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Jennifer Aniston's Morning Show Character Is Making Me Embrace the Power Coat


Hey, reader! While you’re here to for “power coat” inspo, check out more outerwear we love: In any Glamour story featuring a shopping bag icon, you can instantly shop a selection of related products, curated by us. Check out our picks to your left on desktop and right on mobile. Happy shopping!

Jennifer Aniston gives one of her best performances ever in Apple TV+’s new series The Morning Show. In it she plays Alex Levy, a long-running morning talk show anchor whose world flips upside down when her co-host becomes embroiled in a #MeToo scandal. As Levy, Aniston is nuanced, complex, and captivating. She also wears a red trench coat in the third episode that I can’t get out of my head.

The coat, which you can see in the clip, below, is perfect, and Alex wears it when she’s grilling the male executives who run her network. “I’ve let you bozos handle this long enough,” she says at one point. “We’re doing things my way.”

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Here’s the thing: Alex could’ve worn sweatpants during this scene, and I’d still be terrified—but the red coat adds an extra oomph. So much oomph, in fact, that I’ve decided I need to wear a power coat during all my future arguments.

What is a power coat, you ask? Well, it has to have at least one of these three qualities: (1) structure, (2) a bold color, or (3) long length. The ultimate power coat will have all three, like Alex’s.

These celebrities, below, have all embraced the, well, power of the power coat. Take a look for yourself, and shop accordingly.

With this jacket, you could fight literal crimes.

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This jacket would like to speak to a manager.

 Celine Dion is seen on November 13 2019 in New York City.
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Would you cut this jacket off while driving on the highway? I didn’t think so.

Chrissy Teigen is seen on November 23 2019 in New York City.
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This lime-green coat shut down all of its haters with a single tweet.

Kacey Musgraves is seen on November 21 2019 in New York City.
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Laura Pradelska

High gas prices? Not on this red coat’s watch.

 Laura Pradeleska seen attending The London Method  private view at 30 Bury Street on November 21 2019 in London England.
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This jacket doesn’t even need to raise its voice to get you to listen.

Nicole Scherzinger seen attending  Juliet press night at Shaftesbury Theatre on November 20 2019 in London England.
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And don’t even get me started on the crisis management capabilities of this coat.

Tyra Banks is seen on November 18 2019 in Los Angeles California
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10 Celebrities Who Embrace Their Body Hair


We might as well call it: 2018 was the year of body hair. It sounds somewhat ridiculous to say considering body hair didn’t magically appear out of nowhere this year. And yet, shockingly, in beauty campaigns, on the red carpet, and social media, it really kind of did. In 2018, we finally had the first razor ad—ever!—actually show the body hair women were shaving—or not shaving. At the same time, a growing number of women began to stop caring whether their legs were prickly or not, as a Glamour writer reported this summer. Both signaled that body hair is finally on the road to acceptance (and, yep, that goes for bushes too).

Celebrities have played a big part in this comeback story, as they embrace and normalize their body hair on the red carpet, in your Insta feed, and beyond for their millions of followers. One post, quote, or Tweet can make a big difference—and if you were feeling bad about your current stubble situation, maybe seeing Rihanna’s nonchalant attitude towards her leg hair will make you feel a little less so. Scroll on to see the other refreshing stars who DGAF about shaving.



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Millennial Razor Brands Now Embrace Body Hair—But Does It Matter?


One of the best things about fall—besides the sweaters and the PSLs—is that we can give our collective razors a well-deserved break, since we’ll now be bundled up until spring. And though it might seem counterintuitive, that’s a-okay with the newest crop of razor brands to hit the market. From Dollar Shave Club to Billie to Flamingo (which launches today), these Millennial-minded brands are taking a more holistic, inclusive approach to both body hair and self-care.

Dollar Shave Club was one of the first to take a more down-to-earth approach to razors. “We use our humor and no-nonsense attitude to convey our value to women,” says Sam Kang, the brand’s vice president of acquisition. (That explains why, despite its core marketing being geared toward men, women make up nearly 30 percent of the subscription service’s members). Billie then doubled down on these efforts, first by paying women back for the pink tax—the higher cost of personal care products marketed for women—and more recently by launching #ProjectBodyHair, the first-ever ad campaign by a razor company that even shows body hair.

It was the natural evolution of the pro-body hair trend, which saw Rihanna’s leg hair and raised it Janelle Monae’s pubes. All of the above has contributed to the declassification of body hair as something gross, unhygienic, or even taboo, as had been the case for years.

PHOTO: Ashley Armitage

Now, men’s razor brand Harry’s is following suit in a big way. Flamingo, its new female-focused line, aims to celebrate “women’s natural bodies (bumps, dry skin, body hair, and all), dispelling the myth of ‘feminine perfection.'” It’s smart move to capitalize on the momentum, seeing as sales of Harry’s razors grew a whopping 943 percent in 2017, while some traditional razors like Gillette’s Venus Embrace saw negative sales growth. Plus, 59 percent of women between 18 and 34 are interested in trying subscription services (such as Harry’s, Flamingo, and Dollar Shave Club), per findings from market-research firm Mintel.

Now, all of the women who’ve been using Harry’s for years will now get to enjoy razors made for them and by them—in this case, literally. Allie Melnick and Brittania Boey, who helped launch the brand and used the men’s razors themselves, were closely involved in the development of Flamingo, and they took this new attitude toward body hair—and body positivity in general—into consideration.

There’s the obvious: Unlike Harry’s, Flamingo razors are designed to fit the curved areas women tend to shave most, such as our legs, toes, and bikini lines. But the two wanted to go the extra mile. “While building Flamingo, we talked to over a thousand women about body hair, body care and everything in between,” says Melnick, now the general manager of Flamingo. “As a part of this journey, we saw how personal and private everyone’s body care routines are so we wanted to bring these conversations out of the shadows and embrace the realities.”

Those realities involve not shaving every single day—or even at all, depending on your personal preferences. “We’ve created products that address these realities and the in-between shave or wax stubble moments,” says Boey, Flamingo’s senior vice president of Research & Development and Design. Not only does an innovative soft-gel wax strip for face and body, the first of its kind in the US, no longer require that you grow your hair out first (as was typically the case, since hair had to be long enough for the wax to adhere), but ancillary products in the line are also designed to care for skin before, during, and long after you shave. That’s strategic thinking: Ever since a report from Mintel found that women now face less pressure to remove body hair (and less stigma associated with it), brands have been offering formulas that maintain and even nourish female body hair for those who choose to keep it. Flamingo, which spans everything from post-wax clothes to body lotion, takes that seriously.

Each time a brand has made a step in the right direction—that is, the one of more inclusivity—advocates of both body hair and the not-so-smooth realities of shaving voice their support. Fans have also embraced pink tax-free men’s razors, like Harry’s.

And this advocacy can mean big things for brands. “We doubled sales the week of the campaign launch and we ended up completely selling out of product,” says Billie cofounder Georgina Cooley. She also notes that since the campaign, the brand has received an investment from Serena Williams. “I think women are appreciative of brands that are celebrating diversity and breaking the mold of what is considered ‘normal’ in mainstream media,” adds Cooley. “We’re all tired of seeing the same glossy, airbrushed models.”

But it’s still a hard sell, since the core audience seems to be stuck in their habits. “I appreciate the gesture of body hair and all body types, but honestly, I don’t spend that much time or attention on shaving—and having a more inclusive brand image isn’t going to make me start,” says Pei, 28, a student in San Francisco. The same goes for Allison, 30, a publicist in New York City. “I like the thought of what they’re doing and stand for, but I buy the same razors I grew up buying out of habit,” she says. “But I feel like it’s good that girls who are making their first razor purchases see brands like that.”

And even though body hair has gained more acceptance, it’s still polarizing for some. “I’m not a fan of body hair,” says Bebe, 29, a computer scientist in Chicago. “I feel like our generation is a mix of ‘who cares, be free’ and people who literally shave everything.” Alex, 29, a producer also in Chicago, agrees. “I don’t care what anyone else does, but [removing body hair] makes me feel cleaner.”

The good news is that even so, everyone across the board thinks the pink tax is bullshit.





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Meghan Markle's Freckles at the Royal Wedding Are Inspiring Women to Embrace Their Own


If you were one of the 29 million people who watched the royal wedding this weekend, you saw Meghan Markle walk down the aisle looking incredibly beautiful. Gorgeous dress, check; the best wispy bun-tiara combo you’ve ever seen, check; and nail polish approved by the Queen, check. But one part of Meghan’s look in particular caught the internet’s attention, and that was the smattering of freckles that shined through her foundation, which was applied by celebrity makeup artist Daniel Martin. Fast-forward 48 hours, and the Markle effect is at work: on social media, the sight of Meghan’s freckles has people enthusiastically posting about embracing their own—or, conversely, faking their own.

Freckles have flitted in and out of the spotlight over the past few years, but the unanimous praise for them that followed the royal wedding was endearing. In some ways, it’s of a piece with the body and acne positivity movements: Something that used to be considered “undesirable” is taken back and deemed worth celebrating. In doing so, down go shame and stigma. Freckles, stretch marks, frizz—it’s easier said than done. But representing freckles as beautiful, and fit for a literal duchess, marks a change from the full-coverage foundation we’re used to seeing on the red carpet.

While faux freckles have popped up here and there in the beauty world, prior to the royal wedding, there’d been debate over how kosher it was to fake them when some people were bullied for their freckles as children (see headline: “Selena Gomez “Fetish” Freckles Lead to Social Media Fight“). Feel how you might about that, but on Pinterest, a spokesperson says they saw an immediate increase in freckle-specific search traffic after the royal wedding. The phrase “freckle friendly makeup ideas” is up 117 percent from this time last year—and on Instagram, results for “#fauxfreckles” number at 43,267.

The products on the market indicate freckles’ increased popularity. While people have previously relied on dark brown eyeliner to dot on “freckles” if they don’t have any, there’s now a sheerly-tinted liquid liner-type product that goes by Freck, and dubs itself “the original faux freckle cosmetic.”

And on those posts about the so-called Meghan Markle effect, we leave you with this comment from Instagram user heenz7: “Yayyyy I don’t have to hide my freckles anymore.”

Related Stories:
Meghan Markle’s Wedding Makeup Let Her Natural Beauty (and Her Freckles) Show Through
Meghan Markle’s Wedding Hair Took Only 45 Minutes
I Tried the Weird Mouth Massage Meghan Markle Swears By





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