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Kim Kardashian Rented Out Her Childhood Home for Kris Jenner's Birthday


What do you get Kris Jenner, the woman who basically has everything, for her birthday? Well, daughter Kim Kardashian had some very creative (and sweet) ideas that she kept as a surprise from her family until the big day arrived.

In an Instagram post, Kim revealed that she rented out the Kardashian childhood home for the day and invited the family and her mom’s closest friends to enjoy it together. In the video, you get to see the moment that everyone finds out where the real location of the celebration is—though Kim makes sure to tell everyone that she did not, in fact, buy the house. Jenner is naturally overcome with emotion.

“Today we celebrate my mom. Anyone that knows her, knows how sentimental she is. For her birthday I planned a small lunch, with just her kids and her closest friends of 40+ years. I sent out invites with a location where we all met,” Kim wrote on Instagram. “When everyone arrived, I told them I had a surprise and this wasn’t where we would be eating. I then gave everyone the REAL invitation and once everyone saw the address for where we would be going tears filled the room. I rented our childhood home.”

“All of our memories live here especially with our dad. It’s where each Kardashian child was born and made us who we are,” she continued. “Growing up, the home had the most ridiculous wallpaper and kitchen set! I remade all of our table settings, decor out of the same fabric and print as the wallpaper. We had lunch at the home as if it hadn’t changed and we cried the entire time.”

But if you thought that was it, you know know this family. “When we walked out to get our cars to drive there, I had another surprise! I had rented every car my parents ever owned. I had some waiting outside so we could drive them to the house and the rest were lined up in the driveway of the house exactly how my parents used to have them parked. I even remade the exact license plates. (Yes my mom had a 2 DIE 4 license plate!)”

It sounds like it was a very emotional (in a good way) day for everyone. “We drove to the home in these cars and relived our childhood! This was the best day ever. I am so proud I was able to keep such a meaningful surprise a secret from my mom and sisters for weeks! This was the most special, nostalgic day of my life and we felt my dad’s presence enjoying this day with us!” Kim wrote. “I kept it together and didn’t cry the entire lunch even though I cried during the entire planning process. But at the end I went into my old bathroom, closed the door and cried so hard.”

“I can’t stop crying ? @kimkardashian thank you for planning this for all of us, and @krisjenner thank you for giving us the best childhood ??❤️,” Kourtney Kardashian commented. Sister Khloé added, “You are the best daughter EVER.”

And what did the birthday girl think? Well, she loved it: “I can’t stop crying ? this was the most magical day I can remember… Kim you are an angel to all of us … I can’t express what this meant to me and I will now have this beautiful day to add to a lifetime of the most fabulous memories. I couldn’t bear for it to end ❤️? ⭐️✨?.”



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Greta Thunberg: ‘You Have Stolen My Dreams and My Childhood’


Less than a week after hundreds of thousands of children around the world flooded the streets to demand action on climate change, some of the most powerful adults on the planet gathered at the United Nations for a climate summit to discuss what to do about the crisis. Still, the teens had a presence. One of the first speakers to address the group was none other than Swedish climate activist Greta Thunberg, who at 16 has inspired what appears to be…her entire generation.

“This is all wrong,” Thunberg said in one of her most passionate speeches to date. “I shouldn’t be up here. I should be back in school on the other side of the ocean. Yet you all come to us young people for hope. How dare you! You have stolen my dreams and my childhood with your empty words. Yet I am one of the lucky ones. People are suffering. People are dying. Entire ecosystems are collapsing. We are in the beginning of a mass extinction, and all you can talk about is money and fairy tales of eternal economic growth. How dare you! You are failing us, but the young people are starting to understand your betrayal. The eyes of all future generations are upon you. And if you choose to fail us I say, ‘We will never forgive you.'”

The speech was a barn burner, but Thunberg is the last person to be all talk and no action. A few hours later Thunberg announced that she and 14 of her peers had filed a suit against five of the world’s major carbon polluters for violating their rights. (The suit alleges that the countries’ actions go against the U.N. Convention on the Rights of the Child.) If it is successful, the U.N. would have to recognize the climate crisis as a children’s rights crisis, which would be a landmark development in the crusade for action on the issue.

On social media the speech and the suit have found an even bigger audience. (And that’s on top of another viral moment of Thunberg’s, when a camera caught her reacting to President Trump—which has already gotten the meme treatment.) “Keep speaking the truth and fighting for big, structural change, @GretaThunberg. Change is possible when millions of people push for it—and when leaders are willing to listen and lead. I promise to fight alongside you and do everything I can to end the climate crisis,” wrote Senator Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass). Actress Mia Farrow also shared, “@GretaThunberg you have taken on this enormous task and with it, you have given everything and live with the pain of knowing, of trying ceaselessly, of caring with all your being in a world that prioritizes prosperity. But you are moving people—thank you Greta. Thank you.”





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Princess Charlotte Officially Hit Another Royal Childhood Milestone


It’s a fact of royal fandom that everything is newsworthy when a royal child does it. Princess Charlotte turned 4? Give the people a photoshoot. Prince George has a new nickname? I’m overwhelmed by the cuteness. Archie Mountbatten-Windsor goes outside for a photo with Meghan Markle and Prince Harry? Cancel all my plans so I can stare at the pictures.

Well, another tidbit of royal childhood news for Princess Charlotte has arrived straight from Kensington Palace—and it’s bound to usher in even more heart-warming moments to distract us all come fall 2019.

Kensington Palace announced Friday (May 24) that Princess Charlotte is headed for another royal childhood milestone. Starting this September, she’ll join older brother Prince George for school at St. Thomas’s Battersea in Wandsworth, south London. The 4-year-old is moving up from Willcocks Nursery School, which she has attended since January 2018.

Prince William and Kate Middleton have yet to make a formal statement regarding Princess Charlotte’s enrollment, but it sounds like the school is excited to meet its next royal student. Its headmaster, Simon O’Malley, made a brief statement welcoming Princess Charlotte to the fold. “We are delighted that The Duke and Duchess of Cambridge have decided that Princess Charlotte will join her elder brother, Prince George, at Thomas’s Battersea,” he said. “We greatly look forward to welcoming her and all of our new pupils to the school in September.”

What’s in store for Princess Charlotte when she starts school? There’s more to choose from than typical classroom studies: Prince George reportedly enjoys swimming and ballet lessons at school. It’s safe to say his sister will have a similar range of classes.

The news comes shortly after another sweet moment for the royal family. Last week, Prince William and Kate Middleton released a series of photos taken with their children at the Royal Horticultural Society’s Chelsea Flower Show.

Getty Images

Every glimpse we’ve seen of the royal family suggests that Charlotte and George are close as brother and sister can be; and the siblings that study together, stay together. I’m already anticipating all the photos of Prince William dropping the pair off at school in September—if it’s anything like Prince George’s reluctant first day, it’ll be adorable.

Halie LeSavage is a contributing writer at Glamour. Follow her @halielesavage.





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Prince William Just Recreated of One of Kate Middleton's Childhood Photos


Prince William is currently on a royal tour of the Middle East, and to make up for the fact he’s there without Kate Middleton, he recreated one of her childhood photos from when she lived in Jordan. On Monday (June 25), the Duke of Cambridge visited the exact same site in Jerash that the Duchess of Cambridge’s family went to way back in the day. When Middleton was 4, she and her father and sister posed in front of a particular rock, so Prince William decided to take a photo in front of that exact same rock, too, joking that he’d bring the kids next time, according to Daily Mail reporter Rebecca English. As Hello Magazine reported, he cracked a couple more jokes at the site, saying, “Need to come back with the family for this shot,” and “Michael’s looking very smart in his flip-flops,” in reference to his father-in-law.

Later, the official Kensington Palace Twitter account posted a side-by-side comparison of the two photos, writing, “The Duke of Cambridge visits Jerash, the same site that The Duchess of Cambridge visited, aged 4, with her sister and father when the family lived in Jordan.”

Check it out for yourself, below:

Prince William is currently on day two of his five-day Middle East tour, and so far he’s met the Crown Prince of Jordan, Al-Hussein bin Abdullah II, spoken to students at the Al-Hussein Technical University, visited the TechWorks Fabrication Lab, celebrated the queen’s birthday at a British embassy reception, watched a rerun of England’s World Cup match with the crown prince, and met Syrian refugee children who are receiving psychological support services from Unicef’s Makani program, among other events, according to Kensington Palace’s Twitter account.

“Over the next five days The Duke will visit Jordan, Israel, and the Occupied Palestinian Territories – and is looking forward to building a real and enduring relationship with the people of the region,” Kensington Palace tweeted.

Related Stories:

Kensington Palace Posted the Greatest Photo for Prince William and Kate Middleton’s 7th Anniversary





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Hurricane Irma Devastated My Childhood Home—But Locals Are Holding Things Together


I remember the sound of chainsaws. It was the morning of September 16, 1995, after Hurricane Marilyn hit St. Thomas, one of the U.S. Virgin Islands. The 105 mph winds of the Category 3 storm blew away a neighbor’s home, and parts of it hit ours, smashing the top floor. I huddled with my parents and younger sister in a closet downstairs as the storm hit. The winds pushed our car, an Isuzu Rodeo, through the downstairs door; a large chunk of our neighbor’s roof landed on it, trapping us inside our shelter. When the storm passed, a friend came to check on us, and when he saw we were trapped, cut through the roof and Rodeo with a chainsaw and pulled us out. I was seven years old.

Nearly 22 years later, on September 5, 2017, Hurricane Irma hit the Virgin Islands—and it was a Category 5. The damage is devastating: According to CNBC, 40,000 people are currently homeless on St. Thomas—out of a population of 52,000. Damage was most widespread in St. John, the smallest U.S Virgin Island. I still see people posting on Facebook asking about friends and family on St. John that they have not heard from. Since so much of the island is without cell phone service or Wi-Fi, exact numbers of displaced people are difficult to come by. St. Croix, the largest U.S. Virgin Island, is home to 50,600 people. “We were lucky to just experience down trees here,” St. Croix resident DJ Many says. “St. Thomas and St. John had it the worst.” The USVI death count is at least four, and that number could easily rise.

Families won’t be able to find their own—or rebuild their lives—without more emergency funding and media attention. While outlets such as The New York Times and USA Today have ramped up their coverage, many U.S. Virgin Islanders still feel ignored. “After Irma passed, I asked a friend to send me storm updates. She said they are focusing on Florida and there was no more information on the USVI. In fact, before Irma hit us, The Weather Channel had already begun reporting that Florida was bracing for Irma as she prepared to hit the U.S. To say I am dissatisfied is an understatement,” Zenzi H., an entrepreneur and author born and raised on St. Thomas, says.

“We are the U.S.—yes, U.S.—Virgin Islands. Say our name. Find us on the map. Acknowledge us.”

Many residents that I spoke to said they worried that what little national media coverage there has been will only worsen the inequalities that exist thanks to U.S. colonialism. “The lack of media coverage does speak to a larger problem that begins with us not having a voice. As a territory, we do not vote for the president nor do we have a voting member of congress. That is a part of that voicelessness,” Zenzi H. says. However, do not mistake that for powerlessness. “We are a strong and resilient people; we will move forward, but every little bit from the outside will help,” my childhood friend Nicole Joie Smith writes to me on Facebook messenger by candlelight. Electricity is out. When phones are charged through generators or the few places with power, service is limited and texts are delayed. Smith was born and raised on St. Thomas, where the former Miss USVI United States still lives today.

Smith says she spent the first part of the storm in her closet with her dogs, and when foundational beams began to groan, she curled up against a wall underneath a futon for hours. When Irma finally left St. Thomas, her house was flooded—but standing. “The aftermath is dire; I won’t sugarcoat it for you. I have no power. I count my blessings to still have a place to call home. But others are not nearly as fortunate as I,” Smith says.

“Even Hurricane Marilyn, who ripped through St. Thomas like a bat out of hell and left many displaced in her wake, didn’t really faze my seven-year old self,” says Smith. “Months without electricity and running water aren’t high on the scale of concerns for a child.” The mother of another childhood friend of mine, Jasmine Francis, was forced to spend the storm outside, huddling underneath a stairwell, after her entire condo collapsed around her. Thankfully, she survived.

PHOTO: Courtesy of Shaina Rae Pomerantz

Many “statesiders” think of the USVI as a tourist destination. A recent Washington Post article, while doing its part to spread awareness, described the USVI as “a haven for cruise ships and those in search of a good piña colada.” Zenzi H. says that she would love for people first to know who the USVI are and what we are—more than just a playground. “We are not ‘the islands’ or ‘the Leeward islands.’ We are not some hodgepodge of random land masses. We are the U.S.—yes, U.S.—Virgin Islands. Say our name. Find us on the map. Acknowledge us.”

President Donald Trump is currently in Florida, on the third leg of his “Hurricane Tour.” While he [eventually tweeted] about the U.S. Virgin Islands on September 6, basically as Irma was on top of the USVI. Governor Kenneth Mapp said during a press conference Monday that Trump will visit “in six or seven days.” FEMA has made their way there, and wrote to me that “46,000 liters of water, 56 rolls of blue tarps, and 13 infant kits were transferred to St. Thomas and St. John.” The U.S. Army is also now in the USVI aiding in recovery. The help is valued, although more is needed. 31 percent of USVI children live below the poverty line (compared to a 21 percent national average). Including all citizens, 22 percent of the USVI lives in poverty, compared to the national level of 14.5 percent. Perhaps the most striking disparity between these figure is how infrequently the former is mentioned in national media.

Even before help started coming from the U.S. mainland, locals were on it. “Virgin Islanders are not going to sit back and wait for FEMA or the government,” my stepmother, Sandra LaPlace-Duensing, who was born and raised on St. Thomas, says. The LaPlace family and others used chainsaws to help clear roads to Hull Bay, an area on St. Thomas known as a local hangout and fishing location. They’re certainly not the only locals engaging in such grassroots efforts.

PHOTO: Courtesy of Shaina Rae Pomerantz

“Our street was cleared by people who live in the neighborhood. There are still lots of downed trees, poles, and wires but we can drive in and out. We can do this because of the men and women who took on the task of clearing the road. I have seen people traveling with machetes and chainsaws, not to do anything dastardly, just the opposite,” H. says. There may be a shortage of food and water, but residents stressed that reports of violence on the islands are mostly just fear mongering.

Local restaurants such as Gladys Cafe and The Tap & Still on St. Thomas are handing out free food, Shaina Rae Pomeranz, one of my childhood best friends, says. She and countless other locals have done their part by gathering in parking lots to also help dole out food and. When I asked her about the atmosphere and any violence, she texted back that: “Atmosphere was good. Everyone needs food and water. Minor fight over who got what but everything was split up evenly. Didn’t have nearly enough stuff but coming back with more tomorrow.” The U.S. Virgin Islanders aren’t bad, dangerous people; they’re hungry and scared, and they need help.

My parents moved to St. Thomas when I was less than a year old. I lived there until high school, when I moved with my mother to Virginia. I go back often to visit my father, friends, and step-family. While I continue to feel a deep connection to the islands and the people—and at home the second I step foot on the island—it’s my experiences or voice are not nor should be representative of U.S. Virgin Islanders as a whole. Even if my experiences with Hurricane Marilyn sound scary, I cannot stress enough how good my family had it. I should not be the only, nor the last, voice to talk about Irma’s devastation.

I’ve spent the past week running around New York City to find chainsaw parts and medical supplies such as insulin to get to family and friends through Puerto Rico. However, certainly not all U.S. Virgin Islanders in need have that kind of access. Multiple trusted sources say the best place to donate to is the Community Foundation of the Virgin Islands. “Our focus from the Community Foundation is really families and children,” says Katrin C. Braddell, the foundation’s development director.

The last time I flew to St. Thomas to visit my dad, as I looked out the window of the plane, I could still pick out a few unmistakable blue FEMA tarps used as roofs—likely from Hurricane Marilyn, two decades later. Irma’s 150 mph winds make the Marilyn experience seem like a bad thunderstorm. “We are still looking for food, water, fuel, and ice. Many of us are just realizing that we will have to find new jobs. And many are just trying to find clothes to put on our backs,” Smith says. “The blood of my people lies within these emerald rocks, and I refuse to let them die out. So I ask, hell I even beg, please help any way that you can.”



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