Categories
Health

This Video of Meghan Markle Opening Up About Media Scrutiny Is Heartbreaking


To say Meghan Markle has had a rough go in the British press since her relationship with Prince Harry went public would be a bit of an understatement. But it’s been especially rough in the past year during her pregnancy and the birth of baby Archie. If she was still a regular celebrity and actor, we probably would have seen a sit-down interview with her, a la a classic Barbara Walters special, where she revealed the toll it’s taken on her.

But such is not the way with the British royal family—usually. But as we’ve all seen, Markle and Prince Harry are doing things their own way—from the way they introduced Archie to the world to their social media style. Now, a new documentary filmed during their recent royal tour in southern Africa is apparently about to shed a lot of light on some of their most private struggles.

In a teaser clip released by ITV, Markle opens up about her feelings when director Tom Bradtby asks her about her own physical and mental health amidst all the press coverage and pressure. “I would say…look, any woman, especially when they’re pregnant, you’re really vulnerable,” she says. “So that was made really challenging. And then when you have a newborn, you know?”

“And especially as a woman, it’s really, it’s a lot. So, if you add this on top of just trying to be a new mom or trying to be a newlywed, it’s um…Yeah, well, I guess, and also thank you for asking because not many people have asked if I’m okay. But it’s a very real thing to be going through behind the scenes.”

Watch the clip for yourself. Frankly, it’s heartbreaking.

Of course, there are many glamorous things that we all imagine come along with being a royal—but there’s also so much baggage that I don’t know that I’d ever want, and this clip illustrates some of that. Harry also opens up about how every camera click reminds him of the worst parts of his mother, Princess Diana’s life.

I can’t wait to see what else is revealed in the special, along with the happy and joyful moments of the tour—and hopefully more clips of Archie.

Harry & Meghan: An African Journey premieres Sunday night in the U.K. and will air on ABC on October 23 at 10 PM



Source link

Categories
Health

Captain Marvel Broke Box Office Records With a $455 Million Opening Weekend


Marvel’s first female-led superhero movie is officially a record-breaking success: Captain Marvel made a reported $153 million in its opening weekend, just in the U.S. alone. It brought in another $302 million internationally for a huge total of $455 million worldwide ticket sales, according to The Hollywood Reporter. The movie stars Brie Larson as Carol Danvers, a pilot who becomes Captain Marvel after she finds herself in the middle of an intergalactic war. It’s also the first in the Marvel Cinematic Universe to have a woman behind the camera—co-director and writer, Anna Boden.

Those numbers make Captain Marvel the biggest opening of 2019, as well as the first film to break the $100 million dollar mark this year. According to The Hollywood Reporter, the global sales also make Captain Marvel the biggest launch for a female-fronted film ever and the second-largest superhero film behind Avengers: Infinity War. It’s the sixth-best opening worldwide of all time.

Clearly, moviegoers were ready for a female superhero to take charge in her own piece of the franchise. This, along with the smashing success of Wonder Woman, should put an end to any doubts that female superheroes can’t sell at the box office.

Fans took to social media to give their own mini-reviews after seeing the film. “I saw Captain Marvel tonight,” wrote one user. “I am such a fan of the @kellysue comics, and was KINDA nervous. Because SOMETIMES screen things aren’t as good as paper things. BUT I LOVED IT. Truly. Madly. Deeply. #HigherFurtherFaster” Another said, “I just wanted to tell you that we WE ARE SAFE NOW MISS CAPTAIN MARVEL IS HERE AND SHE IS GLOWING.”

“#CaptainMarvel was good fun, and the backlash against it pre-release was ridiculous,” said another user. “Go see it and support it – shouldn’t matter to whiny nerds what gender or race the lead in a Marvel movie is, it’s still a Marvel movie. Representation clearly matters.”

Next up for Captain Marvel? She’ll help take on Thanos when Avengers: Endgame opens on April 26.



Source link

Categories
Health

Jamie Lee Curtis Can't Help Bragging About Halloween's Record-Breaking Opening Weekend


Almost exactly 40 years after she made her film debut as Laurie Strode in 1978’s Halloween, Jamie Lee Curtis is still unbelievably proud to be a member of the Strode family.

On Sunday, as the film’s 2018 sequel of the same name wrapped up a record-smashing opening weekend at the box office, Curtis shared her excitement about the film’s debut on Instagram. “OK. I’m going to go for one BOAST post,” she captioned a photo of her standing next to Judy Greer and Andi Matichak, who play her daughter and granddaughter, respectively, in the new horror film.

“Biggest horror movie opening with a female lead. Biggest movie opening with a female lead over 55. Second biggest horror movie opening ever. Second biggest October movie opening ever. Biggest Halloween opening ever. Couldn’t be prouder of ALL who made this creative experiment have such a thrilling result!” Curtis continued, adding, “#womengetthingsdone #threetallwomen #threestrodewomen #strodestrong #timesup.”

The post earned tons of supportive comments from many of Curtis’s past costars. “Yes queen,” Emma Roberts wrote. “CONGRATULATIONS,” Abigail Breslin added, while Niecy Nash commented, “Congrats my Queen!!!” alongside plenty of red heart emojis.

According to Box Office Mojo, in its opening weekend, Halloween raked in $77.5 million in the U.S., plus another $14.3 million internationally. That $91.8 million total does indeed set all the records Curtis mentioned in her post. Per The Hollywood Reporter, the biggest horror movie opening came courtesy of 2017’s It, which garnered a whopping $123.4 million in its first few days in theaters. The biggest October opening, meanwhile, goes to Venom, which premiered just a few weeks before Halloween to an $80 million opening.

Beyond just financial success, Halloween has also been praised by many critics. The movie is already “certified fresh” on Rotten Tomatoes, with 80 percent positive reviews, and it has a respectable B+ rating on Cinemascore. Of course, we here at Glamour have also praised the film, noting that it’s strongest as a “tribute to the many ironies of the mother-daughter relationship.”

Related: Here’s Every New Scary Movie and TV Show Hitting Netflix Before Halloween



Source link

Categories
Health

Taylor Swift's 'Reputation' Tour Opening Night: All the Moments You Need to See


Taylor Swift kicked off her Reputation Stadium Tour last night (May 8) in Glendale, Arizona, and it was a spectacle. Choreography, pyrotechnics, killer live vocals—Swift delivered roughly two hours of pure pop bliss, and her legion of fans lived for it.

They’re also living for a few moments that happened in between the songs, too—like Swift calling out Kim Kardashian or her pointing to boyfriend Joe Alwyn in the crowd. It wouldn’t be a Taylor Swift concert without some juicy tidbits, right? And the Reputation Stadium Tour opening night had plenty. Here are all the ones you need to see.

A quick refresher on that drama: Swift claimed two years ago that she hadn’t approved certain lyrics Kanye West wrote about her in his song “Famous,” though a Snapchat video Kardashian leaked suggested otherwise. Swift doubled-down on her stance, though, which prompted Kardashian—and basically all of social media—to brand her with the snake emoji.

Swift gave a short but poignant speech about all this last night. “A couple of years ago, someone called me a snake on social media and it caught on,” Swift said. “And then a lot of people called me a lot of names on social media. And I went through some really low times for a while because of it. I went through some times when I didn’t know if I was gonna get to do this anymore and I guess the snakes… I wanted to send a message to you guys that if someone uses name-calling to bully you on social media and even if a lot of people jump on board with it, that doesn’t have to beat you. It can strengthen you instead.”

Not in real life, but Swift recruited her to say the classic, “The old Taylor can’t come to the phone right now” line in a video projection during “Look What You Made Me Do.” Haddish revealed last year she had dinner at Swift’s house after they did Saturday Night Live together and became friends.

Well, I guess that confirms who the song’s about. Eagle-eyed fans caught Alwyn in a baseball cap bopping along in the audience to “Gorgeous.” At the end of the song, Swift literally pointed at him, causing the already-lit crowd to lose their minds even more.

Which is a pretty huge deal for Swfities. The Red deep cut is considered by many to be Swift’s best song, and some fans thought an extended version of it would appear on Reputation. (The original song is apparently eight minutes long.) Unfortunately, that didn’t happen, but Swift made up for that by adding an acoustic version of the song to her set. Naturally, it’s stunning.

Taking cues from Madonna—who’s famous for reinventing her hit songs in concert—Swift included many of her staples in the Reputation Stadium Tour set list, but gave them a twist. She performed “Bad Blood” with elements of “Should’ve Said No”; a medley of “Style,” “Love Story,” and “You Belong with Me”; and a piano moment that blended “Long Live” and “New Year’s Day.”

This might’ve been the most fun performance of the night. Both Cabello and Charli XCX sang verses of Swift’s hit 2014 song, and they all joined in bombastically for the chorus. Pop star friendships!

If the Reputation Stadium Tour‘s opening night is any indication, we’re in for a very fun next couple of months. Are you ready for it?

Related Stories:

While Everyone Else Was Decked Out for the Met Gala, Taylor Swift Was Wearing Reformation in the Desert

Katy Perry Just Sent Taylor Swift a Literal Olive Branch

Taylor Swift’s Fans Are Living for Her New Country Song With Sugarland





Source link

Categories
Health

Opening a Credit Card With My Father Messed Up My Finances For Years


I was lying in bed on a recent Saturday morning when my dad called me yelling about something that’s long been a sore spot between us.

“Why did you go over the limit of your credit card?! Did someone steal it? What’s going on?!” he screamed.

I did a quick mental scan—this was the card that lived in my wallet, but I barely ever touched. I hadn’t used it in ages. I was staying at a friend’s house in Philadelphia for the weekend, and the entire apartment was still asleep. My husband was snoring next to me. I frantically turned down the volume to the lowest notch.

I’ll handle it,” I half-screamed-half-whispered at him, retreating to the bathroom where I hoped no one could hear our conversation.

When we hung up, I immediately called my credit card company. That’s how I discovered that I’d left the card hooked up to my Uber account for months: all those Pools added up, aggregating beyond my $3,000 limit. So what, right? Just an irresponsible decision on my part; why does my dad need to get involved? I’m 27 and married. I have a graduate degree and a full-time job in New York City. I haven’t lived with my parents since 2009.

The thing is: My father and I share a credit card.

My relationship with credit cards started young and with envy: I was jealous of friends in high school wielding their shiny plastic to buy crap at the mall. I tried to sell my parents on letting me open a gas card, but it was a hard no. I didn’t have one college either—my parents said they didn’t want me to get swipe-happy.

At the time I was livid, but looking back I’m starting to understand their perspective: A report published by the American Association for University Women revealed that two-thirds of student loan debt in America is held by women—an estimated $800 billion dollars. And a 2015 National Debt Relief survey showed 63% of women between the ages of 18 to 64 reported have credit card debt, as opposed to only 36% of men. In a way, the odds were stacked against me.

But when I left Florida to go to graduate school in New York City, they finally caved. Because I didn’t have any credit (thanks, guys), my dad offered to open one with me.

Our arrangement was that he would get my statements in the mail and withdraw the money—funded by my student loans—each month from my checking account and handle the bill. The thought was that I’d be too busy with school and adjusting to my new metropolitan life to think about handling that part of my finances. In hindsight, this was a terrible idea.

I swiped my card and put the spending out of mind. Dad was handling the bill. I didn’t need to survey the damage.

Quickly, I started using the credit card for my “big-girl” necessities: a one-way plane ticket from Florida, an iPad for all my class reading that I never actually used, a new desk in the apartment I shared with my boyfriend (now husband) that turned into a collection of clutter. I bought winter coats, hundred-dollar boots; I didn’t think twice about ordering an appetizer while dining out. I justified my purchases as just par for the course after moving to a new place. I swiped my card and put the spending out of mind—I never considered the repercussions of the debt I was accruing. Dad was handling the bill. I didn’t need to survey the damage.

“I’m taking money out of your checking account to pay your credit card bill,” my dad would text me once a month. That system worked until he caught on to just how much I was spending. It started with texts from my father telling me to stop using the card so much. “I have it under control,” I’d write, jabbing my thumbs at the keyboard. This dynamic caused a palpable tension between us, and eventually I decided to cut him out of the process and have the statements sent directly to my Brooklyn address. This only made dad’s text reminders about making timely payments more intense. It never occurred to me that he was worried I could be tanking his credit score.

My father has had money anxiety for as long as I can remember, a remnant from his own childhood growing up without a lot of it. He compensated by being hyper-conservative about how he spent and saved. “I’ve always wanted you to have a sense of responsibility to your own debts,” he told me on a recent, less fraught, phone call. I remember him taking me to the bank at 10 years old to open my first savings account.

He wanted me to feel the satisfaction of seeing that I had my own money not just sitting in a piggy bank. I’d deposit tooth fairy loot and birthday checks from my grandfather, and my eyes lit up watching the balance grow. He instilled me in the value of earning your own wages throughout my teens, and I had regular jobs at pizza joints and ice cream parlors to pay for gas or buy anything extra.

My dad and I, around the time I opened my first savings account.

I got a full ride to college, and that scholarship money was the first time I’d ever had that much in my accounts. Suddenly, I felt rich. I bought myself Forever 21 blouses and cigarettes—things I wanted at the time but didn’t need. When I got to grad school, it was more of the same; but this time with loans. Really scary, big loans. Only by that point, I was an adult. That was four years ago, and when my dad calls to tell me to rein in my spending or pay my bill I find myself wishing that I could just fail and figure things out on my own. I know I’m lucky to have the safety net. But what if losing it might be the only thing that teaches me how to stand on my own two feet?

That morning call in Philadelphia didn’t end well. “Open your own card and transfer the balance. I’m over this and your shit!” my dad fumed before we hung up. It felt harsh, but also like the right move. I don’t want to fight with my dad about money. I am ready to just handle my own financial shit.

When I got home, I started researching cards. The plan is to apply for one with a year of zero percent interest so I can focus on aggressively paying down the $2,800 balance. My husband, who has healthy financial habits and excellent credit, actually suggested that we open a card together—it’s one of those married milestones, and on paper it makes total sense.

But I know that would just put me back in the same comfortable pattern I’m trying to break free from. I don’t want to rely on the men in my life to clean up my finances or make decisions about money. This time I’m going to do it the way I think will work best for me: All on my own.

Jessica Militare is an assistant editor at Glamour.



Source link

Categories
Health

#MeTooK12 Is Opening the Door for Students to Talk About Sexual Assault


Since the explosive reports of sexual misconduct against Harvey Weinstein, the #MeToo movement has shed light on the rampant sexual misconduct that permeates our culture. Countless women have stepped forward to accuse powerful men of sexual harassment and assault, everywhere from Hollywood to Silicon Valley to Washington, DC.

And do you know where else sexual misconduct happens? High schools. Hell, it even happens in middle schools.

Through a new offshoot of the #MeToo movement, called #MeTooK12, girls who have faced sexual harassment or assault in school are coming forward with their stories. They echo the stories we’ve been hearing from grown women for weeks, except that this time, the assault is happening in classrooms, cafeterias, and school hallways. The people being accused are classmates, teachers, and school administrators.

Often, the girls say they reported the misconduct, but there were no repercussions, which reflects research into the harassment in schools. According to the American Association of University Women, data from the U.S. Department of Education shows that 67 percent of public schools in the U.S. reported zero incidents of sexual harassment of gender-based bullying during the 2013-2014 school year. But many other reports show that sexual harassment and bullying are way more common than that—AAUW research found that more than half of girls have experienced some form of sexual harassment in school.

So, two takeaways: First: A lot of kids are experiencing sexual harassment in school. Second: They’re not being taken seriously by teachers, counselors, and school administrators—the very adults who are supposed to protect them. When schools fail to respond to allegations, they’re essentially teaching girls that sexual misconduct is OK.

Because of Title IX, which outlawed sex discrimination in educational institutions that get federal funding, schools are supposed to accurately report sexual harassment and assault—it’s the law. If you want to learn more about how well schools are handling sexual misconduct where you live, check out this chart from the AAUW. If you’re concerned that allegations aren’t being handled properly in a school near you, contact your regional Title IX coordinator for help.





Source link