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The Most Popular Tattoo Ideas From Around the Country


Tattoos are without a doubt one of the most personal ways to express yourself. But because they’re literally permanent, there’s often a lot of pressure and indecisiveness around what you chose to go with. Whether you sort through the Instagram explore page, look at seemingly endless pages of tattoo ideas from your local shops, or take a shot searching with good old Google—finding inspiration can be (and usually is) extremely overwhelming. Thankfully, should you be on the search right now, you’ve come to the right place.

Featuring pet portraits in Austin, palm trees in Miami, and matching sets in New York City, we present to you the most popular tattoos trending right now across the U.S. Inspiration drought? Handled.



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The First Trailer for Netflix’s ‘Wine Country’ Is Here—and It’s Hilarious


When news broke that Amy Poehler would be making her directorial debut with the Netflix comedy Wine Country, I could barely contain my excitement—especially after finding out she hired some of her best SNL girlfriends for the cast. The first trailer for the movie dropped on Thursday, April 11, and it’s everything I could’ve imagined and more.

Wine Country follows Poehler’s character, Abby, as she tries to plan a classy Napa getaway for her friend Rebecca (Rachel Dratch), who’s turning 50. She invites her longtime squad along for the ride, which includes comedy heavy hitters like Maya Rudolph, Ana Gasteyer, Paula Pell, Emily Spivey, and Cherry Jones. (Tina Fey also makes an appearance.) It’s essentially just a movie about your favorite SNL women getting tipsy on wine while on vacation, and I’m 100 percent here for it.

Check out the trailer for yourself, below. It’s serving some major Girls’ Trip vibes.

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Based on this trailer, it seems these women are going to get into some serious Bridesmaids-esque shenanigans. In just the few short scenes we see, Maya Rudolph gives us a drunk serenade (and falls off the piano), Ana Gasteyer pulls out a bag of drugs, and the rest of the cast all rolls down a hill in unison. According to the film’s tagline, though, “as the alcohol flows, real world uncertainties intrude on the punch lines and gossip, and the women begin questioning their friendships and futures.” As long as all of them are friends again before the hangovers kick in, I’m OK.

Wine Country will debut May 10 on Netflix, so be sure to save a bottle of wine (or three) for the occasion. I seriously can’t wait to watch these women drink chardonnay for two hours.

While you’re waiting for Wine Country, though, check out the best movies currently on Netflix.



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Rude: Someone Thought Kelly Clarkson Was a Seat-Filler at the Academy of Country Music Awards


Kelly Clarkson is an icon. That’s a straight-up fact. She has a catalog of bops, starred in the criminally underrated movie From Justin to Kelly, and is currently a judge on NBC’s The Voice. She’s earning checks left and right, as she should be. Kelly Clarkson is so damn iconic that she covered “Shallow” from A Star Is Born and made the world temporarily forget Lady Gaga and Bradley Cooper released it first. OK, I’m exaggerating there, but you get my point: I inducted Clarkson into the “Legends Only” Hall of Fame a long time ago, as did the rest of the world.

So why did someone think she was a seat filler at the Academy of Country Music Awards Sunday night (April 7)? Clarkson revealed this little tidbit on Twitter shortly after the ceremony wrapped. “The greatest thing by far that happened to me tonight was being asked to move because some guy thought I was a seat filler at the ACM’s tonight #CantWinEmAll,” she tweeted. “Literally, it made my night because he was so serious, and I just politely said no hahaha.”

See Clarkson’s tweet for yourself, below.

There’s so much to break down here. First, let’s talk about how chill Clarkson was about this entire situation. Only true stars can shake this kind of thing off. In my mind, Clarkson responded to this guy with something like, “Oh, you don’t know who I am? That’s OK! I have three Grammys, four American Music Awards, and a Nickelodeon Kid’s Choice Award.” When you have a Kid’s Choice Award sitting on your mantle, how can you be bothered by anything?

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Real talk, though: How did this man not know who Kelly Clarkson was? Has he never cried to “Behind These Hazel Eyes?” Did he not see her two-episode arc on the early-aughts NBC drama America Dreams? He clearly has horrible taste in music.

But never fear, KC: The rest of us know exactly who you are. And we stan.



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Country Music Association Awards 2018: The Best Looks


It’s Wednesday—you could use some sequins to jazz up your week.

That’s where the 2018 Country Music Association Awards come in. The mid-week red carpet brought some serious glitz and glamour, courtesy of artists like Carrie Underwood, Kelsea Ballerini, Kacey Musgraves, and more, who were on hand to celebrate the best of their industry. But it’s not just country stars lighting up the step-and-repeat: Mackenzie Foy, Rita Wilson, and other celebrities walked the carpet, too. Between this, the People’s Choice Awards, and the Glamour Women of the Year Awards, it’s been an incredibly high-fashion week—and, again, it’s only Wednesday.

Catch up on the best looks from the CMA Awards red carpet, right here.



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The Best Hairspray, According to Country Singers


Asking a beauty professional—whether it’s a celebrity hairstylist, makeup artist, or Instagram influencer (hi, 2018)—for advice is always a safe bet. But dig a little deeper, and you’ll find there are plenty of other women out there who are legitimate authorities in their own right. In our new column, Unlikely Experts, they’ll give real reviews and recommendations. Whether it’s surfers on the best conditioners, bikers on the best cleansers, or ballerinas on the best foot creams, it’s fair to say these women know best.

“I am that saying: ‘The higher the hair, the closer to God,'” Dolly Parton once quipped. But there’s truth behind her humor: After all, Parton and her peers created the iconic (and lasting) association of country stars with sky-high hair. These days, though, female country artists tend to do more of a glowed-up, natural vibe—think sunny blond with big, loose curls—than the perms of yesteryear.

Still, these are women who spend the majority of their time on the road or on stage—meaning they need products that can hold their hair in place through all kinds of weather, dancing, and ballads. So what hairsprays actually do the work? We asked 13 country artists for their favorites. Their picks, below.



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Before the Midterm Elections, Five Activists Criss-Crossed the Country to Hear From Women.


We’ve heard a lot ahead of these midterm elections about the historic wave of women jumping into the political process as candidates—and for good reason. With the polls now open, 2018 is not just poised to become another Year of the Woman. It will also be remembered as a decisive moment in which women of color were recognized as more than reliable voters. Thanks to change-making candidates—from Catalina Cruz, a Dreamer headed for the New York Assembly, to Stacey Abrams, who launched an inspiring campaign for governor in Georgia—the face of American politics looks different and more like the people that it has overlooked for centuries.

But focusing on women candidates misses an even bigger phenomenon: Over the past 24 months, women have reinvigorated our democracy, and in the process, they are transforming our country.

No matter the results of this election, every progressive victory this cycle will be the result of women.

Women have been the often-unsung volunteers, staff, and supporters, signing up in record numbers to be part of historic campaigns. Women make up 75 percent of leaders and membership in local chapters of Indivisible, an organization that’s mobilized the resistance nationwide. And women have launched their own grassroots efforts, too. In places like Alabama, Virginia, Pennsylvania, and Wisconsin, women of color—who’ve been the most reliable progressive voters in America—are demanding policies (and candidates) that align with their convictions. In a direct rebuke to voter suppression in the South, Black women are running—not walking—to the polls. Motivated by anti-immigrant candidates, Latinas are running for office, organizing, and speaking out. And white women have come to a realization that they have to do more.

No matter the results of this election, every progressive victory this cycle will be the result of women.

This spring, the five of us came together to better understand how women are organizing and showing up in this unprecedented moment—and what’s driving them. As we crisscrossed the country, we met women who had never marched or picked up a protest sign before and were now doing things they could never have imagined.

The woman in Austin, Texas, who fought for and won maternity coverage at the tech company where she works and said, “But I realized it’s not enough—I need to get involved in politics.”

The women from Nashville, Tennessee, to Wisconsin who shared the multiple barriers they’ve faced in the workplace and in politics, from sexual harassment to racial discrimination, but who’d resolved not to give up or in.

The immigrant women, working-class women, teachers, students, doctors, nurses, candidates, and more. The one thing they all had in common? They were on fire. And they were relieved and energized to be together. As a transgender woman said at the end of one of our gatherings: she was glad to be in a room full of other women and to be included in a movement that fights for all.

Over and over, women told us that our political process as it functions (or doesn’t function) now neither speaks to nor works for women. With a sigh, a longtime activist in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, put it best: “I will run the phone banks again this election, as I have for the last several years, but ultimately, I’m working within a system built by men, for men.” And a single mom in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, broke down in tears as she described how hard it is to work the two jobs it takes to afford daycare and groceries. Still, she showed up for two hours on her only day off—her 4-year-old daughter in tow—to talk about what we can do to make America a better place for all of us.

Once, in Pennsylvania, we asked a group of women to share when over the past 24 months they felt most powerful. A few women talked about standing up for themselves at work or for their students at school or for their neighbors when they went to the airport to protest the Muslim ban. When it was the last woman’s turn, she turned to us and said, “This might sound cheesy, but I feel powerful listening to all of you talk about the things you have done.”

Women are done with zero-sum politics. We know this can and should be a nation that holds us all up, rather than pitting us against each other.

We felt that sentiment wherever we traveled, whether women were listening to immigrant women tell their stories in Arizona or applauding the grassroots efforts of Black women who are changing the electorate in Georgia. In other words: Women are done with zero-sum politics. We know this can and should be a nation that holds us all up, rather than pitting us against each other.

Defending democracy and expanding justice is women’s work; it always has been. But there’s something unique about this moment for women. In the past, our activism has helped change the country; but we’ve never run the country. We’ve changed the rules, but never made them. We’ve influenced the culture, but we’ve never shaped it. We’ve powered everything, but we’ve never truly owned power in this country. It’s time for that to change.

Women want to do more than “resist.” We want to no longer be an afterthought or an accommodation—to move past arguing for an incremental improvement in the gender pay gap, a few more seats in the legislature, or a slight improvement in family leave and access to childcare.

We are rising up together to demand economic, political, and cultural equality. Together, we have the power to make communities and workplace safe for women. We can make every job a job that pays enough to sustain a family, because we’ve been working hard for too little for too long. We can take care of caregivers, support families instead of tearing them apart, and treat everyone with the dignity and respect they deserve. We can champion racial justice. And we can and must build a political system that lifts up and addresses women’s everyday needs, such as good public schools, affordable health care, quality childcare, and a just immigration policy.

The question is not if, but how and when women in America will fully build the political power necessary to ensure that the issues that keep us up at night are not dismissed or marginalized, but front and center in the national debate. To do this, we’re going to support the leadership of trans women, because the same gender norms have oppressed us all. We’re going to follow Black women, Native women, and immigrant women, because we know a hopeful future for our democracy depends on it. That’s why we are building a multi-generational, multi-racial movement.

For women, November 6th is not the end; it’s the beginning.

Alicia Garza, Director of Strategy and Partnerships, National Domestic Workers Alliance; Principal, Black Futures Lab; Co-founder, Black Lives Matter.

Ai-jen Poo, Executive Director, National Domestic Workers Alliance; Co-Director, Caring Across Generations

Cecile Richards, author, labor and women’s rights activist, and former President of Planned Parenthood

Deirdre Schifeling, Executive Director, Planned Parenthood Action Fund

Katherine Grainger, Strategist, Principal, Civitas Public Affairs Group



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