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Women's Fashion

Nordstrom Canada Announces it Will Stop Selling Fur and Exotic Skins

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The materials will be phased out by the end of 2021.

Nordstrom Canada has joined the growing list of department stores, designers and e-tailers worldwide to go fur-free. Plus, the Seattle-born company is also going one step further by banning exotic skins, too (making it the first retailer in the US to do so). The materials will be phased out of all brick-and-mortar and online stores by the end of 2021.

The company says the move was prompted by growing customer feedback and following conversations with the Humane Society of the United States. “As part of our ongoing product evolution, we’ve been working with the Humane Society of the United States and recently made the decision to stop offering products made with genuine fur or exotic animal skin in any of our stores or online. Our private label brands haven’t used these materials for years, so extending this policy to all the brands we carry is a natural next step for our business,” Teri Bariquit, the company’s chief merchandising officer, said in a statement.

The company outlined further details of the policy online, noting that the banned furs include mink, fox, lynx, chinchilla, rabbit, coyote, astrakhan/karakul lamb, kangaroo and raccoon dog, among others – in line with the Fur Free Alliance’s guidelines around animals that are killed solely for their fur. The exotic skins policy includes (but is not limited to) lizard, snake, python, alligatorm crocodile, ostrich, kangaroo, and stingray. Nordstrom also outlined that it will continue to sell leather goods made from the byproducts of the meat, agriculture and livestock industries, feathers and down products that are not sourced via live plucking and shearling and calf hair products.

In a release, Kitty Block, the president and CEO of the Humane Society of the United States, added, “This is a pivotal step toward a more humane business model and a safer world for animals, sending a clear message that animals should not suffer for the sake of fashion. Nordstrom’s decision will surely have a ripple effect on other influential fashion leaders.”

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Video

Anna Wintour’s NYFW Wrap Up: “Trend is a Dirty Word” – New York Fashion Week Fall 2015 – Style.com

In this exclusive video, the Vogue editor in chief talks to Tim Blanks about her favorite collections of New York fashion week, the importance of a strong point of view, and why she’s over the T word.

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Anna Wintour’s NYFW Wrap Up: "Trend is a Dirty Word" – New York Fashion Week Fall 2015 – Style.com

Starring: Tim Blanks
Featuring: Anna Wintour
Director: Marina Valle
Executive Producer: Harris Levinson

Produced by: Emoticon Productions (@emoticonprod)
Video shot by: IDM Productions (@indigital_media)

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Fitness

I Exercise to Celebrate My Body Instead of Punishing It, and I’m Much Happier For It

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As a teenager and college student, I struggled with body image and disordered eating. I used disordered eating to handle my emotions and feel more in control of my life. One way this played out was through movement: I would use exercise to punish myself and my body for what I’d eaten, especially if I deemed the amount “too much.” I saw exercise purely as a way to burn calories. I saw exercise as numbers, as ellipticals, and as late-night trips to the gym. I saw exercise as the means to an end, as something I “had” to do.

But then I realized how unhappy I felt. In my gut, I knew my behaviors were unhealthy and unsustainable. I knew a happier life was possible, one in which I spent free time hanging out with friends and engaged in exercises I found enjoyable, which hardly included an elliptical. I knew living my life by arbitrary numbers was not the way to go.

And not only did I know this deep down, but I was also preaching it to others. For most of my time in college, I was co-chair of Embody Carolina, an organization that focuses on eating disorder education, awareness, body positivity, and social justice. I co-led trainings on how to be an effective and compassionate ally to friends with eating disorders: friends whose eating and exercise behaviors were like mine.

Eating disorders are rampant on college campuses, in which up to 25 percent of students have one. Additionally, some studies have found up to 42 percent of people who go to the gym have a harmful relationship with exercise. Overexercise has serious effects, too: It can lead to constant exhaustion, brittle nails, hair loss, insomnia, recurrent injuries, and more.

I didn’t want to be a part of that statistic anymore. I wanted to have a full life and a college experience filled with amazing memories. I wanted to stop hating and punishing myself for what I ate. I realized my body does so much for me — it helps me go places and meet up with friends, it allows me to dance, and it keeps me alive and healthy. In response, the least I could do was treat it right. My body and I had done nothing wrong by eating and enjoying food, and my life would be happier once I was healthier. I’d worked on recovering before, and I knew I could do it again.

I had to make myself okay with skipping workouts and saying “no” to the disordered parts of myself.

I didn’t go right into exercising another way, though: I had to take a break from working out first. I had to make myself okay with skipping workouts and saying “no” to the disordered parts of myself. I had to realize my lack of strenuous exercise didn’t make me a bad person. I had to re-envision exercise as something that could make me feel good mentally rather than something that would affect my weight.

Once I became healthier, I dove back into dance, an exercise I truly love. I attended Zumba classes with an old roommate and didn’t try to figure out the calories I burned. I started taking dance technique classes with a dance group on campus, in which I learned how to do jumps, turns, and leaps I’d always wanted to do but never learned how to growing up. I realized how cool it is and how privileged I am that my body can (or at least attempt to) do so many fancy, impressive dance moves. My exercise was far from about punishment at this point: my exercise turned into learning choreography and feeling proud of myself when I improved. I even became one of the winners of the technique award due to my commitment and improvement.

We live in a diet-culture-filled world, in which feeling okay about what we eat and how we look is close to impossible sometimes. But, let me tell you this: a life free of diet culture and body judgments is one worth fighting for. It’s worth the hard days and therapy sessions. It’s worth the awkward conversations in which you have to “call in” friends who engage in “diet talk” and “fat talk.” I’m so thankful I’m able to exercise my body through learning choreography, and that I do it because I love it and want to celebrate my particular body’s abilities.

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Culture

Who Is The Masked Singer’s Pink Crocodile?

One night after…whatever that first presidential debate was, those of us who are choosing to escape reality by watching season 4 of Fox’s The Masked Singer will be introduced to another round of contestants. Group B of the cast will perform tonight, and in that group we’ll meet Serpent, Seahorse, Baby Alien, Gremlin, Crocodile, and Whatchamacallit.

Last week, the show unmasked the first contestant, Busta Rhymes, who performed LL Cool J’s “Momma Said Knock You Out” inside a dragon costume.

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Tonight promises to be an exciting one for fans. As E! reported, one of the Group B contestants will take off their mask and eliminate themselves from the competition tonight, so that everyone else in the group moves forward and stays in the game. In preview for the episode, panelist Ken Jeong said, “It’s gonna change the show forever!”

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We don’t know who this history-making contestant is yet, but there are several theories about this week’s crew of singers. Most importantly, there are theories that the singer under the pink crocodile costume could be a major music icon. Per TV Guide, panelist Robin Thicke has suspicions that the person behind the mask is a boy-band member from Boston, and suspects the contestant could be Donnie Wahlberg, former member of New Kids on the Block and panelist Jenny McCarthy Wahlberg’s husband.

Fans have also started guessing about the pink croc, and none of their theories include Donnie Wahlberg. But some of them are pretty interesting.

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“A special set of keys reversed my game forever,” Crocodile says for their first clue in the clue package, adding: “Tik tac, woah!” They later say, “You’ve never met a reptile like me” in the intro clues.

Here are a few of the theories.

Elton John

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Some commenters on YouTube and Instagram think Rocket Man is behind the sparkly Crocodile costume. This guess seems be based on the elaborate design of the costume and the obvious “Crocodile Rock” connection.

Chris Colfer

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Colfer, whom fans guessed was The Masked Singer U.K.’s Unicorn (that was actually Scissor Sisters member Jake Shears) is once again coming up as a possible contestant.

Neil Patrick Harris

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NPH is coming up in the same comment as Colfer; both have helped bring visibility to LGBTQ+ musical entertainers, so these related guesses make sense.

Jason Derulo

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Others seem to have tuned into the “Tik” clue. Is this maybe a reference to the singer’s presence on TikTok?

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Swizz Beatz

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Some people have latched onto the “special keys” clue and think the contestant is Swizz Beatz, aka Alicia Keys’s husband.

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YouTube

Here’s hoping we get some more actual tonight. And who knows—maybe the Croc will be the contestant who takes off their mask in an unprecedented show of self-sacrifice.

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Women's Fashion

Kerby Jean-Raymond is Reebok’s New Creative Director

When Kerby Jean-Raymond joined forces with Reebok in 2017, the Pyer Moss designer had one job: to create a sneaker and a few clothing items to support the shoe’s debut. That inaugural collection blossomed into an ongoing partnership between the two brands that spawned several collections and sneakers. After making an indelible mark on the legacy sportswear brand, where do you go next? Global Creative Director of Reebok, of course. “Or technically…Vice President of Creative Direction,” the designer announced on Instagram.

“Every time an interviewer would ask me what else I’d want to be a creative director for I would never say, but in my head it was always a footwear brand. Gotta shake shit up a lil yuh know? Thank you @reebok. I haven’t had a job in 9 years, so please get me a lunch box,” Jean-Raymond wrote on an Instagram post announcing the news.

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In his new role, Jean-Raymond will lend his creative eye to all of Reebok’s design strategies and will work alongside the brand’s global marketing and development team to execute his ideas, “while also focusing on instilling a sense of social purpose into our work,” he said in a press release. Jean-Raymond will report to Reebok president Matt O’Toole.

“Kerby is a fashion visionary with a bold approach who has established himself as a leader and a passionate activist,” O’Toole said in a statement. “We are incredibly excited about the impact he will have on Reebok from a design and brand purpose perspective and for him to bring his unique voice and direction to the Reebok brand more broadly. This is certainly a big opportunity for both Reebok and for Kerby– he understands the value of our rich heritage and iconic silhouettes and how he can build on that and take Reebok in an exciting and evolved direction.”

Jean-Raymond will also be involved in Reebok’s Product with Purpose program, part of the brand’s United Against Racism commitments, launching in 2021. The following year, Jean-Raymond will debut all of the products created under his creative direction.

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Women's Fashion

Schitt’s Creek Topped Social Media Charts After the Emmys

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In other words, it’s simply the best.

Following their Emmys sweep earlier this month, Schitt’s Creek shot to the top of global social media charts. According to The Hollywood Reporter, the Canadian show reached No. 1 on its Social Climbers chart, a weekly list ranking the most popular TV personalities and shows on Facebook, Instagram, Twitter and YouTube.

The chart’s methodology “blends engagement to entities’ social media accounts along with weekly additions of followers/subscribers,” and is based on global data provided by social media analytics company MVP. For the first time ever, Schitt’s Creek snagged the top spot in THR’s Top Scripted list, recording gains in all social metrics this past week. It received 3.4 million Instagram favourites, up 3,781%; and 982,000 Twitter likes, a boost of 3,239%.

In addition, Dan Levy (who took home Emmys for writing, directing and acting that night) entered the Top Actors list for the first time. His social media metrics included 1.8 million Instagram favourites and 1.3 million Twitter likes, plus 98,000 new Instagram followers and 83,000 new Twitter followers. Other actors on the list dated September 30 include Dwayne Johnson, Viola Davis, Jennifer Aniston and Henry Cavill.

Though Schitt’s Creek had been on the air for six seasons, it was only during its final season that it racked up a whopping 15 Emmy nominations (earning four nods but no wins in its prior season). Its 9 Emmy wins this year make it the only comedy to ever have taken home so many statuettes in a single season. The 2020 awards ceremony also marked the first time in Emmys history that one show swept all four acting categories—Annie Murphy, Catherine O’Hara, Dan Levy and Eugene Levy all took home awards for their portrayal of the iconic Roses.

The final season of the show aired on CBC from January through April 2020, but it’s only landing on Netflix now. Mark your calendars, season 6 drops on the streaming platform on October 7.

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Beauty

You Need to Buy a Pair of Crocs

There’s a reason that Bad Bunny collab sold out so fast

It’s official: You need a pair of Crocs. Why? Because they’re the hottest item of 2020—just ask rapper Bad Bunny and the hordes of people who purchased his recent collaboration with the iconic comfy shoe brand. Released on September 29, the musician’s limited Crocs collab—which featured glow-in-the-dark Jibbitz charms (the small decorations used on top of the shoes)—quickly sold out.

And it’s not the first limited edition celebrity drop from the chunky rubber shoe brand to go viral and sell out ASAP. Crocs has teamed up *multiple* times with rapper Post Malone for his brand of Crocs and Jibbitz (a partnership that reportedly came out of Malone’s actual IRL love for the shoe brand and sold out in 10 minutes!). They’ve also collaborated with actor Ruby Rose, luxury store Barney’s New York and even Kentucky Fried Chicken (the latter of which came with fried chicken-scented Jibbitz).

And in December 2019, rapper Rico Nasty even shed tears over the now-iconic brand after her Crocs were confiscated by airport security (as she noted in her tweet about the incident, the sacred footwear in question was later returned).

So needless to say, people are bonkers for these rubbery clogs—but why? What’s up with this Crocs moment? FLARE investigates.

Everyone is working from home

Right up there with the sweatsuit, Crocs seem to have had a resurgence in popularity thanks in part to COVID-19 and the need for people to stay home. With fewer folks having to wear their carefully curated outfits into the office, people are generally going for comfort over style when it comes to their WFH fits (although there are *a ton* of stylish sweatsuits, cute house shoes and comfy yet chic WFH options out there), and this seems like the environment in which Crocs can thrive. Long seen as the shoe of choice for geriatric gardeners or veterinarian assistants, with no one from your 9-5 cushy office job to judge you, now *anyone* in *any* profession can rock them at their “desk” (i.e. their bed or couch)!

Ever wanted to try out a pair of Crocs but were worried that you wouldn’t have anywhere to wear them? Seize the day! Because no one has anywhere to wear anything at the moment!

Read this next: Why Did Crocs Collaborate with Post Malone?

Crocs are *actually* comfy AF

And not only are Crocs now stylish, but also, they’re actually super comfortable. Have you ever slipped your tiny twinkle toes into an authentic Croc? No, we’re not talking about the (still very good) knock-offs you can get at the dollar store, but a *real* Croc. You might as well be shimmying into Cinderella’s glass slippers—because they’re actual perfection; which is high praise for an aerated rubber shoe.

Plus, turns out there’s a reason so many sweet old nanas rock them while tending to their gardens—they’re functional as heck! They can be worn in water or transitioned into a house slipper, meaning that the world truly is your oyster.

Read this next: The Best Sweatsuits to Work From Home In

And Crocs are the only reliable thing we have in this world right now

The final reason Crocs seem to be having the greatest comeback since J.Lo’s romcom career? Because with the world in a state of perpetual fire (sometimes literally), they appear to be the only thing we can depend on. Steadfast, Crocs have been there through our most difficult times, always with a comforting or funny Jibbitz to cheer us up. While their Jibbitz may change, Crocs remain the same in size, comfort and dependability. Plus, who can hate on a brand that so authentically has remained itself? Despite being dragged on for its looks, Crocs has remained true to its ethos: dependable shoes that sometimes smell like fried chicken, and it’s paying off for them.

Read this next: WTF Do You Wear to WFH?

So, the world may be burning and democracy may be dying, but at least we have Crocs.