Categories
Culture

Prince Harry Says He Feels Unsafe Bringing His and Meghan Markle’s Kids Lilibet and Archie to the U.K.

Don’t expect to see Prince Harry and Meghan Markle’s children Lilibet “Lili” Diana and Archie in the U.K. imminently with their parents. The Associated Press reports that Harry’s lawyers argued during a hearing against the U.K. government today that the Duke of Sussex does not feel safe bringing his family to Britain since he is not allowed to pay for police protection out of pocket for them. He is fighting in court for the right to pay for police protection so they can visit.

Per AP, Harry “wants to be able to pay for the protection” and has claimed “his private security team in the U.S. doesn’t have adequate jurisdiction abroad or access to U.K. intelligence information.” As ABC 7 pointed out, senior royal family members are provided taxpayer-funded police protection. Since Harry and Meghan stepped back from their senior royal family roles two years ago, they lost that privilege.

Harry’s lawyer Shaheed Fatima said during the London High Court hearing today, via E!, that “this claim is about the fact that the Duke does not feel safe when he is in the U.K. given the security arrangements applied to him in June 2021 and will continue to be applied if he decides to come back. It goes without saying that he does want to come back to see family and friends and to continue to support the charities that are so close to his heart. This is and always will be his home.”

The British government’s lawyer Robert Palmer, called Harry’s claim “unarguable.” He added in a written submission, per AP, that police protection isn’t something anyone can purchase. “Personal protective security by the police is not available on a privately financed basis,” he wrote.

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Categories
Women's Fashion

31 Presidents’ Day Fashion Sales Worth Shopping

It’s almost Presidents’ Day, which means one of the most underrated long weekends of the calendar year for sniffing out fashion deals is upon us. If you’re unsure of which virtual sale bins to sift through first (fair), you’ve come to the right place. We’ve compiled a list of noteworthy Presidents’ Day fashion sales you won’t want to skip. From Nordstrom’s annual winter sale to steep markdowns on athleisure from Adidas, Bandier, and more, the sales taking place right now will have you more than covered if you’re in need of a break from the same few outfits you’ve been wearing on repeat. Ahead, shop the 31 best Presidents’ Day fashion sales of the long weekend.

Adidas

Take 30% off with code SCORE from February 16-22.

SHOP NOW

Amazon

Shop various markdowns on fashion, sneakers, accessories and more.

SHOP NOW

Athleta

Take up to 50% off sale styles from February 17 to February 21. Then, take an extra 20% off previous markdowns on 2/21.

    SHOP NOW

    Asics

    Take an additional 15% on already reduced apparel and accessories with code PRESDAY now through February 22.

    SHOP NOW

    Ba&sh

    Take an extra 25% off all sale styles from February 17 to February 22 with code BASHWKND25.

    SHOP NOW

    Bandier

    Save up to 80% off select styles during Bandier’s Warehouse Sale now through February 21.

    SHOP NOW

    Bernardo

    Take 15% off with code EPIC15 from February 17 to February 21.

    SHOP NOW

    Cos

    Previous markdowns are an extra 20% off for the long weekend, no code necessary at checkout.

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    Frame

    Sale denim styles are an extra 30% off during Presidents’ Day weekend.

    SHOP NOW

    Hudson Jeans

    Take 25% off sitewide with code FEB25 from February 17 to February 21.

    SHOP NOW

    J. Crew

    First, take an extra 50% off sale styles and 25% off full priced styles through February 19. Then, take an extra 60% off sale styles and 25% off full priced items on February 20 and 21. Purchases made on February 21 come with free shipping.

    SHOP NOW

    Joe’s Jeans

    Take 25% off full price items with code 25OFF from February 17 to February 22.

    SHOP NOW

    GlassesUSA.com

    Now through February 22, take 65% off frames for eyeglasses and sunglasses with basic Rx lenses with code PREZ65. All lens upgrades for eyeglasses and sunglasses are 50% off with code LENSES50. Designer brands such as Prada, Gucci, Michael Kors, Versace, and more are 40% off with code DESIGNER40.

      SHOP NOW

      Kate Spade

      Select full price items are 25% off with code BLOOM until February 21.

      SHOP NOW

      Koio

      Take 25% off select styles beginning February 18. A variety of flash sales will also be kicking off on February 23.

      SHOP NOW

      Levi’s

      Take 30% off sitewide, plus take an extra 50% off sale, from February 15 through February 22.

      SHOP NOW

      Madewell

      Take $25 off purchases of $150+ online until February 24.

      SHOP NOW

      Maje

      Take up to 50% off select winter styles. Some exclusions apply.

      SHOP NOW

      Margaux

      Save up to 70% on select styles during Margaux’s archive sale, happening now until February 22.

      SHOP NOW

      MyTheresa

      New customers can take 10% off orders worth $700+ with code REWARD10US until February 24. Select sale styles are currently up to 40% off as well.

        SHOP NOW

          Net-a-Porter

          Take an extra 20% off sale styles during Net-a-Porter’s final reductions sale.

          SHOP NOW

          Nordstrom

          Select styles are up to 60% off from February 18 until February 28 during Nordstrom’s annual winter sale.

          SHOP NOW

          Percival

          Take up to 60% off select styles and shop Percival’s ongoing archival sale now.

          SHOP NOW

          Reebok

          Take 35% off sitewide with code OHYEAH from February 18 until February 25.

          SHOP NOW

          Revolve

          In Revolve’s end of winter sale, find coats, denim, and more for up to 50% off.

          SHOP NOW

          Saks Fifth Avenue

          Select designer styles are currently up to 75% off. You’ll also find select Sam markdowns and Apparis markdowns for 25% off until February 24.

          SHOP NOW

          Sandro

          Take up to 50% off select styles during Sandro’s seasonal sale. Some exclusions apply.

          SHOP NOW

          White House Black Market

          From February 22 until February 25, tiered discounts will get you up to $125 off purchases of $300 or more.

            SHOP NOW

            Urban Outfitters

            Take 30% off all sale items until February 21.

              SHOP NOW

                Verishop

                Clearance sale items are an extra 30% off with code MINE22 until February 28.

                SHOP NOW

                  Vince

                  Take an extra 25% off sale styles with code EXTRA25 through February 22.

                  SHOP NOW

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                  Categories
                  Life & Love

                  Serena Kerrigan Does It All for the Plot—And Then Some

                  The sun is just beginning to set on another Valentine’s Day when Serena Kerrigan, a 27-year-old confidence coach-cum-entrepreneur-cum-certified internet personality, bestows upon me an unusual gift: the diary she began keeping after her first kiss in the fifth grade. In a little over an hour, the lights will go up on her third live show—a two-hour-long storytelling experience where a stilettoed Kerrigan sashays to and fro, spinning yarns about an adolescence punctuated by mean girls and slightly traumatic summer camps and an adulthood punctuated by…well, she’d likely use a less polite term, but I’ll call it a healthy dose of discovery. Sexual, for certain, but of herself in general.

                  Kerrigan’s brand, otherwise known as SFK—or Serena Fucking Kerrigan, coined after a long-standing joke that she changed her middle name during her freshman year at Duke University because the f-word simply added more panache—is revered by some hundreds of thousands of Gen Z and Millennial women on Instagram and TikTok for its simple approach to improving one’s life, self-esteem, and relationships. Her wisdom isn’t groundbreaking (“you write, produce, direct and star in your life) nor does it leave room for much nuance (“if it’s not a fuck yes, it’s a fuck no”) but evidence that her message resonates isn’t difficult to find among the throngs of devotees—all leather-clad and claw-clipped—who’ve arrived just as the doors open. I don’t overhear a single person lodging their displeasure over the holiday, only squealing in anticipation and complimenting each other’s takes on Euphoria makeup.

                  I’m backstage just long enough for the native New York to greet me like an old friend, offering a “You look cute,” before she grabs the diary and starts flipping through its pages.

                  “My dad bid for this on eBay,” she tells me, lifting it for me to get a better look. It’s made by Juicy Couture and exactly no part of me is shocked, though I’m amused by the thought of how many other moms and dads would’ve bid on a designer diary for their child to doodle about hating their parents. She adjusts her cropped sweatsuit, tucks her legs under herself on the couch, and begins to read a passage.

                  “I hooked up with Jesse. We both went to second. I didn’t think it was a big deal but just to be safe, I told him not to tell anyone. But those things turned around completely. Everyone knew, the teachers called our parents, and now apparently, I’m a slut? I don’t understand. When a guy hooks up with many girls, he’s called a pimp in a good way. When a girl hooks up with many guys, she’s called a slut in a bad way. Huh? Before I thought hooking up was cool. Now it’s slutty. How did we get here?”

                  While many of us have likely pondered the same question, posed it to an elder or a friend in frustration, and probably sparred with someone of the opposite sex in a futile attempt to regain control of the narrative, perhaps it’s simpler to instead discuss how Kerrigan got here: curled up in this green room, trying to make sense of a memento saved from a not-so-simpler time, as 200 women who consider her the best friend they’ve never met wait for her to take the stage.

                  squiggle line

                  In February 2020, just before the world was plunged into a pandemic, Kerrigan quit her job as a video producer and content creator for Refinery29 to begin building her brand. Her mother, an executive vice president at MTV, and her father, a director and screenwriter, had always advised Kerrigan to maintain agency in her career. After three years at Refinery29, this was the first step, but just one month later, agency became hard to come by: As the pandemic began, thousands across the country were laid off and millions were confined to their homes under the constant threat of illness. Even those who ordinarily don’t crave the social trappings of real life—like going on first dates—found themselves longing for even one forced conversation in a crowded bar.

                  But Kerrigan, who was quarantining alone in her apartment in the East Village, saw the social stillness as an opportunity, and began going on blind dates and livestreaming them on Instagram. The show “Let’s Fucking Date” was born and became an overnight sensation, due in large part to Kerrigan’s take-no-prisoners wit and off-the-chart levels of self-confidence. The Today Show dubbed the show “Quarantine’s New Must-Watch,” it was honored by the Webby Awards, and drew 1.1 million views by the end of its “first season” alone.

                  Let’s Fucking Play Card Game

                  letsfuckingdate.com

                  $25.00

                  After an influx of DMs from inspired viewers, Kerrigan decided to put her teachings into fans’ hands, creating a card game, also named Let’s Fucking Date, to guide them through everything from resuscitating stale first or second dates to spicing up a long term relationship that’s losing its luster. On each card is a question like “What’s your biggest pet peeve on dates?” or “What’s the last text you sent about me?” And because seemingly everything Kerrigan touches somehow turns to gold, that too was a hit, and spawned two more X-rated iterations of the game, Let’s Fucking Fuck and Let’s Fucking Play, just months after the first release.

                  The latter deck, designed for self-exploration, was announced via OnlyFans, with a portion of the proceeds being donated to the Sex Workers Outreach Project (SWOP), a grassroots social justice network dedicated to protecting the rights of sex workers.

                  “With the launch, we really wanted to have a conversation about people owning their body and feeling free to do what they want with it,” Kerrigan told ELLE.com. “If it’s a means to make money, then that’s absolutely their prerogative. When I launched the OnlyFans, it was always just to launch the game and get my audience using the platform. We don’t want to take away from the creators who are actually on it to make a living.”

                  Though she won’t offer specifics, she teases there’s more to come from the partnership with SWOP in the near future. When I press her about backlash to the publicity push, she said the majority of the more mean reactions came from women.

                  “There were women like, ‘I thought you wanted to be the face of Chanel and go to the MET Gala,’” she recalls with an eye roll. “If I’m receiving this kind of hate, I can’t imagine the magnitude for, you know, minorities, and people of color that are using this platform as sex workers.”

                  I wondered aloud if she can truly understands the full ramifications of joining OnlyFans compared with those who can’t, say, quit a stable day job to build their brands. One of Kerrigan’s frequent mantras is, “Do it for the plot,”—her take on YOLO. But at what risk? And with what means?

                  “When I tell people to ‘Do it for the plot,’ I don’t mean, ‘Jump off a bridge and hope for the best.’ I’m saying that everything is a part of your story and the worst thing that can happen is dying without trying at all.”

                  “I realize that so much of my identity, being known as this queen of confidence and holding this position of power is intrinsically tied to my privilege. I’m fully aware that so much of my success has come from that,” she tells me. “I get messages from all kinds of people across the world all the time telling me they’re afraid—of changing jobs, of moving, of dating, everything. I guess, when I tell people to ‘Do it for the plot,’ I don’t mean, ‘Jump off a bridge and hope for the best.’ I’m saying that everything is a part of your story and the worst thing that can happen is dying without trying at all.”

                  Many of Kerrigan’s followers often remark how relatable she is, but there’s a strong case to be made that she’s quite the opposite. Her West Village apartment, a pristine sanctuary of varying shades of white—from egg shell to pearl—isn’t exactly representative of how many 20-somethings are living in New York. Nor is her social calendar (she was seated next to Candace Bushnell at a NYFW event), enviable wardrobe, and cadre of conventionally hot and financially comfortable friends. Last fall, paparazzi photos of her palling around with Sports Illustrated models like Nina Agdal and Brooks Nader made the rounds, as did quotes to Us Weekly about Scott Disick and Amelia Hamlin’s breakup.

                  No, Kerrigan is not relatable; she’s aspirational. And while it would be easy to reduce her to just another product of nepotism with too much time, money, and ego on her hands, I find myself stopping short on multiple occasions. Later in the evening, her publicist shares how deeply upset she was by a recent article that implied she doesn’t pay her staff. That reaction isn’t hard to imagine. She’s surprisingly self-aware, earnest to the point of endearing, and over-the-top eager to please those who’ve shown up tonight. Now that I found relatable.

                  serena kerrigan

                  Collins Nai

                  “Am I doing okay?” she asks no less than three times throughout our time together. Even Serena Fucking Kerrigan has her moments. I ask if she feels nervous as a staffer enters the room and makes adjustments to the temperature in the room where the show will be held.

                  “I’m sorry I just like, need a minute,” she says, visibly distracted. It’s clear that whatever she’s about to say, she wants to get absolutely right. Her publicist opens a bottle of champagne and when the staffer leaves the room, Kerrigan regains her concentration.

                  “I feel like if I weren’t nervous then the stakes wouldn’t be high enough. The fact that I am means that I’m doing what I’m supposed to be doing. But I do feel a responsibility to perform. People paid money, they took time out of their day. I want to make them laugh.”

                  Before I take my seat, I pose a few quick questions taken directly from all three of her card games. The first: “What’s better than an orgasm?”

                  “The people who tell me I’ve changed their life or the way they view themselves,” she replies. But at the risk of sounding too sentimental, she adds, “Although, I love cumming.”

                  squiggle line

                  “There’s nothing better than falling in love on Valentine’s Day. Is anyone falling in love right now?” Kerrigan asks the audience, who hoot and holler in enthusiastic response.

                  “Really? Because y’all are fucking here…” she deadpans. To no one’s surprise, the room is populated entirely by gaggles of women and their friends, gleefully being overcharged for cocktails with names like “The Lily Collins,” and giggling with their friends. Seated at a table next to me are two recent alums from the Bachelor universe, as is Kerrigan’s mother, Lily Neumeyer, who receives several dedications throughout the show and uproarious applause whenever she’s name-checked. She bashfully hides her face in her hands on each occasion, but especially after her daughter forgets a line and she blurts it from her seat.

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                  The live show felt like Kerrigan’s social media presence come alive, with her recounting dishy sexploits and reflecting on puberty, partying, and schemes gone awry. Kerrigan changed outfits four times during the show—five if you count her meet-and-greet dress—and around the halfway mark, she dons a black lace veil like an old Italian widow for a mock funeral to lay to rest the names of past hookups and relationships. The audience howls mostly male names into the drunken ether as Kerrigan tosses roses into the crowd.

                  But it’s not all debauchery and dates.

                  “We are indoctrinated to believe if we’re not soft launching a dude’s elbow, we’re lonely,” she waxes poetic at one point, encouraging her devotees to raise a glass and toast to friendship and the relationship we have with ourselves. I sneak a peek at the women nearest me and note a few collecting stray tears as they clink half-empty glasses and beam at their friends—a display that makes a part of me feel lonely for my own.

                  Near the end of the show, a full-length mirror is brought onstage, and flashes of recognition register on the faces of those around me. Though the internet is still largely devoid of spoilers, Kerrigan’s fans know what’s next. Talking to herself in a mirror and “hyping herself up” is a cornerstone of her burgeoning brand; she believes it’s a crucial practice for cultivating bulletproof self-esteem. She frequently uses the ritual on social media and even brought it on screen for her stint on the last season of MTV’s “Siesta Key” as she coached cast members through crises.

                  She asks for volunteers and within seconds, a girl teeters to the stage. Kerrigan, positioned behind her and now wearing an entirely see-through dress, asks her to look at herself in the mirror and tell her reflection what she loves most about herself.

                  “You’re such a good friend and you do so much for people,” she begins, before Kerrigan interjects. “No, I don’t want to hear what you do for people. I want to hear what you like about yourself,” she chides.

                  “Well, I like my eyes,” the girl shyly admits. The audience erupts as if she’s just announced she’s just eradicated the coronavirus. A few more lucky participants get their moment and each one is punctuated by the same reaction.

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                  When the show ends, I watch from the side of the stage as the meet-and-greets begin. Kerrigan spends no less than at least five minutes with each person, speaking to them as if she’s catching up with long lost friends. A woman and her best friend flew from Boston that morning to be there for the show, one of which left her boyfriend, confused about why they weren’t spending Valentine’s together, at home. Another young woman, who looks no more than 22, tells Kerrigan she’s changed her life. It’s a sentiment she’s heard a hundred times now—via DM and IRL—but it seems to move Kerrigan so much that she actually begins stroking the woman’s hair before bringing her in for a long hug and parting with a full-throated, “I love you!”

                  I find myself laughing as a particularly raucous group of six or seven women approach and pose for photos in at least three different formations, all flanking Kerrigan. She’s built a real community here, one that clearly backs her with the same ferocity that she encourages them to feel for themselves.

                  She notices me watching and reaches out.

                  “Come on, we’re taking a picture together!” she declares.

                  I humbly request that the magic mirror be brought on stage and we take at least 50 mirror pics, gazing at our own reflections. As per usual, she smolders as I try to hold my own. I appraise myself, noticing that my hair has fallen and my makeup is less than fresh. We swipe through the pictures together and she remarks that we’re “so hot.” I suddenly realize she’s giving me the same treatment as the others, though I never volunteered.

                  Just as I return home, I receive a text from Kerrigan. Earlier that night I’d asked if any male celebrities were in her DMs and she told me she’d think about it and get back to me. Hours later, she lands on an all-too-on-brand response:

                  ‘None so far but I have a feeling that is going to change very soon 😉 LOL”

                  After all, she doesn’t call herself the “Queen of Confidence” for nothing.

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                  Categories
                  Fitness

                  Chinese Figure Skating Pair Break a World Record at the Winter Games

                  The pairs short program at the Winter Olympics was dominated by figure skaters Sui Wenjing and Han Cong of China. After falling half a point short of gold in Pyeongchang, the duo set the bar high in Beijing with a score of 84.41 — officially breaking the world record of 82.83, which was set by the pair in the teams event on Feb. 4.

                  Sui and Han entered the rink after Russian pair Evgenia Tarasova and Vladimir Morozov earned a score of 84.25 — which momentarily broke Sui and Han’s Feb. 4 record. “The drama of skating after their rivals. [Sui and Han] need perfection in this short program,” commentator and former Olympian Tara Lipinski said at the start of the skate. “They have the edge in the artistic scores, so they have to sell it.” The intense energy from the pair was palpable through the screen as they skated, in unison, to the song “Mission Impossible 2 Orchestra Suite” by Hans Zimmer.

                  Sui and Han cleanly executed elements during their skate that other pairs had difficulty landing. The big throw triple flip, in particular, had commentator Terry Gannon say “wow” after Sui’s stumble-free landing. The pair also received level four (the highest level) in five of the seven elements they executed.

                  “They skate as an extension of one another, which makes their skating feel so smooth, so velvety . . . like they’re skating as one person,” commentator and former Olympian Johnny Weir said after their skate. “Impeccable, impeccable skating.” Ahead, view a celebratory tweet from the Games’s Twitter for Sui and Han’s world record, along with captivating moments from their skate.

                  Categories
                  Culture

                  The House of Gucci Script Was Sent to Lady Gaga First

                  While Lady Gaga is sadly not in the running for an Oscar this year, we can at least relive her House of Gucci performance at home, now that the film is available digitally. (And it will soon be out on DVD on Blu-Ray on Feb. 22, if you still have the tech for it!)

                  Accompanying the release are new behind-the-scenes clips featuring the cast and crew, including this one, premiering on ELLE.com, about how the script from screenwriters Becky Johnson and Roberto Bentivegna came to life in the Ridley Scott-directed drama. Adapted from Sarah Gay Forden’s book, House of Gucci follows Patrizia Reggiani (Gaga), wife of Gucci heir Maurizio (Adam Driver), who was later convicted of plotting his murder. In the video, Bentivegna points out “the Shakespearean nature of the story with this tragic romance at the center.”

                  While the saga also traces the rise of the Italian fashion house and Gucci family drama surrounding it, Patrizia’s presence is felt all throughout. So, producer Gianina Scott says, Gaga read the script first.

                  “We sent the script to Gaga first because it is Patrizia’s story,” she says in the clip. “And she totally connected with it. After we had her, we knew that we could get an amazing cast to join her in this crazy journey.”

                  That cast went on to include Jeremy Irons as Maurizio’s father Rodolfo Gucci, Al Pacino as his brother Aldo Gucci, Jared Leto as Aldo’s son Paolo Gucci, and Salma Hayek as fortune teller Pina Auriemma.

                  “The hardest single thing to do is get what you want to do on paper. Cast will come flocking to a great script with a good director,” Ridley Scott says in the video.

                  Gaga had high praise for the director’s vision with the story. She says he “understands the emotional quotient of a script and he makes room for humanity and for humor. He gave us the space for it to be fun, with a not-so-funny subject.”

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                  Categories
                  Women's Fashion

                  Secrets from Celebrity Men’s Groomer Lauren Kaye Cohen

                  Photo by James Devaney/GC Images.

                  The latest men’s grooming trends to snag now.

                  Gone are the days that male celebs would shrink away from a little men’s grooming such as some well-placed concealer or hairspray before stepping onto the red carpet. “Now my clients come in and say, ‘Make me look like you did for X person,’” says LA-based men’s groomer Lauren Kaye Cohen, who has been prepping an endless list of A-listers such as Bradley Cooper, Ryan Reynolds, Leonardo DiCaprio and Rami Malek for high-profile events and photoshoots over the last 20 years.

                  What exactly is causing this shift, you may be wondering? Beauty-conscious celebs like Timothée Chalamet, Henry Golding and Harry Styles (thanks in part to their makeup artists) have reimagined the boundaries of men’s grooming. And some experts (like TikToker Cat Quinn) note the power in primping for the “female gaze” — meaning less restriction and more creativity.

                  “We all want to look our best for ourselves, but the reality is, we also want to be appealing to whoever we want to find us attractive. I think that guys are getting it more and more that when they put a little bit more effort in, it gets noticed,” says Cohen.

                  Read on for Cohen’s best tricks and the biggest men’s grooming trends right now:

                  Ready to Join Meeting?

                  “Clients that are in the Zoom world have become more focused on wanting their hair, eyes and skin to look really put together because their faces are taking up the whole screen and that’s all anyone sees,” says Cohen. Years of wearing masks have also had a huge effect, with many experiencing more skin irritation. As a result, more men are sporting facial hair not only to be able to skip daily shaving, but also to be more comfortable while wearing a mask. However, the overgrown beard is a thing of the past. “Now the facial hair look is a little tighter, shorter and much more clean,” says Cohen. For effortless hair between washes (and even post-gym), a cleansing texturizing spray is man’s new best friend.

                  Mens Grooming Trends
                  Joeone F/W 22. Photography, Imaxtree.com

                  Golden arches for the win

                  Cohen says that well-groomed brows are critical to giving your look that certain je ne sais quoi since they frame your entire face. While she says over-grooming is a definite no-no, aim to define your brow’s general shape and clean up the in-between areas. “Our faces are not symmetrical, so we’re never going to have identical brows and shouldn’t try to,” says Cohen, who explains that the biggest trap for men trying to DIY their brows is standing too close to the mirror while trying to make each brow look exactly the same (and quickly getting carried away.) “Stand back after plucking every two or three hairs and make sure you’re clocking their natural shape.” A good quality set of tweezers that are easy to handle are key (Cohen says these are still the best.) As a finishing touch, Tom Ford’s Fiber Brow Gel is the most natural looking as it’s not shiny and doesn’t dry hard or flake off. “Wipe off like tip first, so it doesn’t deposit too much product and apply sparingly,” says Cohen.

                  Ditch tired eyes

                  “A lot of clients are really into eye masks,” says Cohen who is obsessed with these 111Skin gel masks because they instantly brighten and tighten the skin and zap puffy eyes. Cohen is also a fan of the Foreo UFO 2 masking device, which is great tech for guys since they can track the app on their phones and get event-ready results in three minutes. “I always use it with the Youth Junkie mask, which is collagen-infused and great for the whole face,” she says.

                  Mens Grooming Trends
                  Photography Courtesy of Smith & Cult

                  Polish is here to stay

                  While more and more men are turning to nail colour to express themselves, Cohen (who painted long-time client Steven Tyler’s nails for over a decade!) says putting in a little extra work with your manicure will go a long way. “A lot of guys just throw polish on without a base or topcoat, but then it looks like a little kid did it and it definitely won’t last as long,” she says. While moody hues like black and navy are go-tos, the new must-haves are off-beat neutrals. Think this cool grey, sage green or chic espresso shade. Since you’re drawing extra attention to your hands, remember to treat them (and those dry cuticles) with a luxe hand cream. This anti-aging Dr. Barbara Strum formula is one of Cohen’s favourite pre-red carpet treatments because it doesn’t leave any residue behind and can even be applied the night before for great results.

                  A little concealer goes a long way

                  All you need to keep your eyes looking light and bright 24/7 is a tiny dab of well-placed concealer. “I love using your fingers for this because their little bit of heat helps to meld the product seamlessly into your skin,” says Cohen. Use your ring finger to dab the inner corner of your eye first, then work the product only slightly downward and stop. Avoiding the urge to cover your whole under-eye area is the trick to keeping the makeup invisible while still getting results, says Cohen. The other key? Applying a good eye cream first, which helps the concealer to go on super smooth and resist settling into fine lines. For a wide variety of shades and a super-light consistency, Cohen turns to this formula, which is a standby in her kit.

                  Categories
                  Fitness

                  History Is Made as Eileen Gu Wins Gold, Making This Her Third Winter Olympics Medal

                  Eileen Gu has officially won her third Olympic medal, claiming gold in women’s freeski halfpipe at the 2022 Beijing Olympics. The 18-year-old, who grew up in California but represents China, has already won gold in big air and silver in slopestyle. Making history, Gu is the first freestyle skier of any gender to win three medals at a single Winter Olympics.

                  In an event that was first introduced at the 2014 Olympics, Gu scored a 93.25 in her first freeski halfpipe run, 95.25 in her second, and didn’t even need to take her third and final run, as it was clear that she was the winner. Only your best run counts, so her second run is what clinched her gold.

                  When Gu realized she had won gold, she fell to her knees in pure joy before having fun doing a celebratory third run, just to ski down to accept her third medal. Embracing fellow skiers Canadian Cassie Sharpe (who won silver) and Canadian Rachael Karker (who won bronze), Gu said, “I’m so proud of you guys.”

                  Her large amplitude (13’9″!), solid grabs, and amazing tricks are what make Gu stand out in freeski halfpipe. Both of Gu’s scores were higher than any other woman in the field, and she would have won the competition with either run. Gu’s dominating performance is untouchable!

                  ZHANGJIAKOU, CHINA - FEBRUARY 18: Ailing Eileen Gu of Team China celebrates winning the Gold medal during the Women's Freestyle Freeski Halfpipe Final on Day 14 of the Beijing 2022 Winter Olympics at Genting Snow Park on February 18, 2022 in Zhangjiakou, China. (Photo by Ezra Shaw/Getty Images)

                  Categories
                  Culture

                  Stranger Things Will End with Season 5

                  All good things must come to an end—even Stranger Things. The hit Netflix sci-fi thriller, which first arrived in the summer of 2016, will conclude with its fifth season, which has no release date yet. The show’s creators, Matt and Ross Duffer, announced the news with a bittersweet letter to fans on Feb. 17.

                  “Seven years ago, we planned out the complete story arc for Stranger Things,” they wrote. “At the time, we predicted the story would last four to five seasons. It proved too large to tell in four, but—as you’ll soon see for yourselves—we are now hurtling toward our finale. Season 4 will be the penultimate season; season 5 will be the last.”

                  The news arrives months before Stranger Things‘ season 4 premiere. Here’s what we know about the final season so far.

                  stranger things letter from matt and ross duffer

                  Netflix

                  When will it be released?

                  It’s too early to say. In the meantime, though, we can look forward to the two-part season 4, which arrives this summer. The first volume premieres on May 27 while the second comes July 1.

                  As the Duffers say in their letter, it took almost two years to film the fourth season. While filming during the height of the pandemic and lockdown surely involved its own delays, producing a massive finale season will likely require a long wait too.

                  What will it be about?

                  How do you sum up this epic story that transcends dimensions and stretches far beyond the borders of Hawkins, Indiana? The Duffers have a plan; we’re just not privy to it yet.

                  “There are still many more exciting stories to tell within the world of Stranger Things; new mysteries, new adventures, new unexpected heroes,” they added in their letter—perhaps opening the door to potential spinoffs in the future. “But first we hope that you stay with us as we finish this tale of a powerful girl named Eleven and her brave friends, of a broken police chief and a ferocious mom, of a small town called Hawkins and an alternate dimension called the Upside Down. As always, we are gracious for your patience and your support.”

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                  Categories
                  Women's Fashion

                  Bloomingdale’s Will Launch A Bridgerton-Inspired Pop-Up Shop This Spring

                  After the voracious appetite around anything and everything Bridgerton consumed Netflix viewers in the early months of 2021, so arrived the dawn of Regency-core. Wedgwood blues, white linens, corsets and empire waists, hairpins and strings of pearls—all staples worn by the wealthy ton at the center of Shonda Rhimes’s smash-hit period drama—popped up in designer collections and influencer Instagrams alike. It was only a matter of time before department stores embraced the trend, as Bloomingdale’s is set to do this spring with its new Bridgerton-inspired pop-up shopping experience.

                  Called The Carousel @ Bloomingdale’s: Bridgerton, the collection will be available both online and at the 59th St. flagship in New York City starting March 3, 2022. Featuring an exclusive fashion capsule from Hope for Flowers by Tracy Reese, the pop-up will also include a Malone Souliers x Bridgerton shoe collection; Bridgerton x Beekman 1802 soaps wrapped in mock-ups of Lady Whistledown’s society pages; and an assortment of afternoon tea-ready Wedgwood x Sheila Bridges fine china. Beyond these limited-edition collaborations, Bloomingdale’s will also host Bridgerton-inspired products from brands including Markarian, Cult Gaia, Lord Jones, Selkie, Sleeper, Annette Ferdinandsen, and Cult Gaia.

                  bloomingdales bridgerton soaps

                  Courtesy of Bloomingdale’s

                  “We knew from the start that the clothes and fashion in Bridgerton would be a major focal point for the series, and it has been so satisfying to see the fans embrace it and incorporate it into their own style,” Rhimes said in a statement. “We couldn’t be more excited to partner with The Carousel @ Bloomingdales for this special Bridgerton inspired pop-up where fans will have the opportunity to shop products and inclusive clothing inspired by the show and created by female designers and designers of color.”

                  Reese’s Hope for Flowers capsule, in particular, will feature empire-waist gowns and collared tops in orchid and hyacinth shades, patterned with gentle florals and ruffle detailing. These feminine silhouettes will rest alongside a pair of elegant white sailor pants, a spaghetti-strap tank, and a cut-out blouse inspired by the classic Bellamy shirt. The pieces, while drawn from the period drama’s color palette, are modernized for a trend-conscious look; Reese says she hopes to see customers wear these clothes with flip-flops or, say, “to the Central Park Conservancy luncheon or something like that.”

                  hope for flowers by tracy reese dress for bridgerton bloomingdales

                  Courtesy of Bloomingdale’s

                  “What I think of with Bridgerton,” Reese says, “I think of romance and love and dreams really. Because it was sort of in that dream space when we were watching it on lockdown over Christmas in 2020, right? It offered hope and optimism. And those are two things that I’m always all about. [Those] are attributes that Hope for Flowers shares with the whole Bridgerton aesthetic.”

                  The collection will go live March 3, with season 2 of Bridgerton set to release soon after, on March 25.

                  This post will be updated.

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                  Categories
                  Fitness

                  Peloton Breaks Into Fitness Gaming With New Bike-Exclusive Experience

                  Peloton Lanebreak

                  Peloton has officially entered the world of fitness gaming with its newest launch, Lanebreak. The Lanebreak game takes Peloton members through one of six winding outer space-like courses to collect illuminated neon bars with a “wheel-inspired” avatar, according to a Peloton press release. Each course is inspired by a different genre of music — pop, hip-hop, rock, and EDM — and features artists like David Guetta and Cardi B, thanks to a partnership between Peloton and Warner Music Group.

                  As of Feb. 17, Lanebreak is available under the “More Rides” category at the bottom of the connected tablet for all-access bike and bike+ Peloton members. Co-creator and instructor Emma Lovewell said in the press release that with the launch of Lanebreak, members now have the option to “ride to some killer music without an instructor.”

                  How Does Peloton’s Lanebreak Game Work?

                  Once a member enters Lanebreak, they’re greeted by a start screen containing playlist options, a list of their rides, their friends list, and four leaderboards corresponding to the range of difficulty levels within the game: beginner, intermediate, advanced, and expert. Playing Lanebreak requires riders to use the resistance dial, and pedals earn points and stars.

                  The resistance dial helps the rider change lanes with onscreen cues, and members can collect bars along the track as they pedal. Riders gain points for being in the right lane on time, increasing speed at times to “fill pyramid shapes” (pictured below), and pedaling within the “target range” displayed on the screen. Depending on the rider’s overall performance, they can earn anywhere from zero to three stars along with their total points.

                  Peloton Lanebreak In Game Image

                  Image Source: Peloton

                  Categories
                  Culture

                  Kanye West’s Harassment of Kim Kardashian Is Not a Joke

                  In typical celebrity fashion, Kim Kardashian and Kanye West’s divorce has been messy, to say the least.

                  Kardashian filed the papers last March, but the drama between the former couple has recently accelerated due to West’s increasingly alarming behavior, which stems from his accusations that Kardashian is withholding visitations with their four children from him. “I’m just wishing my daughter a public happy birthday,” the rapper said in a now deleted video on Jan. 15, the day of his daughter Chicago’s birthday party. “I wasn’t allowed to know where her party was.”

                  West’s Instagram account has become his primary mode of expressing his anger and frustrations towards Kardashian. On Feb. 4, West posted a screenshot of a video of his daughter North with the caption, “Since this is my first divorce I need to know what I should do about my daughter being put on [TikTok] against my will?” On Feb. 6, he alleged that Kardashian said that she thinks that he has put “a hit out on her.” On Feb. 9, West posted a photo with Kardashian and their children with the caption, “GOD PLEASE BRING OUR FAMILY BACK TOGETHER.”

                  West has also used his social media presence to target Kardashian’s current partner, comedian and Saturday Night Live star Pete Davidson, referring to him as “Skete” and reposting a debunked rumor that Davidson pushed the late rapper Mac Miller into suicide by texting Miller intimate details of his relationship with Ariana Grande, Miller’s ex. West even went as far as to release a song with The Game in January where West says thatGod saved me from that crash [referring to the car accident he survived in 2002] / Just so I can beat Pete Davidson’s ass.” On Monday, he urged his fans not to get physical with Davidson as he would “handle the situation myself.” The following day, West posted a screenshot of a text allegedly from Kardashian where she tells West that he is “creating a dangerous and scary environment” that could lead to Davidson being harmed. West has since deleted all his past Instagram posts and posted an apology saying he takes “accountability” for his actions, but the damage has already been done.

                  As with anything pertaining to Kardashian or West, these posts have made headlines. Unlike the normal gossip that surrounds the Kardashian-West family, however, this goes beyond the run-of-the-mill celebrity messiness. West is engaging in full fledged harassment of his estranged wife and the media has failed to contextualize this behavior as something other than typical celebrity tabloid fodder or just West being his usual provocative self. This failure often comes in the form of both publications and regular people simply reposting West’s posts about Kardashian as click-bait or gossip–or even posting it at all. It should be noted that West is struggling with his own mental health issues, but there is no ambiguity to the ongoing harm being committed here: from his releasing private conversations with his ex-wife despite her explicit wish for him not to; to threatening violence on her partner; to engaging in love bombing—a coercive technique in which a person will shower a partner of theirs with affection to later use against them—like sending her a truckload of roses on Valentine’s Day. Kardashian even issued a statement earlier this month condemning West’s “constant attacks” on her, saying they are “hurtful” and “causing further pain” to their family. However, a lot of West’s fans see nothing wrong with his actions, and even go as far as to participate in it online by making memes out of his posts or sharing screenshots of West’s posts in order to go viral.

                  Kardashian is a woman of great means and wealth, which leads people to believe that she isn’t in the imminent danger that women of far less fortune are. Be that as it may, the passive and active enabling of West’s behavior sends a signal not only to Kardashian but also victims of this type of harassment, or even more serious abuse, that what they’re experiencing is not to be taken seriously. There are many people who point to Kardashian’s history of anti-Blackness and misogynoir to explain why they struggle to feel sympathy for the harassment that she’s dealing with. Even though she does have a problematic history, that doesn’t nullify the mistreatment she’s been getting.

                  We’ve constructed this idea of who we think is worthy of care and affection and who isn’t.

                  It would be remiss to not mention how Kardashian has also, at some points in her relationship with West, participated in her ex-husband’s harassment of women. In 2016, she released a tape of a phone conversation West had with singer Taylor Swift, after Swift accused West of misogyny for the line about her in his song “Famous” where West raps, “I made that bitch famous.” It would be a few years before an unreleased part of the tape surfaced, proving that Swift was telling the truth and West didn’t mention that part of the song to her. Kardashian responded to these revelations by accusing Swift of “lying.”

                  Kardashian isn’t unlike many women who stayed in a relationship with someone who mistreats their partners. Their struggle is overlooked because people are under the illusion that there’s something about these women—whether it’s their wealth, their race, or their beauty—that makes them immune from that kind of harm. This is a common rhetoric amongst abuse apologists, the idea that someone can “ask” or even “deserve” to be abused. With that, we’ve constructed this idea of who we think is worthy of care and affection and who isn’t. But there is no safety to be found in a person like West, who treats women like his own project that he can dispose of once he’s done with them.

                  In his 2016 music video for “Famous,” West recreates “Sleep,” the painting by artist Vincent Desiderio in which a naked West is surrounded by several naked pop culture figures, namely his now ex-wife, his ex Amber Rose, and Swift (Rose and Swift did not consent to being depicted in such a graphic manner). It was a supposed commentary on the absurdity of his fame, and fame writ large, but all I can think of is it’s how he’s viewed Kardashian and the women he’s crossed paths with: mere objects meant for his own gratification. It’s time the public acknowledged that as well.

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                  Categories
                  Beauty

                  Your Fenty Beauty Favorites Are Launching At Ulta Beauty Starting March 6th

                  RiRi can’t stop making headlines. Whether she’s announcing her pregnancy in the chicest way possible or redefining pregnancy style at an event for her incredible perfume, it seems like Rihanna has been having a better 2022 than anybody else.

                  And the good news can’t stop coming. Still no word on an album, but the singer and beauty mogul just announced that her makeup line Fenty Beauty will be available at Ulta Beauty–both online and in-store–starting March 6th. That means there will be over 1,300 new locations to pick up Fenty’s new refillable lipstick, along with your existing faves.

                  “I created Fenty Beauty with a global vision in mind, and that vision transcends everything from our shade ranges and products to where and how people can shop the brand. I want everyone to truly be included and Ulta Beauty’s amazing community shares the same passion for beauty that I do,” Rihanna said in a press release about the news.

                  Ulta Beauty is one of the largest beauty retailers in the U.S., and no doubt shoppers are dying to be able to scoop up all their favorites in one fell swoop. On February 28th, fans of the line will be able to get a sneak peek at what will be available, and you can shop ’till you drop starting on March 6th. While there’s no shortage of incredible products that Fenty Beauty offers, may I suggest you pick up a few of their iconic Gloss Bomb lip glosses? And then maybe pass a few on to me.

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                  Categories
                  Women's Fashion

                  The Best And Brightest Emerging Designers Of NYFW FW22

                  For the first time in almost two years, New York Fashion Week’s fall-winter shows took place in person. The weather fluctuated from near-spring perfection to snowy and rainy, but that didn’t deter crowds from gathering at shows, presentations, and parties. While the schedule may not have had all the big names of past seasons, this year was a chance for up-and-coming designers to show their stripes. The breadth of new talent in New York is a sure sign of a city picking itself up by its (designer) bootstraps and marching defiantly towards a fashionable future, one that is equal parts pragmatic as it is fantastical and crafty. Below, we’ve compiled the names and designers who ventured into new territory this season by all showing on the official CFDA calendar for the first time. Whether they’ve been around for a minute or are just now getting on their feet, these designers are the names to know from the week.

                  COMMISSION

                  The design trio of Huy Luong, Dylan Cao, and Jin Kay behind the deathly cool label Commission took cues from Americana and western dress to infuse their latest collection, “Fast Riders, Slow Dancers,” with a dandy twist. The brand has been around since 2018, but this is their first in-person offering on the official calendar to see the collection up close. The brand fulfills the promise of the Wild West with star cutouts on hijacked t-shirts, perfect leather trousers and cargo denim, and the best coats and jackets we’ve seen this week. A rainbow of knits with cuts across the stomach and collarbone suggest a perfectly imperfect pullover, worn over seasons on the ranch (or in our case, making it through the subway turnstile). Every cut, fabric, proportion, and finish is carefully considered, and the collection is rounded out with brushed cashmere scarves, rough leather belts in studded silvers with exaggerated buckles, and the perfect leather shopper bags in the collection’s uber-desirable hues. Lookbook styling by Jason Rider completes the vision with instantly wearable pieces recalling a Western with the chicest costume designer around. Simply put, these are the clothes you want to wear every day.

                  ZANKOV

                  While knitwear veteran designer Henry Zankov is no stranger to fashion, his brand Zankov is on the official NYFW schedule for the first time this season. Shown as a presentation at an intimate space in Soho, the newest collection marks an expansion into subtler color and pattern play compared to previous seasons. Zankov was in Milan over the summer and took direct inspiration from the city’s subdued dusty pinks, browns, and unique geometric tiling and architecture. The resulting body of work includes mohair and brushed alpaca sweaters and zip-ups; decadent matching sweatpants; geometric double-knit cardigans; and cubist patterns on turtlenecks and long-sleeved dresses that demonstrate dazzling technique without falling into kitschy knitwear tropes. Zankov continues to create luxury artful pieces that stand the tests of trends and time, with divine quality and color play at the forefront of his work. Richard Avedon shot the coolly realized lookbook for the season, playing on the nonbinary nature of Zankov’s work by styling looks on a wide spectrum of models.

                  SAINT SINTRA

                  Designer Sintra Martins showed her sophomore runway collection at the swanky Palace Bar on Saturday afternoon to a bustling crowd of fashion cognoscenti who are enraptured by her youthful spin on modern power dressing. The Sintra girlie roots her style in classic suiting and tailoring, not without a hint of chaos. A hem is undone here, a pant is slit there, skirts fall apart everywhere. Striped poplin and staunch oxford shirts are decorated with ginormous bows and to-the-chest collars, and a sparkling Shetland tweed skirt suit features roly poly-esque sleeves that suggest a hardened armor. Superb styling choices by Ron Hartleben took the fantasy to the next level, including mismatched stilettos stuffed at the ankle straps with miscellaneous receipts and invoices, suggesting a hurried woman running out of the dry cleaners and straight to her meeting (or soiree). The showstoppers were a crisp fitted oxford shirt with a deconstructed dusty pink calvary twill and tulle skirt that looked purposefully torn apart to reveal its decaying beauty, and a white cotton gown looped on itself ad infinitum, as if she were run through the paper shredder just before walking the show. It was invigorating to see a designer so fresh to the scene already expand their brand codes in such a daring way, including a foray into eveningwear. More designers on the schedule should take cues from Martins’ passion for world-building and risk-taking.

                  IN THE BLK

                  On Sunday morning, In the Blk presented the collections of three emerging Black designers in conjunction with IMG, Color of Change, and UPS. The collections of jewelry designers Third Crown and Khiry, alongside the ready-to-wear collection of House of Aama, comprised a show that honored the triumphs and tribulations that comprise the Black narrative of America. First up was Third Crown, designed by couple Kofi and Kristen Essell, with their Edelsteen collection. Edelsteen means gemstone in Afrikaans, and the design duo hoped to channel the healing properties of gemstones into their architectural designs. Their stunning gold jewelry shone beautifully as models came out in simple black clothing, with interlocking gold belts and necklaces worn as tiaras providing a regal and subtle start to the show. Next up was House of Aama, the label designed by mother and daughter duo Rebecca Henry and Akua Shabaka, with their collection Heritage Bloodroot Collection – Into the Archives. Building off a 2017 collection and continuing their rich storytelling capabilities with clothing, the duo presented wearable dresses and coats that speak to the rich history of the Southern Creole and Deep South in a modernized context. Closing out the show was Khiry, a modern jewelry label designed by Jameel Mohammed, with their latest offering, Fights Reveal Futilities. Custom-made garments out of recycled t-shirts, bomber jackets, and knits took on new life with the dynamic cuffs, pins, and pendants that almost looked like thorns from a silver rose bush, trudging through battles to make a better future. The presentation included models swathed in metallic balloons, culminating in a bone-chilling finale where the models ripped them off, screaming for release and freedom. It was as thought-provoking as it was beautiful and aesthetically gorgeous, creating beauty out of trauma and pain, allowing the single rose to push through the ground on which struggles took place.

                  DAUPHINETTE

                  Olivia Cheng of Dauphinette knew the fashion crowd was hungry for delectable fashion over the weekend, as guests lined up the stairs to enter Lee’s on Canal, an intimate private dining room, to feast on her latest offering, “Tasting Menu.” Showing for the first time on the official NYFW calendar, Cheng brought small groups of showgoers in for an up-close view to her intricate creations styled on the most diverse and earnest casting of the week. The collection has instantly recognizable pieces for those familiar with Dauphinette’s sustainably made Chainmaille bags and ready-to-wear, crafted out of preserved botanicals (strawberries, daisies). These pieces meshed well with baggy camo pants, jeans, and sturdier sweaters and outerwear where prints and drawings add the perfect quirk. A woman in the show had a long black coat adorned with buttons, sewn into geometric block patterns and a large “NEW YORK” across the chest, with, naturally, a miniature swan on her head. This odd character is just one of many dreamt up by the self-proclaimed “Happiest Brand in the World.”

                  ELENA VELEZ

                  The designer Elena Velez hails from Milwaukee, Wisconsin, and has quickly become known for her brutal, industrial designs that have been called “aggressively delicate.” Her first official runway show on the calendar was entitled “YR 01⁠— Maidenhood & Its Labors” and took on the difficult narratives of a woman emerging from the ashes (or in Velez’s case, the gravel where she pulled her dress from). Ship sails from Lake Michigan and laminated military canvas are reworked into daringly skin-baring dresses and separates that in equal parts embrace and reject the female form. Velez’s muted color palette allows her to explore hyper-specific cuts, seams, and slits, utilizing raw materials to create an earthen woman, entirely unglamorous and yet still somehow womanly in its emphasis on the décolletage and form. The clothes at first glance seem unwearable, but maybe that’s exactly the point being made. Is the woman comfortable in a dress constructed from repurposed parachutes? Is she leaning into her womanly nature or shying away from it? These gorgeous tensions provided for the most scintillating runway of the week, one in which questions were proposed and oftentimes left for the viewer to decide. It’s not an understatement to say it’s the show everyone will be thinking about for weeks to come.

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                  Categories
                  Women's Fashion

                  How to Take a Street Style Photo, Per NYFW’s Elite

                  Bella Hadid. Photography Courtesy of Getty Images.

                  Plus, all our favourite off-runway looks.

                  Ignoring the fact that it’s currently the dead of winter, New York Fashion Week was bursting with wardrobe inspiration for Fall 2022. And as always, that inspiration isn’t exclusive to the runways.

                  While neutral hues, tailored coats and cinched waists were trending on the catwalk, spring brights, bucket hats and balaclavas, and mix-and-match textures were all the rage on the streets. But that’s the name of the street-style game — you first have to be noticed before you can be photographed. And in a crowd full of well-dressed wannabes, it’s harder than it looks.

                  In addition to picking up more than a few ideas for our next shopping trip, we also felt compelled to analyze the anatomy of a street style shot: How do you achieve that perfect, Instagram-worthy unposed pose? Fear not, we gathered our learnings for you below.

                  Step one: Put on clothing

                  new york street style
                  Photography by Getty Images

                  I know what you might be thinking, but this is actually the least important step. If you do everything else right, you can walk outside in pajama pants, a jacket, sunglasses (especially critical if it’s night or an overcast day) and still look on point. But we’re not going to do that — we have standards, after all.

                  You want a look that says, “I’m on trend, but I’m also unique.” Go for bright and bold colours that will help distinguish you from the crowd. Is there a statement accessory you can sport? This is the time to go big or risk going home without a snapshot souvenir.

                  Step two: Carry no fewer than three items

                  new york fashion week 2022
                  Photography courtesy of Getty Images

                  Now that you’re dressed and accessorized, it’s time to gather some additional fix-ins. Is there a magazine or book you can tuck under your arm? Or perhaps you can step outside to get the ultimate accessory: an iced coffee (winter be damned) from your favourite café. Bonus points if you also manage to hold your phone in place between your shoulder and ear as you lock in a post-runway lunch reservation.

                  Step three: Oh, is that a photographer? You didn’t notice

                  new york fashion week 2022
                  Photography courtesy of Imaxtree

                  Now that you look stylish, your arms are full and your day is planned, it’s time to simply walk on the street in a stylish manner. That means acting like you do not care that you are being photographed. Of course, you do care, we all care. But to achieve that nonchalant aura, do not look at the camera as you make long, casual strides. If you choose to smile, do so at someone (or something) out of frame. Now it’s time to soft launch your street style look on Instagram stories before finding a permanent home for the photos on your grid.

                  Still need more inspiration? Scroll through the gallery below for our favourite street style looks from New York Fashion Week Fall 2022.

                  Categories
                  Fitness

                  Mariah Bell’s Free Skate “Was the Exact Olympic Moment She Was Hoping For”

                  BEIJING, CHINA - FEBRUARY 17: Mariah Bell of Team United States reacts after skating during the Women Single Skating Free Skating on day thirteen of the Beijing 2022 Winter Olympic Games at Capital Indoor Stadium on February 17, 2022 in Beijing, China. (Photo by Matthew Stockman/Getty Images)

                  US skater Mariah Bell performed beautifully during her free skate to k.d. lang’s rendition of “Hallelujah” at the 2022 Olympics. After falling during her short program, she took out the triple-triple for this free skate. Without that element, broadcaster and former Olympian Tara Lipinski said, “She is very capable of a clean skate, and that is exactly what she’s hoping for.” Her skate wasn’t perfect, catching a slip on the edge of a triple Salchow jump, but she landed two difficult jumps at the end and had a fall-free performance.

                  Johnny Weir, Lipinski’s broadcast partner and a fellow former Olympian, said: “Mariah’s skating is so accessible, such an ease of her carriage, class, elegance. She’s a skater that everybody can imagine themselves being one day.” Lipinski replied, “She really is the quintessential skater,” and commented on her “classic style and lines.”

                  At the end of Bell’s free skate, she was in first place with a score of 136.92, but that was before other skaters performed and topped her score. “She fought for those jumps,” said NBC’s Terry Gannon. “She’s fought doubt. She’s fought time. And now she’s had her moment at the Olympics.”

                  The 25-year-old made her Olympic debut on Tuesday during the short program portion of the competition, becoming the oldest American women’s singles skater to take the ice at the Games since 1928. She was a second alternate for Team USA at the 2018 Winter Olympics.

                  “This was the exact Olympic moment she was hoping for. That was absolutely incredible,” Lipinski said, adding: “Each jump I felt my emotion growing, growing. I just wanted her to hang on to every single landing. And she was so secure and confident, and there is such a genuine, raw, warm emotion about her skating. It’s not just an artistic presentation, it’s like she’s sharing a little bit of herself with you and with the audience.”

                  BEIJING, CHINA - FEBRUARY 17: Mariah Bell of Team United States reacts with coach Adam Rippon after skating during the Women Single Skating Free Skating on day thirteen of the Beijing 2022 Winter Olympic Games at Capital Indoor Stadium on February 17, 2022 in Beijing, China. (Photo by Matthew Stockman/Getty Images)

                  Coach Adam Rippon hugged Bell off the ice after her nearly flawless performance and was heard saying, “I need a drink.”

                  “To perfect simplicity is much harder than to disguise imperfection, and she fought,” Weir said, referring to Bell’s near slip, where she didn’t put a foot or hand down. “She fought.”

                  “This music, ‘Hallelujah,’ the choreography. It’s just so perfect. It fits her to a T,” Lipinski said. Weir added, “It’s so warm, and buttery, and soft, and nice, and velvety.”

                  The Russian Olympic Committee’s Anna Shcherbakova won the women’s figure skating competition. With a final score of 202.30, Bell finished in 10th place. Weir said, “This was a wonderful tribute to a very long, very successful career that she’s had to fight hard for.” It must feel amazing to finally experience this amazing Olympic moment.

                  Image Source: Getty / Matthew Stockman

                  Categories
                  Culture

                  Robert Pattinson on His Life With His Girlfriend Suki Waterhouse and Her Reaction to Seeing The Batman

                  Robert Pattinson is very much on his press tour for The Batman, and the actor has shared a little about his private relationship with his girlfriend of over three years, Suki Waterhouse. To GQ last week, he spoke about Waterhouse’s impact on his decision making. To Jimmy Kimmel last night, he discussed how her reaction to The Batman changed his own perspective on the film.

                  With GQ, Pattinson discussed why Waterhouse was the reason he changed the location for their interview from the London Zoo to Holland Park. “I was talking to my girlfriend last night and she was, like, ‘You know, people don’t really like zoos.…’” he said. “I’d been thinking about a metaphorical thing. But then I was thinking that’s very wrong, a sad bear walking in circles. I just can’t help it. I’ll do it for every single element, every decision, in my life. What is the worst-case scenario for this decision?

                  He also touched on how she interacted with a repairman over to fix their apartment’s boiler—and trolled Pattinson a bit given his Batman role. “The guy came around the other day, and he just randomly started talking about what a DC [Comics] fan he is. And I’m sitting there facing the other direction, and my girlfriend just keeps continuing the conversation with him. And I’m looking at her like: Shut the fuck up!” He laughed. “Why are you doing this to me? She was very entertaining. Just talking to an obsessive fan.”

                  suki waterhouse and robert pattinson

                  Bertrand Rindoff PetroffGetty Images

                  On Kimmel, Pattinson spoke about how Waterhouse reacted watching the film and why it made him more “terrified” about its release.

                  “It was really her reaction that kind of changed the entire thing because I’m pretty sure she’s not normally into watching superhero movies,” Pattinson said, via Entertainment Tonight. “And just seeing that it was capturing her attention the entire time and then she held my hand and touched it [to her face] and I could feel a little tear. And I was like, ‘No way!’”

                  “And then after the movie was she just all over you? Super sexed up from Batman?” Kimmel joked.

                  “I mean, yeah!” Pattinson quipped back, laughing.

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                  Categories
                  Women's Fashion

                  Fashion’s Latest “It” Destination Is the Metaverse

                  I’m hovering on a red carpet outside London’s Royal Albert Hall. Cameras explode with flashes. Haute hubbub envelops me. I’m posing hard, sporting the sharp white tuxedo I picked out for the British Fashion Council’s annual Fashion Awards ceremony, my fluffy pink tail peeking out from the Bianca Jagger-inspired look.

                  Yes, you read that correctly: my tail. In a surreal touch, I am attending a simulacrum of the ceremony in the metaverse, the social-meets-gam-ing virtual landscape where so much in fashion seems to be happening nowadays: from Balenciaga’s excursion into Fortnite to a virtual Gucci Garden experience. And the guise I’ve chosen is that of a pink squirrel-like creature with, I discover, a squirrel’s propensity for clambering onto every object it comes into contact with. As I rove around inside the hall, listening to the evening’s host, Billy Porter, intone “Fashion is culture!” from the stage and impulse-buying a Gucci baseball cap (which sets me back 100 Robux, aka the currency of Roblox, the gaming app I’m using), I have a strange flashback to the in-person fashion events I used to attend in the halcyon days of early 2020.

                  an animated pink squirrel wearing a white suit standing in virtual space

                  The author, in the guise of a squirrel, “attends” the Fashion Awards on Roblox.

                  Courtesy of the author.

                  Admittedly, they don’t hold a candle to the real thing, but for millions of users, these virtual platforms are a way to feel part of the exclusive fashion world—and to use style to experiment in a way that real-world confines may not allow. Says Roblox’s vice president of global brand partnerships, Christina Wootton, “A lot of times, when you hear from people who’ve experienced it virtually, they talk about it as if they were really there.” (Increasingly, the virtual and the real are colliding: The night also included a new award for metaverse design, presented by a digital Alessandro Michele. This year’s recipient: a Roblox user and digital fashion creator known as cSapphire.)

                  While many associate the metaverse with Mark Zuckerberg’s tête-à-tête with his virtual avatar, the term is actually 30 years old. It was coined by the sci-fi writer Neal Stephenson to describe a virtual reality space that mimics a physical one. For some participants, those interactions serve as a way to experiment not just with style, but identity. Users can select from multiple male and female avatars as a way to explore their gender identity and can customize their body size and proportions, says Maura Welch, vice president of marketing at Together Labs, a technology company that operates the metaverse platform IMVU.

                  There, this past spring, seven brands, including Collina Strada and Mowalola, showed their collections as part of what media outlets like Paper billed as the metaverse’s first runway show. The platform boasts 200,000 active creators; for the show, each designer was paired with a creator. (The Collina Strada design even found its way into the real world, via a dress that designer Hillary Taymour debuted on the platform and then designed IRL for Kim Petras to wear to the Met Gala.) “It broadens the audience and allows people who can’t drop that money on fashion to be able to experience it,” Welch says. “It’s super empowering.”

                  a virtual model wearing green pants and a bright blue jacket

                  Digital fashion creators have even begun showing their wares at fashion weeks. Here, a look from Saint Petersburg-based Kreamonz’s spring 2022 show in Moscow.

                  COURTESY OF THE DESIGNER, ELIZAVETA RADIONOVA, AND NATALIA GUSELMANN.

                  Empowering, perhaps. But it also feels a tad strange, as someone who’s been immersed in tactile fashion for a decade and a half, to be zipping around in this imaginary space like I’ve been uploaded into a Philip K. Dick character’s consciousness. It seems unnatural to be interacting with people as an imaginary character on a screen. Welch challenges me to consider how much I’m already doing that. “If you think about the amount of time that you spend in your digital space versus your real space,” she points out, the former is starting to outweigh the latter for many of us.

                  We may not be disguising ourselves as fashion-forward pink squirrels, but we’re fudging details or creating new identities online, whether it’s alter-ing our Zoom backgrounds, Facetuning our Tinder photos, or touching up our appearances on video calls. “If you ask somebody in Gen Z if a friend was made online or in real life, they actually don’t see a difference,” she adds. And during the pandemic, IMVU’s active user ranks grew by almost half, suggesting that people are flocking to the metaverse as a social space.

                  For some, it’s a kind of no-rules style utopia. Maybe you aren’t comfortable dressing in the clothes you want to wear, or you’re worried about what people will say; the metaverse removes a lot of that friction. “The more time is spent in this virtual space, the more important your online identity becomes,” Wootton says. “You may go in and say, ‘I want it to look just like my real-world self,’ or maybe you want it to be completely different. It feels great to be able to do that without the anxiety of how people will react, because a lot of people on the platform are so much more accepting. It’s where you experiment, and express yourself in different ways.”

                  a red animated figure wearing a blue parka

                  Next stop on the metaverse tour: the author replenishes her “cheer” levels at Ralph Lauren’s Winter Escape pop-up.

                  Courtesy of the author

                  Those who are championing the metaverse also see it as a way to finally do that much-discussed thing—fix fashion. Though there are concerns about its energy consumption, the realm is otherwise sustainable, waste-free, and infinitely renewable without the environmental and labor costs that come with fast fashion. For designers, especially young, aspiring ones, it’s a win, too. There are, after all, no supply chain issues in the metaverse. You don’t need an expensive degree or bolts of pricey fabric to start creating. And you can get instant feedback, says Welch: “If you put something out in the catalog, you’re going to know right away: What do people like, what do they not like? They’re going to tell you.” Users are particularly interested in customization, which is shaping up to be the new couture, with e-ateliers full of aspirants.

                  After making my Fashion Awards debut, I spend day two in the metaverse as two very different entities. First, I’m a blank-faced mannequin, visiting the Gucci Garden on Roblox in a developer’s intricately pixelated re-creation of Florence. I wander through the space, collecting flowers for my head, then a Matrix-like neon maze, where I collect stripes for my outfit. Digital versions of the Italian house’s wares are also on offer.

                  When the experience debuted, Wootton tells me, “People were setting their alarms because they were just like, ‘I can’t miss out on this drop.’” In some cases, they’d then resell their finds on Roblox’s booming secondhand market, where prices were sometimes higher than in the real world. Reddit cofounder Alexis Ohanian tweeted about the fact that a virtual version of the house’s Dionysus bag, whose physical version is priced at $3,400, resold for the equivalent of $4,115, adding, “Watch this space.”

                  an animated figure walks through the gucci garden virtual experience

                  Day two in the metaverse included a jaunt to “Florence” to visit the Gucci Garden experience on Roblox.

                  Courtesy of the author

                  Next, I indulge my sporty side at the Ralph Lauren Winter Escape pop-up. This time I’m a generic jock, clad in a Polo-branded parka, doing a series of wholesome activities meant to generate “cheer,” which serves as a kind of currency in this space. I vault over rocks, ice-skate, toast marshmallows, and sip on Ralph’s Coffee. Alice Delahunt, the brand’s chief digital and content officer, notes that while the technology feels cutting-edge, the designer has always been all about world-building. “When you’ve walked into a flagship store like 888 Madison Avenue, you’ve been transported to the Double RL Ranch”—the designer’s Colorado getaway—or an Aspen chalet or Round Hill in Jamaica, she says. “We feel that his is the perfect brand to exist in the metaverse.”

                  Even though this all feels impossibly removed from reality—and is missing some of the texture of real-life interactions, not to mention the sensual pleasure of wearing clothes and sizing up others’ looks—it could soon be our reality. What the metaverse lacks in quotidian friction, it makes up for in other ways. And as we continue to replace physical interactions with digital ones, it could start to feel more normal than doing things in person.

                  “In the same way that we looked at websites maybe 15 to 20 years ago, we now need to be looking at the metaverse and understanding what our strategy is there,” Delahunt says. And that strategy translates into real-world dollars: The brand has already sold 164,000 digital goods on the Zepeto platform. She gestures to the blue ski sweater she’s wearing: “What I get really excited about in the digital world is, Does this evolve over time? Does this change and adapt to my context, my environment, my mood? Have I earned something for wearing it a certain amount of times, and therefore, have I unlocked the next level of some community-driven activity?” (I could definitely monetize that last one, based on how often I repeat outfits in the actual-verse.)

                  The possibilities are endless, and not just online. As established designers journey into the metaverse and virtual creators dip their toes into the real world, the whole thing becomes a feedback loop. Which means you could see cSapphire’s wares strutting down a runway near you someday.

                  This article appears in the March 2022 issue of ELLE.

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                  Categories
                  Women's Fashion

                  Julia Fox Wears the Ultimate Revenge Dress + Other Viral New York Fashion Week Moments

                  Photography by Getty Images

                  Including the return of Manhattan’s It Girl.

                  It always seems strange to celebrate fall and winter styles just as the weather starts to creep above negative numbers, but thus is the fashion cycle. As the first stop on the Fall 2022 Ready-to-Wear world tour, New York Fashion Week set the bar high, despite missing a few of its mainstay designers like Ralph Lauren, Marc Jacobs and Oscar de la Renta for various COVID-related reasons.

                  While the biggest social media sensation was undoubtedly Julia Fox and her runway debut for LaQuan Smith, sans ex-boyfriend Kanye West (followed closely by the joyful return of fashion’s favourite pretend socialite, Blake Lively), the actual clothing also caused a stir on TikTok. Y2K wares, tailored treats and minimalist colour palettes were some of the biggest trends to come out of the week, so it will be interesting to see if this pattern continues throughout the season.

                  If you missed any of the decadent drama, below is our roundup of the most viral runway moments of Fall 2022 Ready-to-Wear.

                  Area: Minimalists, go home

                  Area Fall 2022
                  Photography via Instagram.com/@area

                  So, Area might have been in the wrong fashion week. Presenting a fabulous study in frivolity, creative directors Piotrek Panszczyk and Beckett Fogg decked their models in rhinestones, fringe, feathers and butterflies in a collection that could be considered couture, not ready-to-wear. But no matter the label, the demonstration was a delight to behold, and we’re sure to see many singers sporting these bejewelled bras very soon.

                  Eckhaus Latta: No longer the new kid on the block

                  Eckhaus Latta
                  Photography by ImaxTree

                  Happy Birthday, Eckhaus Latta! Ten years after Mike Eckhaus and Zoe Latta launched their label, the brand is still as bold and unique as ever before. Male models walked in sheer glittery gowns. Leather pants were both figuratively and literally hanging by a thread. And hot pink corsets were deconstructed to be somehow even more risqué. A celebration of both new and old, the duo’s artistry was a big hit on social media.

                  LaQuan Smith: Julia Fox is fashion’s new muse

                  Julia Fox LaQuan Smith
                  Photography by ImaxTree

                  Frank Sinatra once said: “The best revenge is massive success,” and Julia Fox is clearly taking note. Making her runway debut at LaQuan Smith’s Fall 2022 show a few hours after her public split from Ye (Kanye West), the Uncut Gems (also known as “unca jams,” iykyk) star strutted her stuff in a sexy black cutout gown. In a move that would be sure to make Princess Diana proud, social media was 100 per cent behind Julia Fox and applauded her LaQuan Smith revenge dress moment.

                  Michael Kors: The who’s who of fashion week

                  Michael Kors
                  Photography by Matteo Prandoni/BFA.com

                  Blake Lively, we’ve missed you! The OG Gossip Girl star made her first public appearance in months (not including her brief Broadway red carpet moment in support of Hugh Jackman’s The Music Man), and she wasn’t the only A-lister in the audience. New York City Mayor Eric Adams had a front-row seat alongside Brooke Shields, Ariana DeBose, Lady Eliza and Lady Amelia Spencer, Addison Rae and more. On the actual runway, Emily Ratajkowski, Gigi Hadid, Bella Hadid, Irina Shayk and others strutted in sharply-tailored styles, which Michael Kors himself called the “antithesis of sad slipper life.” The result was a mélange of head-to-toe monochromatic moments that were only heightened by the party-like atmosphere fit for the Upper East Side’s elite—XOXO, Gossip Girl.

                  Peter Do: There’s a massive light at the end of the tunnel

                  Peter Do Fall 2022
                  Photography by ImaxTree

                  Peter Do wants us to go towards the light. And really, when the light is as nice as this, who can blame him? For his sophomore collection, the 2020 LVMH Prize co-winner submerged his styles in a halo of colour. While the actual clothing was restricted to monotone hues like black, white, beige and grey, the venue was bathed in buttery shades of yellow, pink, orange, lilac, blue and green. If you’re not ready to enter this slightly trippy new dimension, the styles worn on the runaway were rooted in reality, with an emphasis on deconstructed suiting and an alternative approach to American sportswear.

                  Tory Burch: Is that you?

                  Tory Burch Fall 2022
                  Photography by ImaxTree

                  Something at Tory Burch’s Fall 2022 Ready-to-Wear presentation was different — it was dark. And not metaphorically dark but literally dark as the runway featured dramatic spotlights strategically placed to emulate a New York City backdrop. The message was clear: this is not your mom’s Tory Burch. Known for its timeless and classic approach to clothing, the collection had new energy and was undeniably cool. Preppy dresses were replaced with slinky separates. Other garments featured perfectly placed bright pops of colour. And if you’re looking for coat and belt inspiration for next fall, this is a great place to start.

                  Categories
                  Fitness

                  Canada Overcomes Team USA For Olympic Gold in Women’s Ice Hockey

                  Canada has won gold after a dominant women’s ice hockey tournament at the 2022 Olympics in Beijing. The Canadians beat Team USA 3-2 to claim their fifth Olympic gold in women’s hockey, closing out a historic tournament that saw them enter the gold-medal match with an Olympic-record 54 goals. In the end, it was their efficient offense that proved the difference in Beijing. But, as is always the case in this matchup of rivals, the Americans weren’t going down without a fight.

                  Having already defeated the US in the preliminary round, 4-2, Canada made sure to start the scoring early in the gold medal match. After a goal by Canada’s Natalie Spooner was called back as offside, Sarah Nurse put her team in the lead for good by deflecting the puck into the back of the net just 35 seconds later. Canada’s star captain Marie-Philip Poulin made it 2-0 with just under five minutes left in the first period, scoring a goal off a set play and giving the US a big hill to climb as the game wore on.

                  After Canada dominated the first period in possession and shots, the second period started more evenly, with both teams sprinting up and down the rink as the game opened up. Once again, it was Poulin causing problems for the US, putting away her second goal of the night off a quick redirection in the tenth minute of the second period. The goal made history for Poulin, who reportedly became the only hockey player of any gender to score in four Olympic gold medal games. It also seemed to light a fire under Team USA, and the Americans answered back when four-time Olympian Hilary Knight scored her sixth goal in Beijing.

                  By the third period, it was clear that the US had grown into the game. The Americans finally began to sustain some offensive pressure and made sure Canadian goalkeeper Ann-Renée Desbiens stayed busy with waves of desperate shots. In the final minutes, the US had a six-on-four advantage after pulling its goalie and Poulin leaving the ice on a penalty. A final flurry resulted in a goal from Amanda Kessel to make it 3-2, but ultimately, it was too little too late. Canada’s quick-striking offense proved too much to overcome, and the Americans will go home with a hard-earned silver and, undoubtedly, a little more motivation for 2026. Canada has now won five out of seven Olympic gold medals in women’s hockey.

                  Canada’s victory also serves as the latest chapter in the storied women’s hockey rivalry between the two nations. Either the US or Canada has won gold in every Olympics since the sport was introduced, with the US winning that first gold in 1998, then watching in heartbreak as Canada claimed it in every Olympics thereafter. In 2018, the US won it back in dramatic fashion, taking the game into a shootout that ended with a huge save by Maddie Rooney and a tear-filled dogpile on the ice. In 2022, it was the Canadians mobbing their goalie to celebrate a return to gold-medal status.

                  Though the US and Canada are bitter rivals on the ice, they also collaborate to push the sport forward. The two teams joined forces in the My Why tour in late 2021, an annual series of games between the North American powerhouses that also served as a tune-up for Beijing. Of course, nothing puts women’s hockey in the forefront like a USA-Canada gold medal matchup, and in 2022, Canada is ending a dominant tournament with a well-deserved gold. Finland won the bronze medal after defeating Switzerland 4-0.

                  Check out highlights from the gold-medal match ahead, and congrats to Team Canada!

                  Categories
                  Culture

                  The Pandemic Taught Feeding America CEO Claire Babineaux-Fontenot About the ‘Goodness’ In the World

                  a designed logo with the words name claire babineaux fontenot date february 16, 2022 at the top, a black and white photo of claire babineaux fontenot, and the words office hours at the bottom

                  Photo by Hillsman S. Jackson

                  In ELLE.com’s monthly series Office Hours, we ask people in powerful positions to take us through their first jobs, worst jobs, and everything in between. This month, we spoke with Claire Babineaux-Fontenot, the CEO of Feeding America, the largest domestic hunger-relief organization in the U.S. Babineaux-Fontenot is used to big titles; after starting her career as a tax lawyer, she went on to work for the leadership team at Walmart for 13 years. But after she was diagnosed with cancer in 2015, she decided to reassess. She joined Feeding America in 2018, and shortly after, Babineaux-Fontenot was tasked with guiding the organization through the pandemic, as Feeding America’s 200 food banks and 60,000 food pantries and meal programs became a lifeline for millions of people. Here, Babineaux-Fontenot shares how she kept her spirits up during the worst moments of COVID-19, how her unconventional childhood influenced her career, and why she’s more than fine with letting her co-workers see her sweat.

                  My first job

                  My first job outside of our house was working in the library at the University of Louisiana at Lafayette. I had to go around and find books that were not where they were supposed to be. Most of my time was spent looking under tables and picking up after students who didn’t have the respect for the books that I had. It didn’t allow for a lot of opportunity to engage with people. As much as I love books—I love holding them in my hand, I love the way they smell, I love to read—I learned I was not supposed to be a librarian.

                  a set of designed questions and answers that read

from the desk of

go to email sign off 
your partner in the mission

dream job i haven't done yet 
i'd love to teach high school english


what i do to relax 
i love to read jane austen and shakespeare then if i really want my mind to numb into a pleasant space, i watch '70s sitcoms

my first salary 
my very first salary was from the university in 1982 they defrayed some of the cost of my education, and i got a whopping 94 dollars per month

                  Photo by Hillsman S. Jackson

                  How growing up with 107 siblings drove my career

                  Through biology, adoption, and fostering, there were 108 of us children over the course of my mom and dad’s time together, which spanned almost 54 years. Until 2004, I seldom talked about my childhood. The reason I started talking about it more is because it has everything to do with everything; all of my personal and professional aspirations started with growing up in that home. The normal path to becoming part of our family was that the family you were born to was not high-functioning. There’s trauma associated with that. So I wanted to be a children’s rights advocate. I wanted to be a lawyer. It came from growing up in our home and thinking about how might I use my voice to lift up the voices of my brothers and sisters.

                  Why I consider my cancer diagnosis a gift

                  I became a lawyer, but I didn’t practice the kind of law I thought I was going to. I stumbled into becoming a tax lawyer and kept getting tapped for new opportunities. All that time, I knew why I became a lawyer. I saw firsthand the needs that exist inside of communities. I saw firsthand the power that people have to impact their communities. I knew all of this. But I was moving along, thinking, “I’ve got plenty of time.” I was acting like a person who could get to it later. Then the weekend of my 51st birthday, I went to get an executive physical, and I learned that I had cancer. Everything just started moving in slow motion. Once I had that diagnosis, I had so much clarity that said, if I survive this cancer, I will do those things that I thought I’d doone day.” I had a great prognosis, access to brilliant doctors, remarkable medical care. As a consequence, I have done really well with the cancer. Cancer, for me, was a beautiful gift that came in an ugly package, because I’m pretty sure I would’ve kept convincing myself to wait. And I’m glad that I didn’t.

                  claire babineaux fontenot, ceo of feeding america, in the warehouse at helping harvest

                  Babineaux-Fontenot in the warehouse at Helping Harvest in Jan. 2021.

                  MediaNews Group/Reading Eagle via Getty Images

                  How I stayed hopeful at the height of the pandemic

                  It felt like everything changed overnight. I thought one of my key responsibilities would be to make sure America knew what was happening, to lift up people experiencing food insecurity, to help people understand how bad things were and also understand they were well-positioned to be a part of solutions. I started traveling to food banks in the heart of the pandemic. I really thought I should do this out of a sense of duty. Here are our members out on the frontlines, and I had put in place a travel ban and told the national office they couldn’t be there, so I should be there. But at that first food bank visit during the pandemic, I realized, this is a privilege. Think about all of the things that happened in 2020, all of the things that happened in 2021, all of the things that are still happening right now, all of those moments that may have caused us to ask ourselves: Are there good people in the world? I knew the answer was yes. Every single place I went, I found people standing shoulder-to-shoulder with their neighbors, finding ways to be helpful. There is goodness in the world. I see it all the time. That keeps me going.

                  a designed qa that reads

from the desk of

the best way to reach me 
text, no doubt

my mantra 
it started when i was going through chemo i felt running would help with my chemo, but there were so many days when i didn't want to, so i developed a rhythmic mantra "i am strong i am strong i am strong"

my open tabs 
literally i have no open tabs other than zoom right now a sign of our current times, right

my power outfit 
when all else fails, black dress and pearls

                  Photo by Hillsman S. Jackson

                  The best career advice I’ve ever received

                  I was having a terrible time with a boss. I found someone who I knew didn’t like the boss, who’s a mentor of mine, and I went to him knowing in my bones, we’re about to slam this boss. So I came in and said, “Let me tell you what this boss is doing wrong.” And the person said, “You are focusing on all the wrong things. Rather than putting your energy on who your boss is not, refocus and spend some meaningful time understanding who he is, what matters to him. Then ask yourself, can you and he win at the same time?” It pivoted my whole thinking. One lesson was that when you have the opportunity to give advice, you should think about it as a responsibility to not just lean into what the person wants to hear. But the other lesson was it really did change the way I looked at those types of situations. I ended up thriving with that particular boss, because at the end of the day, we really wanted the same things.

                  The reason I show up to work as my full and flawed self

                  When you have so many people who are counting on you to be helpful, if you aren’t willing to let them see you sweat, that’s not real. That’s inauthentic. It’s particularly hurtful for people who show up at work knowing that they fall into some “other” status, either as women or as people of color or as non-binary. There’s this inordinate burden that society places on us, that we place on ourselves, to come in perfectly. I feel as a woman, a woman of color, with eyes at least partly open, I have a unique opportunity, privilege, and responsibility to make it clear that you don’t have to have all of the answers. What I do have is confidence in the ability of the people I surround myself with to make meaningful and positive change. I have confidence I can be a part of that.

                  This interview has been edited and condensed for clarity.

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                  Categories
                  Women's Fashion

                  A Behind-the-Scenes Look at Ella Purnell Getting Ready for Coach

                  As we all know, getting ready is almost as good as actually going out. Yellowjackets’ breakout star Ella Purnell agrees. “I love putting on some music, guzzling coffee, catching up with the hair and make-up team (today it was with the insanely talented Min Min Ma and Renato Campora), and just seeing what we come up with that day,” she told ELLE over email.

                  The “today” she is referencing is the Coach fall-winter runway show, which debuted on February 14. The New York brand is one of the main stops during New York Fashion Week, bringing out the crowds, the spectacle, and an unmatched celeb front row including Megan Thee Stallion, Angus Cloud, and more (global ambassador Jennifer Lopez, however, was not in tow). With the brand’s knack for curating a family of Hollywood’s best, it’s no wonder that Purnell’s rising profile was amongst the familiar faces. Lucky for us, she shared some candid moments of her getting ready for the event, just moments before the catwalk.

                  courtesy of coach

                  Courtesy of Coach

                  courtesy of coach

                  Courtesy of Coach

                  courtesy of coach

                  Courtesy of Coach

                  For her look, Purnell experimented with something she’s never tried before: unexpected tucking. “I have a ridiculous amount of oversized shirts, but I’d never tried tucking them into a long skirt before,” she explained. “It gave it a more softer, more flirty edge, especially with the colour palette.” Her final outfit consisted of a pink plaid shirt and a ditsy floral skirt, contrasted by unexpected accessories like a navy leather belt, statement sunglasses, and a purple platform boot. It’s quintessential Coach, mashing together soft western details with American prep.

                  courtesy of coach

                  Samantha Deitch/BFA.com

                  When it comes to Purnell’s personal style, she tends to move beyond both Coach and her character Jackie’s penchant for sweater vests and letterman jackets. “I don’t usually go for preppy or cute unless I’m also pairing it with big boots, or sneakers, or lots of chunky rings,” she said, which made her hybrid outfit all the more cogent. “I think I have a little more edge than Jackie. She’s definitely a little more mainstream. That being said, I’m definitely popping more collars out of my sweaters than before, so maybe she is influencing me subconsciously!”

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

                  Categories
                  Women's Fashion

                  The Ultra-Mini Skirt is Back. But Where’s the Body Inclusivity?

                  LaQuan Smith, New York Fashion Week Fall/Winter 2022. Photography courtesy of Imaxtree

                  Let’s unpack this.

                  When leggy models strutted down the Miu Miu runway last October with belly buttons, hipbones and upper thighs on display, the Italian fashion house had marked the return of the low-rise, ultra-mini skirt.

                  After a summer of Y2K revivals (like the “whale tail” exposed thong and “coconut girl” aesthetic), Miuccia Prada’s presentation upped the ante for early 2000s nostalgia. But by tapping exclusively thin models to wear its skin baring line, the luxury label proved it was living in the past.

                  Over the past few months, models like Bella Hadid and Hailey Bieber have worn the ultra-mini skirt on casual outings, and the garment’s been praised as a symbol of fashion’s return to fun, experimental and risqué dressing. It only makes sense, then, that during New York Fashion Week Fall/Winter 2022, designers would tap into the mini skirt craze again by presenting their own takes on teeny, low-rise attire.

                  ultra-mini skirt
                  LaQuan Smith, New York Fashion Week Fall/Winter 2022. Photography courtesy of Getty Images

                  For his runway show, LaQuan Smith presented micro-mini skirts bound together by ties and what appeared to be safety pins. “This collection was really about the revival of New York City and celebrating life again,” the designer told Vogue. Australian label Dion Lee also presented a leather variation of the barely-there skirt, featuring nearly undone clasps. What remained the same was the waify models featured on the catwalk.

                  “To be blunt, it sends the message that plus-size people aren’t attractive/thin enough to wear cool clothes,” Monique Black, a model and fashion influencer, tells FASHION. “There’s no difference between a flat stomach and one with rolls other than how they’re perceived and categorized.”

                  ultra-mini skirt
                  Dion Lee , New York Fashion Week Fall/Winter 2022. Photography courtesy of Getty Images

                  First gaining popularity in the ‘60s, the miniskirt represented a rebellion against societal taboos. Born out of a youth-led movement that aimed to counter the repressed post-war fashion of the ‘50s, the mini skirt went on to become a cultural icon. In the 2000s, the leggy garment was further revised to be low-rise and even more scandalous.

                  But before that, in the ‘90s, the idealized fashion standard was “heroin-chic,” an aesthetic that celebrated thinness and paleness. This narrative continued into the early 2000s, when thin people were glorified as a necessary accessory to complete any high-fashion outfit. Needless to say, fatphobia and body shaming are inextricably linked to that period of time.

                  “Clothing options for plus-size people in the early 2000s were virtually non-existent, thereby completely excluding fat people from fashion,” explained model Jessica Blair in a TikTok video. “Low rise jeans are viewed as fashionable and trendy on thinner body types, but are typically seen as lazy or unflattering on plus-size bodies.”

                  Y2K fashion trends are cute, sure, but as we bring these styles back, it’s important to understand the social and cultural context in which they first thrived. Still today, thinness is viewed as something that complements a revealing outfit, while people with larger bodies are often criticized for wearing the very same pieces of clothing. As the micro-mini skirt returns to the catwalk, we’re leaving behind a key evolution in the world of fashion: body inclusivity.

                  But Black is ultimately happy about the ultra-mini skirt resurgence. Fashion’s larger trend of risqué dressing reminds her of the ‘60s, when women began to wear miniskirts as part of a radical societal shift. “Except this time,” she says, “we get to take that mantra and apply it to all body types.”

                  And while the body positivity movement has moved the needle in fashion, fatphobia still exists within the industry. With Y2K finding its way back into the style zeitgeist, it’s critical that we don’t regress to the body-shaming culture of the noughties. And that starts on the runway.

                  “It really goes back to representation,” Black says. “If we’re pulling inspirational pictures from the 2000s to recreate the looks, and all we have are thin, white women to look at, it sends the message that to wear these clothes, you must look this way.”

                  “I want more visibly fat bodies on the runway…It’s 2022, not 2002.”

                  Categories
                  Fitness

                  A Brief History of the Fierce Rivalry Between the US and Canada Women’s Hockey Teams

                  USA vs. Canada women's hockey record

                  It’s official: the US women’s hockey team is back in the finals at the 2022 Winter Olympics in Beijing, where they’ll square off against longtime rival Canada. This marks the sixth time the neighboring teams will compete against each other in the gold-medal match. At the 2018 Olympics, Team USA clinched a first-place finish over Canada, but in Beijing, the Canadian team has gone out of their way to show the US that they aren’t backing down. Canada has scored a record 54 goals during the Olympic tournament, according to ESPN, and held a 4-2 victory over the US in the preliminary round. Here’s a brief history of the rivalry between these fierce competitors ahead of tonight’s final.

                  Since women’s hockey made its Olympic debut at the 1998 Winter Games in Nagano, Japan, both the US and Canada have medaled in every tournament. The countries have faced off in a total of five Olympic finals. Team USA won the first-ever gold medal at the 1998 inaugural tournament, where they outscored Canada 3-1. However, Canada then went on to win four consecutive gold medals, three of which edged the US into second place. At the 2018 Winter Games in Pyeongchang, exactly 20 years after they first won gold, the US reclaimed gold in a nail-biting, sudden-death shoot-out. The final score was 3-2.

                  The rivalry between the US and Canada goes far beyond the Olympics. At the 2021 International Ice Hockey Federation’s Women’s World Championship, both teams once again found themselves in the final, which naturally went into overtime. In a reversal from the 2018 Olympics, Canada won 3-2. In total, there have been 20 Women’s World Championship finals, and the US and Canada have competed against each another in 19 of them. Canada has won 11 of those games; the US has won eight.

                  In late 2021, the teams’ rivalry continued at the My Why Tour, an annual tournament that sees the neighboring squads face off in a series of games. Their track records only grew more evenly matched after four of the six games were decided by one goal. Unsurprisingly, three of those matches went into overtime.

                  It goes without saying that the US and Canada are the two most competitive teams in women’s hockey, which makes this rivalry so thrilling to watch. Suffice to say, we’re in for one epic showdown during tonight’s Olympic final, which airs on NBC at 11:10 p.m. ET.

                  Categories
                  Culture

                  Why Shailene Woodley and Aaron Rodgers Broke Up and Ended Their Engagement

                  Shailene Woodley and Green Bay Packers quarterback Aaron Rodgers have ended their surprise romance and engagement after less than two years together. A source confirmed the split to People this afternoon and explained why their relationship didn’t work.

                  “It was an amicable split; it just wasn’t working,” the source said. “They’re very different people with busy careers and there were obstacles that they couldn’t surmount. They will remain friendly; there’s no bad blood and no drama. It just didn’t work out for them.”

                  Reports of the breakup come shortly after a source told the magazine in late January that Woodley and Rodgers dealt with their different political beliefs by not discussing them.

                  Rodgers, who sparked controversy by misleading people about his COVID vaccination status, appears to be the more conservative of the two. Woodley, meanwhile, has been such a vocal environmental activist that she got arrested during the Dakota Access Pipeline protest and endorsed Bernie Sanders in the last election.

                  “They are not talking about their politics, and they never really have,” the source said then. “They disagreed on a lot of things. Early on, they decided to agree to disagree about things and not debate them.”

                  “She is not someone whose mind you can change, so Aaron hasn’t even tried,” the source added.

                  In December, People was told that Woodley and Rodgers’ partnership is different than many relationships. “They have a different, non-traditional relationship,” a source close to Woodley said. That source said to not take Woodley’s social media silence on Rodgers’ birthday as a sign of relationship trouble.

                  “Shailene and Aaron are still together,” the source said. “It’s not odd they don’t post about each other on their birthdays in that sense, [they] are very private about things.”

                  Woodley and Rodgers announced their engagement last February. In July, she told Entertainment Tonight that “there’s no wedding planning happening. There’s no rush. We’ve got no rush.”

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