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Senator Kamala Harris Wore a Bedazzled Rainbow Jacket to Pride and It Was a *Moment*


Over the weekend cities around the world celebrated World Pride. Plenty of celebrities and politicians showed their support, attending parades and parties across the country. Bay Area native Senator Kamala Harris was in San Francisco—along with California governor Gavin Newsom and Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi—for the occasion. And her outfit, an oversize denim jacket bedazzled with rainbow rhinestones, has gotten people talking.

Justin Sullivan

The presidential hopeful spoke at SF Pride and rode along the parade route with husband Doug Emhoff, as well as Proposition 8 plaintiffs Kris Perry and Sandy Tier, according to SF Gate. (Harris married Perry and Tier in 2013, when she was attorney general.)

Senator Harris wore a sparkling denim jacket over a black T-shirt—with matching bedazzled text—and white jeans.

Kate Waters, traveling press secretary for the Senator’s presidential campaign, tweeted that it was from Levi’s—fitting, as the company is based in San Francisco.

Reporters on the scene shared their own snapshots of Senator Harris and her jacket from a breakfast held ahead of the parade.

Meena Harris, the Congresswoman’s sister, posted a video of the jacket, complete with a sparkling effect.

Naturally, the statement piece got people talking on social media.

On her campaign website, Senator Harris does have a special Pride collection—though the bedazzled jacket isn’t a part of it. Similarly, Levi’s released a special capsule for Pride Month, with all proceeds going to OutRight Action International, but the Congresswoman’s exact Pride outfit is nowhere to be found. You can, however, buy a special-edition version of the brand’s signature Trucker Jacket with a rainbow collar for $120.98, which will benefit charity. (Glamour has reached out to Levi’s for more information on Senator Harris’s jacket and will update this story when we hear back.)

Meanwhile in New York, another public figure was photographed wearing a glittery Pride-inspired look.



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Taylor Swift Dressed in Head-to-Toe Rainbow to Kick Off Pride Month


For most of her career, Taylor Swift hasn’t been one to get political, but that slowly seems to be changing: The 2018 midterms saw her taking to social media to urge fans to get out and vote—and even endorse candidates running to represent her home state of Tennessee in Congress. She’s been keeping up the new trend, too. In April, she donated $133,000 to the LGBTQ+ rights-focused Tennessee Equality Project, and on Saturday, she posted a letter on Instagram addressed to her Republican senator, Lamar Alexander of Tennessee. Her public message urged him to vote for the Equality Act recently passed by the U.S. House of Representatives, which would protect members of the LGBTQ+ community from discrimination in their homes, workplaces, schools, and other public accommodation. (Her Instagram bio now reads “Support the Equality Act,” too.)

Hours after she posted her letter, she took to the stage at iHeartRadio’s Wango Tango—and she came dressed to celebrate Pride Month in a rainbow outfit. “I just feel like who you love and how you identify, you should be able to live your life the way you want to live your life, and you should have the same exact rights as everyone else,” she said to her audience.

It was a pretty incredible outfit: The matching rainbow-patterned set of high-waisted lace-up shorts and a cropped, fringed long-sleeve top was paired with a yellow tee underneath—and some rainbow-patterned sneakers.

Kevin Mazur/Getty Images for iHeartMedia
Taylor Swift performs onstage at 2019 iHeartRadio Wango Tango presented by The JUVDERM Collection of Dermal Fillers at...
Kevin Mazur/Getty Images for iHeartMedia

That fringe!

Taylor Swift performs onstage at 2019 iHeartRadio Wango Tango presented by The JUVDERM Collection of Dermal Fillers at...
Rich Fury/Getty Images for iHeartMedia

Swift also had a surprise for fans: Panic! at the Disco’s Brendon Urie appeared on stage to sing their single, “ME!”. Urie, who identifies as pansexual, was also wearing his pride, with a T-shirt reading “100% love, 100% equality, 100% loud, 100% proud, 100% together, 100% me” in a rainbow pattern.

Brendon Urie and Taylor Swift perform onstage at 2019 iHeartRadio Wango Tango presented by The JUVDERM Collection of...
Jeff Kravitz/FilmMagic for iHeartMedia/Getty Images

It was right in line with the message Swift had sent to Sen. Alexander earlier that day: “Let’s show our pride by demanding that, on a national level, our laws truly treat all of our citizens equally,” she wrote in the caption accompanying the letter.



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Meghan Markle and Prince Harry Kick Off Pride Month with Sweet Instagram Post Declaring 'Love Is Love'


Meghan Markle and Prince Harry broke records when they launched their own Instagram account—@SussexRoyal—in April after previously sharing social media channels with Kate Middleton and Prince William.

Since that time, they’ve amassed over 8.4 million followers and have used the platform a little bit differently than we’ve come to expect from the royal family—from baby Archie’s birth announcement to commenting on other royal posts with emojis. They also have a pretty cool strategy where each month they only follow accounts dedicated to a cause or issue that is important to them. Last month it was mental health—and now in June, the Sussexes are celebrating Pride month.

“Continuing with our tradition to rotate the accounts we follow based on causes and social issues that matter to us: For the month of June we ‘proudly’ shine a light on PRIDE,” the Instagram caption reads. “This month we pay tribute to the accounts supporting the LGBTQ+ community – those young and old, their families and friends, accounts that reflect on the past and are hopeful for a deservedly more inclusive future.”

“We stand with you and support you ?,” the caption continues. “Because it’s very simple: love is love.”

The image is a collage of photos from the accounts chosen by the Duke and Duchess to highlight. The organizations are both British and American and include The Trevor Project, the Matthew Shepard Foundation, Stonewall UK, Pride, and It Gets Better.

Markle and Harry also paid a sweet tribute to Princess Diana, who did an enormous amount of work with HIV and AIDS patients in the 1990s prior to her death. They included a 1996 photo of Harry’s mom sitting with a one such patient at London Lighthouse, a center for people affected by HIV and AIDS.

Princess Diana visiting a patient at the London Lighthouse, a center for people affected by HIV and AIDS, in London, October 1996.Jayne Fincher/Getty Images

The response in the comments section has been overwhelmingly positive. Markle’s friend and makeup artist Daniel Martin wrote, “love IS LOVE ✊??❤️????.” Another fan said, “We stan for a couple that promotes inclusivity and diversity! ????❤️”

A number of the organizations also expressed their gratitude to the royal couple. “Thank you so much for your support of lgbtq+ youth! Happy pride month! ❤️?????,” It Gets Better wrote. “Thank you so much for your support in raising awareness! ❤️?,” the Matthew Shepard Foundation added.

It’s great to see the royal family supporting equal rights for all. And they’re not the only big names making a statement to kick off such an important month—also on Instagram, Taylor Swift posted a letter to her senator to raise awareness for the passage of the LGBTQ+-focused Equality Act.





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Why You Should Take Pride in Being an Outlier, According to Ashley Graham


For a crash course in self-confidence, look no further than model and podcast host Ashley Graham. She’s always been outspoken about claiming her space in fashion and beauty: Whether she’s modeling in unretouched photos or sharing her daily affirmations, she doesn’t hold back on embracing her identity.

Graham shared her keys to finding strength in her differences on a panel at the 2018 Glamour Women of the Year Summit that she moderated featuring Younger‘s Nico Tortorella, Pose‘s Indya Moore, author and comedian Phoebe Robinson, and Arrested Development‘s Alia Shawkat. The big takeaway: There’s more power in being an outlier than you may think.

PHOTO: Ilya S. Savenok / Getty Images

Ashley Graham, Indya Moore, Nico Tortorella, Alia Shawkat and Phoebe Robinson at Glamour’s WOTY Summit

The group kicked off by talking about the so-called “boxes” that their identities often fill in a creative field, like being a person of color, not conforming to the gender binary, or in Graham’s case, being a size 16. “For so long, we have been demanded to fit into boxes and we have been told we have to conform,” Graham said. “I’ve been told I have to be the perfect shape or the perfect size for sample sizes.” But, she said, speaking up for, and celebrating, her differences unlocked a new level to her career. “When I had to make my own terms, that’s when I finally became successful.”

Moore, who identifies as a gender-variant-femme, said that her gender identity was not accepted while she was growing up. “I had to navigate my existence as being misbehavior my whole life,” she said. But she says that fearlessly celebrating her identity today is the only way to live the life she wants, and to elevate other gender non-conforming folks. It’s a point reiterated by Robinson, who often found herself as the only black woman in a comedy room.”Your life is yours, and you have to go about it your own way,” she said.

Reaching that level of confidence comes from what Graham calls a “defining moment.” For her, that looked like leaning in to her size and accepting jobs where she was the only curve model. “I’ve been the token curve girl and sometimes I think if I say no will they give it to someone else or is that spot completely gone now,” Graham said. Being the first one in the room, even when it’s isolating or checking that “box,” makes room for more women later. “In my eyes, it’s necessary but it shouldn’t be forever,” she said.

2018 Glamour Women Of The Year Summit:  Women Rise

PHOTO: Ilya S. Savenok

Ashley Graham, Indya Moore, Nico Tortorella, Alia Shawkat and Phoebe Robinson at Glamour’s WOTY Summit

It doesn’t matter who you are or what your background is, the panelists said: You’re worthy of your place in the world. “You are bold, you are brilliant, you are beautiful, and you are loved,” Graham reminded the audience.

Graham first explained in her July 2017 Glamour cover story that it’s the very things that set her apart—and, at one time, that weren’t celebrated in mainstream culture—that make her happiest to be herself. It’s a message that she reiterated on the panel today. “I felt like a token in the beginning [of my career],” she said in her cover story. “But now there are so many curve models—and more opportunities. I feel like a queen [on those jobs] because I’m the only one like me. I’m like, ‘Yes, I’m the curve ruler!'”

Find out more about Glamour‘s 2018 Women of the Year here.

Related Stories:

Go Ahead and Steal Ashley Graham’s Powerful Daily Affirmation

Ashley Graham: ‘We Need More Size Diversity in Beauty Ads’

Ashley Graham on the Difference Between Tokenism and True Size Inclusivity on the Runway



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Taylor Swift Just Kicked Off Pride Month in Chicago With an Incredibly Powerful Speech


June kicks off Pride Month in many cities around the world—and Taylor Swift was on hand in Chicago to get it going at her concert on Saturday night. Right before she launched into her song “Delicate,” the singer gave an emotional speech to the crowd that was dedicated to the LGBTQ+ community.

“It’s very brave to be vulnerable about your feelings in any situation, but it’s even more brave to be honest about your feelings and who you love when you know that it might be met with adversity from society,” she said while wearing a rainbow dress.

“This month and every month I want to send my love and respect to everybody who has been brave enough to be honest about how they feel, to live their lives as they are, as they feel they should be, as they identify,” Swift added.

“This is a month where I think we need to celebrate how far we’ve come, but I think we also need to acknowledge how far we have left to go. I want to send my love and respect to everybody who hasn’t felt comfortable enough to come out yet … and may you do that on your own time and may we end up in a world where everyone can live and love equally and no one has to be afraid to all say how they feel,” she continued.

“When it comes to feelings and when it comes to love and searching for someone to spend your whole life with… it’s all just really, really delicate,” Swift closed. “You know?”

You can imagine where it went from there. Fans loved it too:

Watch it below:

Related Stories:

H&M Just Came Out With a New Pride Collection

Lena Waithe Wore a Pride Cape to the Met Gala, and Twitter’s Loving It

Here’s How Pride Is Being Celebrated Around the World This Weekend





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H&M Launches a Collection for Pride Month


In 2018, fashion brands aren’t shy about voicing their values—and putting their money where their mouths (and their marketing campaigns) are. H&M is the latest to show its support for Pride Month, which starts on June 1, and the LGBTQ+ community with the launch of its latest collection.

On May 31, H&M’s online shop and select brick-and-mortar locations will carry an apparel and accessories collection tied to Pride, which will include brightly-colored tees, sequin shorts, and slogan sweatshirts—all priced under$50. A percentage of proceeds from the collection will benefit the United Nations Free & Equal, the UN’s official campaign against the criminalization of LGBTQ+ folk worldwide. “H&M believes in everybody’s right to love who they want,” H&M’s head of Menswear Design, Andreas Lowenstam, said in a statement. “We hope people can use H&M’s Pride collection to celebrate their belief in equal love.” The brand’s celebration of Pride Month doesn’t stop at clothing: It’s also collaborating with OUT magazine on a special campaign, titled “Pride OUT Loud,” to kick off the collection’s launch. It features LGBTQ+ figures like Olympian Gus Kenworthy, singer Kim Petras, and artist-activist Gabrielle Richardson.

As a model and founder of Art Hoe Collective—a gallery curated on Instagram for queer creatives of color—Richardson has a strong tie to the collection’s message of global love and inclusiveness. “I just want to let people know that they exist and they’re not alone,” she tells Glamour about her appearance in the campaign.

For Richardson, it’s the collection’s message tees (with words like “Equality” and “Pride,” which she wears in her campaign shot) that are central to supporting LGBTQ+ folks through fashion: “People want to start a conversation, people want to start a dialogue. When you have something like a shirt that says ‘equality,’ people see it and they have an immediate visceral reaction. If anything, that will help facilitate these important conversations. [When] it’s something as universal as a shirt, it can really set the fire. It can really start the conversation.”

Part of acceptance also comes from having the support of far-reaching, recognizable brands like H&M. “Recognition is strength,” Richardson says. Through this type of global campaign, she can reach queer folk who perhaps haven’t seen themselves represented in this type of imagery before. “I think the amazing thing about big brands like H&M that are so accessible, that are so big, is that it can reach so many people all over the world, all over the country,” she explains, “and places where a little queer kid didn’t think there was anyone else like them. [Those kids] can see their reflection through someone else who has gone through the same things as them and has a very similar narrative that they didn’t really completely understand before.”

Then, there’s the expectation-defying component of appearing in a Pride campaign alongside four other creatives: Richardson says this campaign shatters assumptions of what “queerness” looks like by featuring a diverse group of models, including herself. “I think it’s important for people when they see me in this campaign, they realize that [queerness] can look like anyone,” Richardson tells us. “Queerness can be a black girl who’s just wearing jeans and a t-shirt.”

“I just think it’s important for you to stand strong for who you are and let people know what you’re about as soon as they see you,” Richardson says. When H&M’s Pride Collection becomes available to shop on May 31, people of all identities can do just that.

Get your first look at H&M’s Pride OUT Loud campaign and collection, below.

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