Monday 9 May 2016

ELLE Singapore Magazine Article: Meet the Coolest Girl In K-Pop

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South Korean pop star CL is the baddest female in K-pop and she won’t have it any other way.

ELLE Singapore Magazine Article: Meet the Coolest Girl In K-Pop


In the K-pop world of cookie-cutter music artistes, 25-year-old South Korean Lee Chae-lin — better known as CL — stands out by a mile. Projecting badass instead of cutesy, she wears black leather like a uniform, rapid-fire raps in Korean and has hits like Hello Bitches, Dirty Vibe and The Baddest Female.

Who’s this yeppeun yeoja (“pretty girl” in Korean) with the tough-chick stance and larger-than-life personality? Here’s the lowdown: A rapper, singer and songwriter known for her unique vocal tone and incredible energy on stage (have you seen her dance?), CL is the front woman of Korean girl group 2NE1 who’s also launched a solo album. She wields major influence in Asia (check out her fan site www. clthebaddestfemale.com). And did we mention she has nearly 4 million Instagram followers? CL is also the muse of Moschino’s Jeremy Scott (he calls her the Nicki Minaj of K-pop) and was his date to the 2015 Video Music Awards. Plus, when she coolly sat front-row at Alexander Wang’s Fall/Winter 2016 show at New York Fashion Week (traditionally a stylish launch pad for “It” girls), she caused quite a stir.

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Playboy Magazine Articles: Casey Neistat - YouTube's Favorite Vlogger

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For the YouTube genius who snowboarded through Times Square, life in New York hasn't always been a viral joyride.

Playboy Magazine Articles: Casey Neistat - YouTube's Favorite Vlogger

MY WAY

I grew up in southeastern Connecticut, two and a half hours from New York City. I always romanticized New York and obsessed about it in a way I now reserve for the look on my baby daughter’s face. My parents would take my siblings and me into the city maybe once or twice a year, but if I had to trace my fascination with New York to one thing it was the Tom Hanks movie Big. I had it on VHS and would play it on repeat. Here was this kid who miraculously turned into an adult but had the brain of a child, and by maintaining his youthful spirit he was able to succeed in this gigantic playground that was New York City. Playing piano with his feet got him a promotion. To me, that movie was fucking gospel.

I moved to New York when I was 20. I was a bike messenger that first summer, which was horrible. This was 2001, so you had to pay for your cell phone minutes. I lived in a 12-by-12-foot room on the Upper West Side for $370 a month. The building was partly filled with people who’d recently been let out of jail. I shared a wall with a family who had a hot plate, and I could smell whatever it was they were cooking, through the wall, all day, every day.

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Fast Company Articles: Apple, Facebook, Google, And Alibaba Take Hollywood

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Now that Netflix and Amazon have proved that outsiders can thrive in Hollywood, the world's largest tech companies Alibaba, Apple, Facebook, and Google are launching their own plans to get in on the act.

Fast Company Articles: Apple, Facebook, Google, And Alibaba Take Hollywood

The Imperial hotel has been a fixture on park city, Utah's main street since it opened in 1904. originally a spot for weary miners, it captured the imagination of Hollywood when an independent film festival came to town and its central location helped make it a hub for 10 days each January. It’s reputedly home to Park City’s most famous ghost, Lizzy, a prostitute who was killed by her husband. Legend has it that Lizzy still flirts with men there. During this year’s Sundance Film Festival, though, the Imperial was haunted by a different spectral presence: Apple.

While other tech companies craved visibility at the annual indie-cinema jamboree—Samsung set up a virtual-reality storytelling village, Airbnb staged a painstakingly curated artist’s retreat called Airbnb Haus, and Uber offered helicopter rides from Salt Lake City—Apple slipped into Sundance practically unnoticed. It set up shop in the Imperial, which was recently converted into a condo-slash–event space. Behind the now unmarked door at 221 Main, Apple hosted private, invitation-only events. On one evening, a group of young filmmakers were treated to cocktails and a farm-to-table dinner put on by the chefs from Eveleigh, one of Los Angeles’s hottest restaurants. The space was as sleek and understated as an iPhone 6S; one attendee described the decor to me as “very beige.” Unlike most Sundance brand-sponsored events, there were no press r...

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Playboy Magazine US Article: Keegan-Michael Key on Obama, Religion and Life After 'Key & Peele'

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With Key & Peele behind him and his first marquee movie role (alongside a do-rag-sporting kitten) out this month, the comedian pauses to talk race, religion and Hamlet’s anger translator.

Playboy Magazine US Article: Keegan-Michael Key on Obama, Religion and Life After 'Key & Peele'

The plot of your new movie, Keanu, involves two guys trying to find a stolen cat. Forgive us for saying so, but that doesn’t exactly sound like the smart social satire you and Jordan Peele are known for. Are you slumming it?

KEEGAN-MICHAEL KEY:
It started out as a sort of exercise. Our platform has mostly been exploring African American masculinity and what it means to be a person of color in America. That’s a recurring theme in Key & Peele. So how do you do that as a movie? Jordan tried putting it into a feature-length script, and we realized there was something missing. These guys, the two main characters, weren’t pursuing anything. I thought the cat was Jordan’s way of being sly. I thought it was a reference to Blake Snyder’s Save the Cat!, which is a screenwriting book. But he told me, “No, I just think cats are cute. Everybody likes cats, right? Especially women.” That was seriously his justification for the cat. It’s really quite brilliant.

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Thursday 5 May 2016

NYLON Articles: Meet the New Kings and Queens of Young Hollywood

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NYLON Articles: Meet the New Kings and Queens of Young Hollywood

Wyatt Russell

“Today is legitimately the first day where I can just sit here, smoke a cigarette, and I don’t have to do anything,” Wyatt Russell says. He’s talking about enjoying his newly fixed-up house in Austin (where he lives when he’s not in L.A. for work), but he may as well be talking about his work schedule. The 29-year-old former pro hockey player has been pretty damn busy since a hip injury took him off the ice and into the family business (Kurt Russell and Goldie Hawn are his parents; Kate and Oliver Hudson are his half-siblings). After memorable roles in Judd Apatow’s This Is 40 and 22 Jump Street, he’s now playing a tie-dye-wearing, herb-toking, Carl Sagan-quoting baseball player in Everybody Wants Some. And with the Anna Kendrick wedding dramedy Table 19, comedy Folk Hero & Funny Guy (in it, he gets to play guitar—another one of his talents), and the sports comedy Goon: Last of the Enforcers on deck, he better enjoy that smoke break while he can.

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Filmfare Articles: "I Never Leave My Underwear!"

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She minces no words. She censors no thoughts. Nargis Fakhri leaves Rahul Gangwani blushing with her rare candour

Filmfare Articles: "I Never Leave My Underwear!"

Between 40 cheeky questions and some unprintable asides, Nargis Fakhri has a surreal control over brash honesty. She doesn’t belong to the Hindi film industry; she’s not good at being vanilla. So she spikes her personality with vodka, roofies, acid... wait... scratch that, it’s more like spicy Jägermeister. If you don’t know what that is, chances are you have no chance with Nargis at the bar. And then she wants to drop it all and just move on to a doctor’s life. Have a quaint home back in the American suburbs and live a happy life without a mortgage. But right now, she has a steaming, boisterous and charged life under the spotlight. She’s so hot, Indian boys are dropping a lot more than just the proverbial jaw. The fans are drooling over this dishy lady. And why not. Just like James Bond’s Martini, she’s best served shaken not stirred...

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Cricket Today Magazine Articles: 9 Hottest Female Anchors Of IPL

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Shonali was applauded for her cricketing knowledge while interviewing studio guests. She hosted the IPL for four consecutive seasons...
Cricket Today Magazine Articles: 9 Hottest Female Anchors Of IPL

A part from the game, the Indian Premier League is also high on glamor quotient. The cheerleaders and female presenters are the ones who have added new dimensions since the inception of the league. We have seen over the years that females have form a chord with fans and cricketers. They have been taken hand to hand by everyone and their style of presenting a game has gain momentum during the course of a particular game. Here is the list of glamorous female presenters who have or are gracing the slam bang tournament.

SHONALI NAGRANI

Shonali Nagrani is an entertainment television presenter, who has also appeared in several Bollywood films. She was crowned Femina Miss India International in 2003. After successfully working for ESPN and other networks, she was signed by ITV in 2011 to co-host their coverage of the IPL, alongside Matt Smith. She was brought on board as an analyst and presenter. Shonali was applauded for her cricketing knowledge while interviewing studio guests. She hosted the IPL for four consecutive seasons.

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Men's Fitness (US) Magazine Articles: Who Needs A Gym, Anyway?

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Thanks to a surge in boot camp-style training, HIIT workouts, and CrossFit, we’re officially living in a body-weight-training world. But are you getting the most out of your outdoor intervals, burpees, and sprints? With the help of our savviest trainers, we’ve created the only guide you’ll need to turn any public park, city street, rocky trail, or sandy beach into your badass - and completely gratis - gym.

Men's Fitness (US) Magazine Articles: Who Needs A Gym, Anyway?

CITY

Take It to the Streets


Expert tips from the coolest man on concrete: Knox Robinson, Nike+ Run Club coach and captain of the urban running squad Black Roses NYC

1) Make Every Run a Destination Run

A city means lots of streets—and lots of routes. So take advantage and run from Point A to Point B, not A to A. Says Robinson, “I’ll map out a route to the beach and run there, soak in the ocean, then have a meal on the boardwalk and take the train home.” You’ll always find it exciting—which, let’s face it, is the world’s best motivator.

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Cosmopolitan UK Magazine Articles: 9 Women Share How They've Fought Their Way to the Top

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The four letter word every woman needs to get ahead at work? Nope, not wine. Grit. Josie Copson meets the nine women who’ve wrangled and fought their way to the top.
Cosmopolitan UK Magazine Articles: 9 Women Share How They've Fought Their Way to the Top


1. Casey Stoney MBE

ENGLAND WOMEN’S FOOTBALL CAPTAIN


“In 2005, I was part of the England team at the European championships. We were playing a home tournament – something that had never happened before in ladies’ football. I felt so honoured. But my excitement quickly dissipated. I was in a squad of 21 and realised I was one of only two players who weren’t selected to play any minutes in any of the three games. By the end of that tournament, I seriously contemplated quitting. I had a full-time job to supplement my income and didn’t think I could juggle everything any more. Then, something switched inside me. I thought, “I’m not going to give up.” Instead, I made a decision to get up at 4am every day to train before work. I trained harder and longer than I’d ever trained before. That whole experience was the making of me and I’ve kept that work ethic ever since. If I’d have given up I would never have captained my country or gone to the Olympics.”

2. Shaa Wasmund MBE

ENTREPRENEUR


“I actually started my career as an intern on Cosmopolitan. One day, I was sitting in the editor’s office waiting for her to arrive when I noticed a pile of paper with the magazine’s letterhead. I shoved a stack in my bag and later wrote a letter to the boxer Chris Eubank&

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Billboard Magazine Articles: Remembering Prince: The Greatest Musical Talent of His Generation

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Remembering Prince: The Greatest Musical Talent of His Generation

Billboard Magazine Articles: Remembering Prince: The Greatest Musical Talent of His Generation

Mourning has no sense of priorities. When an artist's achievement is as complex as Prince's was, trying to assess his huge legacy is undone by recognition that now everything is in the past tense: that panoply of scorching and/or aching grooves, the Jimi Hendrix-meets-Keith Richards guitar fused with a voice able to switch from angelic to devilish quicker than Charlie Chaplin wiggling his mustache, the pansexual Pied Piperism and belief that all life is a doomed but exciting revolt against death, the effrontery and wit of the whole ­project even after he had been at it for decades. But every appreciation has to start somewhere.

So let's start by trotting out that overused word "unique" and remembering how, um, uniquely true it was. The Beatles were competing with similarly derivative -- just less alchemic -- U.K. bands before anyone stateside heard of them. Bob Dylan was the star pupil of a bustling New York folk scene. Getting closer to home, Michael Jackson and Stevie Wonder were both nurtured from boyhood on by Motown before ­individuating themselves, and James Brown had learned everything there was to know about R&B from year..

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ADWEEK Magazine Articles: YouTube Is Ready to Take on TV-Sized Budgets

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Google plots a multipronged strategy - using talent like Rachel Levin - to make its video arm the biggest draw for TV dollars.

ADWEEK Magazine Articles: YouTube Is Ready to Take on TV-Sized Budgets

IT ISN’T ALWAYS EASY TO PAIR UP THE SUITS OF THE MARKETING WORLD WITH THOSE FREEWHEELING KIDS that make the buzziest videos in the digisphere. The two sides—and more importantly, their respective brands— must have chemistry. So last July at VidCon, the annual digital video conference held in Anaheim, Calif., YouTube set up a “speed dating” event, hoping to play matchmaker between advertisers and creators. Among the talent mingling with marketers was Rachel Levin, a rising beauty vlogger who immediately hit it off with the people behind the anti-smoking initiative Truth. “She wasn’t originally on our radar,” admits Justin Hooper, group creative director at 72andSunny, the agency handling Truth.

She’ll be on just about everyone’s radar this week at the Digital Content NewFronts in New York where YouTube will pitch Levin and other charismatic stars from its creators’ stable at its Brandcast event. Levin, though still a relative unknown, seems like an easy sell—she’s recently entered rarified YouTube air by passing the 1 billion view mark. What’s more, her YouTube subscribers have shot up from 1.9 million to 7.6 million in the past year, and her videos get watched 3.5 million times per week.

Such numbers are why Truth execs cast her for their “It’s a Trap” campaign after learning that, in her personal life, she had little patience for...

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New York magazine Article: Meet the First Superstars of the Beyoncé Generation

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Meet the first two superstars of the Beyoncé generation.

New York magazine Article: Meet the First Superstars of the Beyoncé Generation

You were not expecting this, but here you stand, transfixed, in the doorway of a Hollywood rehearsal studio, your throat clamping up and your chest tightening, watching 16- and 17-year-old sisters Halle and Chloe Bailey sing a single word, “Hallelujah,” in gorgeous, repeating crescendos, like a church choir sending a dying loved one off into the light. Those harmonized “Hallelujahs” aren’t even a song, just their way of saying grace. You are not religious. But you will start to cry. And as soon as they spot you, it’s over. “Hi! I’m Chloe,” says Chloe, rushing out from behind her piano to give a stranger a hug. “I’m so excited! We’re going to have so much fun!” She means it; Chloe is a grin embodied. She gasps. What’s wrong? “I like your sneakers! Blue is one of my favorite colors.” Halle, the younger sister, follows Chloe’s lead, flashes a sweet smile, puts down her electric guitar, and gives a more timid hug. Meanwhile, Chloe has moved on from complimenting my sneakers to raving about the vegan place, Gracias Madre, where we’re having lunch after rehearsal (the sisters are both vegan) and how she’s already dreaming of her order and how it’ll probably have pesto, which is maybe her favorite thing to eat, and she does an enactment of the exact look of joy that’s going to cross her face when it touches her mouth. Halle, her brow furrowed, lost in..

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Wednesday 4 May 2016

The Atlantic Magazine Articles: The Secret Shame of Middle-Class Americans

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Nearly half of Americans would have trouble finding $400 to pay for an emergency. I’m one of them.

The Atlantic Magazine Articles: The Secret Shame of Middle-Class Americans

Since 2013, the Federal Reserve Board has conducted a survey to “monitor the financial and economic status of American consumers.” Most of the data in the latest survey, frankly, are less than earth-shattering: 49 percent of part-time workers would prefer to work more hours at their current wage; 29 percent of Americans expect to earn a higher income in the coming year; 43 percent of homeowners who have owned their home for at least a year believe its value has increased. But the answer to one question was astonishing. The Fed asked respondents how they would pay for a $400 emergency. The answer: 47 percent of respondents said that either they would cover the expense by borrowing or selling something, or they would not be able to come up with the $400 at all. Four hundred dollars! Who knew? Well, I knew. I knew because I am in that 47 percent.

I know what it is like to have to juggle creditors to make it through a week. I know what it is like to have to swallow my pride and constantly dun people to pay me so that I can pay others. I know what it is like to have liens slapped on me and to have my bank account levied by creditors. I know what it is like to be down to my last $5—literally—while I wait for a paycheck to arrive, and I know what it is like to subsist for days on a diet of eggs. I know what it is like to dread going to the mailbox, because there will always be new bills to pay but seldom a check with which to pay them. I know what it is like to have to tell my daughter that I didn’t know if I would be able to pay for her wedding; it all depended on whether something good happened. And I know what it is like to have to ...

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