstring strech 30 seconds
Standing quad stretch 30 seconds
Mountain Pose 2-3 breaths

Categories
Culture

It’s Officially “Not Yet” Season and Mariah Is Our Only Hope

ertn

Eric Reads The News is a daily humor column which skewers politics, pop culture, celebrity, shade, and schadenfreude.

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Every year, the festivity-loving public attempts to put Mariah Carey to work earlier and earlier. And every year Mariah, Queen of All Things Festive, must remind us that she is still has a few minutes left on her break and she’ll let us know when we can throw off our cares, wrap a large Santa coat over our negligee, and start practicing the alto line from “All I Want for Christmas Is You.”

The tenuous period before Festive Season, also known as Mariah Carey Season, is known as Not Yet Season, of which Mariah is also the ruler and sole copyright holder. People (me, I am people) try to start hollying and jollying and Mariah, ever the patient deity, always replies with a succinct but clear “not yet.” This year, however, Not Yet Season has taken on a whole new meaning as we head into a week when we will furiously refresh our Twitter feeds all day every day to see if all the ballots have been counted and the election can be called. And for much of the week the answer will come to us on a whistle tone with the words we already know by heart: Not Yet.

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I’ll admit, I’m a bit of a Mariah Carey Season zealot, so I don’t normally observe Not Yet Season. I began playing “All I Want for Christmas Is You” on the day after Labor Day, I voted early, and Trump has never been my president, so this upcoming week is a bit of a mystery to me. It’s also particularly odd that an extended Not Yet Season is coming a few days after Daylight Savings Time ends. After you fall back an hour, the answer to the question “is it night right now?” is never Not Yet. So you can see my confusion! But I know who has the answer: Mariah Carey.

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Here’s the problem as I see it: there’s a lot of concern that our election results won’t be clear for a while. There’s an even greater concern that members of the Republican Party will try to obfuscate the results of the election or throw out ballots that should be counted in an effort to win races they haven’t. This is mostly a concern because members of the Republican Party are currently trying to obfuscate the results of the election and throw out ballots that should be counted in an effort to win races they fear they won’t. So you can see how one would get the idea.

Media companies will be under pressure to call races on Election Night because we have strayed from the light of Not Yet Season and expect a quick tabulation of tens of millions of votes. Why do we believe this is reasonable when it takes a full week to find out who got sent home on Dancing with the Stars? Why are humans such paradoxical creatures? Why do people vote against their own interests? Why is a Republican congressional candidate trying to rip my ballot from my hands right now? You know who has the answers: Mariah Carey.

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It has always been Mariah. In the dark winter of 2016, who gave us a New Year’s Eve performance that encapsulated the energy we needed to get to 2017 and beyond? Mariah Carey. Who invented the phrase “I still believe”? Mariah Carey. Who, when presented with a totally deranged Supreme Court case aimed at enabling voter suppression said simply, “I can’t read suddenly”? Chief Justice Mariah Carey.

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Not Yet Season will not be over until Mariah Carey takes herself down to the New York Times building and breaks the New York Times election needle in half. Not Yet Season, as the ancient scrolls demand, will not release us from this Purgatory until Mariah Carey herself validates the results by singing “Hero” as she personally scans ballots.

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Not Yet Season, as well as this interminable election that should have been a clear choice for the majority of Americans, will not end until Mariah Carey gets on the airwaves and sings, “Wait a minute, this is too deep/I gotta change the station” from her hit “We Belong Together.” It is a Constitutional fact that we cannot have a peaceful transfer of power until Mariah Carey descends upon the White House lawn, raises a microphone to her lips, and declares, as she did in the hit “GTFO”: “How ’bout you get the f*ck out? / How ’bout you get the f*ck out?/ Take your tings and be on your merry way.” And then, finally, Not Yet Season will be over, the tinkling xylophone will begin, and we, too, can be on our merry ways straight into that most wonderful time of the year: Mariah Carey Season. Long may it reign!

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Categories
Beauty

This 16-Year-Old Was Racially Profiled in A Black Beauty Supply Store—So She Bought One.

The first step in any Black woman’s haircare ritual is a trip to the local beauty supply store. Ask a Black woman to recall her earliest memory of these essential establishments and it will mirror the memories of countless others: perusing the aisles to determine whether a Just For Me or Dr. Miracle’s box perm would best suit her hair; scanning the different lengths and textures of Sensationnel’s packs of hair for her first sew-in; and comparing Adore’s semi-permanent hair color in Spiced Amber and Cinnamon to see which one makes her look grown, but not too grown. (It was Spiced Amber for me.) Ask 16-year-old Paris McKenzie to recount one of her earliest memories and it’s the one about being racially profiled and followed throughout her local beauty supply store that sticks out the most.

Beauty supply stores can be a Black girl’s sanctuary. They are places—like Target or Home Goods—where we often stray from our list of need-to-buy items and walk away with so much more. But these physical spaces where Black consumers spend their earnings are rarely Black-owned or operated. Tobi Idowu of Business of Fashion wrote earlier this year, “Of at least 9,000 shops specializing in Black haircare and cosmetics in the US, 3,000 are Black-owned, and most of the remainder are operated by people of Korean descent,” according to report from an organization called the Black Owned Beauty Supply Association (BOBSA).

“I’ve never been in a beauty supply store owned by a Black person,” McKenzie tells me. “When I walked into a beauty supply store, either I didn’t get assisted well or I was given an attitude or people watched me like a hawk or followed me around the store.” Now, sitting between a wall of Freetress braiding hair and a glass display of headbands and hoop earrings in the back of Paris Beauty Supplyz, McKenzie feels at home. That’s because the Black-owned beauty salon store has her name on the lease.

The business of beauty is in McKenzie’s blood. For the past 16 years, her mother Senica, a hairstylist and serial entrepreneur, has owned and operated Brooklyn’s Paris Hair Studio and Paris Runway Boutique (both of which are named for her daughter). Growing up, McKenzie shadowed her mom, often frequenting a supply store within walking distance of both businesses. At the time, it was owned by a Korean family with whom both Paris and her mother had a rapport.

McKenzie worked as a shampoo girl at the hair studio before becoming a sales associate at Paris Runway boutique where she learned how to price items and interface with customers daily. “Whenever someone would walk into the boutique and start browsing, I would go over to them and say, This will look nice on you. You should try it on. This looks your style,” she says, as she acts out the scenario.

paris beauty supplyz

Nerisha Penrose

Manning her mother’s boutique made her very perceptive to a customer’s needs. “After working in a boutique for so long, you learn how to learn people when they walk in. Because you can look at their outfit and know a little bit about their style and what to sell to them. Same thing applies to a beauty supply store. Somebody walks in with their hair out, you know what texture their hair is. You can kind of see the level of dryness or moisture. So now you know what products to advertise. I want people to feel like they’re shopping with somebody who knows them in and out.”

When the pandemic hit earlier this year, the beauty supply store McKenzie and her family frequented decided to shut down and was on the hunt for new owners. Given Senica’s longstanding reputation in the community, the owners approached her with an offer she couldn’t refuse. But instead of adding another store to her portfolio, Senica turned to her daughter and suggested she purchase the shop for herself. With the help of her brother Oshane, who helped McKenzie create an LLC, McKenzie was able to obtain the lease on the space.

The first order of business was to completely remodel the shop, from removing the carpet to rebuilding inventory with products that appeal to every hair type and texture and lifestyle. “Anything you want to make yourself feel more beautiful—lashes, concealer, lip gloss—come in here and you’ll find it,” she says with a chuckle, mimicking a TV infomercial.

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However, no TV placement could have gotten her the exposure that she got with a single Tweet. On September 4, the day she opened the shop’s doors, she wrote: “I just became the youngest Black owner of a beauty supply store at 16 years old! A simple retweet or like can help support.” The immediate praise and support McKenzie received was more than she could ever have anticipated. The original tweet was retweeted thousands of times, drawing attention from the likes of Janet Jackson and Bella Hadid who both reposted McKenzie’s announcement on their own accounts. “I was at a last-minute photo shoot when I saw somebody comment under the post, ‘Who’s here from Bella Hadids’ page?’ I thought it was a little troll comment. But I watched her story and I was on it. I screamed. We had to stop the photo shoot because I was like, no, this can’t be real,” she recalls. The following day, Jackson did the same thing. “My mom and I were both going crazy because it was Janet Jackson. Oh my gosh, Janet Jackson knows my name.”

paris beauty supplyz

Nerisha Penrose

There’s a comforting familiarity you feel when you step into Paris Beauty Supplyz. Maybe it’s the chirpy greeting and smile McKenzie’s little sister Shawntelle gives you when you walk through the door. “Is there anything I can help you with?” she asks me before running off to finish her homework. Or maybe it’s McKenzie’s protective older brother Oshane pacing the aisles to make sure every product is placed just-so. McKenzie may make compromises in carrying mass brands over smaller brands—both in-store and the online shop—but one thing that remains a must is keeping family in the business.

At one point during our conversation, Oshane politely interrupts to inform his sister that a lady from South Carolina has arrived to meet the young entrepreneur. “It’s been like this ever since we opened,” McKenzie tells me. A mother and daughter recently drove from Texas to meet the 16-year-old inspiring little girls around the world to launch their own businesses regardless of age.

“The little girl brought a whole book of questions she wanted to ask me for her lemonade stand. She asked me questions about how long it took me to open a business and how it feels to be a young business owner. I never expected to be such an inspiration to other young girls. They drove here to speak to little ol’ me.”

She remembers hearing about the two sistersKayla and Keonna Davis—who made history in 2019 as the youngest Black women to own a beauty supply store in California. Unfortunately, the sisters had to shut down due to difficulties in procuring products from product manufacturers. McKenzie is aware there will be bumps along the way, but it’s the impact on young Black and brown girls that she’s more concerned about.

“It feels amazing to be able to join in on what was already going on, because it was so influential and so important for a lot of Black, young girls and Black people everywhere to see Black people stepping up and breaking those barriers that held us back for so long in the beauty supply market,” she says.

Even with a store to run, McKenzie still has her eye on a backup plan. Currently enrolled in a medical-based high school where she’s on track for early graduation, the 16-year-old is interested in becoming a Pediatric orthopedic surgeon and hopes that by the time college admission rolls around next August, Paris Beauty Supplyz will be self-sufficient enough that she can attend a Ivy League school. Harvard or Stanford are her top picks.

It still hasn’t hit me yet how influential this is until I hear people say, ‘Oh my gosh, a 16-year-old owns this.’ I’m always wondering, Why are you guys going crazy?” she adds. “But then it makes sense— I am 16 years old and I own a beauty supply store.”

state of black beauty

Joelle Avelino


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Categories
Women's Fashion

Megan Thee Stallion Is Curating a Savage X Fenty Gift Guide for Her Hotties

This holiday season, we’re not checking off the “naughty or nice” list, but the hottie list. For Savage X Fenty’s Holiday 2020 campaign, Hot Girl Coach Megan Thee Stallion is supplying her fans with all the trimmings to make sure this holiday season is hottie-approved.

For the November Xtra VIP Box—a monthly selection of exclusive items hand-picked by Rihanna or a special guest of her choice—Savage X Fenty tapped brand partner Megan Thee Stallion to help debut the Pearls of Love box. Inside, customers will find the String of Pearls Cupless Bralette and a matching garter belt, modeled by the rapper in the campaign image below.

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Courtesy

“With her magnetic charm and colorful alter-egos and personas, Megan embodies the Savage X ethos of being whoever you want whenever you want,” the brand said in a statement. In tandem with her curated Xtra Vip Box, Megan also created a holiday wishlist for her fans entitled the Hottie Holiday gift guide equipped with balconette bras, crotchless bikini panties and thongs, the open-back teddy bodysuit, and more available to shop starting on November 1.

As always, the collection is available in bra sizes from 30A – 42H and regular sizing from XS – 3X. If you’re unable to get your picks from the Savage X Fenty site, the collection will also be available for purchase at amazon.com, ASOS.com, and Zalando.com.

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Categories
Women's Fashion

Sam Smith: “Becoming Famous is One of The Main Traumas of My Life”

Photograph by Alasdair McLellan

We caught up with the Grammy Award-winning artist ahead of the drop of their newest album, Love Goes, today.

Sam Smith is on their last interview of the day to promote their new album, Love Goes, at a London hotel and has been rewarded with a vodka martini. It arrived, however, with an olive instead of the twist they requested. Many stars, especially of the Oscar- and Grammy-winning variety, would have sent it back, possibly even had a little hissy fit. Not Smith. They shrug it off and sip contently while we have a Zoom chat to talk about the album, which drops today along with a livestream performance from the iconic Abbey Road Studios at 4pm EST.

The album is Smith’s most varied work yet – from the poignant acapella Young to the bouncy Diamonds, which was released in September.

“I was in the studio pretending to be a really, really rich woman whose husband had left her and taken all of her diamonds and possessions in a nasty divorce,” Smith describes. “She was left in a mansion by herself, in her wedding dress, drinking wine. That’s what I was imagining when I wrote the song. This disco, Diana Ross character came out of me.”

How true to life are the lyrics?

“I only have these diamonds they’ll have to rip out of my ear to get,” they say, pointing out the two solitaires in their right lobe. On the other hangs a vintage pearl, worn at the suggestion of stylist Ben Reardon, who dressed Smith for the album art shot by fashion photographer Alasdair McLennen. “I never really liked pearls but I wear this every day,” Smith says of their new jewellery signature. “Now I want a pearl that has a deep, dark story to it.” Among the jewellery on their fingers is a gold Tiffany & Co. 1837 ring purchased in New York. “I was really sad after the breakup of my first long relationship,” Smith recalls. “I was so, so down. To cheer myself up, me and my three beautiful queer friends basically pretended we were in Sex and the City and got all dressed up, went for cocktails, walked around and then went to a vintage store and got this. I think of it as my independence ring.”

Love Goes artwork.

There is a lot of love angst on this album, some stemming from that breakup. And Smith laments that it’s tougher for someone who isn’t cis-gendered to find love.

“It’s hard, not because there’s a lack of people wanting to love these wonderful people. It’s hard because we’re taught not to love ourselves. So to have successful relationships can be incredibly difficult because we can self-destruct. It takes a lot of therapy, to be honest, and help, communication and practice to love.”

Smith finds listening to American author and therapist Brené Brown helps. “She speaks about vulnerability being the birthplace of joy and courage. To my queer life that really, really hit me deep.” Smith came out as non-binary in March 2019, and advises others contemplating the same to accept there are some things they can’t control. “You need to put your hands in the air and go into the moment sometimes knowing that it’s not going to be okay. That message has helped me a lot.”

Being genderqueer also resulted in a developmental delay in the romance department, Smith feels. “My ‘20s are like my teenage years when it comes to love because I was cheated from that in school.” They used fashion as a weapon to help deal during that difficult period. “From the age of 15 to 19 I would be in all female clothing and full makeup throughout school. It was my way of saying ‘f— you’ to all the bullies. And I felt incredible.”

sam smith new album
Photograph by Alasdair McLellan

Fame has also been a lot to cope with, Smith reveals.

“Becoming famous is one of the main traumas of my life so far,” they say. “I’ve found it such a shock to the system. I was brought up quite normally. I didn’t go to performing arts schools or anything. I left school and worked in a news agent’s in a local train station, and a bar in London. And at the age of 20 I was put into this machine that turned my life upside down in the space of eight or nine months. Everything I knew changed. Everyone treated me differently. My financial situation went from 0 to 100. I started to have to take responsibility within my family and my work circle. I didn’t have the knowledge to have that responsibility. I was a child still. And as a queer person, you’re already feeling inexperienced.”

Smith’s new reality also impacts family, friends, and co-workers, they point out. “And that’s all because I wanted it so bad. So there’s this weird mixture of guilt, pride, sadness, happiness, freedom, entrapment. All these things that you feel at the same time that you just have to work out and ride the wave.”

Leaving Smith to enjoy their martini, one last question comes to mind. Would they ever go back to dressing in that flamboyant, more feminine way?

“I think I would,” they respond. “As I get older I just want to be in caftans, diamonds and jewels.”

Purchase tickets to watch the livestream performance at Abbey Road Studios at 4pm ET today here. You can also purchase tickets for an encore showing of the livestream at 8pm ET/8pm PT today via this link.  

Categories
Beauty

FLARE Faves: Our Top Buys From October

Back when the FLARE team shared an IRL office space (RIP to my abandoned aloe plant…), my mornings looked a little something like this: rush to get up the elevators in time for our 8:30 a.m. daily meeting (for which, I admittedly showed up to at approx. 8:32 most days), hit the button on my Nespresso machine, roll my chair over to our meeting table and start discussing the trending news items of past 24 hours with my brilliant colleagues. We’d assign a new story or two, check in on the status of our scheduled posts for the day and then invariably our attention would turn to what new outfit, eyeliner or gadget one of us was debuting.

Since WFH became our new reality, there’s been less opportunity to share sale scores and new obsessions. For one, most of us put a hard stop on unnecessary shopping; and furthermore, we found ourselves wearing sweatsuits much of the week. But now that things are opening up (and we’re opening up our wallets again) we decided to take our conversation online—like everything else right now—and a new series was born. Introducing FLARE Faves, where we’re sharing our top fashion, beauty and home buys from the past month.

Read this next: 8 Perfect Cardigans to Shop Now

Here, the best things we bought or were gifted in October.

Jenn’s picks

Best sweater

editors favourite products: club monaco sweater

This oversized cable knit beauty is possibly the most fetching shade of blue—somewhere between cyan and aqua—that my eyes have ever gazed upon. It’s the next best thing to sitting on an actual beach gazing at the turquoise ocean. I vow to wear it with a contrasting merlot lip, tuck it into leather pants, and layer a slim thermal turtleneck under it for cold weather patio wine. We’re going to do everything together.

Oversized Cable Crew Sweater, $249, clubmonaco.ca

Best serum

editors favourite products: valmont serum

The price tag on this targeted blemish treatment is not small but its effectiveness is major. Unlike so many spot treatments, it’s not at all drying or irritating (you know when you wake up without a pimple but with a new ring of parched skin?). In fact, the texture is akin to a moisturizer so you just feel like you’re dabbing a lightweight lotion on your irritated area. It contains active ingredients like a keratolytic agent to help eliminate the build-up of dead cells in inflamed areas and borage oil to soothe irritation. And yes, I used it recently on a little effer ready to erupt on my chin (thank you so much, maskne) and it was 100% gone in the morning.

Primary Solution, $250, lamaisonvalmont.com

Best hand sani

editors favourite products: paume

I don’t leave the house much but when I do this hand sani is in my belt bag. I’ve been asked at least twice in public (you know, like in line at Shoppers Drug Mart) what the smell is because with notes of citrus and cedar, it is the least rank-smelling sanitizer I have tried. It’s also made in Canada by a female entrepreneur, comes in packaging that is almost too chic for hand sanitizer and made with thoughtful, sustainably-minded materials including a refillable pump format made from antimicrobial plastic and my purse buddy, a travel bottle made with 100% recycled plastic that’s meant to be refilled five to 10 times and then recycled.

Hand Sanitizer, $16, mypaume.com

—Jennifer Berry, managing editor

Read this next: From Pilled Sweaters to Stained Suede, Handle Wardrobe Annoyances Like a Pro

Elham’s picks

Best sweatshirt

editors favourite products: ssense sweater

I’m technically still waiting on it to ship to my home, but I already know it’ll be a fave and I’ll be living in this sweatshirt for the foreseeable future.

Essentials Mock Neck Sweatshirt, $115, ssense.com

Best hair wax

editors favourite products: hair wax

I’ve been itching to do something new with my hair, but the damage I put it through the last time I went on a dye-spree still haunts me years later. I’d rather get my hair professionally done, but I know that I personally won’t be stepping foot in a salon for a while. So this coloured hair wax is a fun substitute! The tone ended up pulling more pink than red on me, but it washes out easily so I didn’t mind the unintended hue. Do take note: This stuff definitely works better on curly hair. I tried it on my straight-haired roommate and it just looked like she stepped out of a painting studio.

Mofajang Hair Wax Dye in Red, $15, amazon.ca

Best wireless mic

editors favourite products: wireless mic

It was originally bought as a joke to make video chats and online movie watch sessions more exciting, but it’s quickly turned into the most entertaining way to just casually talk at home. The echo feature is by far the funniest at making mundane phrases turn into unnecessarily long musical numbers. This is definitely a contender for best purchase of the year.

Bonaok Wireless Bluetooth Karaoke Microphone, $41, amazon.ca

—Elham Numan, graphic designer

Read this next: What’s New on Netflix Canada—Plus, What’s Leaving—in November

Charlotte’s picks

Best leggings

editors favourite products: sweaty betty leggings

Remember last month when I said I was ready to wear pants again? That lasted approximately a week. Once the weather turned crisp here in Toronto, it was back to cozies pronto! Just in time for my return to stretchy everything, cult fave yoga brand Sweaty Betty arrived in Canada via Nordstrom, and I couldn’t be more excited about finally trying the leggings that chic Notting Hill moms have been sporting on their school runs for years.

Sweaty Betty Zero Gravity Leggings, $169, nordstrom.ca

Best bar soap

editors favourite products: glossier bar soap

I know I’m in the minority, but I much prefer bar soap to body wash in the shower. (For one, important, reason: There is generally less packaging waste.) So I was pumped when Glossier made it cool again by launching an exfoliating bar version of their popular-with-young-millennials Body Hero line. My tub just looks happier with this powder-pink brick on its ledge, and the orange blossom and neroli scent lightly perfumes my bathroom, even while I’m not using it—a delightful bonus.

Body Hero Exfoliating Bar, $17, glossier.com

Best read

editors favourite products: breasts and eggs

Originally published over a decade ago in Japan, Mieko Kawakami’s Breasts and Eggs ended up on international best-seller lists again this year after being translated into English and introduced to a whole new audience. I picked it up and, as the cliche goes, couldn’t put it down: It’s one of the most unflinchingly nuanced explorations of womanhood and motherhood that I’ve read, well, ever. Plus, this cover is just so beautiful—I bought the book on my Kobo reader, but need to get another copy just for my bookshelf.

Breasts and Eggs by Mieko Kawakami, $39, chapters.indigo.ca

—Charlotte Herrold, editor-in-chief

Read this next: Indigo Is the First Major Canadian Retailer Committed to Selling More Black Brands

Katherine’s picks

Best matching set

editors favourite products: roots

If you’re wondering if you *really* do need yet another matching sweatsuit, the answer is yes, and it’s 100% this one. Roots is a pretty tried and true Canadian brand when it comes to the perfect sweatsuit, and this new addition to their line-up is no exception. It’s super cozy, extremely comfortable, and the vintage look of the mockneck and smaller brand logo give it a bit of a more chic edge. Plus, the dried sage colour is really unique and a nice switch-up from the brand’s typical range. And yes, I’ve already watched about 30 hours of Netflix in it. Pro tip: The sizing runs large in the sweater, so definitely size down. (For reference: I’m typically a Small and went with an XS.)

Cloud Mockneck Sweater, $78, and Slim Pant, $74, in Dried Sage, roots.com

Best spot treatment

editors favourite products: mario badescu

Maybe it’s the change of season, maybe it’s stress, maybe it’s the fact that maskne is a thing, or maybe it’s a combination of all three, but my skin has been going *seriously* bonkers this month, with tons of breakouts, especially around my chin area. While I was initially hesitant to try cult favourite brand Mario Badescu (I’m wary that something this popular is just being over-hyped), I’m glad that I did. The drying lotion is perfect to pop on emerging breakouts during the day or overnight, and has taken several of my pimples down in just a few hours. It’s so effective that I’ve actually started using it in place of my dermatologist-prescribed spot treatment. (Shhh!)

Mario Badescu Drying Lotion, $23, sephora.com

Best luggage

editors favourite products: away luggage

While purchasing luggage—especially right now when travelling is limited—is definitely a luxury, if you’re looking to treat yourself with something special for your first trip after quarantine (once it’s safe to travel, of course), then I’d definitely recommend the latest collection from Away. I’ve personally been eyeing the luggage brand’s wares for several years, and their latest collection with actor Rashida Jones seemed like the perfect excuse to pull the trigger. The range comes in a series of unique colours that are inspired by Jones’s home in Ojai, California, where she’s been spending time during the pandemic. While the suitcase (which I was generously gifted) is predominantly spending most of its time right now stored under my bed in its super chic dust bag, that hasn’t stopped me from pulling it out from time to time to admire the colour and dream about my next trip.

The Away by Rashida Jones Collection The Carry-On in Copper, $435, awaytravel.com

—Katherine Singh, assistant editor

Categories
Fitness

Pharrell Designed Jerseys For These Iconic Soccer Teams, and We Can’t Enough of the Tie-Dye

Redesigning iconic sports jerseys can be tricky business, but trust Pharrell Williams to get it right. The artist and creative director of Human Race just collaborated with Adidas to create hand-designed jerseys for five legendary European soccer clubs: Manchester United, Real Madrid, Juventus, Arsenal, and FC Bayern Munich. The brand also created jerseys for Romance FC, a women’s and nonbinary football club in London. We took one look at the results and fell in love.

These clubs boast recognizable jerseys as it is, but Pharrell reimagined them in raw and unique ways. Designers used hand-drawn techniques as the basis for each jersey before joining with the Adidas team, melding the artistic look with a high-performance jersey.

“The most important part of the process with this collection was to learn of each club’s legacies and how each defining moment of their histories were captured and preserved from a design and aesthetics perspective,” Pharrell said in a press release. “Each of the new jerseys are symbols of the five [clubs’] collective memories which have been brought to life through the most personal, creative, and unique design process we have — by hand.”

The jerseys aren’t just for show. Arsenal, Manchester United, and Real Madrid will be wearing the new designs for pregame warmups, while Juventus sported theirs during a match on Oct. 25. FC Bayern Munich is planning to wear their new jerseys during their next domestic cup game. Unfortunately for fans, several of the jerseys are sold out at the moment, so we’ll have to content ourselves with admiring them afar. Check out all six versions ahead!

Categories
Culture

Climate Moms to the Rescue!

In February, a couple weeks before COVID-19 spread through the U.S., a group of mothers in San Diego gathered in a living room under colorful balloons and a birthday banner from a recent party. One mom brought her baby girl to the meeting, dressed in a fuzzy pink vest. The mothers, most of whom are Mexican-American, live in San Ysidro, a neighborhood of San Diego close to the U.S.-Mexico border. They were there to discuss how the San Ysidro School District had cut a bus route, forcing some of their children to walk a few miles to and from school each day.

Sandy Naranjo, a mother of two who organized the meeting, told the group that slashing the school district’s transportation budget was connected to other disparities. She passed around her laptop with a map showing local pollution levels, zeroing in on a swathe of wealthier neighborhoods to the north that had been colored green to indicate low levels of air pollution. Naranjo then zoomed in on the patches of red and orange—the areas with high air pollution. The mothers’ eyes widened as they pointed out their neighborhoods. “Why didn’t we know about this?” one said with alarm.

Some women are opting not to have biological children due to the climate crisis—a topic that attracted more attention after congresswoman Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez mentioned it during a recent Instagram live-stream. “There’s scientific consensus that the lives of children are going to be very difficult,” she said. “And it does lead young people to have a legitimate question: Is it OK to still have children?” In the United Kingdom, some women are formally abstaining through BirthStrike, a group committed to the movement. Proponents cite a 2017 study that suggests having fewer children is the greatest lifestyle choice people can make to shrink their carbon footprint.

kelsey wirth, co founder of mothers out front, protests at the youth climate strikes in boston in september 2019

Kelsey Wirth, co-founder of Mothers Out Front, protests at the Youth Climate strikes in Boston in September 2019.

Eric Haynes

For years, though, a starkly different movement has been taking hold as well. The women who met in San Diego to discuss air pollution are part of Mothers Out Front, a growing crusade of moms, grandmothers, and caretakers pressing their communities to adopt climate-friendly policies. Their motivation rests on a different notion: that mothers are in a distinct position to leverage change—that their appeals to protect children might uniquely resonate with those in power. And so far, it’s working: Since 2016, the group has successfully pushed Massachusetts and California to adopt new laws promoting clean energy and regulating gas leaks, convinced dozens of cities and towns to embrace renewables, and stopped or postponed gas projects in Massachusetts, Virginia, and New York. “I sensed in my feelings of despair and outrage, there was power in that, a mother’s love for her children,” says cofounder Kelsey Wirth.

The idea for the organization began in 2011 when Wirth, the former president of Align Technology, which makes Invisalign, was reading her three-year old daughter a book about coral reefs. As she flipped through the book’s vivid drawings, she realized coral reefs could potentially go extinct during her daughter’s lifetime. Wirth was familiar with climate issues through her father, Tim Wirth, a former U.S. senator and congressman from Colorado who helped co-sponsor some of the first Congressional hearings on global warming in 1988. It occurred to Wirth that, all these years later, not much had changed.

In 2012, Wirth met with Vanessa Rule, a longtime climate organizer and fellow mother, and together they launched Mothers Out Front in Massachusetts the following year. They organized hundreds of house parties across the Boston area, where mothers discussed important local climate-related issues. From there, chapters opened in New York and then spread to Virginia, Colorado, California, and Missouri. The group now has over 23,000 members nationwide.

There is a long history of mothers in the environmental movement. In the early 20th century, many American women campaigning for clean air and water were open that motherhood was the force behind their activism. At the time, lobbying as mothers allowed women to participate in politics, according to Dr. Susan Conradsen, a professor of psychology and women’s studies at Berry College in Georgia, who has studied maternal activism.

I sensed in my feelings of despair and outrage, there was power in that, a mother’s love for her children.

Decades later, as women gained more rights, activists relied less on their role as mothers, though some continued to embrace it. In the 1960s, women protesting pollution from nuclear testing held out photos of their children. Throughout the 1980s and ‘90s, mothers across the country led campaigns against toxic waste in their communities. Conradsen says that present day activists are following in those women’s footsteps by reclaiming the title of “mother” without fear that it will diminish their authority. “We don’t have to only use it and we don’t have to dismiss it,” she said. “It can be part of our identity.”

Many members of Mothers Out Front are seasoned activists, while others are recruited at school functions and are learning about climate issues for the first time. Leaders teach other moms about the legislative process and how to tell their own stories in a way that engages politicians. They also provide them with childcare while they attend hearings and protests. Though some moms choose to bring their children along when they meet with legislators to help drive their points home.

In June 2018, Gina Cacioppo, took her then infant daughter with her to the county legislature in Ithaca, New York, urging them to stop a local coal plant from transitioning to natural gas. (Although methane gas emits less carbon than coal, activists say gas can deter communities from adopting renewable energy, which would have greater impact in lowering global emissions.) As Cacioppo spoke, her daughter dangled from her in a baby sling, cooing and grasping at the microphone. “I’m asking you to protect my baby in a way that I cannot and I wish I could,” she told the legislators. Ultimately, the county legislature sent a letter to the plant opposing the transition and the plant announced they would use the space for a data center partially powered by solar energy instead. Mothers Out Front considers it one of their first major wins.

members of mothers out front march at the rise for climate protests in san francisco in september 2018

Members of Mothers Out Front march at the Rise for Climate protests in San Francisco in September 2018.

Emily Rose

Today, the group’s largest national campaign is to get school districts to switch to electric school buses, 94 percent of which are fueled with diesel in the U.S. One diesel school bus alone releases 27 tons of greenhouse gas emissions annually, which is equivalent to five gasoline-powered cars.

One of the moms steering the effort is Maria Villanueva, a member of the San Diego chapter. The issue is personal for her; in the early 2000s, her daughter developed severe asthma while living next to an autobody repair shop in National City, a suburb south of the city, which was zoned to allow dozens of industrial businesses, resulting in high air pollution. (In 2005, children in National City were hospitalized for asthma at a 57 percent higher rate than the county average.) Villanueva and the National City moms ultimately failed in their effort to get their district to adopt electric school buses, but Mothers Our Front succeeded in two other local school districts this year, including Chula Vista Elementary School District and San Ysidro.

Moms make all the difference in the world.

Mothers Out Front devotes considerable energy to linking fossil fuels—mostly from methane gas—to children’s health and safety. In 2016, after learning that children in homes with gas stoves have a higher risk of experiencing asthma, more than 100 mothers in Boston packed into a Boston City Council hearing (so tightly that one council member said there were “mothers everywhere!”). Ultimately the group succeeded in getting the Massachusetts Legislature to pass laws requiring utility companies to repair leaks more quickly, to address leaks that have environmental impact, and release information on “lost and unaccounted for gas.”

In Virginia, where the proposed Mountain Valley Pipeline, a 303-mile long natural gas pipeline starting in West Virginia, is under construction, Mothers Out Front brought together rural families who are uneasy about potential gas leaks. Desiree Shelley, an organizer in Roanoke and mom of two daughters, told me conversations about gas leaks and children’s health are particularly sensitive and that families can panic if they’re not also given potential solutions. Mothers Out Front is deliberate when giving families facts and advice. “Hope is important, but it can’t just be hope as some abstract idea,” Shelley says. “It has to be something that is attainable.”

On July 12th, during a hot weekend in San Diego, a fire broke out on a Navy ship docked a few miles off the city’s coast. Shortly after the fire began, a portion of the vessel exploded. Within a couple hours, Naranjo’s living room smelled like burning plastic, even with the windows shut. Her phone lit up with texts from mothers in the area: “Oh my gosh, can you breathe?” Then, the mothers started questioning why the government hadn’t notified them about the disaster.

As the stench lingered, Naranjo and her husband evacuated with their two young children, but she says other families couldn’t. The incident deepened the importance of one of their other campaigns in San Diego. Since the pandemic began, Naranjo and Villanueva teamed with other activists and doctors to persuade the city to create an office dedicated to environmental justice. In October, they won. The staff members will be bilingual and address problems that contribute to racial disparities in San Diego’s air pollution, like zoning and permit decisions for polluting businesses—issues the mothers say have been long overlooked. For Villanueva, the victory means she may one day watch her daughter play sports outdoors without worrying about what she’s inhaling. “[Moms doing this activism] makes a difference,” she said. “It makes all the difference in the world.”

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Categories
Women's Fashion

Carly Cushnie Is Shutting Down Her Eponymous Label

cushnie   runway   september 2018   new york fashion week the shows

Frazer HarrisonGetty Images

Since the start of the pandemic in March, the fashion industry has been devastated in more ways than one. Cushnie, the beloved fashion brand known for its sleek, demure designs, is the latest victim to succumb to COVID-19’s damaging affects. Today, designer Carly Cushnie announced that she’s been forced to shut down operations for good.

In a note released early Thursday morning on Instagram, Cushnie explained that “while my brand has persevered through unending headwinds, the effects of COVID-19 have hurt my business beyond repair, and it is with great sadness that I share Cushnie will be closing its doors.” The designer first launched Cushnie as Cushnie et Ochs with her former business partner Michelle Ochs in 2008. Cushnie went solo in 2018 when her partner left the company and dropped the “et Ochs” from the name. What followed were more bold, sensual designs, and even more celebrity fans, including Michelle Obama, Beyoncé, Priyanka Chopra, Halle Berry, and that Rihanna dress moment. Most recently, Cushnie was tapped to join fellow labels Lisa Marie Fernandez and LoveShackFancy for Target’s Designer Dress Collection, giving Target customers designer threads at an accessible price point.

This content is imported from Instagram. You may be able to find the same content in another format, or you may be able to find more information, at their web site.

In the note, Cushnie lists her other accomplishments, from dressing the aforementioned celebrities to joining the Board of Directors of the CFDA. But she recognized that all of her feats couldn’t insulate her from the fashion industry’s deeply-embedded prejudices against women. “One of the great ironies of the fashion industry is that while it caters to and profits from women, it has never felt like an industry that supports them,” she wrote.

Cushnie ended on a hopeful note, implying that while her brand might be shutting down, “my passion for design has never been stronger.” She added: “I recognize the power of my presence and will continue to fight for the causes and values I believe in, and will always continue to create.”

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Categories
Women's Fashion

15 Ways to Try the Sweater Dress Trend if You’re Sick of Sweatsuits

Photo by Daniel Zuchnik/Getty Images

Comfort never looked so good.

If you’ve come to the point where elastic waistbands just aren’t cutting it or you want to dress things up without sacrificing comfort, the sweater dress trend is for you. Opt for a body-con or billowy silhouette for a look that is very versatile – the ’70s-inspired soft stretchy shapes celebrate curves, à la Emily Ratajkowski.

Worn over pants, like leather leggings, or grounded with a lug sole boot, this look can take loungewear up a notch to office appropriate. A sleeveless style is perfect with a white shirt underneath or wear your chunky knit with shearling slippers around the house. Feel more productive as you work from home in something that is just as cozy as your go-to lounge set but channels runway looks from Bottega Venetta and The Row. We say it’s time to embrace the freedom of a comfortable staple you’ll be living in all season long.

Click through for our favourite takes on the sweater dress trend:

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Video

Chernobyl Doctor Fact Checks the HBO Series | Vanity Fair

Ukrainian medical responder and radiation expert Alla Shapiro reviews the validity of the HBO series “Chernobyl.” Alla shares some real-life on-site experiences to explain whether clips from the series are true to what actually happened on April 26th, 1986 and the days that followed.

Dr. Shapiro received a Medical degree and a PhD degree in Kiev, Ukraine where she was trained in pediatric hematology. After Chernobyl she was one of the first medical responders sent to the most radiation contaminated areas, and headed the field team surveying the medical effects on children in the Chernobyl vicinity.

In 1989, Dr. Shapiro and her family became stateless refugees, spending 6 months in refugee camps in Italy, before immigrating to the U.S. She completed a residency in pediatrics at Georgetown University Hospital and a fellowship in pediatric oncology at the National Institute of Health. Shortly after 9/11, she became a Medical Officer at the Counter-Terrorism and Emergency Coordination Staff at the US Food and Drug Administration and evaluated drugs that treat people who have been exposed to harmful levels of radiation.

Dr. Shapiro is currently completing a book manuscript entitled Extraordinary Journey of the Stateless: From the Shadows of Chernobyl to the Lights of Washington.

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Chernobyl Doctor Fact Checks the HBO Series | Vanity Fair

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Fitness

I Tried the Surprisingly Soothing Meditations on Chris Hemsworth’s Fitness App

Young sporty woman practicing yoga

This week, Chris Hemsworth blessed Instagram with a series of mini-meditations featuring the Aussie actor reciting affirmations in different gorgeous, scenic locations. Hilariously titled “Affirmations That Positively, Absolutely, Probably (Most Likely) Won’t Make Your 2020 Worse,” the humorous videos were actually promoting Hemsworth’s fitness app Centr, which offers real meditations.

I decided to try the meditations on Centr for myself after being sold by the soothing sound of Hemsworth’s voice in the promos. In addition to mindfulness content, Centr has six-week fitness programs, coached and self-guided workouts, and health-conscious recipes. After a free seven-day trial, there are three price options – one month for $30, three months for $60, and 12 months for $120.

With well over 50 meditations and sleep visualizations to choose from, it’s virtually impossible not to find one that piques your interest. Some are specific, like “how to heal in a relationship” or “judge less, live lighter” and others are more general, like “deep breath.” One of them is even called “stop giving a f*ck in a few minutes,” which seems like an ambitious — albeit admirable goal — for a 15-minute meditation.

There is, however, one major downside to the meditations on Centr. Unfortunately, the only sessions narrated by Hemsworth himself are for children. But, if you do happen to have any little ones at home, I highly recommend you introduce them to meditation with the dulcet tones of Thor’s voice.

Since I am fairly new to practicing, I chose to keep it simple. I tried out the “everyday mindfulness” meditation, as it incorporates one of my personal goals of being more mindful in my daily life.

Over the course of about seven minutes, the meditation encourages awareness of your surroundings as you go through seemingly mundane activities like drinking your morning coffee. The narrator first talks you through grounding yourself physically by taking note of your breath, the scents and sounds around you, your feet on the ground, and your back against your chair. The narrator then explains how that level of mindfulness can be accessed outside of meditation.

“When you have a shower, or brush your teeth, practice being fully tuned in and connected to your experience,” the narrator instructs. “The feel of warm water on your skin, the smell of soap, the taste of toothpaste, the sound of water splashing.”

Overall, I appreciated how meditation made me really focus on the moments of my everyday life that I take for granted and offered tools to be more present in those moments.

While I can’t necessarily promise that I will notice the pitter-patter of rain on my window every time there’s inclement weather, I will definitely be making an effort to be less distracted by my thoughts throughout the day.

Click here for more health and wellness stories, tips, and news.

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Culture

Karlie Kloss Is Reportedly Pregnant With Her First Child With Husband Joshua Kushner

Karlie Kloss and her husband Joshua Kushner are starting a family, People reports. A source close to Kloss told the outlet that the model is pregnant and due next year. “Karlie is overjoyed to be expecting her first child in 2021,” the source said. “She will be the most amazing mother.”

The couple wed in October 2018 after dating for six years. Kloss announced the news of their New York wedding on her Instagram at the time.

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She announced their engagement in July 2018: “I love you more than I have words to express,” she wrote. “Josh, you’re my best friend and my soulmate. I can’t wait for forever together. Yes a million times over.”

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Kloss made headlines earlier this week when she endorsed Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden in her voting Instagram post. Kushner’s older brother is President Donald Trump’s advisor Jared Kushner, who’s married to the President’s daughter Ivanka Trump. Both Kloss and her husband are liberal.

“What’s your voting plan?” Kloss captioned her post. “This was mine—signed, sealed, (notarized), and delivered ✅ #voteBLUE #scienceoverfiction”

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Kloss spoke in July 2019 about her ties to President Trump. “It’s been hard,” she started. “But I choose to focus on the values that I share with my husband, and those are the same liberal values that I was raised with and that have guided me throughout my life.”

She spoke similarly to The New York Times in September 2018 about it. “Josh and I share a lot of the same liberal values that guide our lives and the things we stand for,” she said. “We’ve really grown together personally and professionally [over our six years dating]. Josh knows that I’m just a nerdy, curious human being. I think that’s why he loves me. We have each other’s back.”

Kloss has not confirmed her pregnancy on social media yet.

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