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Meghan Markle Is Reportedly on a Secret Girls' Trip to New York City for Her Baby Shower


Sound the alarms and fire up a rendition of “The Star-Spangled Banner” because Meghan Markle is reportedly back on American soil. Reports have emerged that the Duchess of Sussex is currently in New York City for a girls’ trip ahead of the birth of her and Prince Harry’s first child this spring. Royal reporter Omid Scobie, who often travels with the royal couple to their official engagements, has confirmed that Markle is spending the five-night trip with her closest friends, perhaps some of those who recently spoke out in her defense.

“The trip is a lovely chance to catch up with friends and spend time in a city she loves,” a source told Harper’s Bazaar of the getaway. “This will be the last time a lot of them will see Meg until after the baby is born, so it’s nice to share precious moments.” Given some of the tough headlines and endless speculation about every aspect of her life, it seems like the perfect time for a well-deserved break for Markle.

So what does a royal do on a girls’ trip? Sources say much of the hang time is being done in private at her five-star hotel (understandable) but Markle was spotted eating at a restaurant in Soho with her BFF, stylist Jessica Mulroney.

“It’s been a relaxing visit. Nothing beats face time with your friends,” says a source. “Meg will be flying home refreshed and relaxed—and with a lot of new baby clothes.”

One big reason for all those new clothes? A baby shower! Scobie reports that Markle’s friends are throwing her and Baby Sussex a celebration on Tuesday for about 20 people. Showers are much more of an American tradition, so it makes sense that she’s having hers on this side of the pond.

But that’s not all Markle has on her plate before the next royal baby arrives: Next up for Markle is an official trip with Prince Harry to Morocco on February 23-25.





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Girls' Generation Singer Tiffany Young on Launching Her Solo Career in the U.S.


On June 28, the night her song “Over My Skin” was released, Korean American singer Tiffany Young went live on Instagram from her Los Angeles home. The 29-year-old wore a rainbow tank and pink pom-pom earrings, and looked—despite having spent half her life in Seoul, South Korea—every bit the California girl. As she thanked fans for their continued support while dancing around in her chair, Young had both the poise of an industry veteran with the exuberance of an up-and-comer on the brink of her big break.

In many ways, Young is both. Stateside audiences might not know her name, but Young is a superstar in South Korea, where she spent the past decade with popular K-pop group Girls’ Generation. Now, she’s setting off on her own and starting fresh in the United States. “I feel like I’m living out my dreams again,” Young tells Glamour. “It’s an amazing feeling.”

It’s a bold move: Young has loyal fans supporting her move, but she’s still a new artist to the U.S. And K-pop doesn’t have the best track record when it comes to crossovers. Take BoA and CL, both A-listers in South Korea who struggled to make waves in mainstream western markets. Wonder Girls toured with the Jonas Brothers in 2009 and their English version of “Nobody” made a small splash on the charts, but the group’s follow-up collaboration with Akon, “Like Money,” fell flat and put an abrupt halt to their English language album. Even Young’s group, Girls’ Generation, tried an English version of their song “The Boys” that failed to make an impact. Until BTS’ recent breakthrough, Psy and his “Gangnam Style”—for better or worse—was the name most often associated with the genre.

But Young’s background is different—and may just be the thing to help her break through. Born and raised in California, the singer was first scouted as a teenager after singing Mariah Carey’s “Hero” and Christina Aguilera’s “The Voice Within” at an audition in 2004. Having lost her mother when she was only 12, Young found comfort and release in singing ballads like Aguilera’s. “‘The Voice Within’ is very intimate in talking to your inner younger self,” Young explains. “It just really spoke to me in a way nothing else had. That’s when I realized music was definitely magical for me.”

SM Entertainment, one of K-pop’s biggest agencies, took notice of the young singer; at 15 years old, she moved to Seoul on her own. Away from her family in a new country, Young grew up fast. Navigating the business at a young age, she learned to be assertive and make her own decisions. “There were parent meetings, so I’d be the one in there because my family’s all here [in America],” Young says. “The whole time in Korea really helped me become independent and have opinions.”

She wasn’t entirely alone, though: Her Girls’ Generation bandmates shared in the growing pains. “I found family in the girls,” she says. “We really kind of grew into each other and taught each other a lot of things.”

Young was 17 when Girls’ Generation debuted with the song “Into the New World.” The lyrics spoke of forging a new path together, with lines like, “Don’t wait for a special miracle. There’s a rough road in front of us. With unknowable future and obstacles, I won’t change, I can’t give up.”

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“That was the truth of what we were thinking about at the time,” Young says. “We’re going to get together, and we’re going to change the world. We can create our own world.” At the time, according to Young, the group members were all ages 16 to 18 and didn’t think too deeply into the song’s message. Yet it’s stood the test of time; a decade since its release, “Into the New World” has gotten a new life as an anthem for change in Seoul Pride celebrations and political protests.

Then, at 22 years old, Young started a sub-group of Girls’ Generation with fellow members Taeyeon Kim and Seohyun (Juhyun Seo). In the debut song “Twinkle”—a funky, brassy track about not letting anything dull your shine—the trio were able to showcase more of their vocals and personal styles. “At this point, everyone was like, ‘What are they going to come out with? They’ve done so much,'” Young says. “But we were still in this place where we still have so much to show you.”

In 2016, Young released her first Korean solo EP, I Just Wanna Dance. The album’s synth-pop title track is a euphoric club anthem about dancing all night like the world’s your stage. You can just picture Britney Spears and Ariana Grande high-fiving Young, telling her to take it from here.

A year later, as Young reached a milestone decade with Girls’ Generation, she decided not to renew her contract with SM Entertainment. “It was a natural, organic, gradual pivot,” Young tells us. “I had always gotten demos [for Girls’ Generation] in English, and I’d sing it in both languages all the time. It almost became so natural that even the fans, my bandmates, and my former label were like, ‘Tiffany needs to sing in English.’”

Still, Young wanted to celebrate the Girls’ Generation anniversary to the fullest with the release of the group’s song “Holiday.” It was especially important for her to take the anniversary in fully, because so many moments in the past 10 years had been overlooked. “It didn’t hit us until now,” Young says. “We’re looking back at all these things like, we were so young. Time passed by so fast.”

Since their 2007 debut, Girls’ Generation has released nine studio albums, four EPs, and 28 singles. In 2013, the group won Video of the Year at the YouTube Music Awards for their video “I Got a Boy.” They’re one of K-pop’s longest-running groups, with no signs of slowing down. (Even without Young on board.) Last year’s anniversary album Holiday Night went straight to the top of the World Albums chart. The group even made it into Guinness World Records 2018 for Most Awards Won after winning 13 at the Melon Music Awards.

Now, Young finds herself back in California ready to embark on her solo career. For many K-pop stars, the end of a group contract leads to a solo career, acting, or hosting TV shows in Korea. Young, however, wanted to take her dream to the U.S., despite the risks involved. “Once I was here, even when there was a lot of self doubt, it was like, “Come on. You wanted this your whole life,” she says.

An added bonus: She was finally able to share her work on an intimate level with her family, whom she had only seen about twice a year for an hour before concerts. “They were like, ‘So this is what you’ve been doing your whole life?’ And it really hit me: They’ve never seen me on set,” she says. “They’ve only seen the final product. I felt so supported that I had family on the set of my music video.”

Now settling into her new life in Los Angeles, Young is studying acting while she works on new music. She envisions herself starring in movies that blend music and film, like Moulin Rouge. (“It’s that universal story of wanting to be loved and loving someone in return,” she says.) She’s been on castings and auditions, but Young’s taking it slow for now. The same goes for music. She’d rather run with inspiration as it comes, releasing stand-alone singles before committing to a full album.

That said, she has an idea of what she wants to do. For her English-language solo debut, “Over My Skin,” Young wanted a fun summer song about being comfortable and confident. Lyrics like, “‘Cause I like it when you touch me / Do nasty things and you don’t judge me / You got that something that undoes me,” dance over a sound that blends her bright, K-pop roots with early 2000s pop. (Young felt inspired after attending a recent Justin Timberlake concert.)

The result? A sexy, unapologetic track that she hopes inspires listeners to own who they are and what they want. “Coming from celebrating a decade of being in a girl group, I wanted to celebrate what it is to be a woman in this time and age,” she says.

That also translated to the song’s cover photo, above, in which she opted for a stripped-down look. It’s a departure from the typically glossy production of K-pop and sends the message that for her solo, California-based work, Young is presenting herself as is. No heavy makeup, no flashy wardrobe, no elaborate sets. The video shows all the obstacles she’s met as an artist juxtaposed with herself performing confidently, triumphantly on stage.

“This music video reflects situations where I’ve had to overcome my insecurities as a performer, shut out any fears or short comings, and feel good in my own skin,” she says. “For me, it’s about self love, self acceptance, and growing.”

In other words, this new chapter of her career honors both her roots and who she is now. In fact, the name Tiffany Young brings those two parts of herself together. (She was born Stephanie Hwang, Korean name Miyoung Hwang, but in Girls’ Generation she went by Tiffany.) She chose Young because in Chinese characters it stands for forever.

“When people hear Young, it’s like, OK, she’s trying to stay young? But there’s a deeper meaning,” she says. “I forever want to be embracing where I come from and what I’ve done and who I am.”

That includes being an artist who hopes to give back to her fans for following her through this journey. “I’m thankful for the trust that we have right now,” she says. “I hope to be an artist for them that opens their hearts and their minds, makes them feel happy and understood.”

Blanca Méndez is a music writer who’s written for Rolling Stone, SPIN, and Noisey.

Photos: Transparent Agency, Getty Images





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Priyanka Chopra and Nick Jonas Visited a Girls' Orphanage Together in Mumbai


A day after making their engagement Instagram official, Priyanka Chopra and Nick Jonas paid a visit to a girls’ orphanage in Mumbai. On Sunday (August 19), Jonas posted a video to his Instagram Story that showed Chopra dancing next to a girl at St. Catherine’s Home in Andheri West, Mumbai. “St. Catherine’s orphanage today. My heart is full,” he wrote, adding a red heart emoji. Then, on Monday (August 20), Chopra posted to her Instagram a video from their visit showing Jonas singing for the girls.

“12 years of knowing these girls and in minutes they all get love struck by the #lovebug… thank you @nickjonas and our families,” she wrote in the caption. “Thank you to the sisters and all the girls at St. Catherine’s orphanage for opening your hearts to us again. I’ll see you next time.”

As Chopra mentioned, she’s been visiting St. Catherine’s for the past 12 years. During previous visits, she’s also scheduled and attended screenings of two of her movies, Planes 3D and Mary Kom, for the girls, according to DNA India.

PHOTO: nickjonas/Instagram

priyanka dance 2

PHOTO: nickjonas/Instagram

Chopra and Jonas’ visit comes just a day after they celebrated their engagement with their families in a traditional roka ceremony. According to Chopra’s photos from the event, her mom (Madhu), her brother (Siddharth), and Jonas’ mom and dad (Denise and Kevin Sr.) were all present. “The only way to do this… with Family and God. Thank you all for your wishes and blessings ??♥️?,” she wrote in the caption.

“Taken.. With all my heart and soul,” she added in the caption of another photo showing the pair gazing deeply into each other’s eyes. Jonas also posted the photo and captioned it, “Future Mrs. Jonas. My heart. My love.”

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Fatimah Asghar of 'Brown Girls' on Turning Microagressions Into Dark Comedy


In a world short on joy, humor can be a unifier and a survival tool. In that spirit, we bring you our Comedy Issue, a month-long celebration of funny (and fearless) women and the enduring power of a good laugh.

I’ve spent a lot of time at borders, in the space between two countries or two places. Recently, as I stood in the Pakistani consulate, applying for a visa to visit my father’s family, a man stared quizzically at me. “Where’s your husband?” he demanded. I explained that I wasn’t married; I am a woman, alone. “You’re 28? You should be married,” he responded with the same judgment as my aunties’ at family barbecues; then he consulted his supervisors about what to do with me. On another day I might have corrected him, explaining how I don’t need to be with someone to be a full human; or how, because I am queer, my spouse wouldn’t necessarily be a man anyway. But because I needed a visa, I held my tongue.

Interactions like this are common: people demanding to know what man claims me. I get it from strangers who slide into my DMs to family members who ask whether I’m ready to get married. A few weeks ago, my uncle called to tell me about an engineer in Pakistan I should marry. When I declined, my uncle asked if I had ever used a neti pot; he had recently used one and it changed his life. The call ended with him saying, “OK, just take some time to think about the marriage? And think about using a neti pot.”

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Asghar’s web series, *Brown Girls,* now in development for HBO.

The surreality of these exchanges and their extreme casualness makes them hilarious. As a screenwriter I pepper them into my scripts because they’re part of the fabric of my life. I’m not a sitcom writer; I prefer dark comedy, diving into microaggressions and cultural misunderstandings. I’m also a poet, whereby I explore the bleaker undertones of these moments: what it’s like to have my queerness negated, to have my religion questioned in queer spaces, to always have to explain myself, and to not be honest about both my religion and sexuality. It is the feeling of being forever stuck at the border, of never knowing why your identity might spark some trouble: because I’m Muslim? American? queer? brown? a woman?

Once, when I was traveling from Jordan to Syria at night, a border control agent took my passport, locked it in a drawer, and said he would consider giving me a visa in the morning. Passportless, I played cards with my friends all night as we slept in shifts. Another time I was detained at the Israeli border and put into an isolated room for four hours as border agents questioned me about the nature of my visit. While these interactions are tense and riddled with fear, they also contain a strange beauty: In in-between spaces, things cease to have definition; you don’t belong to one country or another. It’s a strange and poetic land of possibility where I get to define myself on my own terms.

Courtesy of Random House

I’ve found my chosen family in queer communities of color and with other queer Muslims. What I long for most are spaces where I don’t have to explain myself, in which my identities are not contradictory, places where I get to be my full self. Where I—not a man or husband—decide who I am.

Fatimah Asghar, 28, is the creator of the Web series Brown Girls, now in development for HBO. Her book of poems, If They Come for Us, is out August 7th.



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Another Season of 'Gilmore Girls' Might Be Coming


We were all left hanging at the end of last year’s Gilmore Girls: A Year in the Life, when Rory Gilmore uttered the four words creator Amy Sherman-Palladino said she always knew would end the series: “Mom?” “Yeah?” “I’m pregnant.” And just like that, the credits rolled, and we were left clutching our wine glasses and tissue boxes, wondering what on earth we’d possibly do with our lives now. Since then, we’ve been begging for answers (who is the father?!) and also for more Gilmore Girls (we need closure!). Now, Sherman-Palladino has revealed that she has the freedom to make our wildest dreams come true—the rest of the cast just needs to get in on it.

In an interview with Radio Times published on Friday, the showrunner said that although she’s now signed in an overall deal with Amazon—leading some fans to panic that the now-Netflix-based series would definitely never happen—she negotiated a little space in her contract to go back to Stars Hollow.

“We carved out a little niche for ourselves with Amazon saying that if we ever want to do it, if the girls and us get together and we have a concept that works, then we have the freedom to do it,” Sherman-Palladino told Radio Times.

“So it would just have to be the right circumstances, and that we’re all sort of in the same drunken mood together to go repaint Stars Hollow again,” she continued. “Because we had to repaint Stars Hollow, and we’ll have to repaint it again. But it’s definitely possible.”

Apparently she’s still friends with a lot of people on the cast, according to the Radio Times—meaning that lines of communication are open. She still hangs out with Lauren Graham, who plays Lorelai, and Kelly Bishop, who plays matriarch Emily Gilmore—they got lunch last week—and she even still calls Alexis Bledel up for chats on the phone. Of course Graham and Bledel said in April they hadn’t been contacted about coming back—but I mean, what is with her social calendar if not a revival, right? Yeah.

According to what she told the Radio Times, working on the Netflix revival sounded way more fun than working on the original series. “During the series everything was so frantic, we had so much work to do and it was just constant; we never really got to rehearse a scene or talk about a scene or talk about stuff or just hang out and shoot the shit,” she said, adding that having the definite framework with the Netflix revival meant the cast could actually chat and hang out. “We got to have that time together as a mad theatre group and that was amazing.”

Who doesn’t want to have a ton of fun while keeping millions of devoted fans happy? And she couldn’t really leave us on that four-word cliffhanger, could she?

Could she?

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These 'Gilmore Girls' Favorites Have an Idea About Who the Father of Rory’s Baby Could Be


PHOTO: Courtesy of Netflix

It’s been just short of a year since we heard the infamous Last Four Words at the end of the Gilmore Girls revival, when Rory told Lorelai, “I’m pregnant.” In that moment, the world was split into their respective teams— that is, Teams Logan, Jess, or Dean. (Of course, there was also that guy in the Wookie costume who we’d rather forget.) And while the debate still rages on—though it’s been officially announced that Jess is not the father, per Milo Ventimiglia’s insider knowledge—we still don’t have an answer. But it turns out Tanc Sade and Alan Loayza, who played Colin and Finn (a.k.a. Rory’s classmates and Logan’s best friends), have an idea.

The actors made an appearance at the Gilmore Girls Fan Fest in Kent, Connecticut, on Saturday. They spoke on a panel about the Life & Death Brigade—you know, the secret society at Yale that jumps off of buildings and speaks only using words that don’t have the letter E.

When they were asked about who they think the father of Rory’s baby could be, according to Bustle, Sade pointed at himself and laughed before Loayza stated, “It’s gotta be Logan.”

Why does he think so? “That’s purely from a selfish standpoint, because we would be the uncles. So if they bring it back, we would be doing crazy uncle stuff and probably putting the baby in some Life & Death Brigade adventures… A little mini umbrella for the baby,” Loayza explained.

So…maybe not the best reasoning.

Obviously, this is all speculation: these two Life & Death Brigaders don’t have any official word on who it is. Loayza admits, however, that he still thinks it could possibly be Jess. “That was the one thing that I thought like, if [Amy Sherman-Palladino] was going to throw a curveball, maybe with that look when [Jess] looks at [Rory] at the end. Did a moment happen after the newspaper scene between them that we never saw? We don’t know.”

They also opened up about which of Rory’s old flames they prefer. Loayza has worked with both Ventimiglia and Jared Padalecki who played Dean outside of Gilmore Girls. “But, in the world, I think I am Team Logan,” he admitted. We understand the unwavering support of their bestie, but frankly, we still need closure.

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Milo Ventimiglia Knows Who Isn’t the Father of Rory’s Baby on ‘Gilmore Girls’
This ‘Gilmore Girls’ Theory Suggests Rory and Logan Are the New Emily and Richard
Milo Ventimiglia’s ‘Gilmore Girls’ Theory About the Father of Rory’s Baby Might Enrage You



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