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watch nick vatterott tell jokes to tuna

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Tuna, a ridiculously, painfully cute pup who you probably follow on Instagram, stopped by our offices this week to show us his famous overbite and smell our eager hands (and to promote his forthcoming book, published by Penguin). Serendipitously, comedian Nick Vatterott also came by that day. Nick is friends with actor T.J. Miller (they once had a comedy troupe together!), who recently came to our offices and made a video with a tiny dog. So it seemed only natural that we let Nick try out some jokes on Tuna, on camera. Because if an underdog with an overbite doesn't find your jokes funny, who will?

Watch the video above and prepare to have your heart melted. Literally. Your heart will just be a melty puddle. Sorry/not sorry. 


this second-gen rockstar was destined for it-girl status

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Frankie Clarke answers my Skype call from her college dorm room, and the wall behind her is lined with band posters and a The Runaways vinyl. In many ways the vinyl is fitting as with her choppy bangs, all-black wardrobe, and a penchant for heavy eyeliner, Frankie looks very much like a modern-day Joan Jett. Mostly, she is just like every other college kid—she's tired, has far too much work, and she has a choir concert to run to in an hour. But Frankie certainly isn't your average 20 year old. She spent her childhood on tour with Guns N' Roses (her dad is guitarist Gilby Clarke). She now runs a successful style blog called Frankie's Planet, and has serious musical talent of her own. There is no doubt that she is certainly an it-girl to watch.

Tell us a little about growing up.
"I grew up in Sherman Oaks in Los Angeles, California. My Dad was the guitarist of Guns N' Roses and now plays in Kings of Chaos with Steven Tyler, as well as doing solo stuff. My mom is the designer of Frankie B. Jeans. I have always grown up around fashion and music. My parents joke that I took my first steps on a moving tour bus, but it's actually probably not a joke."

How did your own music career get started?
"I think I was one years old when I went to my first concert. It was an Iggy Pop show and apparently I managed to sleep through the entire thing. I guess my interest in music really started at age four when I asked my Dad for a pink sparkly guitar. He encouraged me to learn piano before guitar because it's a good way to be introduced to playing music. I played piano for five years, but by the age of 10 I felt kind of done with it. I really just wanted to play the guitar, so finally my parents allowed me to start my guitar lessons. I ended up joining an all-girl rock band when I was 11 called Sweet Gone Sour—that was the start of my songwriting. We were even featured in Teen Vogue (laughs). In high school I went from being in an all-girl band to being the only girl in the band, so that was an interesting transition. We all went our separate ways for college, so for the last few years I have just working on doing my own solo thing. 

How do you balance school and music?
Sometimes it's hard to find time for my music when I have school going on, but I am a creative writing focused English major which has really helped with my lyric writing. This summer I am hoping to have time to focus purely on my music. My Dad, Stephen Perkins (Jane's Addiction), and Chuck Wright (Quiet Riot) play every Wednesday at this bowling alley in Hollywood called Lucky Strikes. It's their jam night, so they'll have a bunch of different musicians join them, and I'll often come up and play a song or two with them. It's good practice for me and gets me out there." 

Who are some of your favorite musicians right now?
"I will admit that for someone who says they're so interested in music, I am absolutely terrible at getting into new bands. I'm mostly influenced by a lot of older bands. I love seventies glam rock, so I like T-Rex, The Runaways, Joan Jett, Suzi Quatro, and David Bowie—I was actually David Bowie for Halloween this year. As for artists now, well, everyone who knows me knows that I am obsessed with Julian Casablancas, so I'm a huge fan of The Strokes. I'm also really loving Paramore right now as I feel like they are just doing something different. I also love The Arctic Monkeys, The Black Keys, and really anyone with a rock background."

Where did you get the inspiration to start your blog, Frankie's Planet?
"My parents have always been into music and fashion, so they're the two things that have always come naturally to me. The name "Frankie's Planet" was inspired by a song my Dad wrote for me when I was little. I've found that the blog is place for me to record my outfits and also explain how music inspires my fashion choices. It's a place where my two favorite things can come together."

With your all-black wardrobe and love for rock and roll, it would be easy to mistake you for a New Yorker. What is it that you love about living in LA? 
"I love both New York and LA, but LA has my heart.  I can't stand being cold so that's really my only set back from saying I love them both equally. There are also so many great restaurants and shops in LA. My go-to stores are Wasteland, Topshop at The Grove, and Nasty Gal; and Blu Jam, M Cafe, The Six, and SoHo House are my favorite places to eat. On the weekends my boyfriend and I like go and see bands play in Hollywood, whether it's a band I'm a huge fan of, a friend's band, or a band we have yet to discover."

What are your plans for after college? 
"I still have a year until I graduate, but when I'm done with school I really want to focus on my music and keeping up my blog. It's hard to find inspiration when I'm bogged down with school work, but music and blogging are great outlets for me and I can't wait to put all my energy and focus on that."

watch dakota johnson sing a reality tv theme song

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We're super into Dakota Johnson, and part of what makes her such an intriguing figure is that she's tough to pin down. Most celebrities work very hard at cultivating a public persona, but since becoming famous, Johnson has kind of been all over the place, showing us different, er, shades of herself. We've met awkward Dakota and annoyed Dakota. This past weekend on SNL, we met I-can-laugh-at-myself Dakota. Which Dakota will we meet next?! The answer lies—as all answers do—on Cara Delevingne's Instagram account. The model, who is apparently friends with everyone, uploaded a video of the Fifty Shades of Grey star doing a rendition of Natasha Bedingfield's song, "Unwritten," the early-aughts chart-topper that was also the theme song to The Hills. Anyway, meet silly Dakota, everyone. She seems like a lot of fun. 

willow smith stuns in this boho-inspired shoot

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What exactly does one do after unlocking the universe's deepest, darkest mysteries? If you're Willow Smith, you take a deep breath, channel your prana energy, create some stellar new tunes, and put yourself in the capable hands of Carine Roitfeld. In the upcoming issue of CR Fashion Book, the 14-year-old poses in a boho-inspired shoot and briefly discusses her next hair venture. "I just want to have dreads," Smith says. "I want to embrace my full self, as natural as I can be."

In the past, Smith has experimented with multiple hairstyles—she has had long, braided extensions, a pink buzzcut, a grey blunt bob/bang combo, and an asymmetric shaved head. “I think my look changes all of the time,” she says, “and right now it’s a bit more messy, kind of grungy.”

If Smith does adopt dreadlocks, it may help destigmatize the way some view the hairstyle. After Zendaya debuted her new 'locs at the Oscars, E! host Giuliana Rancic made some misguided comments that many—including her co-host Kelly Osbourne—viewed as racist. Zendaya responded with an intelligent, well-rounded statement. It's refreshing to see two independent young women—both teenagers—embrace their culture in such a strong way. We're looking forward to seeing how amazing Smith will look (and how cool it will be when she whips her hair back and forth).

Click through the gallery to see the entire shoot. Then, pick up CR Fashion Book when it hits newsstands March 5.

Related Articles:
Willow Smith's "Topless" Photo Is Causing A Stir
Willow and Jaden Smith's New Music Is Really Good

Willow and Jaden Smith Unlocked The Universe's Secrets

a bonkers new 'avengers: age of ultron' trailer is here

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The third and presumably final trailer for Marvel's Avengers: Age of Ultron has hit the web, and it features everything you'd expect from the sequel to the second biggest movie of all time. There's snappy one liners, a seemingly unstoppable villain, breathtaking action, and a Hulk and a Hulkbuster. You get a great look at franchise newcomers Elizabeth Olsen and Aaron Taylor-Johnson as Scarlet Witch and Quicksilver respectively, who look like they'll be causing some problems for our heroes (remember, Olsen's Scarlet Witch has two love interests in the comics: Vision—who we get a glimpse of at the very end of the trailer—and her own brother, Quicksilver). And for good measure, there's some good old fashion exposition. Basically, Robert Downey Jr.'s Tony Stark creates a robot named Ultron to help protect the world when the Avengers are off duty. But because creating artificial intelligence in movies is never a good idea, Ultron eventually goes haywire and tries to destroy everyone and everything in his sight. Pretty casual stuff. Avengers: Age of Ultron hits theaters on May 2, when you can expect box office records to shatter accordingly. 

nylon x hlzblz giveaway

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In the spirit of re-vamping your wardrobe for spring, we're bringing you non-stop giveaways through the month! We can't help that we just want to see our girls completely decked out in the coolest threads available.
 
This week we've teamed up with streetwear brand HLZBLZ for a giveaway that's sure to kill it. This L.A.-based company delivers a consistent dose of rad logo-wear for "baddie b's" only. Enter your email below for a chance to win either the $250 grand prize to HLZBLZ or the $150 perk of being runner up. Losing is not an option—you can always stock up on all things HLZBLZ at NYLONshopBye Felicia.

See official rules here.

we lost our first apartment together in the hurricane

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My World, My Words is a series of first-person essays featuring totally unique, inspiring personal experiences unlike anything you've heard before. The most interesting stories are also often the most overlooked, so we're on a mission to find them and share them with you. Written by people from all walks of life, these essays will move you in ways you might not expect—and that's the point.

I have a thing about water. Every time I hear dripping water or heavy rain, the hairs on the back of my neck stand up a bit. Hurricane Sandy destroyed the first home my partner and I shared, so I guess it’s an understandable after-effect.

Nick and I had put off living together for years, knowing the strain domesticity could create. We had no idea what was in store for us. 

Before we moved into our garden apartment, Nick told me he didn’t really like the idea of renting something that was street-level. With Nick not really being an overly cautious person, this should have tipped me off. It didn’t. 

It took nine handy men, two plumbers, three guys from Roto-Rooter, and a contractor to fix our toilet the first time. Two months later, when the problem returned, they sent a camera down the back of the pipes. They then discovered that our bathroom line did not connect to the front sewer line, meaning sewage was just being spewed freely beneath our floor. Two very nice men from Peru spent two days living in the foundation of our home, connecting sewer lines.

So on the night of Hurricane Sandy, when we heard that same bubbling we were so used to from our toilet clogging, at first I thought the sewer was just backing up again. 

As usual, Nick began to put a towel under the toilet bowl to catch some of the water that was leaking out. As I stood in the adjoining, carpeted room, I looked down. The perimeter of the carpet began to darken. Water was coming up from the floor.

When I looked up from the darkening floor, I saw a river gushing in from our deck, through the living room, and out the front door. Our backyard had filled with water, which burst through our steel back door. I felt like I was in a dream. As I screamed for Nick, the room quickly began to fill. “This is not going to get better,” I thought, water around my ankles.  

We heard a knock on our front window. We looked out to see that our neighbors had rushed down to help us move out what we could. 

Ankle deep, I ran around, trying to get our pets to safety. I pulled out plugs and grabbed electronics, and I didn’t leave until the water was up to my belly button. 

As the water rushed past my waist, I grabbed one final item, a spare pair of jeans, and took a last look back into my apartment before getting pulled out of my front window.

At that time, Nick and I owned a rabbit and a hamster. Liza was my first hamster, and my housewarming gift to Nick.  Once we got her, I fell instantly in love. She truly embodied her namesake, the great Liza Minnelli, and would spend hours in her plastic hamster ball, fearlessly rolling herself into doors and crashing into walls. Liza would follow my rabbit around the apartment and try to nip at him through the holes in her plastic ball. They had a real big brother/little sister dynamic. Bunny pretended she didn’t exist and Liza did everything in her power to get his attention. Two months into our lease, when Christmas came, we bought Bunny and Liza tiny Christmas stockings that hung on our fireplace, side by side. 

Our top floor neighbors helped us bring the things we valued most to safety. They are the reason both of our pets made it out alive and with supplies. They offered us clothes, food, and a safe place to spend the night. And we had not spoken more than a “hello” before that night.  

Moments after we abandoned the apartment, after the water had gotten well past my waist and all the overheard lights in my apartment finally went out, we stood in the hallway of our apartment building, soaked and surrounded by the few things we were able to save.  I took a deep breath in.

We spent that night trapped in our apartment building. Our street was waterlogged. We had nowhere to go. We spent the next few hours on our front steps watching sea water fill our neighborhood. We watched power lines fall, conductors explode, and cars float into each other. I saw a woman crying as people pulled her out of her home.

That night we slept two floors up, with the windows open. As I tried to fall asleep, I listened to the wind and what sounded like the ocean attempting to lull me to sleep. I soon realized that sound was actually several feet of water rolling on top of the pavement below. It did little to relax me.

I woke up early the next morning. The sun was shining. The water was gone from the street. We ventured down into our apartment and discovered it was dry. All that remained from the previous night was debris and a water mark, exactly four feet high.  

We spent the next week sorting, cataloguing, and discarding our belongings with help from friends and neighbors. It’s a surreal feeling, sawing the first piece of furniture you ever purchased in half so you can fit it, water logged and heavy, out your front door. It helped to have people around. For the next week, volunteers from all over Jersey City stopped by to offer us food, blankets, flashlights, and help hauling everything we once owned into city-provided dumpsters. My faith in humanity went up significantly. 

Once our apartment was gutted, we turned in our keys. After spending a year fighting to fix this beautiful falling down apartment, it was time to move on. I left my curtains up in the front windows as a tribute to what had once been a lovely home. And then I walked away.

One of my favorite memories is from the night of the flood. Nick and I snuck away from our neighbors’ apartment before going to bed and stood on the front steps of our building. It was very late at night and we held hands, looking out at the water below. I knew then, without question, that this was the person I’d have for the rest of my life. 

Nick and I now live on the third floor of a wonderfully maintained apartment building. We fucking hate the rain.

For more My World, My Words, check out:
What It's Like To Be Genderqueer At An All-Women's Naked Spa

robert pattinson and fka twigs exchanged promise rings

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Yes, you read that that correctly. Though the overwhelmingly darling couple has been somewhat hush-hush about their relationship since they were first spotted together in September, news of a promise ring exchange has shown that the relationship between Pattinson, 28, and FKA twigs, 27, is indeed moving from smitten to seminary school sweet. According to a source and friend of the couple that spoke with People, the actor "wants to marry her,” and is “much more happy than before.” The source also added, “They are inseparable when they are together. They live at his house.”

We here at Nylon can imagine that—aside from a more committed relationship—a few more promises were exchanged with the rings. And here they are...

Recreating the “Papi Pacify” music video will be limited to special occasions
Special occasions include: birthdays, Valentine's Day, anniversaries... you know, that sort of thing. 

We will consciously make efforts to purge “Twilight” from our collective memory
Twilight was great and all, but as demonstrated countless times, Robert's acting range transcends pouting and leering. 

I, Twigs, will assume all control of Robert’s coif
His recent, edgy bowl cut has suggested as much.

I, Robert, will bring ROSES to every one of Twigs' shows
Because chivalry ain't dead. 

We will out-style every couple ever
Sorry, Britney and Justin. FKA and RPatz take no prisoners.

Congrats, you crazy kids. The world is rooting for you. Seriously. 

(via People)


ben & jerry's romances thc-infused ice cream

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Vermont is no stranger to greenery—it is the Green Mountain State, one of the most environmentally conscious spots in the country, and a place where a deep-seated hippie culture has created an undying demand for foliage of a more inebriatory nature. So it makes total sense that the state's main dessert manufacturer, Ben & Jerry's, is open to making marijuana-infused ice cream as soon as it becomes legal.

Though they've been known to hang out from time to time, weed and ice cream's souls have not yet merged on a commercial scale. But, considering that it is 2015, it's only a matter of time before the two come together to give you the most intense sugar high ever. 

Known for their history of progressivism—namely their support of gay marriage and use of non-GMO ingredients—the duo co-founder Ben Cohen told HuffPost Live, “Makes sense to me. Combine your pleasures."

“Ben and I have had previous experiences with substances,” added his parner, Jerry Greenfield. 

Though the two have offered up a few prospective flavors—"Satisfy My Bowl" and "Dave Matthews Band Magic Brownies Encore Edition" for a starter—we feel like we could do a better job at naming them, provided there are samples sent our way. Just let us know, B&J! 

(via Huffington Post)

this eye cream is making our brains explode

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Shout out to Byrdie for calling our attention to a magical, mystical eye cream that looks like it might solve all of our problems. At least, the problems that lurk under our eyes in the form of dark puffy bags. The beauty site just posted a video in which a woman applies Instantly Ageless from Jeunesse underneath one of her eyes, and over the course of about a minute, her under-eye bag disappears. I’ve actually never seen anything like it. Where does it go? How does they go? What is going on?! 

Beauty editor Faith Xue did some digging to find out: “This ingredient is actually the trade name for an ingredient called acetyl hexapeptide-3. The company Lipotec, based in Barcelona, Spain, found that this peptide helped destabilizes one of the proteins that causes muscle contractions, like frowning—hence, the 'Botox in a bottle' effect,' she writes. And while it doesn’t have long-lasting effects, Jeunesse’s site says that one vial will last two or three days. 

Head over to Byrdie to watch the video and then let us know if your brains are exploding as much as ours are. 

(via Byrdie)

hayley kiyoko on the 'jem and the holograms' remake

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If you heard a high-pitched, harmonized squeal last March, chances are, it was the sound every '80s baby inadvertently let out when it was announced that Jem and the Holograms was being remade into a live-action film. In case you're not familiar, the seminal neon-rich animated series ran from '85 to '88 and was basically the original Hannah Montana. With a modern-day twist, the 2015 version will focus on Jem, a small-town girl who, along with her three sisters, transitions from an "underground video sensation to global superstar." With a heavy sonic focus and killer aesthetics, it's no surprise that the film tapped actress/musician Hayley Kiyoko to play Aja, one of Jem's rockstar sisters.

Aside from starring in the most highly anticipated remake of the year, Kiyoko has been releasing new music, gearing up to terrorize the masses in Insidious: Chapter 3, and acting alongside Patricia Arquette and James Van Der Beek in the latest CSI installment, CSI: Cyber.  

Did you grow up watching the original Jem and the Holograms series? 
"No, I had never seen it! I feel like it was a little bit before my time because it was the ‘80s and I was born in ’91. But when I auditioned for them, I had to know what it was, and I looked it up and it was crazy. It was like, oh my god I’m going to have blue hair. So at the end of the day, it’s pretty incredible, and I think the people who are fans of Jem and people from that generation will really enjoy the show.

"And I’m excited for CSI: Cyber which comes out March 4—it comes out in a couple weeks! We shot 13 episodes and it went super quick. The cast [includes] Patricia Arquette and everyone is super humble and fun and nice. It’s also fun to pretend to work for the FBI."

How does the Jem and the Holograms remake differ from the original?
"It’s a modern take on the story. I think we want you to see it documentary style and it really brings in the 2015 times and YouTube and the interweb. So it’s really just a branch off the franchise and I don’t think it’s by the book at all."

Scooter Braun is producing the film. He manages so many people who started out viral [Justin Bieber, Ariana Grande, Cody Simpson] and basically just has the magic touch. I was just wondering if there are any surprise guest appearances in the film...
"I guess you’ll just have to watch and see."    

You have blue hair in the film, and it seems like you’re always changing up your beauty look.
"It’s just hair and I love changing up my hair. Ever since I was in middle school, I was shaving off the side of my hair and just dyeing it myself. It’s just an outlet of artistic expression. For me, hair is a really great chapter ender. You start something looking one way and then you end it and change your hair. I feel like it’s an emotional thing. When people look at breakups, they chop their hair off and it may seem dramatic, but I use my hair as something like an organizer for life. I’ve got blue hair for JEM, pink hair for Insidious, blonde hair for CSI, and I’ve never had long hair before. If you google me, I always have really crazy and short hairstyles so I’m really enjoying this long hair and the undercut. I’ll probably stick with this look for a while."

Is that kind of your favorite beauty look that you’ve had?    
"I’ve loved them all. I really love my blonde hair—that was probably one of my favorites because I’ve always wanted to go bleach blonde and I’m loving it. I’m loving it until my hair falls out, and then I’ll shave my head."

What is the inspiration behind your own music?   
"The inspiration was really just to do something that I loved and something that I believed in. I think as an artist you’re just trying to find your sound and wanting validation from others and so last year when I left my management and I had no new music, no team, no nothing, I flew out to London, and I just wrote what I felt. I found this happy medium of heavy beats, but also dizzy harmonic melodies on top. It was bringing a little bit of everything I loved together. And it was also about finally discovering who I am."

In your career, or maybe not, what’s the scariest thing you’ve ever done?    
"I’ve gone skydiving twice, and I’m obsessed. My friend called me and he was like, 'We’re going skydiving.' I usually don’t go on any roller coasters ever, or stand at a ledge, or anything, but I jumped out of a plane and it was the most exhilarating, eye-opening experience ever, so I went again."

8@8: your morning scoop

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Today is...
National Cheese Doodle Day. Tomorrow, Orange Finger Awareness Day.

News of the Day:
+
There's a new campaign to get a woman on the $20 bill—and we think it's about time. Sorry not sorry, Andrew Jackson. 
+ Meet Etti-Cat, the verbose ettiquette overlord of MTA journeys past. 
+Up-and-coming British psych-rocker Only Real just released his video "Can't Get Happy." Ironically enough, it makes us very happy.
+Solange showed us that she is impervious to jet lag, and made the runways of the Paris airport her own. Channeling her flawlessness will lend you some commuter cool this morning. 
+Big Sean's Dark Sky Paradise debuted on top of the U.S. charts. You should probably give it a listen if you haven't already. 

Deal of the Day: 
Because it's almost spring, 30% off at Madewell stores and at madewell.com (using the code "thisclose") until midnight tonight.

Advice of the Day:
"
The way I see it, you should live every day like it's your birthday." - Paris Hilton 

GIF of the Day: 

"beauty and the beast" has its male leads

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Dan Stevens, one of Downton Abbey's breakout stars, will be joining Emma Watson as one of the titular characters in Disney's live action retelling of Beauty and the Beast, according to The Hollywood Reporter. Stevens is the perfect choice for the role of the misunderstood creature, able to blend charm and menace effortlessly as he showed us in last year's surprising thriller, The Guest. There's no word yet on how the film will depict his beastly features—whether it's makeup, or CGI, or a mixture of both remains to be seen. 

Meanwhile, yesterday it was announced the British actor Luke Evans (Dracula Untold, Fast & Furious 6) is all but signed on to play the film's villain, Gaston.

You might not need a recap of what this film will be about, but just in case: Beauty and the Beast tells the story of Belle, a woman who takes her father's place as the prisoner of the Beast, a frightening creature who is actually a cursed prince. With the help of some singing and dancing home appliances, Belle learns to love the creature, despite his less-than-ideal looks. There's no word yet on whether or not this film will be a musical like the 1991 animated film it's inspired by, but Watson did post the following to her Facebook page shortly after she was cast:

I'm finally able to tell you... that I will be playing Belle in Disney's new live-action Beauty and the Beast! It was such a big part of my growing up, it almost feels surreal that I'll get to dance to 'Be Our Guest' and sing 'Something There'. My six year old self is on the ceiling - heart bursting. Time to start some singing lessons. I can't wait for you to see it. Emma xx

So yeah, there'll be singing and dancing. And not just the singing and dancing we are doing with joy at this moment.  

supermarket: tuxedo stripe pants

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One of our favorite trends is menswear—it's comfortable, androgynous, and adds a tailored edge to any ensemble. One of the easiest borrowed-from-the-boys look to pull off is a tuxedo stripe pants. They're comfortable, fitted, and sophisticated, so they're perfect to wear to a party or event. You can also use them to emote a more downtown casual vibe—just pair them with a worn-in band tee and a cool sneaker. Click through the gallery to see our top ten picks.

kim kardashian has gone blonde

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There are some things in this world we can always count on: New York winters will always be terrible, the Internet will always be rife with inexplicable llama and dress ephemera, and Kim Kardashian will always rock her bombshell brunette tresses. But now one of those comforting constants in our life has changed and we're questioning everything we know—Kim K. has gone full-on blonde. 

Kardashian debuted her new 'do at the Balmain show today at Paris Fashion Week. And we're not talking highlights, which the reality TV star has had before. Nor is this a dirty blonde/light brown kind of deal: The 34-year-old has rocked lighter hues in the past, but not anything quite so shockingly platinum blonde. With her recently chopped lob, Kim K. has undergone a complete aesthetic transformation that we could never have expected—and we can't help but suspect that the ever-style conscious Kanye West had at least some influence in the decision to grab the bleach.

This new change also comes fresh on the tails of younger sister Khloé's honey blonde makeover, and a few weeks after half-sister Kylie embraced some Brigitte Bardot-esque locks for a photo shoot in Love magazine. Perhaps it's just a matter of time before the whole Kardashian klan embraces their blonde ambition. 


Photo by Pascal Le Segretain / Getty Images

(via Just Jared)


aro a.k.a. aimée osbourne debuts a new video

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You may have watched every episode of the Osbourne family's reality TV show, but unless you're a diehard fan, you may not know that Sharon and Ozzy have a daughter named Aimee. She shied away from cameras, choosing to forge her own life and career without the help of her parents. Yesterday, under the moniker ARO (short for Aimée Rachel Osbourne), the 31-year-old released a music video for her single "Raining Gold." And it's so incredible that it would probably be making its way around the internet even without the discovery of her famous surname.

"I fought it for a long time," she said in a press release. "It's natural to want to rebel against what your parents do. Once I accepted music was my path, I rebelled by wanting to do it my own way. I also didn't think it was respectful to my father's career and creativity to assume that I could jump on the back of all he had worked his entire life for."

Directed by Spencer Susser, co-director of Lana Del Rey's "Summertime Sadness" video, the four-minute clip is as haunting as Aimée's vocals. After some unfortunate, unknown event leaves a gas station overturned, a bloody man crawls through the diner where Aimée is casually sitting at the counter. While the graphics are attention-grabbing, it's the combination of Aimée's sweet and powerful vocals and the slow-moving, pulsating beats that are really spectacular. Portishead, for 2015, y'all. 

video premiere: kuroma "simon's in the jungle"

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When a song fit for dancing in your room, cruising down the freeway, and chilling with old and new friends is paired with vibrant, conceptual animation, the result is something not unlike a perfectly '90s jam track. Accentuated by steady tambourine and grooving electric guitar, Kuroma's latest song, "Simon in the Jungle" takes us back to the days of heavily saturated cartoons and cassette stores, topped with a beachy, California feel-good vibe.

Headed by Hank Sullivant, former frontman of The Whigs and current touring guitarist with MGMT, the Brooklyn/Athens-based psychadelic pop group makes the kind of music intended to keep you going all summer long—and to keep you jamming out while the bleak winter drags on. The upbeat retro feel combines a light, danceable beat with substantial rock 'n' roll undertones to keep it grounded. Think of this as the soundtrack for your sunny, daytime escapades.

This track comes from Kuroma's first full-band release, Kuromarama, out April 7. On the album Sullivant will be joined by MGMT's James Richardson and Will Berman and Simon O'Connor of Amazing Baby. While these guys have all released incredible music on their own, their latest collaboration just proves that the whole is bigger than the sum of its parts. 

Pre-order Kuromarama on iTunes and you'll instantly receive two free tracks, and catch Kuroma live as they tour with Ex-Hex this April and Tennis this May.

björk's moma retrospective is overwhelming and underwhelming at the same time

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A question hung over me as I entered a press preview for MoMA’s wildly anticipated Björk retrospective: How will the museum display the work of an artist—whose creations are available to us on Spotify and YouTube—in a way that feels exciting and new? The answer became clear as I snaked through a cramped and somewhat disorienting exhibition of her nearly three decade career: They won’t.

I first discovered Björk in 1995, when the album artwork for her sophomore release, Post, was painted large on the wall of the HMV in downtown Toronto. There she was: a mythical creature of arresting beauty, with raven-black hair and wearing a jacket that appeared to made out of envelopes. Where did she come from and who was she? The answers to both of those questions, I’d find out, were Iceland, and one of the most unique and influential musicians of her generation.  

At the time, Björk made catchy, cutting-edge, gloriously weird music that sounds like bubblegum pop compared to the surreal sonic landscapes she’s been exploring over the last decade or so. And you could say that as Björk’s music got less accessible and her wardrobe more otherworldly, she became more worthy of a career retrospective at an institute of contemporary art like the MoMA.

Which brings us back to that initial question. What could the MoMA, and particularly its curator-at-large Klaus Biesenbach, do to recontextualize and reimagine Björk’s work? What would they reveal about an artist who has made a career out of revealing herself? They began by placing some of the instruments she used to make her seventh album, Biophilia, in the lobby. In typical Björk fashion, these instruments had names like “gravity harp” and “Tesla coil,” and were rigged to make them play on their own. It worked as a nice tease and a small reminder of Björk’s singular vision as a musician.  

The real exhibition doesn’t begin until you get to the second floor, where you’ll find a cavernous theater with red, rectangular cushions and a big screen playing all of Björk’s music videos one-by-one on a continuous loop. Björk’s videos are as large a component of her artistic identity as her songs, marrying them with visuals that can sometimes be breathtaking (“Joga”), terrifying (“Army of Me”) and transcendent (“All Is Full of Love”). Sitting in the theater with about thirty other transfixed journalists, I was reminded of this. The schizo beauty of “Hyperballad” segued into the gonzo animation of “I Miss You,” and on it went, all of it in high-definition surround sound. Seeing them projected with such grandeur made the idea of watching them on YouTube seem unfair to their creators.

I would have stayed longer, but I had to get in line for my appointment viewing of the “Songlines” exhibit, which, billed as a “psychographic journey," is meant to be the retrospective’s showstopper. And here’s where it gets problematic. Billed as a first-of-its-kind museum exhibition that uses words like “immersive” and “3-D” to raise your expectations, “Songlines” pulls off the impressive feat of being overwhelming and underwhelming at the same time. Upon entering the exhibit, you’re given an iPod touch and a pair of state-of-the-art headphones, and told to walk forward.  A soothing female voice comes on and begins recounting a fable about “a girl” as Björk’s music overlays it. (The full story, called “A Triumph of the Heart,” is a lyrical retelling of Björk’s life by the Icelandic poet Sjón.)

“Once there was a heart, a human heart that lived inside a girl,” she said in a Björk-like accent (I later found out this was Icelandic actress Margret Vilhjalmsdottir, who’s known Björk since they were both teenagers). As she tells this first chapter, the word “Debut” appears on your phone and you realize you’re in a room dedicated to Björk’s first album of the same name. The idea behind the exhibit reveals itself: Each room is dedicated to one of Björk’s seven albums, and you will travel through them looking at artifacts from Björk’s life and career, as the narrator poetically takes you through the evolution of Björk. The phone geolocates you within the exhibition, and plays the corresponding chapter.

But the fatal flaw behind this idea is an advancing timeline that appears at the bottom of the iPod screen in each room—the kind you find at the bottom of any video player. As it inches forward, you’re acutely aware that your time in each room is finite, and you’re meant to move forward once the chapter is done. (The recommended time is five minutes in each room, forty minutes total.) This left me constantly checking my iPod to see how much time I had left in this room, instead of focusing on the actual items on display. Ironically, a male voice sometimes interrupts the narrative to tell you to “take your time,” which is exactly what I felt I couldn’t do. (To make matters even more rushed, the exhibit is stationed with security guards who all but force you to move forward and do not let you go back.)   

But even more ironic is that these rooms aren’t even worth spending all that much time in. They’re filled with artifacts from Björk’s life as an artist, some more well-known than others. There are diaries and journals from when she was a surrealism-obsessed youngster, her iconic Marjan Pejoski-designed swan dress from the 2001 Oscars, and various outfits and props from her music videos, like the lovemaking androids from “All Is Full of Love.” (One inexplicable item that sums up the meh-ness of the “Songlines” exhibition is the album cover from her album Homogenic, which is animated so that Björk blinks. Cool!) As a Björk fan, these are neat to see, but are they worth waiting thirty minutes in line for? The answer is probably not.

One floor below, they were showing a MoMA-commissioned video called Black Lake, which is essentially a ten-minute music video for Björk’s song “Black Lake,” off her latest album Vulnicura. It looks like just like a Björk video—she’s doing interpretive dance in a volcanic Northern landscape as the camera spins and soars—except it’s playing on two wide screens in a cocoon-like room that was specifically engineered to dazzle your eardrums (6,000 soundproofing cones cover the walls and ceiling). Before the video began, Björk herself emerged from a side door with Klaus Biesenbach wearing a bizarre cactus-shaped headpiece. I couldn't really tell because she remained submerged in darkness.

"I’m very grateful that Klaus [Biesenbach] convinced me to do this exhibition,” Björk said. And then, summing up my overall impression of the exhibit, she added, “It’s been quite a journey." 

 

jared leto is platinum blonde now

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Despite what teen-centric coming-of-age films tell you, there are many things in life more embarrassing than showing up to a party in the same dress as another person. That being said, we're not world-famous celebrities, a.k.a. who-wore-it-better media prey. So we'd be interested in hearing exactly how Jared Leto and Kim Kardashian feel at this moment of time—when they both debuted nearly identical platinum blonde, slicked-back 'dos. 

Both Leto and Kardashian are known for their long, dark-haired manes (sometimes ombré, sometimes not), so it's surprising to see them both with such radically bleached locks. And although we knew that Leto ditched his prophet-esque long waves earlier this week, we were not expecting another drastic change. (Be still our hearts!) Kardashian debuted her new look at the same Balmain show this morning.

(via Elle)

alison sudol looks to a new stage

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You probably recognize Alison Sudol’s face even if you can’t quite place her name: Up until last year, the dollish L.A. artist was best known by her musical project, A Fine Frenzy. After three albums and six solid years of touring, though, Sudol decided it was time to give songwriting a break. “My process was very lonely—it was me and a piano for an extended period of time, and I wasn’t very good at socializing,” she admits. On this crisp December day in L.A., however, the singer-songwriter—and of late, actress—feels far from her subdued, shy musical persona. Standing in line for coffee, she flashes me a slightly mischievous grin, then quickly throws down the kind of offer no girl can refuse. “Do you want a snack?” she asks, gesturing towards a mound of miniature cakes. “We can share it—that way no one feels bad.”

With music on the backburner, Sudol quietly enrolled in acting classes. “I wanted some balance, to try something creatively that was not fully my doing,” she later explains over a cappuccino. “I wanted to be a part in a whole.” After a year of intense training, she found that part in Kaya, a singer and love interest to Jay Duplass’ Josh on the highly acclaimed TV series Transparent. The show, which was created and directed by one of Sudol’s personal heroes, Jill Soloway, and won two Golden Globes in January, tells the story of a late-in-life father played by Jeffrey Tambor, who comes out to his family as a transgendered woman. “I think Jeffrey is completely magic,” Sudol says with a smile. “When you see someone in real life and then to watch him do what he did onscreen—he just completely transformed.”

This month, Sudol also appears in USA’s Dig, about an FBI agent (played by Jason Isaacs) who uncovers a mysterious ancient conspiracy during a murder investigation in modern-day Jerusalem. “It’s a total ride,” she says of the show. “Reading the script was like reading a great book; I didn’t want to put it down.” Still, if you ask Sudol her favorite part about acting, you’ll get an unlikely answer that also cuts straight to the core of her charm. “There’s things I avoid with music that I can’t avoid with acting,” she confides. “I’ve had a lot of experience with not allowing myself to experience certain emotions, like anger and confidence, and with acting you’re in this space where it’s safe to fully go there. You have to jump into it and it’s really liberating to be able to feel things fully in a creative setting.” In moments like this, Sudol’s transition from songwriter to actress comes across as totally organic. She lights up when she talks about favorite TV shows, complicated characters, and her musical pursuits because, as she puts it, it’s really all breaks down to storytelling. “Both with songwriting and playing a role, you’re delivering the truth of something in a moment,” she says. “In a lot of ways, it’s the same thing.”

Sudol’s currently dividing her time between auditions, new songwriting projects, and “a lot of yoga,” as well as expanding and strengthening her acting chops. “I want to go into the margins, into those moments where there’s snot hanging out of your nose and things aren’t cute and you’re not pretty,” she laughs. “I’m all for messy. That’s what I want to explore.”

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