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Willie and Christina Geist Met in Sixth Grade. 33 Years Later, Here's How They Make It Work


Who did you have a crush on in sixth grade? Maybe it was a back-row kid from homeroom or a spelling bee champ. When’s the last time that person crossed your mind—or even your newsfeed? For Sunday Today Show host Willie Geist, and his wife, New York Times bestselling children’s book author, Christina, it was, oh, four seconds ago.

The pair met in the middle school and while life took them in different directions, the universe nudged them back together. The Geists have now been married since 2003 and have two children, George, 10, and Lucie, 12. Between them, the duo also has two demanding careers. Christina, 44, is the author of Sorry Grown-Ups, You Can’t Go To School!, which drew on a clever hack she invented to get her daughter excited to start school, framing it as a special thing only she gets to do.

And Willie, 44, who’s been a longtime co-host on Morning Joe, is settling into is groove on Sunday Today—where he trades high-drama politics for actual dramatists. So far, he’s interviewed the likes of Bill Murray, Jerry Seinfeld, David Letterman, and Tiffany Haddish.

While their schedules require a lot of coordination, and their lives have countless moving parts, their partnership is stronger than ever. Here, the Geists fill us in on how they’ve been making it work from middle school to (per their own characterization!) middle age.

Sometimes you can judge a book by its cover

WILLIE GEIST: We both went to George Washington Middle School in Ridgewood, New Jersey. On the first day, Christina had a bunch of friends from elementary school, whereas I was the new kid from the other side of town, standing alone and scanning the room. And I know it sounds like revisionist history, but this is true. I really remember thinking in my little 11-year-old brain, “Oh, she seems cute and cool.” And it turns out I was right—because that was 33 years ago, and we’re married with kids.

CHRISTINA GEIST: I remember it, too. It’s crazy but I feel like Willie always stood out. He’s a presence in any room he walks in, both because he tends to be taller than 95% of the people, but also because he’s just the type of person that the attention naturally shifts towards him.

Trust your gut

WG: We dated briefly during freshman year of high school. I played on the football team and I had a little towel that hung out of my pants and I wanted to write Christina’s name on it—but I made the first letters too big, so it basically said “Christ” and then had a little “ina” in the corner, because I ran out of space. It ended up looking like a tribute to Jesus rather than my 14-year-old girlfriend. So she was the one who broke up with me, because once you see guys with cars, you’re like, “Oh, you’re just a pimply 14-year-old with ‘Christ’ on his towel.”

We got back together junior year, then went to Vanderbilt together. But after college I got a job in Atlanta and she went to Boston. We felt like, “If we’re going to break up and see what the world’s like outside of this, it seems like this is the time to do it.” So we did for a couple of years and I remember hearing things through the grapevine that she was dating someone else. And I had to be ok with that, because that was the point of the whole thing. But after a certain period of time I thought, “I know in my heart that this is the person I want to be with. If we just went through this exercise of breaking up for the sake of breaking up, and I’m going to lose her over that, that doesn’t make any sense.” I found myself trying to reel her back in and make sure she didn’t slip away.



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Christina Ricci Is Glad Social Media Didn't Exist When She Was a Young Star


Lifetime kicks off a month of true crime biopics, featuring women with incredible stories, tonight with the premiere of Escaping the Madhouse: The Nellie Bly Story. Christina Ricci plays investigative journalist Nellie Bly, born Elizabeth Cochran Seaman, who went undercover to expose the horrendous conditions and treatment at the notorious Women’s Lunatic Asylum in Roosevelt Island. Without giving too much away, Bly undergoes treatment at the asylum and has no recollection of how she got there or who she really is.

If that’s creepy and disturbing, imagine what it was like for Ricci to play the role. “I had a really hard time with one of the scenes, because as a mother in real life it’s just horrendous [to see these women suffer],” she says. But it was important for Ricci to tell Bly’s story, even though she didn’t have an extensive knowledge of her previously. “I found it really interesting to see how we treated our poor and mentally ill. The whole point of studying history is to not repeat the mistakes we’ve made, so it’s important to understand that this was a reality for people.”

Even so, Ricci found herself looking for ways to leave such dark subject matter on set. “It’s natural defenses,” she says. “Your brain doesn’t want to think about terrible things, so [for me], if you just allow it to recover, my brain will go right to the adorable kitten nearby.”

In her nearly 30 year career, Ricci has certainly mastered the art of evolving and focusing on the positive. She says she’s grateful she didn’t grow up in the age of social media (“Thank God I was done with all my hard partying [by then].”) and that there’s now smarter roles for women in TV and film (“For a very long time, the things we were supposed to be in were so stupid”). But it hasn’t been easy either. Ahead of tonight’s premiere, she tells Glamour what she’s learned. Read on.

PHOTO: Michelle Faye Fraser/Lifetime

Christina Ricci in Escaping the Madhouse: The Nellie Bly Story

Glamour: How often do you watch your films when they come on TV?

Christina Ricci: It depends. We have Apple TV, so I’d have to go search for my own stuff. It’s been a long time that I’ve been like, “I really want to go and see that movie…” I think the last one we watched was Addams Family Values. I had to talk about it since it was being re-released for its anniversary, so I watched it again to familiarize myself with it.

My sister was adamant that I mention Now and Then, which is one of her favorites.

CR: I was in a bathroom recently with (co-star) Rita Wilson and didn’t say hi! I don’t think she recognized me. I looked at her, but she didn’t recognize me, and I totally forgot she was in that movie and that I worked with her until after. I should have just gone right up to her. When you’ve worked as long as I have, and I was a child then and am an adult now and such a different person, it’s hard to almost remember that you had contact with some people.

You’ve seen so much change through your career. What’s changed for you personally?

CR: I think there’s a real appreciation for intelligent filmmaking and seeing it reflected in movies and TV. For a very long time the things we were supposed to aspire to be in were so stupid. I had to pretend that I thought it was good, you know? So it’s nice now that you can actually say, “No, I want to be in something really smart, and I don’t care if only 10 people get it. I want to make art.” There seems to be real value to that now.

Is there anything you wish you could go back and tell yourself during your teen years?

CR: Yes, for sure. I would tell myself it’s all about the work I did and what I created, and nothing else mattered. I didn’t know that for a very long time, and I wish I had. I think it’s very confusing when you introduce a child to fame because fame is so warping. People clamor for and want it so badly. I think as a kid, you get confused, when really any adult should tell you, “No, it’s about what you create and the work you do. It’s about valuing yourself as an artist and not something to be put up for people to consume.” I didn’t understand that…I thought that I was meant for other people to consume. [But] I was a kid.

Christina Ricci

PHOTO: Dave Allocca

Christina Ricci in 1999.

Is there anything you do now to make sure you don’t have to deal with the pitfalls of fame?

CR: I never really went out anyway. The thing is, I’m not naturally attention-seeking, but I tried to be that for so long because I thought I was supposed to be. It led to me doing a lot of things to cope to be this person that I wasn’t, and that caused a lot of problems. I think now just knowing you don’t actually have to [play that game], it’s not about fame, and it shouldn’t be about fame. If what you’re seeking is fame, you’re always going to be empty. It’s something I’m trying to teach my child because I think social media and all of this attention-seeking stuff is soul-crushing. I don’t want him to have to learn that the hard way.

Right. It’s become about the amount of followers you have.

CR: It’s very strange. It’s like taking the worst part of high school and making it [a profession].

Remember when actors would go out to clubs and it wouldn’t wind up on social media?

CR: I don’t know how these young actors aren’t getting into more trouble.

It’s why I think Netflix and chill became such a huge phenomenon. What else are people going to do?

CR: Well, it’s smart and thank God. Nobody needs to be embarrassing themselves. Somebody said to me the other day—and it’s kind of funny—they were like, “You were a part of the last group of young, famous people that were insane.” Because there was no one to cover it! So it was like the last hurrah of like throwing TV’s out of hotel rooms and stuff, you know? Because right after…I think the Internet hit when I was 22 or 23, and thank God I was done with all of my hard partying. [Laughs] It’s nuts.

Escaping the Madhouse: The Nellie Bly Story premieres on Lifetime on Saturday, January 19, at 8 P.M. ET/PT.



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Christina Aguilera Takes Glamour's 'Big Questions' Survey


Like any pop star with staying power, Christina Aguilera has managed to master the art of reinvention. She intrigued us after bursting on the scene with “Genie in a Bottle” during 1999’s pop music renaissance, shocked us by separating herself from dozens of similar acts with chaps and piercings during 2002’s “Dirrty” period, then produced hit after hit—and a new pin-up look—with 2006’s jazz and soul inspired album Back to Basics. And that’s just a corner of her resume.

Now, the 37-year-old is switching things up again with the release of her sixth studio album Liberation (available to buy and stream now), which is her first since 2012. And it definitely commands your attention. (Just watch her passionate “Fall in Line” performance with Demi Lovato at the 2018 Billboard Music awards if you need convincing.)

To celebrate the new album, Aguilera answered “The Big Questions”—a rapid-fire assortment of things you definitely want to know—for Glamour’s August issue.

What’s your full name, and where does it come from?

Christina Maria Aguilera. I’m half Ecuadorian, half Irish. My mom said she named me after a princess.

What’s your idea of true happiness?

The idea of true happiness is seriously just peace of mind. No deadlines and no judgments.

What’s your idea of hell on Earth?

Suppression. Well my whole album is called Liberation for a reason. It’s about the anti-being suppressed and feeling stifled. There’s nothing worse in the world than feeling like you’re in a stifled place where you’re being told how to be, how to dress, how to act, how to feel. And it happens all the time. So I think at a certain level maybe we’re all a little suppressed. But you know yeah. That is definitely hell on earth to not be free.

What’s a headline about yourself you’d love to read?

Well I’m going to go for the unattainable. But these are pretty off the beaten path questions and a little bit imagination so “Christina Aguilera Does The Unimaginable Solves World Hunger” Or “Bridges Social Divide.”

Would you rather stop time or speed it up. And why?

Stop time for sure. It’s going too fast! My kids are growing up way too soon I’m like oh my dear lord. Where is time going? So definitely to be able to freeze time. I would do it in a heartbeat.

If you could phone a friend right now, who would it be?

I think Priscilla. Priscilla always makes me happy. She’s done my hair, my extensions for so friggin’ long. I’ve known her forever. She’s my ride or die.

If you could be anyone, who would you be?

Wonder Woman. Real people are too complicated for me. I want to kick some ass!

What’s the best invention of all time?

Social media. It allows you to speak your mind and squash rumors. But it’s also the worst, for so many reasons.

What three things would you take to a desert island?

I’d need company, so either my dog or my man, water or wine, and definitely a boat, so I can get the fuck out of there.

How do you stand up for what you believe in?

You just do it! Very Nike campaign, but you have to be unafraid to go against the grain.

You have to give up sex, booze, or laughter. Pick one.

Booze. I’d have to start being a good stoner then, I guess.

Illustration by Helen Green.

What’s something you wish you’d written?

“Imagine,” by John Lennon.

What’s your most irrational fear?

The dark. I sleep with candles lit, a night-light, a nineties sitcom in the background, and a sound machine…. Yeah, it’s special.

What advice do you think your 18 year old self would give to you?

Probably to get out more. Leave your bedroom!

What advice would you give to your 18-year-old self?

Start yoga. It helps everything.

This story appeared in Glamour’s August 2018 issue.



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2018 Billboard Music Awards: Christina Aguilera and Demi Lovato Perform Together


In a meeting of pop-diva royalty, Christina Aguilera and Demi Lovato together debuted their new song, “Fall in Line,” with a performance at the 2018 Billboard Music Awards on Sunday night (May 20).

While the women belted out powerful lyrics—and, of course, their signature runs—they were surrounded by soldiers wearing helmets and marching around the stage. (The singers themselves wore matching black patent leather jackets.) After Aguilera finished singing the introduction, the soldiers walked her down the stage and carried her body around, perhaps alluding to some of the lyrics about control. For the big finale, a large screen in the background showed videos of little girls playing in fields while Aguilera and Lovato knelt together and embraced, touching their heads together in an emotional moment.

PHOTO: Kevin Mazur

2018 Billboard Music Awards - Show

PHOTO: Kevin Winter

2018 Billboard Music Awards - Show

PHOTO: John Shearer

2018 Billboard Music Awards - Show

PHOTO: Ethan Miller

The fiery duet, a soulful anthem that shows off both of their respective vocal powers, features lyrics like “Little girls, listen closely / No one told me, but you deserve to know / That in this world you are not beholden / You do not owe them your body and your soul,” and “I wasn’t made to fall in line.”

Watch their performance, below:

Not only were celebrities like Halsey and Tyra Banks—who mouthed “that was powerful” when the performance was over—living for the collaboration, fans collectively lost their minds for the song’s debut. “Xtina and Demi giving you VOCALS,” one Twitter user wrote. “I can’t believe we all just watched Demi Lovato’s dream come true,” another wrote.

The collaboration, which is featured on Aguilera’s forthcoming album, has been heavily anticipated by fans who know that Lovato has been a huge admirer of Aguilera for years. The song is part of Aguilera’s new album, Liberation, which is due out on June 15. The 37-year-old singer released her first song in six years, “Accelerate,” earlier this month as the first single from the album.

Related: Christina Aguilera Goes Makeup-Free for ‘Paper’ Magazine





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Christina Aguilera's New Song Doesn't Feature Enough Christina Aguilera


After six years of waiting and flooding Twitter with “When’s the album coming?” messages, fans can rest easy: Christina Aguilera has finally made her return to music. The pop star released her first single since 2012 on Thursday, May 3. Called “Accelerate,” it fits perfectly into top 40’s current landscape: sultry, chilled-out, a warm pop tune with R&B influence. In lieu of vocal gymnastics, Aguilera delivers the lines in “Accelerate” like she’s drinking cocktails on a beach. It’s very relaxed, easily danceable, and features two mood-setting features from Ty Dolla $ign and 2 Chainz.

It’s good—if this weren’t Aguilera’s first release in six years. We’ve waited eons for this moment, and Aguilera herself has been teasing new music for years now. So it’s unusual that Aguilera, who has a knack for consistently delivering dynamite first singles, chose “Accelerate” to be her debut back on the scene. Take 2012’s “Your Body,” for example. It’s a punchy pop masterpiece that features Aguilera’s catchiest chorus to date. “Not Myself Tonight” (2010), from the polarizing Bionic album, snaps and crackles with synth-pop flair. Then there’s “Ain’t No Other Man” (2006), a funkified ode to jazz that reached number six on Billboard‘s Hot 100 chart. Before that, of course, Aguilera released “Dirrty” (2002) and “Genie in a Bottle” (1999): two songs that defined Y2K pop.

All these songs are incredible and have one common thread: Aguilera’s up front and center on them. Despite the songs’ swirling productions, the spotlight stays consistently on X-Tina’s voice. That’s not to say she has to capital-S sing in order to have a hit record—”Not Myself Tonight” buries Aguilera’s vocals in techno trickery, and yet she still never pulls focus—or that she can’t have featured artists. (Redman raps on “Dirrty,” in case you forgot.)

There’s no denying these aforementioned hits are Christina Aguilera songs—and “Accelerate” doesn’t feel like a Christina Aguilera song, at least to me. It feels equally divided between herself, Ty Dolla $ign, and 2 Chainz. There just isn’t enough of her on it, which, again, would’ve been fine for a third or even fourth single from the album—but not the first. Certainly not a first single in six years. The shine isn’t just on Aguilera here, and it deserves to be.

Aguilera’s eighth studio album, Liberation, will drop on June 15. She released a promotional image for the record on Thursday, as well:

The album, interestingly, features a song with Demi Lovato called “Fall in Line.” “I have always looked up to Christina,” Lovato told Billboard magazine for its cover story about Aguilera. “I remember being at her concert and singing facing the crowd instead of the stage, knowing that that was exactly what I wanted to do in life.”

Let the countdown to Liberation begin.

Related Stories:

Christina Aguilera Goes Makeup-Free for Paper Magazine

Watch Christina Aguilera’s Moving Tribute to Whitney Houston at the 2017 American Music Awardss





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Watch Christina Aguilera's Performance Tribute to Whitney Houston at American Music Awards 2017


Twenty-five years ago, the late Whitney Houston starred in a now-iconic movie called The Bodyguard and with it came the song that is now her trademark, “I Will Always Love You.” It’s a song that’s quintessentially Whitney: the dramatics, the opulence, the soaring high note at the end. Many view “I Will Always Love You” as Houston’s greatest vocal feat, which is impressive seeing as how she’s arguably the greatest vocalist of all time.

And tonight at the American Music Awards, another vocal powerhouse sang the song and paid tribute to both Houston and The Bodyguard: Christina Aguilera. Yes, Aguilera, clad in a black outfit and her hair slicked back, took the stage at the AMAs to give a special performance honoring the song and film that catapulted Houston into a fame stratosphere only a few celebrities reach. Aguilera whipped through several tunes from The Bodyguard, including “I Will Always Love You” and Houston’s cover of “I’m Every Woman,” which became a feminist anthem in the early 1990s.

The crowd was visibly moved by Aguilera’s performance—cameras caught several celebrities tearing up. Even Pink, who famously feuded with Aguilera in the early 2000s, couldn’t help but be moved by the performance. (If you follow celebrity news, though, then you know Pink and Aguilera put their beef to bed. “We were super young and super new at the whole thing, and I think I’m an alpha, and she’s an alpha,” Pink said about their up-and-down relationship a few weeks ago.)

Check out some clips of the performance, below:

The Twitter reactions, though, weren’t as kind. Several people took issue with the fact Aguilera, a white woman, performed the tribute.

Others simply didn’t think she was up to par with Houston.

Click here for more of our coverage of the 2017 American Music Awards.

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