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Selena Gomez's Latest Red Carpet Dress Was Perfect—Except She Couldn't Move in It


If you’ve ever wondered how celebrities manage to move at awards ceremonies in their intricate red carpet outfits, Selena Gomez set the record straight this week: Sometimes, they can hardly move at all.

On Thursday (February 6), Gomez attended the 2020 Hollywood Beauty Awards in Los Angeles wearing a blush pink dress by Patou and platform heels by Aquazzura. Her look was chic enough for the red carpet, yet simple enough to find a loose interpretation of it at Zara in two weeks’ time. In other words, it would make the perfect date-night outfit for Valentine’s Day.

Note how Gomez’s long sleeves are attached to the bodice of her dress with tight bows, forcing her to hold her arms at her sides. While the romantic silhouette was cute in front of the cameras, it ended up constricting the star later.

Selena Gomez on the Hollywood Beauty Awards arrivals carpet. Her dress isn’t causing problems—yet.

Tibrina Hobson

Selena Gomez on the Hollywood Beauty Awards red carpet

Gomez had to hold her arms at her side in her Patou dress.

Tibrina Hobson

Once the singer was seated at her table for the awards ceremony, her dress got in the way of basic dinnertime functions. Her off-the-shoulder sleeves were so far down on her arms, she couldn’t lift them to take a sip of her water. Instead, she had to slouch down in her seat so her glass could reach her mouth.

In videos posted to Instagram, Gomez laughs as she tries (and fails) to move normally in her dress. “I can’t f*cking move!” she exclaims in one. She repeats in the other video, “I can’t move my arms!” The things we have to do for fashion.

Gomez’s look was styled by Kate Young, whom she’s worked with since 2014. The dress is just as sophisticated as the other outfits Young has picked out for the 27-year-old to wear while promoting her new album, Rare. “It was really important that [Gomez] looked powerful and strong and it wasn’t about doing girlish or baby looks,” Young told People about Gomez’s current style era. “It was about her looking sexy and strong. She’s here to do business.”

The singer certainly has a lot of business ahead—and hopefully, she’ll have an easier time moving in her outfits to promote it. Last week, Gomez announced the forthcoming launch of her new beauty line, Rare Beauty. “Rare Beauty isn’t about how other people see you,” she wrote on Instagram with the collection reveal. “It’s about how you see yourself.”



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The Senate Passed a Major Tax Bill So Hurriedly Some Senators Couldn't Even Read It All


In the early hours of Saturday morning, the U.S. Senate voted on a new, highly contentious tax bill known as the “Tax Cuts and Jobs Act.” The $1.5-trillion tax bill is set to give massive tax cuts to corporations and the wealthiest Americans alongside uncertain benefits for the middle class, according to the Washington Post. However, some Democrats are crying foul over the process by which the bill was passed: When amendments to the Republican-led bill surfaced, the information didn’t go directly to the Democratic senators, according to the New York Times. Instead, those senators got wind of changes from K Street lobbyists.

Senators turned to social media to express their anger at how they had to catch wind of changes, the state the 479-page bill was in when they eventually received it, and the fact that they had just a few short hours to read the missive before the vote.

“This is so bad. We have just gotten list of amendments to be included in bill NOT from our R colleagues, but from lobbyists downtown,” Democratic Sen. Claire McCaskill of Missouri tweeted, “None of us have seen this list, but lobbyists have it. Need I say more? Disgusting. And we probably will not even be given time to read them.”

Six hours after her initial tweet, McCaskill posted a photo of a page of the bill, which she and her Democratic colleagues had by then obtained—according to USA Today, major changes were unveiled around 7 P.M. Friday evening. The nearly 500-word text was filled with sometimes-illegible handwritten amendments in the margins.

“I defy any member of the Senate to stand here and take an oath that they have read this and understand what in the world it means to businesses and families and individuals,” Democratic Sen. Dick Durbin of Illinois said.

McCaskill also tweeted saying that Democratic senators had asked if they could adjourn on Monday so everyone could study the bill, but the request was denied.

Sen. Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts posted a video of herself trying to decipher the handwriting on one of the pages. The Massachusetts Democrat was unable to read everything. “I just want to give you an idea of how the Republican leadership thinks we’re supposed to make laws in the United States Senate,” she said.

Other senators also posted images of the scrawl-filled bill on Twitter, explaining their disappointment in the process.

The bill eventually passed 51 to 49, with a winning margin of one vote (Republican Sen. Bob Corker of Tennessee voted against the bill due to concerns over its effect on the deficit). However, the saga isn’t over yet: Because of all the differences between this bill and the version that passed in the House of Representatives about two weeks ago, it’s being sent back to a joint committee, who will “iron out an agreement” between the two versions, according to USA Today. From there, both the House and the Senate will have to vote on identical copies of the bill.

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Netflix's 'Alias Grace' Takes Place Nearly 200 Years Ago, But It Couldn't Be More Timely


Praise be, fans of The Handmaid’s Tale: The latest Margaret Atwood adaptation, Alias Grace premieres on Netflix today.

The series is set in 1843 and based on Atwood’s fictional account of the real-life case of Grace Marks (played by Sarah Gadon), an Irish immigrant who was sent to jail for 30 years for the murder of her Canadian employer, Thomas Kinnear, and his housekeeper, Nancy Montgomery. But though the series takes place nearly 200 years ago, there are plenty of timely issues surrounding Grace’s situation. “Grace is a white, Irish immigrant, and while we don’t think of this as attracting the same prejudice, the Irish were regarded as less than human, which is what happens to every immigrant group in this country,” director Mary Harron tells us. “It’s a story about immigration, it’s a story about young women and the sexual danger that they find themselves in.”

Anna Paquin, who plays housekeeper Nancy Montgomery, adds, “The whole story is creepy and terrifying. We are conditioned to want to know what happened, but I love storytelling that doesn’t actually wrap it up for you.”

The six episode series also features a star-turning performance from Gadon, who leapt at the chance to work with Harron and writer/producer Sarah Polley. “I heard she was adapting the novel, and I knew it was going to be a huge opportunity,” she explains. “I knew I would probably have to fight for it because so many women worship at the altar of Sarah Polley and want to work with her.” The result? A perfect match that will leave you wanting more. Here, Gadon explains why.

You’ve said that playing this role was a total mindfuck. When you went in for the audition, were you terrified about actually getting the role?

Sarah Gadon: When I auditioned for the project, they asked me to prepare many scenes in the accent. I thought, “How am I going to do this?” But I just worked through it, and then we had this session where we worked for hours through versions of the character. Then I left, and they called me a few days later and said, “Can you do it again? Can you do it just one more way?” I thought, “Ugh! Really? We did this for hours already!” But I said OK and went in and did another version. Then I thought, “Oh yeah, they were really right about that. We didn’t do that [before].”

What did they want?

Sarah: I think it was to play the danger of one of the scenes we were doing. And so we did it, and then they offered me the part. I thought, “That’s a real signifier of what this role will be. It will be endless.” I was so excited to get the role, but then the fear set in of what I knew I had to do to prepare for it, and, of course, the expectations that Margaret would have, Sarah would have, and Mary would have. I felt a tremendous amount of pressure.

PHOTO: Sabrina Lantos/Netflix

Had you read the book before?

Sarah: I hadn’t. I picked it up before I met with Mary and Sarah and thought I should read some of this before my meeting. I read the whole thing because it’s so compelling. I think there was a huge hysteria surrounding it because Grace was part of the working class in a time where the class system was very strung, so the notion of this young girl murdering somebody above her station was shocking and horrifying to people of that time. And then there’s the fact that she was this young, beautiful girl who committed these horrific crimes. She was kind of catapulted into fame. She was made infamous and was this icon of terror. That was something that we really thought a lot about, which was this sensationalized true crime.

What do you love most about the show?

Sarah: I love that it’s a real exploration of female subjectivity. It takes all of these really iconic images that we’ve seen over and over again throughout history, film, photography. They are images that are very familiar to us because they keep reappearing, and they are images of a woman looking in a mirror, a woman with an apple, a woman in a veil. These are very powerful images. The reason why I love the show so much is that its subverts all of those images…these images that have predominantly created by men, and it says, a woman looks into the mirror. This is not about female beauty, this is not about an emblem of beauty, about vanity. It’s about Grace being acutely aware of that image and taking it on…taking on all the projections of who she should be. Sitting comfortably in them and making you feel uncomfortable, and then her inviting you in, and saying we are now going to explore what it is to be a woman, beyond this superficial understanding of her. I love that.

It’s the same with the scene with the apple. It’s saying I’m dangerous, but I’m also all of these other things at the same time. I think it’s so powerful that she doesn’t eat the apple in front of Simon. She waits until he leaves, and it’s kind of, it’s not about you, it’s about me. It’s the same with the veil moment, which is this idea of woman in a veil representing country, representing religion, representing patriarchy. It’s this moment where Grace is able to, in a very unsettling and terrifying way, explore her deepest sexual desires, her anxieties, her opinions of others. These moments excite me as an audience member because they are in direct conversation with all of these ideas of what women should be. It’s powerful to watch that—and exciting. By the end of it, it feels deeply personal because it’s very much a conversation of what identity is.

alias-grace-sarah-gadon-vertical-season-one.jpg

PHOTO: Sabrina Lantos/Netflix

There are so many underlying themes in the show. Is there a specific topic you’d like viewers to think about more?

Sarah: I think in order to understand where we are right now, it’s important to look back and say, “Where have we come from? And why have we come from there?” When you’re thinking about issues that are at the forefront of everyone’s minds right now, like immigration or gender politics, the show is a very interesting exploration of where we’ve come from. It helps us understand things like, why are females competitive with each other? Is that inherited from this notion that a male’s attention was your meal ticket and your survival? How have we taken that female notion of competition that was created through this extremely patriarchal structure about life and death? And how have we untangled that and arrived where we are now? So, there are lots of things to take away. That example that I just said really exists in Grace’s relationship with Nancy, and it made me understand that idea of competition and where that came from in a way that I never thought about before.

How did this experience change you?

Sarah: I think I was very haunted when I read the book by Grace and her story and moved by her, and I still am. I often think about how Grace didn’t really have a mother. She didn’t really have strong female relationships in her life. She spent the majority of her life isolated. And by way of playing her and embodying her, I’ve come in contact with some of the most powerful female relationships I’ve ever experienced. I wonder if in some way that’s a kind of retribution for Grace Marks.

What was it like working with all these amazing women at the helm of this project? How was that different from other projects you’ve worked on?

Sarah: In some ways, it wasn’t really different at all. Mary and Sarah were extremely demanding of me. They had extremely high expectations, so they weren’t necessarily nurturing in that way. [Laughs] But one thing that stands out is they were very inclusive of me throughout every step of the process. They valued my opinion, and they asked for it often. They were so inclusive in a way that I had never experienced before on a film.

Because you said this was the hardest role that you had taken on, where did you find the confidence each day to attack this?

Sarah: [Laughs] I think I really found it in Mary [Harron] and Sarah [Polley], because they just believe in me so wholeheartedly. I respected them and looked up to them my whole life, so letting them down was just never going to be an option. I think that that was the real driving force. But the other thing that really grounded me throughout the process was that I was playing a real person, and I wanted to honor this person’s memory. That was a real source of inspiration and confidence for me, that I was going to honor this woman who never had a moment in her life where she was honored.

Alias Grace is now streaming on Netflix.



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I Was Fighting Breast Cancer as an Underinsured Woman, and I Couldn't Get the Care I Needed to Live


“I’ll do whatever I have to do to get out of here,” Nikki “Trip” Triplet, 39, remembers thinking when she showed up at one clinic for breast cancer testing. But the self-employed, under-insured Texan wasn’t talking about fighting and surviving breast cancer. She was talking about getting out of that particular run-down facility. She was determined to receive her care in a cleaner, better-managed medical center than her bare bones government-issued insurance allowed.

“I needed chemo once a week but they had it scheduled every six to eight weeks because that was how long it would take to get an appointment,” Triplet tells Glamour. “When I tell you ‘sometimes you almost die before you get treatment,’ it’s not a joke. When it comes to cancer and the medical world, you’re poor unless you’re rich.”

Triplet says that financial discrimination was her toughest fight when she was battling breast cancer. Tougher than the white women who wouldn’t move their purses so a black woman—accompanied by her girlfriend, no less—could sit down next to them in a waiting room. Tougher than the doctor who said, “I’m pretty sure you’re not going to be milking any babies with those.”

courtesy Nikki Triplet

“If you are not insured, then you might as well be Black or Hispanic or gay or a lesbian because you will be treated just like we are treated every day,” she says. “But being insurance-less is the new black.”

Once she was diagnosed, Triplet, a real estate agent, says she and her girlfriend called medical offices endlessly, trying to find the right words to say in order to get her the help she needed. When she heard, “We don’t take your insurance,” she’d say, “I’m sure somebody else there does.” When she heard, “Your girlfriend can’t come in the room,” she’d say, “Oh, good thing she’s my best friend, so now she can come in.”

“We would put on the pressure on anyway that we could,” Triplet says. It paid off—eventually, she landed in the hands Jamie E. Terry, MD, who specializes in breast surgery at Texas Breast Specialists-Houston Medical Center, and received excellent care. Triplet can’t rave enough about Dr. Terry. So now she advocates for others to stand up for themselves and get the physicians they deserve.

“I want all Black people, all broke people, all gay people to know: you gotta take a whole bunch of nos to get to yes,” she says. “But I don’t want anybody giving up.”

And words matter. That’s one of the most important lessons Triplet learned on her cancer journey. But she also learned how to speak without saying anything at all. She just smiles—to reveal a gold grill that says “FUCK CANCER.”

“It’s offensive awareness,” she says. “I want as many people who can be offended to be offended by it. Because I was offended when cancer picked me. I was offended that I was going to lose my hair. I was offended by the things that I was about to go through that I wasn’t prepared for.” It’s a reminder to everyone that cancer can happen to anyone.

After multiple surgeries, chemotherapy and radiation, Triplet will continue to take a once-a-day pill for three more years as part of her battle. “Cancer broke me down,” admits the advocate for Avon (she’s also a state leader for the Young Survival Coalition in Texas). “But at the same time it built me up. I became the person I didn’t know that I was supposed to be.”

“Never for one minute believe that you must defend [what happens in] your bedroom or [what’s in] your bank account in order to defend your breasts—or your life.”



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Jenna Dewan Tatum Wore a Sheer Dress, and Channing Tatum Couldn't Take His Eyes Off Her


PHOTO: Samir Hussein/WireImage/Getty Images

Jenna Dewan Tatum and Channing Tatum are one of those couples that seems like they’re having fun together at all times. Not to mention that they clearly can’t keep their hands off each other, even after eight years of marriage. So it’s no surprise that when Jenna stepped out at the premiere of Channing’s new film Kingsman: The Golden Circle in a Zac Posen dress that showed off her curves, Channing was totally here for it.

The dress in question was an effervescent and ethereal princess-style white tulle gown that featured a structured top and a voluminous, light green embroidered bottom. The bottom half was also very sheer, with Jenna’s legs (and even a bit of her bum) peaking out from the delicate material. When asked about his wife’s dress by Entertainment Tonight, Channing, right on cue, replied, “I love that. She’s got a great booty.”

Take a look:

Channing Tatum

PHOTO: Karwai Tang/WireImage/Getty Images

Channing Tatum

PHOTO: Karwai Tang/WireImage/Getty Images

Jenna herself though demurred when asked about the dress, saying, “There’s only a little longer I can do this.” (We disagree, Jenna.)

Jenna has no problem showing off her body on social media, either—the dancer explained to Entertainment Tonight the reason behind posting a picture to Instagram of herself wearing a thong (which you can see below): “That was me being proud of doing 800,000 squats.”

Channing has also taken to social media to post pictures showing how much he appreciates his wife. The Magic Mike star previously posted a black and white snap of a fully nude Jenna sleeping in bed, captioning it “Nap time = The Best Time ? ? ?.”

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11 Times Selena Gomez and The Weeknd Couldn't Keep Their Hands to Themselves


In 2015, Selena Gomez released her deeply-underrated bop, “Hands to Myself.” And ever since, people frequently associate Gomez with it—especially when it comes to her boyfriend, The Weeknd (real name Abel Tesfaye). It’s pretty obvious why: Gomez and The Weeknd really enjoy showing their love for each other in public (and on social media), which makes “Hands to Myself” the perfect theme song for their relationship. Is it cheesy? Sure! Are we going to keep saying it? Absolutely! It’s what the pop-music gods want! From Disneyland to the Met Gala, the Weeknd and Gomez’s PDA is worldwide—and we’re 100 percent here for it.



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