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The Oscars 2020 After-Party Dresses You May Have Missed


After Parasite took home Best Picture at the Oscars 2020, the night was really just beginning, as the stars headed out to various after-parties around town. In fact, many of the soirées were packed with guests during the actual ceremony because some stars watch the show together just like us regular folk. They just happen to be wearing gowns and oodles of sparkling jewels that most of us can only dream of putting on.

From the famed Vanity Fair party to the annual event hosted by (Oscar winner) Elton John, the stars really turned out in their finest designer looks for Hollywood’s biggest night. Riverdale‘s Madelaine Petsch opted for a bright pink gown while Tracee Ellis Ross, Rashida Jones, Sharon Stone, and Christina Hendricks went the timeless, classic route with black dresses. Meanwhile former in-laws Caitlynn Jenner and Kaitlynn Carter both arrived at parties in white.

Check out some of the best after-party dresses from the Oscars 2020.



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The Golden Globes 2020 After-Party Looks You Probably Missed


And just like that, awards season officially kicked off with Sunday night’s Golden Globes 2020. As expected, looks were turned—we’re still not over J.Lo.’s giant Valentino dress and Gwyneth Paltrow’s sheer Fendi moment—and there were some killer beauty moments to boot. Keeping with the Globes’ reputation as being one of the more relaxed awards shows of the season, the looks definitely had a dressed-up feel but didn’t feel too buttoned up.

However, after the party comes the afterparties, where celebrities really let loose and have fun with their looks. As is tradition, some stars went straight to the bash into dresses made for going-out, while others pulled a quick-change and shed their gowns for something slightly less formal. From Ashley Benson to Hailey Bieber, scroll on for some of the biggest transformations of the night that you might have missed.



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Missed Miscarriage: What It’s Like to be Waiting to Miscarry


Ten percent of all known pregnancies end in miscarriage. So why does the subject still feel so taboo? For women dealing with the complicated grief of miscarriage, it’s not the stat that’s comforting—it’s the knowledge that they’re not alone, that there is a space to share their story. To help end the culture of silence that surrounds pregnancy and infant loss, Glamour presents The 10 Percent, a place to dismantle the stereotypes and share real, raw, stigma-free stories.


After suffering three pregnancy losses over the last year, I’ve become a bit of a reluctant expert on miscarriages. There are the really early ones, sometimes called chemical pregnancies, which you might not even know about unless you take an early pregnancy test. There are the sudden, unexpected ones—the ones every pregnant woman fears. And then there’s the missed miscarriage, the kind of loss that takes its time, leaving women like me in a state of stagnation as we wait, sometimes weeks, for our pregnancies to end.

I would have been about seven weeks pregnant when I found out about my own loss. At the time I was vacationing in Spain with my husband and 2-year-old son, but all I could think about was going home to my doctor so I could get an ultrasound and see the baby’s heartbeat. I worried over every twinge until I woke up one morning with cramps so sharp I made an emergency appointment with an OB at a hospital on the outskirts of Barcelona.

I’d become all too familiar with transvaginal ultrasounds during my first pregnancy, and that moment of holding my breath before the doctor smiled and pointed out my healthy baby and its beating heart on the screen. Except this time the Spanish doctor didn’t smile and instead told me that the pregnancy had stopped progressing weeks earlier.

These types of pregnancy losses come without the obvious symptoms of a miscarriage. I’d experienced no bleeding. No cramps until that morning. Nothing to indicate the ball of cells growing inside my uterus had abruptly stopped without so much as a whisper goodbye. For this reason, missed miscarriages like mine are typically diagnosed by ultrasound, says Scott Sullivan, M.D., director of maternal-fetal medicine at the Medical University of South Carolina. It’s an experience that’s becoming more common. “When I started my career [20 years ago], our ultrasound abilities were limited—we couldn’t even see what was going on at five, six, seven weeks,” Sullivan says. Thanks to better technology, women are now getting their first ultrasound at 12 weeks, if not sooner—a significant jump from the 16- to 18-week window of the past. “I suspect that in years past people had miscarriages that they didn’t know about,” Sullivan says. It’s not that missed miscarriages are getting more common; it’s just that we’re more likely to know about them.

In Barcelona the doctor advised me to prepare to complete the miscarriage within a week, and I booked an emergency flight home the next day.

Back in the comfort of my home, I braced myself for the bleeding, but nothing happened—for five weeks. I looked and felt normal as the pregnancy hormones dissipated, but my routine now included weekly visits to my OB for check-ins. I’d wait with pregnant women in my doctor’s lobby, staring at the photos of newborn babies hanging on the walls before going into the ultrasound room that had been such a joyful place during my first pregnancy. And there, visit after visit, I’d see that there was still a five-week-old embryo hanging out in my womb, apparently in no hurry to leave. My doctor confirmed that I was experiencing a missed miscarriage, which seemed a funny way to describe something that hadn’t technically happened yet.



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Sarah Huckabee Sanders Won't Be Missed


On Thursday, Donald Trump announced on Twitter that “After 3 1/2 years, our wonderful Sarah Huckabee Sanders will be leaving the White House at the end of the month and going home to the Great State of Arkansas.” Unlike some of Trump’s statements, this one at least has a kernel of truth to it. Indeed, soon-to-be former White House Press Secretary Sanders has lasted multiples of Scaramucci. She survived Stormy Daniels and Michael Cohen and General John F. Kelly as well as fellow prominent ladies of the administration, such as former Secretary of Homeland Security Kirstjen Nielsen and Nikki Haley, who served as ambassador to the United Nations.

But like all denizens of Trumpworld (except those who share the president’s last name), she has run her course.

For months, there had been speculation that Sanders would step down. It’s less clear from what, given that she hasn’t stood behind the podium to take questions from the press in over 95 days. The New York Times summed up the job she is set to depart like this: “In Tokyo, she took a sushi-making class. In London, she posted a Buckingham Palace selfie with Louise Linton, the actress who is married to the Treasury secretary, Steven Mnuchin. (In an undocumented interaction, she asked the Prince of Wales to sign her dinner menu. He did.) In Ireland, Ms. Sanders and her husband, Bryan, took a photo with a group of Trump loyalists at the president’s private golf club and visited a local pub.” In other words, she’s spent the past few months like most Trumpian kleptocrats: enjoying the perks of government “work.”

With no actual accomplishments to memorialize in the traditional White House departure post-mortem, Sanders will be remembered first and foremost not for what she did, but for how she did it: With frequent sneers and ceaseless scorn, she was one more woman who helped Trump launder his sexism and racism. Like Ivanka Trump, with her nebulous “women’s empowerment initiative,” or Kellyanne Conway, who claimed that women who oppose Trump “just have a problem with women in power,” Sanders has obfuscated and stalled and deflected, providing effective cover for some of the president’s most misogynistic behavior.

Sanders lied about the president’s hush money payments to adult film actor Stormy Daniels, telling the press that “the president has addressed these directly and made very well clear that none of these allegations are true.” (Reader, it turned out what she meant was all of those allegations were in fact true.)





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We All Totally Missed Baby Archie at Trooping the Colour This Weekend


Meghan Markle made her first appearance since giving birth to baby Archie this past weekend, at Queen Elizabeth II’s annual Trooping the Colour ceremony. Those who tuned in assumed she and Prince Harry had left Archie at home, but it turns out he was at the event too⁠—just not on the balcony.

“Archie was at Trooping the Colour,” a source tells Us Weekly. “[It] was a chance for him to meet some of his cousins.”

The insider continued, “The reason Harry and Meghan didn’t appear on the balcony when the queen returned back to Buckingham Palace was because she was breastfeeding.”

Markle was all smiles at the event, but this source tells Us that leaving Archie⁠—even for that short period of time⁠—was hard for her. “She has spent almost every moment with him and saying goodbye was very difficult,” they say. “But Meghan truly wanted to be at the celebration for the queen…. Meghan loved seeing all the other royal children and was doting on them.”

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Meghan Markle and Prince Harry at Trooping the Colour 2019.
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Prince Harry has similar feelings about being away from Archie. A second source tells Us it was hard for the Duke of Sussex to go to Italy in May for an overnight engagement: “Harry left for Italy and it was very difficult for him to leave Archie and Meghan. He wants to spend every second he can with them.”

Baby Archie was first introduced to the world on Wednesday, May 8, during a photo call. Both Markle and Prince Harry gave short interviews about their new lives as parents.

“It’s been great. Parenting is amazing,” Prince Harry told reporters. “It has only been, what, two and a half, three days…. We are just so thrilled to have our own bundle of joy and to be able to spend some precious time as he slowly starts to grow up.”



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Coachella 2019: All the Celebrity Moments You Missed


The first weekend of Coachella just wrapped, and it was jam-packed with fun fashion, beauty, and celebrity moments. So many of your favorite stars came out to the desert over these past three days and gave you FOMO in the process. Of course, you can enjoy most of Coachella thanks to live-streaming, but there are definitely a few A-list moments you might’ve missed, so we rounded them up here. We’ll update next weekend when Coachella has its encore.

When the audience “hawed” before Kacey Musgraves “yeed.” It’s custom at the country singer’s shows for her to yell “yee” at the audience, and they respond with “haw.” (Musgraves is the queen of yeehaw. Trust me. It’s a thing.) But the crowd at Coachella didn’t quite understand how this worked, and a viral moment was born.

When Gigi Hadid ate McDonald’s more elegantly than anyone has before. The supermodel took a snack break at the Bootsy Bellows Party, presented by McDonald’s and PacSun, on Saturday, April 13.

McDonald’s and PacSun

Janelle Monáe and Lizzo turning Coachella into #ASSCHELLA. They shared an instantly iconic onstage moment. Even better: Monáe returned the favor by supporting Lizzo in the audience during her set.

Ariana Grande low-key becoming the sixth member of *NSYNC. We all know she brought out the legendary boy band for her headlining set Sunday night, but have you seen their behind-the-scenes selfies? I’m living.

Kendall Jenner’s super-moody selfies. Listen, Coachella hits people in different ways.

Katy Perry and Billie Eilish’s new friendship. “We must protect @wherearetheavocados, beings like her don’t enter our orbit often,” Perry posted on Instagram, referring to the “Ocean Eyes” singer. So does this means we’re getting a duet in the near future or nah?

Paris Hilton being a goddess. What is the point of this twirling video? Who knows, but it deserves an Emmy.

Nicki Minaj and Ariana Grande laughing through technical difficulties. “We can’t hear anything,” Grande said as Minaj was rapping her verse on their song “Bang Bang” on Sunday. Honestly, this is more entertaining than if the cues actually worked.

Bella Thorne casually hanging out in a kiddie pool full of…marshmallows? Sure!

Bella Thorne at Coachella in April 2019.
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