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Here's How 'SNL' Finally Addressed the Harvey Weinstein Allegations


Saturday Night Live is known for its sharp takes on news and culture—and its willingness to skewer people, particularly disgraced people, in power. So many were surprised when, last week, the long-running series opted not to cover the unfolding Harvey Weinstein scandal in its October 7 episode, which took place two days after the New York Times published its explosive report detailing allegations of sexual harassment, assault, and inappropriate conduct committed by Weinstein. After a week of more revelations, eyes were once again on SNL last night.

Granted, it’s hard for a comedic, satirical show to find the appropriate way to cover sexual assault. SNL wound up addressing the allegations against Weinstein in two skits. The first was via a faux actors panel about sexual harassment in Hollywood with Cecily Strong playing Marion Cotillard, Leslie Jones as Viola Davis, Kate McKinnon returning as Debette Goldry, and Aidy Bryant as the panel’s moderator (playing an editor from Glamour.com, no less). Together the four women walked a fine line between serious and funny with Bryant, Jones, and Strong playing the straight types to McKinnon’s fiery shot thrower.

“I actually did have one meeting with Harvey, OK?” McKinnon’s character says when the conversation turns to Weinstein. “I was invited to his hotel room, and when I arrived, he was naked, hanging upside down from a monkey bar. He tried to trick me into thinking his genitals were actually his face. It almost worked—the resemblance is uncanny.”

The characters then go on to discuss why sexual assault keeps happening and the role that other men play in these crimes by failing to speak up. When Bryant’s character mentions the “whisper system” that women use to warn one another about threatening men, McKinnon-as-Goldry says “Back then we had a secret code among us actresses to warn each other about the creeps. The code was, ‘He raped me.’ That way if men were listening they would tune us right out, easy peasy.”

The “whisper system” is a very real thing: in the original Times report, actress Ashley Judd confirmed that “women have been talking about Harvey amongst ourselves for a long time, and it’s simply beyond time to have the conversation publicly.”

The sketch also touches on the “father of daughters” line that often gets thrown around by men when they speak out about sexual harassment and discrimination against women. As Strong-as-Cotillard said (with just the right amount of outrage): “You should be upset because you’re a human being.”

That’s when McKinnon comes in with a cutting line of her own: “Having a lady in the family doesn’t make you some kind of hero. I mean, even Hitler had a sister.”

Watch the full skit below:

[embedded content]

The “Weekend Update” guys also kicked off their segment with the Weinstein allegations, with Colin Jost announcing that Weinstein was going to sex addiction rehab. “Somehow I don’t think that’s going to help anybody,” says Jost. “He doesn’t need sex rehab. He needs a specialized facility where there are no women, no contact with the outside world, metal bars, and it’s a prison.”

Co-host Michael Che then ripped into the mogul’s plea for the movie industry to give him a second chance because “we all make mistakes.”

“No, man, a mistake is me walking into the wrong bathroom and using it anyway because I was crowning,” says Che. “You assaulted dozens of women. That’s not a mistake—that’s a full season of Law & Order. Your name’s a verb now. As in, ‘If this guy tries to Weinstein me, I’m going to cut off his little Harvey.'”

[embedded content]

For the record, Weinstein’s legal team has denied the claims, issuing a statement via a spokesperson stating, “Any allegations of non-consensual sex are unequivocally denied by Mr. Weinstein.”

Related Stories:
These Are All the Women Who Have Accused Harvey Weinstein of Sexual Harassment and Assault
After Harvey Weinstein Allegations, Women Share Stories of Sexual Harassment on Twitter
’30 Rock’ Called Out Harvey Weinstein Five Years Ago



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Here's How You Can Help Victims of the Northern California Wildfires


PHOTO: JOSH EDELSON/Getty Images

For nearly a week, devastating wildfires have raged through Northern California, scorching over 212,000 acres of land and displacing more than 20,000 people. At least 31 people have died and over 2,800 homes have been destroyed. Since they began on Sunday, the fires have spread rapidly due to dry conditions and firefights have been working tireless to control the numerous blazes.

“We’re not even close to being out of this emergency,” said Mark Ghilarducci, the director of California’s Office of Emergency Services, on Thursday.

Whether you’re in the region or living elsewhere in the country, there are numerous ways you can help those who have been impacted. Here are a few organizations that are currently providing aid to those affected.

The Napa Valley Community Disaster Relief Fund is accepting donations for those affected by the fires.

The Sonoma County Resilience Fund is accepting donations to provide aid for mid- and long-term needs of those affected by the fires.

From now until October 30, Airbnb is offering free rooms to people displaced by the fires or traveling to Northern California to take part in relief efforts.

The Napa and Sonoma Valley Fire Relief GoFundMe provides support for firefighters who are battling the flames throughout Northern California. Numerous GoFundMe pages have also been created to raise money for both residents and relief workers.

The Jameson Animal Rescue Ranch are accepting donations to help care for both companion and farm animals. Wine Country Animal Lovers is similarly accepting donations and providing resources to evacuated families in Northern California so they can keep their pets with them. The Napa Community Animal Response Team is looking for volunteers to help care for evacuated animals.

The American Red Cross is looking for volunteers who can help evacuees.

The San Francisco clothing shop Love on Haight is giving away free clothes.

Yuba County, Sonoma County, and Napa County food pantries are all currently accepting donations.



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It's Surprisingly Hard to Ban Toxic Sex Toys, But Here's How to Protect Yourself


These days, most of us will carefully check ingredients lists for gluten and trans fats, demand that our water bottles be made without BPA, and seek out paraben-free, body-safe cosmetics. But the average person can’t tell you what a toxic sex toy is—or even that they exist. Unfortunately, in the unregulated sex toy industry, plenty of sex toys are potentially rife with products that can hurt you (and not even in the fun, kinky way).

Perhaps the most well-known offender vis à vis toy toxicity is a group of chemicals known as phthalates, a plasticizer that can be blended with other substances to make them softer and more flexible. A spotlight’s been shone on phthalates in recent years, as publications like Bustle and Bitch, and via feminist-oriented sex shops like Good Vibes and Babeland have spoken out against them.

So why all the hullabaloo? It turns out that phthalates may have side-effects when they come into contact with your body that not only aren’t disclosed by most sex toy manufacturers, but could potentially be terrible for you. According to Dr. Amanda Morgan, a faculty member at the School of Community Health Sciences at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas, who wrote her Master’s thesis on harmful sex toy materials, phthalates are known endocrine disruptors that can cause health problems. “[Phthalates] mess with your hormones; they can cause birth defects, or other things related to liver or kidney functioning,” Morgan told me, referencing a studies which have linked phthalates to irregular fetal development, early-onset puberty, and lower sperm counts, among other issues. “They can really mess you up, because they pretend to be your hormones, and so your body’s hormonal cycle gets knocked out of whack from exposure to these things.”

With the short-term effects of chlorine and the long-term effects of phthalates, PVC is, Morgan says, “definitely one of the worst sex toy materials we’ve seen.”

When you hear horror stories about sex toys, though, it’s not necessarily phthalates that are to blame. One of the most common anecdotal complaints about toxic toys is that they cause skin irritation: “I first thought [it] was a yeast infection or BV, because of extreme itching and burning on my inner labia,” reports one reader who wrote in to sex toy review blog Dangerous Lilly. “My ass suddenly felt like it was on fire. A burning sensation spread throughout my butt,” recalls sex educator Tristan Taormino about a questionable dildo she used. One Playboy story describes a dildo that caused a woman “such severe pain that she could barely speak.”

I asked Dr. Emily S. Barrett, a professor at the Rutgers University School of Public Health who has done extensive research on the prenatal effects of endocrine disruptors like phthalates, whether these reported burning sensations fit with her understanding of the chemicals. She told me she hasn’t seen evidence that phthalates irritate the skin in this way, and that they tend to “act on a much more subtle level most of the time.”

So what is causing these health problems? According to Amanda Morgan, phthalates aren’t the only sketchy ingredient still getting into our sex toys. As part of her thesis research, Morgan tested 32 sex toys to determine their chemical makeup. What she found was pretty scary: The toys she tested typically contained 30-35 percent chlorine. She said PVC, a material commonly used to make inexpensive sex toys, always contains chlorine (hence the chemical name “polyvinyl chloride.”) Even scarier, in 2006 BadVibes.org—an organization which, full disclosure, is linked to pro-toy-safety sex shop The Smitten Kitten—ran lab tests on four popular sex toys. They found that two of them were made of PVC and contained “very high levels of phthalate plasticizer.”
 
“We use chlorine to kill bacteria in things,” she said. “If you are being exposed to this high level of chlorine, especially in a sensitive membrane area [like the vagina or rectum], we could definitely chalk that up to causing irritation, burning, or messing up the environment by exposing it to something that is, as we know, a sterilization product.” So with the short-term burning effects of chlorine and the long-term endocrine effects of phthalates, PVC is, Morgan says, “definitely one of the worst sex toy materials we’ve seen.”
 
Now, you might be thinking, “OK, great to know! I’ll just only buy safe toys from now on!” Well, it’s not so simple. Since the sex toy industry is unregulated, it doesn’t fall under the current purview of the Food and Drug Administration. According to FDA press officer Angela Stark, that’s because the agency “does not regulate devices meant purely for sexual pleasure. It does, however, regulate genital devices that have a medical purpose such as vibrators intended for therapeutic use to treat sexual dysfunction or to supplement Kegel exercises.” Of course, the vast majority of sex toys don’t fall under this “health aid” umbrella.+++large

The current Congress likely wouldn’t rush to make a bold, sex-positive statement like mandating sex toy safety.

The responsibility of regulating sex toys could potentially fall to the Consumer Product Safety Commission, but Morgan told me the understaffed CPSC is already in charge of regulating over 15,000 types of products—not to mention the products themselves. The complex issue of sex toy regulation would be a big ask on top of all that.

Add to all of this the fact that the current Congress likely wouldn’t rush to make a bold, sex-positive statement by mandating sex toy safety, and there are plenty of reasons your sex toy might not meet body-safe standards. “Our government doesn’t generally like to talk about people pleasuring themselves,” Morgan pointed out.

Beyond that, though, Morgan adds that regulating the sex toy industry might not even be the best solution to getting rid of toxic toys anyway. “If something is federally regulated, that means that the federal government—depending on where they are in their political leanings at that time—could potentially make it illegal to have these products, by saying they are ‘dangerous’ and then regulating them out of existence,” she reasoned. “You get certain types of people in power and they may not believe in sexual health, wellness, [or] self-pleasuring. It might go against their core values and therefore they [might] use their political agenda and the federal regulation system to regulate these products out of people’s hands.”

It’s a conclusion that Zach Biesanz, a legal assistant in the office of New York’s Attorney General, came to in his 2007 paper in the journal Law & Inequality: “Special regulation of the sex toy industry would be unreasonably burdensome from a regulatory standpoint,” he wrote. “Only banning these toxins outright will suffice to protect consumers from phthalates’ harmful and even lethal effects.”

“Sniff your sex toy. That’s the easiest thing you can do [to protect yourself].”

In the meantime, how do you tell if a toy is safe? Sex toy experts like Morgan, the Smitten Kitten’s founder Jennifer Pritchett, and seasoned sex toy reviewer Epiphora all recommend buying toys made of phthalate-free, body-safe materials like pure silicone, stainless steel, glass, and hard plastic. Still, it’s difficult to know what’s what in an industry that mislabels its products so frequently. “Sniff your sex toy,” said Morgan. “That’s the easiest thing you can do. If you smell these products and they don’t smell like anything, then it most likely is a stable chemical compound like silicone.” Phthalates and PVC, however, smell “like chemicals,” according to Morgan, “like a new shower curtain,” according to Epiphora, and “like a headache,” according to Pritchett. The sex toy smell test might sound a little weird, but it’s a pretty good first line of defense.

Morgan also recommends buying toys made by “companies that take a lot of pride in making good-quality, body-safe toys,” citing Tantus and Jimmyjane as examples. Other companies that proudly declare their products body-safe include We-Vibe, Fun Factory, Vixen Creations, and Funkit Toys.

And when in doubt, find a reviewer you can trust. Sex toy review blogs abound on the internet —Epiphora, Dangerous Lilly, and Formidable Femme, to name just a few—and while you’d be wise to take claims about sex toys with a grain of salt in this unregulated industry, sometimes the preponderance of good or bad reviews about a particular company or toy can suggest conclusions about its safety (or lack thereof).

Most importantly though, demand body-safe sex toys buy only buying from companies you can trust. “Consumers vote with their pocketbook,” said Tantus founder Metis Black. “Support the businesses that make safe toys a priority, that use their resources to educate, that take a stand and advocate for consumers.” She added that while pure silicone toys are expensive now—especially in comparison to PVC toys, which can often be under $30 a pop, versus $100+ for silicone—more consumer demand for body-safe toys will create more supply at lower prices, as bigger companies with more resources start making non-toxic toys in larger quantities. That’s just sex toy economics.

Bloggers, consumers, and ethical toymakers alike all dream of a future in which no sex toys will burn your junk, give you infections, or cause long-term bodily harm. It seems reasonable enough. And if we keep fighting for it, maybe one day it’ll be reality.



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Urban Outfitters 20% Off Beauty Sale: Here's What to Buy


  • <img src=”https://media.glamour.com/photos/59dfc241748caf598bc2707b/master/pass/43789346_000_b.jpg” alt=”Mario Badescu Facial Spray With Aloe, Cucumber, and Green Tea, $7 (now $5.60)“/>

    “Add this to the list of mists so worth the $$$—even though this one is all of $7. It’s light, refreshing, and necessary once 3 P.M. rolls around and my face is feeling dry.” —Lindsay Schallon, senior beauty editor

    Courtesy of brand

  • <img src=”https://media.glamour.com/photos/59dfc23f17b30712227cbf5f/master/pass/42544015_000_b.jpg” alt=”Frank Body Shimmer Scrub, $20 (now $16)“/>

    “Consider this coffee scrub unicorn beauty for people who hate unicorn beauty—and love soft, hydrated, ever-so-slightly glimmery skin.” —L.S.

    Courtesy of brand

  • <img src=”https://media.glamour.com/photos/59dfc29102dac71fc54c7e57/master/pass/UOSale-NYX%20Professional%20Makeup%20Faux%20Whites%20Eye%20Brightener%20Liner.jpeg” alt=”NYX Professional Makeup Faux Whites Eye Brightener Liner, $8 (now $6.40)“/>

    “I hate white eyeliner—I’m convinced it accentuates how bloodshot my eyes always are from staring at a computer screen—but I actually adore these creamy pastel pencils. They glide on super smooth, don’t smear around, and add a pop of brightness without making me look like I belong in a Visine commercial.” —Amber Rambharose, beauty editor

    Courtesy of brand

  • <img src=”https://media.glamour.com/photos/59dfc2b746d4414ffe3136a7/master/pass/UO-Sale-Herbivore%20Botanicals%20Body%20Oil.jpeg” alt=”Herbivore Botanicals Body Oil, $26 (now $20.80)“/>

    “Yes, I have purchased this oil at full price before. I was lured in by its short and sweet ingredient list—meadowfoam oil just sounds like bliss—and hooked by how it leaves you smelling like a French heiress just chilling in a field of flowers right off the Riviera.” —A.R.

    Courtesy of brand

  • <img src=”https://media.glamour.com/photos/59dfc3bc07c527135eb97cc8/master/pass/31571805_070_b.jpg” alt=”Mario Badescu Drying Lotion, $17 (now $13.60)“/>

    “Humble brag: ever since accepting chemical exfoliants as my savior, my skin has been great (a year ago, I couldn’t go two days without dealing with a new crop of whiteheads, so I’m basking in this gear shift). The one traditional acne-fighter still in my arsenal is this drying lotion. When a zit makes it through my bacteria-nuking regimen, it dries it out overnight.” —Rachel Nussbaum, beauty writer

    Courtesy of brand

  • <img src=”https://media.glamour.com/photos/59dfc6f06cdd00652f36b8c6/master/pass/40774176_000_b.jpg” alt=”COSRX BHA Blackhead Power Liquid, $22 (now $17.60)“/>

    “And this is the life-changing acid I just mentioned. Coming in at 4% BHA, it’s mild enough that you don’t have to worry about sensitive skin reacting, while powerful enough to make a difference. For a quick primer on BHA—which stands for beta hydroxy acid—it gets down into your cells and exfoliates them, getting ahead of acne-causing bacteria and nixing potential pimples in the bud. Again: life-changing.” —R.N.

    Courtesy of brand

  • <img src=”https://media.glamour.com/photos/59dfc3bc07c527135eb97cc7/master/pass/39083324_022_b.jpg” alt=”Nudestix Intense Matte Lip + Cheek Pencil, $24 (now $19.20)“/>

    “Some people are blush people; I’m not one of them. My skin is so pink-toned naturally that blush has always felt a little like adding insult to injury. That said, a scribble of this stick on my cheeks every morning makes me look alive, and it takes all of two seconds.” —R.N.

    Courtesy of brand

  • <img src=”https://media.glamour.com/photos/59dfc23f9c5ea755687bdecd/master/pass/41302100_000_b.jpg” alt=”Ouai Wave Spray, $26 (now $20.80) “/>

    Jenna Dewan Tatum doesn’t lie; this spray is everything. It smells like a fancy salon and gives my fine, flat hair the most perfect rumpled waves that last all day.” —L.S.

    Courtesy of brand

  • <img src=”https://media.glamour.com/photos/59dfc2b7989cf55b00f18452/master/pass/UOSale-Among%20The%20Flowers%20Premium%20Bath%20Soak.jpeg” alt=”Among The Flowers Premium Bath Soak, $16 (now $12.80)“/>

    “My version of being financially responsible is only buying jars of sea salt, coconut oil, and flower petals when they’re on sale. Following that logic, it’s basically criminal not to stock up on this blend that’s genuinely good for your skin. The star ingredient: calendula petals, a flower I’ve used to soothe everything from menstrual cramps to muscle aches.” —A.R.

    Courtesy of brand

  • <img src=”https://media.glamour.com/photos/59dfc241748caf598bc2707c/master/pass/43718667_000_b.jpg” alt=”Pixi Glow Tonic, $15 (now $12)“/>

    “Here’s what I turn to the mornings after I fall asleep in my makeup (which I’ve done at least twice a week for the past three months, so often). The glycolic acid gently sloughs away dry, dull skin—but never in a way that flares up my rosacea, thanks to the aloe vera and botanical extracts.” —L.S.

    Courtesy of brand

  • <img src=”https://media.glamour.com/photos/59dfc6f06cdd00652f36b8c5/master/pass/44786994_000_b.jpg” alt=”Anastasia Beverly Hills Liquid Lipstick Set, $25 (now $20)“/>

    “I know, I know—matte lipstick fatigue is peaking, and with every. single. brand coming out with their own take, they all blend together at some point. But through it all, Anastasia Beverly Hills’ OG version has stayed in my purse. It goes on super opaque, doesn’t budge, doesn’t destroy my lips, and the colors are gorgeous. This trio of browny-nude colors are casual, but beautiful. It’s ideal.” —R.N.

    Courtesy of brand

  • <img src=”https://media.glamour.com/photos/59dfc2b546d4414ffe3136a5/master/pass/UO-Sale-Ardency%20Inn%20Modster%20Manuka%20Honey%20Pigment.jpeg” alt=”Ardency Inn Modster Manuka Honey Pigment, $21 (now $16.80)“/>

    “I use manuka honey for everything: scrapes, bruises, inflamed skin and ingrown hairs. This pigment a full face multitasker and the honey makes it extra good for dry or acne-prone skin, chapped lips, itchy eyelids, you name it. It’s basically a glow-y Band-Aid for all your skin ailments.” —A.R.

    Courtesy of brand

  • <img src=”https://media.glamour.com/photos/59dfc2430c07df4d4d8dd57d/master/pass/43254473_066_d.jpg” alt=”Slip Silk Pillowcase, $79 (now $63.20)“/>

    “I used to roll my eyes when people said silk pillowcases changed their lives. Then I tried one. This is no B.S. beauty myth—the days I sleep on one, my hair looks ten times shinier and smoother. The only downside is the work it takes to wash them.” —L.S.

    Courtesy of brand

  • <img src=”https://media.glamour.com/photos/59dfc2b8989cf55b00f18454/master/pass/UOSale-Call%20Of%20The%20Vialed.jpeg” alt=”Call Of The Vialed For UO Perfume Rollerball, $20 (now $16)“/>

    “When I need to feel calm, grounded, bust down writer’s block, or chill out, I roll on a Vialed scent and enter a bubble of how that feeling smells. It’s wonky to describe, but feels straight up transcendent. The scents themselves are right up there with that you’d drop $200 in a toxic cloud filled department store: ouds, neroli, myrrh, amazing.” —A.R.

    Courtesy of brand

  • <img src=”https://media.glamour.com/photos/59dfc29146d4414ffe3136a3/master/pass/UOSale-MEANT%20The%20Wonder%20Polish.jpeg” alt=”Meant The Wonder Polish, $43 (now $34.40)“/>

    “This polish is no joke. It’s so good that I took kitchen scissors into the bathroom so I could slice open the packaging and save every last drop in a Ziploc bag. It’s my favorite product to shave with, since I don’t need to moisturize after using it. It makes you that soft all over.” —A.R.

    Courtesy of brand

  • <img src=”https://media.glamour.com/photos/59dfc29202dac71fc54c7e59/master/pass/UOSale-Touch%20In%20Sol%20No%20Poreblem.jpeg” alt=”Touch In Sol No Poreblem Primer, $18 (now $28.80) “/>

    “This lightweight K-beauty favorite creates a mirror smooth (but not shiny) barrier that seals in moisturizer and keeps makeup magnetized to its dewy finish.” —A.R.

    Courtesy of brand

  • <img src=”https://media.glamour.com/photos/59dfae8f4802dc452e2dcd02/master/pass/urban-sale-comb.jpg” alt=”UO Large Wide Tooth Comb, $12 (now $9.60)“/>

    “My shower is a revolving door of products (part of the beauty writer job is trying everything, I’m lucky). But the one thing that’s stayed with me for literally six years? My cheapo, purple plastic wide-toothed comb. It’s not cute, but essential for detangling my curls in the shower. This one is a chic upgrade I wouldn’t be afraid to ‘gram.” —R.N.

    Courtesy of brand

  • <img src=”https://media.glamour.com/photos/59dfc23f9c5ea755687bdecc/master/pass/30534762_000_b.jpg” alt=”Smith’s Rosebud Salve, $8 (now $6.40)“/>

    “There are myriad reasons every makeup artist keeps this balm in their kit, but I’ll leave you with the only one that matters: It’s the best lip balm out there, hands down.” —L.S.

    Courtesy of brand

  • <img src=”https://media.glamour.com/photos/59dfc6f222f4fe590116ba24/master/pass/42218792_007_b.jpg” alt=”Touch In Sol Metallist Liquid Foil + Glitter Shadow Duo, $25 (now $20) “/>

    “With a metallic cream eyeshadow on one end and a sparkly dose of glitter on the other, I feel like Emily Blunt’s character in The Devil Wears Prada with this on. That’s the highest praise I can give.” —R.N.

    Courtesy of brand

  • <img src=”https://media.glamour.com/photos/59dfc3bd5378f15c0ab3044d/master/pass/39387105_011_b.jpg” alt=”Aquis Essentials Hair Towel, $30 (now $24)“/>

    “My love of turban towels is well-documented, and I can thank Aquis for bringing me into the fold. As someone who values her curls not turning into a cloud of frizz, microfiber fabric is the towel loophole. It takes hours off my drying time, and gets my soaking wet curls out of the way in the morning. Can’t live without it.” —R.N.

    Courtesy of brand

  • <img src=”https://media.glamour.com/photos/59dfc2439c5ea755687bdecf/master/pass/44277341_066_b.jpg” alt=”Foreo Espada Blue Light Acne Treatment, $140 (now $112)“/>

    “Whenever I feel a period zit coming on, I zap it with this device—the blue LED light kills bacteria that causes acne—and follow it up with Mario Badescu’s drying lotion. It’s crazy how well the combo works.” —L.S.

    Courtesy of brand

  • <img src=”https://media.glamour.com/photos/59dfc3bc000cf857bb0e9a06/master/pass/31723315_013_b.jpg” alt=”Anastasia Beverly Hills Dip Brow, $18 (now $14.40)“/>

    “The cult of Dip Brow is far-reaching, and after a few months of seeing it mentioned in basically every makeup tutorial posted to Instagram and Reddit, I bit the bullet last year. It was a good decision. All you need is a tiny dab of the product on an angled brush to fill in both of your brows. The color lasts all day. I’m still working my way through my first pot—again, from last year. That’s unheard of.” —R.N.

    Courtesy of brand

  • <img src=”https://media.glamour.com/photos/59dfd6d5204b6c24f82aadab/master/pass/42623983_000_b.jpg” alt=”Verb Ghost Oil, $16 (now $12.80)“/>

    “In an affectionate way, my hair is a product-eating monster. Literally, I can load on four pumps of heavy-duty hair oil, and any smoothing effect it gives is typically gone within the hour. It’s an untold mystery of this world, but Verb’s Ghost Oil puts up the best fight of any oil I’ve tried (and I’ve tried so, so many). It smoothes, adds shine, doesn’t completely kill your volume—and on me, the effect lasts about three hours. On my friends, they’re set the whole day.” —R.N.

    Courtesy of brand

  • <img src=”https://media.glamour.com/photos/59dd2d9a00dd0247d0326b40/master/pass/bestrednailpolish-river.jpg” alt=”And Don’t Miss…“/>

    And Don’t Miss…

    The Dark Red Nail Polishes Our Editors Always Turn To

    Jen Mulrow



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    Here's Every Single Item From the H&M x Erdem Collaboration


    Every H&M collaboration possesses the same few traits: a buzzy designer, a selection of limited-edition pieces that feel instantly collectible, a crazed launch, and a high probability of seeing the pieces pop up on the resale market at however-many-times the original price. From the looks of it, the fast-fashion retailer’s latest pair-up, with beloved British brand Erdem, will be no different. The collection, which launches November 2, has a total of 83 pieces spanning womenswear, menswear, and accessories, which riff off some of the prints and silhouettes designer Erdem Moralioglu has become known for at his namesake brand, including dreamy florals, elegant lace, high necks, and long sleeves. Prices start at $29.99 for accessories and cap out at $299 for some of the collections most intricate—and probably sought-after—pieces, such as the floral gowns and tailored coats.

    Ahead, see every single item in H&M’s soon-to-be-sellout collaboration with Erdem. Start planning your fall shopping appropriately.



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    Here's How Gigi and Bella Hadid Do Coordinated Going-Out Outfits


    Bella Hadid celebrated her 21st birthday in New York City last night. And, to nobody’s surprise, she and sister Gigi arrived in lewks that, in Bella’s own words, could “get it.” (Too soon?)

    The birthday girl rang in her 21st year wearing a Dolce & Gabbana bustier dress that fit so well, it was as if it was literally molded by the fashion gods to fit her body. (That, or she’s a professional model—but who’s to say>) The dress featured lace-up adornments along either side, and she paired it with simple strappy sandals and a delicate necklace. As good sisters do, Gigi appeared to have coordinated her ensemble with Bella’s without totally mimicking it: She opted for a baby blue three-piece get-up by Pamella Rolland, complete with matching satin Stuart Weitzman pumps and a Tyler Ellis box bag.

    PHOTO: Getty Images

    Though they’re not exactly alike, both outfits possess similar design details, such as the bustier top, silky material, and subtle ways of exposing skin. (Not to mention they both wore their hair up to spotlight their outfits.) The looks are sleek and simple, but undoubtedly luxe. Your turn to examine.

    Celebrity Sightings in New York City - October 9, 2017

    PHOTO: Gotham

    Celebrity Sightings in New York City - October 9, 2017

    PHOTO: Gotham

    The supermodel siblings have a history of stepping out in matchy-matchy ensembles—which leads us to believe they may have discussed these party looks ahead of time.

    At the 2016 Victoria’s Secret Fashion Show, Bella and Gigi wore similar silver and gold dresses.

    2016 Victoria's Secret Fashion Show in Paris - After Party - Arrivals

    PHOTO: Getty

    Before that, they were spotted leaving the Versace show in Milan donning contrasting baby blue, black, and white outfits.

    Versace - Arrivals - Milan Fashion Week SS17

    PHOTO: Getty

    And earlier this summer, the sisters were seen walking around the SoHo neighborhood in New York in striking blue sweatshirts.

    Celebrity Sightings in New York City - May 3, 2017

    PHOTO: Getty

    We’re no detectives, but if we had to guess, it seems like the Hadid sisters did exchange a “What are you wearing tonight?” text.

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