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How To Make Your Blowout Last An Entire Week

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By now, you're well aware of the virtues of not washing your hair every day. Beauty editors and common gals alike are breaking free from the daily shampoo-condition-style grind.

But what about the greaseballs among us? How can we get on board and still look fresh? Look no further than our weeklong plan, which starts with a fabulous blowout and makes it last until the bitter end.

Related: 16 Essential Summer Hair Tricks

Monday: Savor The Blowout. Here's How.

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Tuesday: Flip It And Reverse It. Here's How.

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Wednesday: The Hump-Day Braid. Here's How.

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Thursday: The Half-Bun. Here's How.

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Friday: The Sleek Pony. Here's How.

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Saturday: Knot It And Forget It. Here's How.

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Sunday: Suds Up, Buttercup. Here's How.

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More from PureWow

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The Right Lipstick For Your Skintone
28 Hairstyling Tricks Every Woman Should Know
22 Tips For Really Pretty Nails
How To Get Summer Radiant Skin
16 Essential Summer Hair Hacks
Easy Ways To Fake A Flawless Tan

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On This Week's Best-Dressed List, Lupita Nyong’o Steals The Show

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Taking a look at this week's best-dressed celebrities, we picked up a few lessons that will help us for years to come. 


Emily Blunt showed us how to revive old trends, Lupita Nyong’o taught us that sunglasses and a fancy dress can work together in perfect harmony and Rosie Huntington-Whiteley proved that you can totally stand out in head-to-toe black. 


Check out our favorite looks of the week and let us know if you agree with our picks. 



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Beauty Queen Nela Zisser Can't Stop Eating

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Nela Zisser has inhaled five Subway sandwiches in less than 10 minutes. She's wolfed down a 5-pound burrito in under five minutes, 120 Chicken McNuggets in under 17 minutes, and 50 mozzarella sticks in eight minutes.

Still, the 23-year-old beauty queen isn't satisfied with her Miss Earth New Zealand 2013 tiara. She wants to win Nathan's Famous Hot Dog Eating Championship in Coney Island.

In the days before Major League Eating's most prestigious competition, she sat down with HuffPost Weird News, a bowl of chicken stock at her side, and promised that she would "keep eating until she was No. 1."

LISTEN: NELA ZISSER CAN'T STOP EATING


Zisser's first showing at Coney Island July 4 wasn't too bad. She downed 16 hot dogs and buns in 10 minutes, enough for a seventh place finish in a field of 16 women, behind two-time champ Miki Sudo. But she'll have to more than double her tally next year to approach Sudo's 38-dog performance.

"I love the challenge," Zisser tells us, "and I won't stop until I win."

Eating legend and HuffPost Blogger Crazy Legs Conti also joins us, providing insight on what it takes to reach new heights in gustatory greatness. And you should believe him when he says, "Unicorn poop tastes delicious."

nela zisser
nela zisser

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Kylie Jenner Looks Like A Cross Between Kim K And My Little Pony With Blue Hair

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If we didn't know better, we'd say Kylie Jenner was the product of some sort of genetic experiment that crossed Kim Kardashian with a My Little Pony after she debuted her pale blue hair at the Bellami Beauty Bar in West Hollywood on Thursday night, where she was promoting her hair extension line, as one does at 17.




A photo posted by King Kylie (@kyliejenner) on




A photo posted by King Kylie (@kyliejenner) on




UPDATE: Okay, actually this is what you get when you cross Kim Kardashian with My Little Pony



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The Women Who Are Redefining Beauty

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By Meghan Cahn


The portraits you are about to see are of breathtakingly gorgeous women. They're models; that's their thing. But, like many of us, when they were young girls and picked up magazines, they were flooded with images of women who didn't look like them (save a Benetton ad or two). They didn't see curvy bodies, freckled faces, natural curls, or feline-like eyes reflected in those pages, but instead models who appeared to be created from one mold. And that mold was the basis for what was typically considered "beautiful."

But, as we all know, beauty is not a one-size-fits-all situation. And the fashion industry is slowly shifting away from pushing out a homogenous POV, casting a more inclusive net. We're starting to see beauty defined in broader terms -- and hopefully one day, there will be no terms at all. Here are six unique models who are helping us get there.

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ALL PHOTOGRAPHED BY FELIX WONG.

Ashley Smith
Ashley Smith's modeling career had a sluggish start -- it almost never happened at all. The Texas native was discovered at South by Southwest when she was a punk teen sporting half-inch gauges in her ears and a lip ring. Though everybody around her had a "You're born in Texas, you stay in Texas" mentality, as soon as she turned 18, Smith packed her bags and moved to New York. She fell in love with the city, but the fashion industry didn't fall in love with her -- at least not right away.

"I'm a free spirit, so I didn't have the fear of failure. It was more about, 'I don't know what I'm doing, but I'm just gonna go out there and do it,'" she says. "And people were hesitant -- you know I don't have a very typical body -- especially coming from East Texas, where you eat Taco Bell three times a day. People were like... 'Oh, you're short. You have boobs. I don't know how this is gonna work.' And I was like, 'Well, I don't know either.'"

As a punk kid with a self-described "fuck you" attitude (and rainbow hair), Smith had always embraced standing out in a crowd. But when she started in the modeling world, that mindset didn't exactly work in her favor.

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Though casting agents loved the gap between her front teeth, her body was not what they were looking for. "They said, 'You'll never do the shows, you'll never be editorial,'" says Smith. "They were putting me in a box in the beginning. I just wanted to make some money, so after a year, I decided to quit."

But her agent convinced her to go to Paris before throwing in the towel; Smith obliged and her luck quickly changed. She booked shows -- big ones -- the kinds of jobs she was told she would never get. She walked in Chanel at the Grand Palais, Balenciaga, and Prada. Earlier this year, she was featured in Sports Illustrated. And she has never looked back.

Smith, now 24, credits this shift in the fashion industry in large part to social media. "It [gives things] such a wider scope," she says. "Now, it's more about personality and [being] more open-minded." Smith's positive, live-in-the-moment spirit is also what makes her beautiful. "I take a lot of pride in being myself and finding what is beautiful for me rather than going, 'Oh, that's beautiful. Let me attach myself to that.' [I find] what is beautiful for me inside and put that out into the world."

Katie Ermilio Chantilly Lace Tee, $995; American Apparel Cotton Spandex Jersey Cross-Back Bra, $14; Dsquared Jazz Jeans, $477; Vans Leather Sk8-Hi Slim Zip, $80.

Ines Rau
French model Ines Rau describes her look as "strong and edgy, but also very sexy. I am a wild cat." It's true: On set, the petite, 25-year-old brunette was lithe yet determined, and every movement she made had a tangible sensuality. She was also hilarious -- and just as much as her deep brown eyes and angular bone structure lit up the camera, her cheeky comments lit up the room.

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Rau, who was born a male and started transitioning to become a woman at the age of 16, began her modeling career just two years ago with a spread in American Playboy and has since been featured with Tyson Beckford in OOB magazine and shot by Bruce Weber for Barneys New York. Though she joins Andreja Pejić and Hari Nef as one of only a handful of transgender models in the spotlight, Rau says she feels like too much of a neophyte to be considered a significant part of any shift in the fashion world -- though she does see and appreciate the changes. "I think the industry is more open-minded and realistic of today's society," Rau says. "It finds me interesting enough to work with. They see beyond just the plastic to the personality."

She says: "I wanted to be a model, but never thought I could. Becoming a good-looking woman was already a blessing to me, then a fashion model. It's a real Cinderella story I'm starring in...I still can't believe it."

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When asked if she feels like she has a different role to play as a model because she is transgender, Rau definitively says no. "I'm too rock 'n' roll to be a role model," she says. "I am just being me and doing my job. I feel more like a woman, to be honest -- I often forget being transgender. I know it sounds funny, but I've been fully a woman since I was so young, I moved on a long time ago. Sometimes, I am like, 'Oh my god, you are transgender, how crazy.' My mind is deleting the transition episodes and the pain, and just keeping what comes after. It's really complicated to explain, but I just feel like I was born the way I am today, and it's amazing."

As for the future of the fashion industry, Rau thinks we will see more diversity and images of real people. "Every model should represent a part of any kind of woman, because every woman is beautiful to me."

Zimmermann lace top and pants; model's own jewelry.

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Sabina Karlsson
When 26-year-old Sabina Karlsson walks into a room, the effect is dizzying. She already towers at 5'11'', but her broad frame and fiery mane of natural red curls make her beauty feel even more expansive. Like a Chuck Close painting, she captivates from afar, but the closer you get the more enraptured you become. Her face is peppered with auburn freckles that gather intensely around her lips and the bridge of her nose. And there's a gap between her front teeth. Though that feature is reminiscent of Lauren Hutton, Karlsson truly looks like no other model.

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Karlsson has always possessed the power to captivate a room. She was discovered at the age of four in Sweden, where her Swedish father and Gambian mother still live. By the time Karlsson was 15, she was booking fashion shows across Europe. But as she grew older and her body began to develop beyond the gawky teenage and model-requisite dimensions, she found herself exhausted and unhappy. In order to maintain a "straight-size" model weight (typically sizes 0 to 2), she was working out sometimes as many times as three times a day, and adopted beyond poor eating habits. Her body just wasn't meant to look that way, so she stopped forcing it.

"In 2010, I just hit this point where I was so tired," she says. "I couldn't go out with my friends, because I had to bring my own food. I was constantly thinking about what I could eat and what I couldn't eat. I just couldn't enjoy my life -- and I wanted to."

Karlsson turned her focus toward improving her health and embracing her natural shape, and continued to work as a plus-size model. Though she and some of her colleagues would like to see an end to the modeling industry's mandated plus-size and straight-size labels ("We're all just models, we shouldn't be defined by our size," she says), she is thankful for where she is in the industry.

"I'm so much happier," she says. "People appreciate seeing people they can relate to -- seeing real bodies and real women. [I have] realized that this is where I should be, and this is where I should've been from the start."

Rag & Bone Lakewood Shirt, $175; American Apparel Cotton Spandex Jersey Camisole, $18; Lafayette 148 Ludlow Wide-Leg Trousers, $398.


Read The Full Story On Refinery29

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6 Surprising Beauty Buys You Can Find At Costco

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By Taylor Bryant

Our Costco shopping list typically looks a little like this. Toothpaste. Check. Enough toilet paper to last us the year. Check. Cheez-Its. Double-check. But, it's also making its way up the ranks to becoming our new budget-beauty destination. And not just for liter-sized shampoo -- though we love that too -- we're talking discounted designer makeup, skincare, and hot tools, people.

Related: 6 Models Who Are Redefining The Beauty Standard

The retailer recently launched a project called Beauty's Most Wanted, in which they teamed up with beauty professionals, like hairstylist Orlando Pita and manicurist Jenna Hipp, to create products for the Costco consumer.

Related: Should You Be Conditioning Before You Shampoo?

The catch? You have to sign up for a Costco membership to score these sweet deals. But, we think that's a small price to pay for all the Benjamins you'll be saving in the long run. Click through to check out some of the buys we can't wait to snag and get ready to mix beauty with your bulk purchases.



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This 6-Year-Old Probably Looks Better In A Fedora Than You

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Meet Liam, the 6-year-old who can probably rock a hat better than you. 


The UK-based cutie knows his way around an outfit and has an Instagram account to prove it. The feed, run by his mother, Aleksandra, features the tyke in a plethora of cute sneakers, bomber jackets and skinny jeans. 


 According to his mom, Liam "loves accessories like fedoras and sunglasses" -- and it's no wonder -- he looks better in a bowler hat than anyone we know. Right now, Liam only models for his family, but we imagine it's only a matter of time before we see him in the pages of GQ. 



A photo posted by olkafiolka (@olkafiolka) on




A photo posted by olkafiolka (@olkafiolka) on




A photo posted by olkafiolka (@olkafiolka) on




A photo posted by olkafiolka (@olkafiolka) on




A photo posted by olkafiolka (@olkafiolka) on




A photo posted by olkafiolka (@olkafiolka) on



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Selena Gomez Keeps It Casual In Cutoff Denim Shorts

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Selena Gomez looked casual and cool in a pair of denim cutoff shorts and a white button-down shirt in Los Angeles Thursday. 


The 22-year-old singer was photographed by paparazzi leaving a friend's house in sunny LA. She was effortless with her hair in a ponytail as she checked her phone.


Gomez has been busy promoting her new single, "Good For You." 






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Tearjerking Ad Shows Kids Really Do Notice How Much Their Moms Do For Them

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"Amazing moms need to be told just how amazing they are." That's the message of this powerful ad from Nivea India.  


The video -- which is part of a campaign called "mom's touch" -- shows school children talking about their mothers on camera, while the women watch on TV in a separate room. The kids describe how hard their mothers work and how much they sacrifice to give them the kind of education and future they didn't have as children.


"My mom loves me more than anything in the world."


Cue the waterworks.


H/T BuzzFeed


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'Women In The Wild' Features Moms Breastfeeding Outside To Spread A Message About Confidence

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Photographer and mom of four Erin White was having a hard time breastfeeding when a creative project gave her the boost of confidence she needed.

Inspired by an image by Stephanie Karr Studios, her local breastfeeding community in Kaiserslautern, Germany wanted to create their own group nursing photo, and White volunteered to be the photographer. During the photo shoot, many women shared their stories about breastfeeding, body image, and loss. "There was so much wonderful energy between all the mamas and babies!" she told The Huffington Post.

breastfeeding

After sharing the group photo on social media, the photographer says she received "a huge outpouring of emotional e-mails and comments from mothers across the world." Moved by the women's enthusiasm for normalizing breastfeeding and promoting body positivity, White decided to expand the project, photographing mothers and including their stories with the images.

With help from her associates Liliana Taboas and Megan Flanagan, her project -- titled "Women in the Wild" -- includes 51 mothers from different parts of the world. "They are so inspiring and real and relatable," White said.

women in the wild

For each session, the photographers explained the message and asked the mothers to wear what made them feel most comfortable. While some remained fully clothed, others stripped down to their underwear. "I see a lot of women decide to go more nude once we are at the shoot and they see other mothers doing it," White said. "It gives you a feeling of strength I think. You’re completely vulnerable, but there’s a whole group of you so you find confidence and power standing with your fellow mothers for a cause."

The photographer hopes the participants get a sense of confidence and healing from the series. "The first year or two can be so hard as a family, the last thing [a mom] should be stressed about is her body image," she said, adding, "I hope people will get a sense of the natural beauty of a new mother and stop tearing each other down. I hope it helps people see breastfeeding as a natural act of feeding a baby, rather than a sexual act to be hidden."

This summer, White hopes to photograph many more mothers as she travels throughout the U.S. For more information about the ongoing project, visit her website and Facebook page.



H/T BabyCenter



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Ed Hardy Designer Christian Audigier Dead At 57

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Ed Hardy designer Christian Audigier has died at age 57 after a battle with cancer.


The French fashion star and entrepreneur was diagnosed with myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS), a bone disease, in January, reported TMZ. 


"I just heard the news and I am truly devastated," his longtime publicist, Michele Elyzabeth, told the website LATF. "Christian was an incredibly brilliant man. He will be missed."


British DJ Pete Tong tweeted a farewell message to his friend on Friday. 





So did "Jersey Shore" alum DJ Pauly D. 





Audigier was the man behind the famous Von Dutch trucker hat worn by celebrities like Ashton Kutcher and Britney Spears. He was inspired by pop culture. 


“My demo is tabloid magazine," he once told GQ. "I am different from the other designer. Because what they say they hate, I love. They say they hate it but they always looking at it. We all look at OK! magazine. We pretend to don’t be. But we all want to see.”


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Can We Just, Like, Get Over The Way Women Talk?

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This post originally appeared on The Cut
By Ann Friedman


Like, have you ever noticed that women apologize too much? Sorry, but just humor me for a second here. What if, um, how we're speaking is actually part of what's undermining us in the workplace, in politics, and anywhere in the public sphere where we want to be taken seriously? I think it could be time for us all to assess how we're talking. Does that make sense to you, too?

It makes sense to tech-industry veteran Ellen Leanse, who explains that women overuse the word just, which sends "a subtle message of subordination." Essayist Sloane Crosley and comedian Amy Schumer tell us not to say "sorry" so often. A career coach warns the readers of Goop that women use too many qualifiers ("I'm no expert, but ..."), which undermine their opinions. Radio listeners complain of "vocal fry" that makes it impossible to listen to women. And according to a Hofstra University professor, women who suffer from upspeak -- also known as "Valley Girl lift"? -- reveal "an unexplainable lack of confidence" in their opinions when they turn declarative sentences into questions.


As someone who's never been shy about opening her mouth and telling you exactly what she thinks, this barrage of information about the problems inherent in women's speech has me questioning my own voice. Here I am, thinking that I'm speaking normally and sharing my thoughts on campaign-finance reform or the Greek debt crisis or the politics of marriage, when apparently the only thing that other people are hearing is a passive-aggressive, creaky mash-up of Cher Horowitz, Romy and Michele, and the Plastics. I'm as much a fan of these fictional heroines as the next woman, but I want people to hear what I'm saying and take me seriously.

At first blush, all of this speaking advice sounds like empowerment. Stop sugarcoating everything, ladies! Don't hedge your requests! Refuse to water down your opinions! But are women the ones who need to change? If I'm saying something intelligent and all a listener can hear is the way I'm saying it, whose problem is that?

"All the discussion is about what we think we hear," the feminist linguist Robin Lakoff tells me. Lakoff is a professor emerita at the University of California, Berkeley, and, 40 years ago, pioneered the study of language and gender. "With men, we listen for what they're saying, their point, their assertions. Which is what all of us want others to do when we speak," Lakoff says. "With women, we tend to listen to how they're talking, the words they use, what they emphasize, whether they smile."

Men also use the word just. Men engage in upspeak. Men have vocal fry. Men pepper their sentences with unnecessary "likes" and "sorrys." I haven't read any articles encouraging them to change this behavior. The supposed distinctions between men's and women's ways of talking are, often, not that distinct. "Forty years after Lakoff's groundbreaking work, we've learned that all such generalizations are over-generalizations: none of them are true for every woman in every context (or even most women in most contexts)," writes feminist linguist and blogger Debbie Cameron. "We've also learned that some of the most enduring beliefs about the way women talk are not just over-generalizations, they are -- to put it bluntly -- lies." Maybe we don't sound like a pack of Cher Horowitzes after all.

Still, I care about good diction -- I want to be heard and understood. When I'm writing, it's easy to do a control-F for "I think" and delete all of the wishy-washy words that are diluting my opinions. When I'm speaking, it's much harder to notice which linguistic tics I exhibit. And until I started co-hosting a podcast, I was fairly oblivious to my own vocal patterns. Then the emails and tweets started rolling in, advising me and my co-host that we would sound a lot smarter if we could just pay a bit more attention to our speech. The list of complaints mirrors the advice-driven articles I've seen scattered over the internet lately. "Fingernails on a chalkboard," wrote one reviewer on iTunes. "One has up-talk, the other has vocal fry and both use the word like every frigging third word... These are the ladies Amy Schumer goofs on."

It quickly became apparent that if we were to take the advice of all of our detractors -- carefully enunciating, limiting our likes, moderating our tone to avoid vocal fry -- our podcast would sound very different. It would be stripped of its cadence and its meaning; it would lose the casual, friendly tone we wanted it to have and its special feeling of intimacy. It wouldn't be ours anymore. "This stuff is just one more way of telling powerful women to shut up you bitch," says Lakoff. "It makes women self-conscious and makes women feel incompetent and unable to figure out the right way to talk." She adds, "There is no right way." Especially if you want to sound like yourself, and not some weird, stilted robot.

Indeed, as with salary negotiations in which women are damned if they don't ask for a raise and penalized for being overly aggressive if they do, tweaking speech to be more direct and less deferential comes with its own consequences. "When women talk in ways that are common among women, and are seen as ineffective or underestimated, they're told it's their fault for talking that way," the linguist Deborah Tannen, who's written several best-selling books about gender and language, told me. "But if they talk in ways that are associated with authority, and are seen as too aggressive, then that, too, is their fault when people react negatively." Asking women to modify their speech is just another way we are asked to internalize and compensate for sexist bias in the world. We can't win by eliminating just from our emails and like from our conversations.

Lakoff argues that the very things career coaches advise women to cut out of their speech are actually signs of highly evolved communication. When we use words like so, I guess, like, actually, and I mean, we are sending signals to the listener to help them figure out what's new, what's important, or what's funny. We're connecting with them. "Rather than being weakeners or signs of fuzziness of mind, as is often said, they create cohesion and coherence between what speaker and hearer together need to accomplish -- understanding and sharing," Lakoff says. "This is the major job of an articulate social species. If women use these forms more, it is because we are better at being human."

Language is not always about making an argument or conveying information in the cleanest, simplest way possible. It's often about building relationships. It's about making yourself understood and trying to understand someone else. As anyone who's ever shared an inside joke knows, it's fun. This can be true even at work or in public -- places where women are most likely to be dismissed because of the way they speak. To assume that our verbal tics are always negative is to assume that the goal of all speech is the same. Which of course is patently ridiculous.

Maybe women are undermining themselves a bit when they, like, speak in a way they find more natural. But only in the sense that they are seeking to articulate their thoughts more authentically and connect more directly with the people listening to them. Next time I read some advice from a podcast listener or from some self-styled expert on the internet about how women are too creaky-voiced, too apologetic, or using a word too much, I know exactly how I'll respond: As if.

Also from The Cut:
Kanye Styled Kim In Lingerie At A Château
What 10 Nude Athletes Can Teach You About Loving Your Body
Rihanna Found This Woman On Instagram, Made The American Dream Come True
Colorado Figured Out How To Dramatically Lower The Teen Birthrate
Living In L.A. Made Me Get Over My Body Issues

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The Early 2000s Would've Been Nothing Without Jessica Simpson

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Can we even remember a time when Jessica Simpson wasn't in our celebrity consciousness?


These days, you probably encounter her most in relation to her very cute clothing line and very cute children. But back in the 2000s, Simpson obviously rose to fame as a pop vocalist and celebreality TV show icon. 


In honor of the star's birthday on July 10, The Huffington Post took a look back at some of the most defining moments of the first era of Simpson's career. 


Take a walk down memory lane (and get some dope vintage tunes stuck in your head for the next like two weeks!!!).


Simpson breaks into the pop scene with hit single "I Wanna Love You Forever," 1999.




A classic throwback to Jessica's early innocent girl vibe. The song debuted in 1999, a wholly more innocent year of history that also included the release of "10 Things I Hate About You" and "Never Been Kissed." 


Simpson was only 19 at the time, which might make you rethink a lot of things. (Genetics are literally insane.)


Also, keep an eye out at the 0:25 mark for what we're 99 percent sure is an appearance by a very young Ashlee Simpson. 


The Simpson-Lachey fascination takes off with "Where You Are," 2000.




On the list of very important turn of millennia goings on, Jessica Simpson and Nick Lachey's romance ranks high.


Their early '00s chemistry is hard at work in this video, in which Simpson yearns for Lachey and imagines them walking around together near some trees. 


 The pair got together in 1999 and dated (with a brief break) until their marriage in 2002. They divorced in 2006. 


Jessica's Chicken of the Sea tuna fiasco sets the celebrity news world on fire, 2003.




The Simpson-Lachey marriage, of course, led to a very important TV show of our time: "Newlyweds: Nick and Jessica. The series gave the hungry public a little peek into their young domestic lives. The most famous scene of the show came in its very first episode, when Jessica gets confused about whether Chicken of the Sea tuna is tuna or chicken. The mistake blew up the celebrity news cycle and, we would argue, solidified Jessica's ditzy blonde public persona of the time. Watching the clip now, it seems so, so artificial. We obviously can't prove it, but we would guess a producer behind the wings knew viewers at home would be very entertained by a rich famous person getting mixed up about such a simple, everyday thing. ('Cause that was also, like, the premise of the show. Nick and Jessica are just like us!)


If it wasn't staged, whatever, who doesn't say dumb stuff sometimes? And also, why is Nick, who was supposed to be her loving husband at the time, being so rude about it? Those are our thoughts on that whole situation more than a decade after it was culturally relevant. "Can they live?" - sort of Kim Kardashian.


Back then, "SNL" hopped on the making-fun-of-the-mistake chain with a sketch in which Jimmy Fallon and Justin Timberlake play Nick  Lachey and Jessica Simpson. So ... just a little reminder that that happened, and that the entertainment landscape looks very different in 2015. 




 


The "With You" music video happens, 2003.




And now, one of the most brilliant music videos we've ever seen.


We can't say we know exactly where we were as a culture when this video came out. But our instinct tells us people were not severely concerned that it features Simpson washing dishes in a sudsy sink, lying on the ground putting lacy underwear on her head, lounging in a jersey 'cause she's just a sporty kind of gal, eating RIBS very MESSILY and trying to hit golf balls with her boobs literally getting in the way. (For context about Internet discussion of bogus gender stuff, the video came out in 2003. Jezebel didn't launch until 2007.)


This video demonstrates Simpson's Marilyn Monroe-level skill of playing into the character her audience so obviously wanted her to be (did you catch her playfully eating the Chicken of the Sea tuna?). If after watching this you really think Simpson wasn't in control of herself vs. sexy American girl image, I am giving you some side eye.


Jessica cries (wearing goggles after eye surgery) while watching Ashlee Simpson perform "Shadow" on "The Ashlee Simpson Show," 2004.




According to scientists*, it is impossible to not cry while listening to this song.


Whatever publicist crafted the younger Simpson's alt image should truly win publicist award of the past two decades.


*jk didn't ask any scientists.


Jessica stars in "Dukes of Hazzard," 2005.




The world lost its sh-t about the daisy dukes.


In conclusion, remember when low waist jeans were a thing? 


Happy birthday, Jessica! 



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Chrissy Teigen's Slicked-Back Hair And More Celebrity Looks We Loved This Week

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After finally getting into a summer workout groove, the HuffPost Lifestyle editors have been discussing ways to wear our hair when it's not completely dry. Thankfully, we've got plenty of "wet hair" inspiration from the celebrities who topped this week's beauty list.


Lily Collins styled her growing-out pixie in a sleek and sexy 'do for the Lancôme 80th Anniversary Party during Paris Couture Fashion Week. Both Jessica Alba and Irina Shayk kept it simple on the red carpet with center-parted and gelled strands. Meanwhile, Chrissy Teigen played with dual textures by smoothing down the crown of her "bronde" locks and keeping the long layers in the back soft and flowy.


See these slicked-back hairstyles below, plus our tips and product recommendations to help you recreate the looks. Then tell us which star gets your vote for best beauty look.








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Kate Moss Won't Pose Nude Anymore, But There's Still The Internet

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Models often become famous for wearing the creations of major fashion designers. But when it comes to Kate Moss, the British bombshell solidified her supermodel status by posing nude.  



But it looks like the supermodel is putting her body-baring days behind her. 


 According to The Mirror, the 41-year-old fashion icon will no longer pose nude in order to spare her 12-year-old daughter, Lila Grace, from embarrassment. 


 “I don’t think my daughter wants to see me on the toilet. Lila has seen me nude," Moss told The Mirror. "She went: ‘Yes, Mummy, there is a lot of you in those pictures.’ She saw the Playboy thing - she didn’t see the inside but she knew about the whole thing.”



Photo credit: Lui 


 Moss has flaunted her flesh for countless publications and fashion campaigns. Her Calvin Klein "Obsession" ad is legendary. Her St. Tropez campaign is stunning. Her March 2014 feature for Lui was shocking. And the list goes on and on. 


 





 


And while it's noble of her to think about shielding her tween daughter from her exhibitionist ways, there's one problem: the Internet.


 That's right, thanks to modern technology Moss' daughter will only be a few key strokes away from seeing her mother in the buff. But again, we appalaud her efforts. 


 


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7 Cardinal Sins To Avoid If You Get Your Eyebrows Done

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Messing around with your eyebrows is a serious matter, and there are few people who feel more strongly about that fact than brow artists. Anyone with decent vision and a clean mirror can remove thick, stray brow hairs. But an expert can create an eyebrow shape that fits your face perfectly.


When you overpluck or trim too much, achieving beautiful brows doesn't come as easy. Want to avoid the wrath of your brow artist? Avoid the seven no-nos below. 


1. Filling in your eyebrows with heavy makeup before your appointment. Wearing brow makeup makes it harder for the brow specialist to see what hair is actually there, according to Caroline K., a senior specialist at hair removal salon Spruce & Bond. "It covers up the fine, baby hairs that we need to tweeze to get that nice shaped brow," she says. Although we do always clean the brow before tweezing, there is a risk that the leftover residue from the makeup can clog the newly open pores! Come in with a naked brow and let the experts fill them in for you after your brow service."


2. Having unrealistic expectations about your eyebrows. "It's true, we all want what we can't have; and to some it can be extreme. Please don't come in with unrealistic ideas on how your eyebrows should look (think Pamela Anderson thin eyebrows wanting to leave the studio that day with thick, full brows like Cara Delevingne)," says Caroline K. "It just won't happen! I'm not saying that it could never happen, but it could take weeks or even months."


Boom Boom Brow Bar owner Malynda Viglotti recommends bringing in a picture of yourself with brows that you loved from a certain point in time. Also, being able to explain to the brow artist whether you like a fuller brow or a more styled brow is crucial. "Communication is key because once you take the hair out it’s gone and takes months to grow in," she says.


3. Going somewhere new to get your brows done. Caroline K. knows it can be tempting to go to the most convenient salon or spa while you are out of town and can't see your regular brow specialist. "But once you cheat, there will be regret; and all those weeks and months of working so hard to get your brows where they need to be will go down the drain," she says.


 Viglotti echoes this belief, adding: "We can only work with what you have and if you have nothing then, you have to let it grow all back. It takes 3-6 months sometimes."


 4. Not disclosing whether you've been prescribed topical medications or acne treatments, including Retin-A and Accutane. These medications may cause skin to peel or exfoliate and can affect the outcome of your brow shaping appointment. "If you are going to wax, tell the aesthetician because your skin is hyper sensitive. And maybe consider the option not to wax but to tweeze at that time because you don’t want to lift skin," says Viglotti.  


5. Tweezing gray hairs at home. "Don't do it. I repeat, Don’t do it," says Caroline K. "I know it's hard to see those gray brow hairs randomly pop in the older we get. But do understand, you need those hairs there!" The professional admits to seeing way too many self-conscious women tweeze them away only to leave them with sparse and patchy brows. It makes it harder to create the brow shape that best fits your needs. There is always an option to tint your brows to cover up those unwanted, but needed, grey hairs.


6. Attempting brow waxing after a spray tan: This one is pretty self-explanatory but Viglotti says that if the aesthetician applies the wax and peels it off, you can rip off the tan, too.


7. Flat out lying: "We know if you’ve done Botox or can tell if you’ve been tweezing between [visits]. We want you to have the best brows! We want you to feel beautiful. So let's work together," Viglotti says.


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Queen Elizabeth's 94-Year-Old Husband Philip Caught Swearing At Photographer

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LONDON, July 10 (Reuters) - Prince Philip, the 94-year-old husband of Britain's Queen Elizabeth well-known for occasional verbal gaffes, was caught on camera swearing at a photographer on Friday, British media reported.

At an event to mark the 75th anniversary of the Battle of Britain between the Royal Air Force and the German Luftwaffe in 1940, TV footage showed an exasperated Philip appearing to lose his temper during a photocall.

"Just take the fucking picture," news websites quoted him as saying to the photographer at the event in central London attended by son Prince Edward and grandson Prince William among others.

Buckingham Palace declined to comment on the incident.

Philip, the longest-serving consort in British history, has found himself in hot water before for gruff and unguarded remarks.

The former naval officer once told British students in China, "If you stay here much longer, you'll be slitty-eyed," and asked Aborigines in Australia if they still threw spears at each other. (Reporting by Michael Holden; editing by Andrew Roche)

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Who Really Does Run the Roost at Nadine Johnson PR? Lupo Wanted to Share With Us That He Really is Top Dog.

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A few weeks ago we stopped by the fabulously hectic office of PR guru Nadine Johnson to get the scoop on dog mascot Lupo. He's stolen every heart in the office, so along with photographer Kimberly M. Wang/Eardog.com and Mindy Montney of Dog & Co, we dug further to see what made this dog tick!

What's your favorite thing to do at the office?

I enjoy teasing my older sister Milou and supervising all the employees from my little throne at the top of the stairs. I also steal their lunches when they are not looking, but need to watch out as beach season is here and I've gotten a bit round around the waist.

Who is your favorite designer?

I adore Dior sneakers and Céline leather flats (from mum)--they use the very best glue. I love chewing them, but I call it redesigning, as it adds to the look.

What's the best party you have ever been to?

There are many of them but perhaps the one that mum threw for Princess Gloria von Thurn und Taxis in our garden. I can relate to royals. I also like going to fashion shoots where I can play with Chanel jewelry and chew the bags.

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What's your favorite treat?

Doing whatever I feel like and getting away with it. That's the ultimate treat.

What happens when you get in trouble?

I usually don't get in trouble. At least I think so, but others might disagree.

What's your favorite scent?

I only enjoy specific scents like the smell of a hot fresh turkey burger or my mum's coffee. I also love my big brother Jack's dirty socks--just divine.

Thanks Lupo - we had a blast with you and your sister Milou.

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This Beauty Pageant Queen Turned A Mean Tweet Into A Positive Movement With #NoMakeupSelfie

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Just because you look picture perfect, doesn't mean that you're immune from cyberbullying.


North Carolina beauty pageant queen Isabella Gaines, Miss Greater Port City's Outstanding Teen 2015, found that out the hard way when a stranger tweeted two photos of her side-by-side on June 30 -- one with makeup, and one seemingly without.


 





The tweet was featured on the "NCOT no makeup" account (NCOT stands for "North Carolina Outstanding Teen" ) which describes itself as "the page where youll (sic) find the prettiest NCOT girls WITH NO MAKEUP! YUCK!" 


"I was kind of hurt at first,” said Gaines in an interview with local news station WNCN. But instead of ignoring the tweet or saying something hurtful back, Gaines decided to turn the tweet into an inspiring social media moment.


 



From there, Gaines told WCNC that her friend, Kenzie Hansley, decided to post her own photo with and without makeup. Hansley ended her message with #NoMakeupSelfie and from there, the movement spread like wildfire. Pretty soon, other pagent queens, celebrities and girls from North Carolina to California were tweeting at Gaines and Hansley with their own selfies. 






"I honestly did not expect this type of response. I wanted to help one person, but I am happy it went this big and has an encouraging message," said Gaines in a conversation with The Huffington Post. "I have learned you don't have to take things and you can take a stand for things you believe in and you CAN make a difference." 


Amen! 





H/T Buzzfeed


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11 Pinterest Accounts Every Dude Should Follow

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When it comes to Pinterest, women dominate. The popular social media site is frequented by females; in fact, women are more than four times as likely to use Pinterest as men. But don't count the fellas out yet! Pinterest offers men's street style, grooming tips, and major accessories to ensure each man looks his best.


So guys, if you're looking to step up your style game, we've got the Pinterest accounts that will show you how. Check out these 11 boards for some seriously dashing men's style. 


 


1. Daniel Bear Hunley






2. SANDFELD






3. Dagmar Müller-Brennecke



 


4. Dale Partridge






5. Nick Goodenough






6. Kyle Newton






7. The Designers Collective






8. Up Knörth



 


9. Daniel Cronje






10. Thomas Murphy






11. Niyalish






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