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Bombshell Costume Designer Colleen Atwood on What Makes a Signature Fox News Look


How much Fox News did you have to watch coming into this?

A lot. More than I’ve watched in my entire life. It was very compressed. You know, we had loops of it. You just kind of got used to it in that way, which was funny.

How would you describe the quintessential Fox News look—for women especially?

The look I was going for was a dress that’s body conscious just enough. It’s not too short, but short enough that when they sat down, you got a shot of someone’s leg. Necklines were inviting, but not obvious. It’s sort of like sexy without being obviously sexy, which Roger really understood—that it’s good to leave enough to the imagination, but suggest. That was where we went with it.

I love the scene where they go into the dressing room and you realize there’s a Fox News anchor uniform.

That came from a real picture that I saw, a real research picture of somebody in their office. It seems that those people don’t work in those clothes all day long, so that was sort of how they did it.

Do you have a favorite look or scene?

The scene in the first trailer of the three of them in the elevator is so powerful. I really like that a lot. And I think that the devastating scene of Margot and John is an incredible scene in the movie. You know, it’s a movie that’s not about clothes. They just have to be believable. So it’s not like I had a big costume moment in the movie, but I really enjoyed working on it.

Margot’s character goes through the biggest story arc with her character. Is there any way you translated that with her clothing?

I tried to. She starts as coming from the South, so I made wraparound dresses that kind of looked like what somebody who doesn’t know better thinks is really classy. Simple, younger things. And then, she’s a quick study, so when she looked around her and saw what everyone else was wearing, she gradually stepped it up. She always had the little slightly Christian vibe to it. There’s a modesty and restraint to her, and I think her performance reflects that. It helps make the moment that she [has with Ailes] even more horrible.

I’m curious with the shoes, was there a specific heel height or anything in sourcing those?

High. Nothing was under three inches, let’s put it that way. Margot’s had a slight platform, because she was standing next to two women who are six feet tall in their bare feet. Charlize and Nicole were in three-and-a-half inch, and Margot was probably in three-and-a-half inch but with an inch platform. They were in very high shoes, and they all wore them really bravely the whole time. Sometimes people are like, “Oh God, do I have to wear those?” But they were great. They went for it. They were so into it, and their support of each other was tremendous.

Anna Moeslein is a senior editor at Glamour.



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Bombshell Review: The Fox News Drama Gives a Revealing Look at the Toxic Sexism of Roger Ailes


With Kelly as narrator, Bombshell breaks the fourth wall with asides to the audience (of a colleague who lasciviously compliments her dress as she walks through the Fox newsroom, Kelly says he’s not a creep, he’s just “ambitious”). That, along with the brusque, overly-explanatory style—a signature of writer Charles Randolph—falls flat. The device works in Randolph’s explanation of the 2008 financial crisis, The Big Short, because of the complexity of the financial system, but here, the asides are unnecessary and distracting.

Margot Robbie’s terrific Kayla, an “evangelical millennial” and aspiring anchor, is the most heartrending part of the film. While her character isn’t strictly true, she’s an amalgam of all the women Ailes subjected to his lechery, the ones who, unlike Carlson or Kelly, didn’t have enough star power or leverage to share publicly what had happened to them. One of the most crushing scenes in Bombshell is when Kayla breaks down telling her co-worker—the fantastic Kate McKinnon, who plays a (fictional) closeted lesbian producer—she “gave in” to Ailes.

More than anything, that’s what Bombshell gets right: the agonizing position workplace harassment puts women in. Carlson, in the movie and in reality, eventually settles the suit for $20 million, with the caveat that she’s forbidden from discussing what happened. (The real-life Carlson is now campaigning to end the use of nondisclosure agreements and forced arbitration that prevent women from speaking up.)

Near the end of the movie, Kayla ticks off the list of never-ending questions for women who’ve been harassed. What did I do to bring this on? Will I always be seen as a victim? If I come forward, will this define me? As in real life, the film leaves them unanswered.

Rebecca Nelson is a magazine writer based in Brooklyn. Her work regularly appears in The Washington Post, ELLE, GQ and many other publications.



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Bombshell: Everything We Know About the Fox News-Inspired Movie


Back in 2016, a massive scandal roiled Fox News, as sexual harassment allegations piled up against the late Roger Ailes, who was the former CEO and chairman. One of the women who came forward with accusations was among the network’s most recognizable names: Gretchen Carlson. Now, a new film, aptly tiled Bombshell, is dramatizing the story and bringing it to the big screen.

According to a synopsis, the film is a look “inside the most powerful and controversial media empire of all time, Fox News, and the explosive story of the women who brought down the infamous man who created it.” The teaser itself is minimal but communicates that some major drama is brewing.

Here’s everything we know about the film so far:

The cast is excellent. Charlize Theron is playing Megyn Kelly; Nicole Kidman is playing Gretchen Carlson; and Margot Robbie is playing a fictional associate producer named Kayla Pospisil. John Lithgow is portraying Roger Ailes, while Connie Britton is playing his wife, Beth Ailes. Meanwhile, Allison Janney is going to play Ailes’ lawyer, while Kate McKinnon is filling out the cast as a Fox News employee.

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The film was directed by Jay Roach. Roach helmed the HBO movie Game Change about Sarah Palin, so political fare isn’t new territory for him.

It’s coming just in time for the holidays. The film is going to have stiff competition when it drops on December 20. The polarizing Cats adaptation comes out on the same day, and the Greta Gerwig-directed version of Little Women makes its grand debut only a few days later. Still, Bombshell seems like it’ll be the right fit for anyone who wants to see intense, slow-brewing drama portrayed by some of the best actors out there.

We will update this post with more information about the movie as it comes in.



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Melania Trump Unveiled Her New Blond Hair on Fox News


Melania Trump took her new blond hair and not-so-new complaints about the media to Fox News this week, submitting to a sit-down interview with host Sean Hannity on Wednesday.

In their conversation, Trump told Hannity that the greatest hardship she’s faced since she’s been in the White House is the “opportunists” who’ve used her name and the Trump brand to “advance themselves.” Perhaps in an effort to channel her own #BeBest initiative, which aims to curb bullies online and seems to have had no effect on her own husband, she did not name names but she did call out journalists, comedians, celebrities, and authors for their supposed behavior.

Now it’s news to no one that FLOTUS takes issue with how she and her husband are treated in the press. But what did make waves on the internet? Trump’s new look. The erstwhile brunette trotted out a fresh set of highlights, and Twitter took notice.

Of course a woman is free to switch up her hair (or wear a Zara jacket that seems to suggest a certain disregard for a national crisis on the border) whenever she pleases, but if that woman is Melania Trump and her new shade now falls between Donald Trump Russet Potato and Ivanka Trump Daffodil on the color wheel, people will have opinions.

Some had questions:

Others had theories:

Most just had feels:

And some shut out all the noise and did just as Trump requested in another portion of the interview. The media, she said, “likes to focus on gossip and I would like them to focus on the substance and what we do, not just about the nonsense.”

For at least one journalist the point was well-taken! Never mind the hair! Or the comparisons to other women in the administration or on Fox News. Let’s concentrate on what matters:

Related Stories:
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Former Fox News Anchor Juliet Huddy Says Trump Kissed Her on the Lips After a Work Lunch


Former Fox & Friends host Juliet Huddy said this week that Donald Trump tried to kiss her on the lips after taking her out to lunch in Trump Tower. According to Page Six, the alleged incident took place in 2005 or 2006, which likely places it after Trump married his wife Melania in January 2005.

Huddy was a guest on WABC Radio’s Mornin’ With Bill Schulz on Thursday when she spoke about her experience with Trump.

“He took me for lunch… very public situation,” Huddy said. “He said goodbye to me in an elevator while his security guy was there, in the Trump elevator. And he went to say goodbye, and rather than kiss me on the cheek, he leaned in on the lips.”

Huddy, who accused Bill O’Reilly of sexual misconduct in 2011 and settled the case outside of court, said she didn’t feel threatened by the alleged advance, but she was shocked. “I wasn’t offended. I was kind of like, ‘Oh my god.'”

“He took me out to lunch to talk with me about potentially maybe me doing something with The Apprentice,” Huddy added. “Whatever, everything was fine. It was a weird moment. He never tried anything after that, I was never alone with him.”

After lunch, Huddy says Trump invited her and her friend, whom she was meeting after lunch, to take a tour of The Apprentice set.

Trump has been accused of making inappropriate sexual advances on women and even bragged about groping women on tape. He has since been subpoenaed due to sexual misconduct allegations, though the White House has denied any allegations of harassment or assault.

“At the time I wasn’t offended by it, I thought he was a single man and maybe he leaned in for a kiss, thinking… ‘She came out to lunch with me and maybe she was interested,'” Huddy said. But she wasn’t interested.

Years later, Trump joked about the incident in front of a studio audience when he was a guest on her show The Morning Show with Mike and Juliet. According to Huddy, he turned to the audience while the cameras weren’t rolling and said, “I tried hitting on her but she blew me off.” She said he was laughing.

“Now that I’ve matured, I look at things a little bit differently,” she explained, “I still think that even if that happened I would’ve said something like, ‘Woah, woah, woah, woah,’ but at the time I was a little shocked. I thought maybe he didn’t mean to do it, maybe I leaned in wrong. But I kind of was making excuses.”

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Related Stories:
A Timeline of Donald Trump’s Inappropriate History With Women
A Recently Uncovered Video Shows Donald Trump Bragging About Hiring a ‘Beautiful’ Teenager
Al Franken Is Gone. John Conyers is Gone. Why Is Donald Trump Still Here?



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Adam Scott talks Big Little Lies, Ghosted on Fox, and the nineties horror franchise he could never infiltrate


Before posing for this adorably pensive portrait (not pictured: standard issue New Balances), Adam Scott, 44, had never been photographed by a woman for a major magazine. Seriously. First, as part of Glamour‘s second-annual “Powered by Women” initiative, we fixed that. And then we called up the brainy funnyman for a tour of his beautiful mind. Turns out he’s dreamier than we could have ever imagined.

GLAMOUR: Ghosted, your new buddy comedy series with Craig Robinson, loves to put you in awkward situations. Why do you think you’re so comfortable playing the punch line?

ADAM SCOTT: I guess I’ve always felt kind of weird. I went through a long and fruitful overweight-awkward stage, and I got teased. I had a taste—well, more than a taste—I was kind of living in that space for a while. That’s the kind of thing that shapes you.

GLAMOUR: You and Craig have an unbelievable physical comedy dynamic. What’s it like to be the little dude in the little dude-big dude paradigm?

AS: Craig is such a sweet guy, but when you look at Craig and me from the outside, there couldn’t be two more different-looking people. The writers have fun trying to subvert that and play with it.

GLAMOUR: So do you toss all the “buff guy gets girl” scripts out the window?

AS: Oh, I gave up on trying to get those parts 20 years ago. I auditioned for every ­nineties flick, but it never happened for me. I think I auditioned for all the *Screams*, actually, and didn’t get any of them. And there are a lot of those movies.

GLAMOUR: Wait, you went out for Skeet Ulrich’s role in Scream?

AS: That must have been it. That had to be it. I think it was.

GLAMOUR: As someone who was 12 when Scream came out, this is a big reveal. It doesn’t matter, though, because you went on to play Amy Poehler’s love interest on five seasons of Parks and Recreation, which led to more than one fangirl listicle. Is it cool being a hipster-nerd sex icon now?

AS: When that stuff first started happening, I was hyperaware of it. But as it continued, I grew more and more weary of it. I can only imagine if I’d had any success when I was 19 or 20. That would have surely gone to my head.

GLAMOUR: What was it about Ed, Reese Witherspoon’s hopelessly devoted husband on Big Little Lies, that
made you want to play him?

AS: He genuinely loved Madeline. And he was determined to clear the way for her. He’s there to protect her and keep her safe, which makes him feel safe. They end up finding their way on the show, which is nice. But yeah, it obviously wasn’t the healthiest relationship.

GLAMOUR: I’ve got to ask: What exactly are you doing right now? It’s awfully noisy where you are.…

AS: I’ll tell you what I’m doing! I have to get to work, and I am the last one in the house, so I have to put the dog in the kitchen. Then we have this, like, smoothie delivery service, so I’m putting a bunch of them in the freezer for my wife. I am also trying to set the alarm so I can get out of here.

GLAMOUR: I always joke that men can’t multitask, but here you are, a renaissance man.

AS: Exactly. [Laughs.] Please put that in the article.

GLAMOUR: Of course! Okay, time for a truly loaded question: “Fuck, Marry, Kill” with Madeline McKinsey, Leslie Knope, and Party Down‘s Casey Klein.

AS: Oh, boy, that’s dangerous territory. Okay, so I think any sane person would marry Leslie Knope, right?

GLAMOUR: Absolutely.

AS: I feel like Casey Klein would just be heartbreak. And we saw what kinda trouble Madeline brings. I don’t want to kill any of them, though. The other two I am just going to leave up in the air and it could be, like, interchangeable.

Ghosted premieres on Fox October 1.



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