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Oscars 2019: Everyone Can Relate to Olivia Colman's Best Actress Acceptance Speech


Best Actress is one of the most coveted titles to take home from the Academy Awards. And at the Oscars 2019, that honor went to Olivia Colman for her performance in The Favourite from a competitive group that included A Star Is Born‘s Lady Gaga and awards-season favorite Glenn Close of The Wife. Colman accepted her award with a speech that revealed how shocked she was to win the award—and the Internet is loving it.

Colman opened her acceptance speech for portraying Queen Anne of England with a stunned quote: “This is hilarious,” she said. In her brief but wide-ranging speech, she went on to thank many people (including: her husband, her children, and her costars) while repeating that she found her win quite “funny.”

The speech ranged from inspiring (“Any little girl who’s practicing her speech on the tele—you never know!”) to hysterical (“If I forget anybody, I’ll find you later and give you a massive snog”), all in a matter of minutes. Colman didn’t seem to expect her win, and it was a sight to behold. (You can view the entire speech on Twitter.)

Kevin Winter/Getty Images

And, in an iconic conclusion, she closed her speech by blowing a kiss to Lady Gaga in the front row.

Oscars 2019 Olivia Colman accepts the Best Actress award
Ed Herrera/Getty Images

The speech was off-the-cuff, shell-shocked, and incredibly charming. Naturally, the Internet had a lot to say about the “delightful” moment and the performance that earned it.

Some asked for more projects where Colman gives a speech, just because her surprised reaction to winning Best Actress felt so relatable.

Others loved that she gave a heartfelt call out to her fellow nominees, Lady Gaga in particular.

She may be an Academy Award winner, but make no mistake: under pressure, “Olivia Colman is all of us.”





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Jessica Biel Fell Asleep on Her Date Night With Justin Timberlake, and I So Relate


Justin Timberlake‘s birthday is today (January 31), and to celebrate he and Jessica Biel went out last night in New York City. Things got off to quite the hilarious start, though. In perhaps the most relatable move ever, Biel fell asleep in the car before their date even began.

The “Mirrors” singer filmed the entire situation and posted it to Instagram. “Happy birthday to me, happy birthday to me,” he sings to himself quietly before panning to Biel, who couldn’t be bothered with anything besides her REM cycle. Wow. Same. Me.

Timberlake starts singing a little bit louder, and that’s what eventually wakes Biel up. “I’m just preparing for our big night out,” she says, laughing. “I’m just preparing!” Timberlake then chuckles to himself and gives some side eye. But the real shade should go to him for rustling Biel from her shut-eye. She looked so comfy!

Watch this all go down for yourself, below.

Listen, she’s onto something: I mean, why spend time and money going out for your birthday when you could sleep? I live in New York City. It’s cold right now. Really cold. Too cold to go outside. Napping sounds like way more fun than dealing with this frigid tundra.

Justin Timberlake and Jessica Biel tied the knot in October 2012 after about five years of dating. They met at a party in Hollywood. “When I met Jess, it was undeniable how beautiful she is,” Timberlake wrote in his book Hindsight: & All the Things I Can’t See in Front of Me, released last fall. “I made some sort of sarcastic comment, really dry. Nobody got it except her. She laughed, and I noticed, all of a sudden, and in the way where you wonder if a person’s like you, if they have a very dry, dark sense of humor, too.”



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If You're Freezing in Your Office Right Now, Cynthia Nixon Can Relate


If you’ve ever had to drag a space heater into your cubicle or resort to that workplace Snuggie tucked under your desk to beat the office chill, New York gubernatorial candidate Cynthia Nixon understands how you feel.

Nixon, the SATC alum up against Governor Andrew M. Cuomo, sparked a conversation we didn’t know we needed over office thermostats when her team requested that event organizers turn up the heat (literally) at Wednesday night’s scheduled debate between the two, hosted by New York station WCBS-TV.

Cuomo reportedly prefers his AC blasting high, but because Nixon refuses to shiver through her first and only debate with New York’s current governor, she’s asking for a comfortable 76 degrees. According to The New York Times, Nixon strategist Rebecca Katz wrote to WCBS-TV with the request, noting that working conditions are “notoriously sexist when it comes to room temperature, so we just want to make sure we’re all on the same page here.”

In other words, blame the patriarchy for your chattering teeth.

The idea of sexist room temperatures has now ignited a Cold Room War of sorts. The conversation is, in part, a matter of workplace attire deemed appropriate for men and women: Men can usually don a suit and feel perfectly comfortable in an arctic room. But for anyone who shows up for a 9-to-5 in a dress or a skirt, office climate quickly becomes an issue.

Kerry Howley, a professor at the University of Iowa, shared her perspective on Twitter and with the Times, saying that she feels like “cold office temperatures are a burden that are placed on women.”

“I feel like it affects performance in a way that is surprising to people. I become less effusive, less articulate, less extroverted when I’m uncomfortable with the temperature,” she added. Other women also chimed in quickly: “Cynthia Nixon asks for the debate hall to be 76 degrees, and I’m sitting here in my work Snuggie wondering if this is actually the opening salvo of the revolution,” writer Monica Hesse shared.

Still, plenty of people (both men and women) dismissed Nixon’s 76-degrees request as simply too hot.

While the discussion may feel heated on the Internet, Governor Cuomo’s camp responded to the whole situation with a statement that can be best described as, well, chilly:

“Unlike Cynthia Nixon, the Governor has more important things to focus on than the temperature of a room,” Lis Smith, a Cuomo campaign spokeswoman told The Hill.

Nixon, for her part, isn’t letting this get in her way. She told Refinery 29 that she’ll debate Cuomo in a parka if she has to. We’re sure anyone sitting at their desk, wrapped in a blanket while doing their job effectively, can relate.

MORE: Cynthia Nixon Releases Sex and the City–Themed Campaign Merch





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Elizabeth Warren Once Struggled to Find Child Care—and Every Working Mother Can Relate


For millions of American families, securing affordable, high-quality child care is a challenge if not an impossibility—one that Senator Elizabeth Warren is all too familiar with.

On Wednesday evening, the Massachusetts lawmaker delivered the keynote address at the National Women’s Law Center’s 45th anniversary gala and in a heartfelt speech, revealed that if it hadn’t been for the help of her 78-year-old Aunt Bee, she likely wouldn’t be a U.S. Senator today.

Warren started her career as a teacher, but when she ended the school year pregnant with her first child, she wasn’t asked to return. Throwing herself into life as a mother and wife, Warren knew she wanted to do something more. After law school, she got a job teaching law, but her life was quickly thrown into chaos when her babysitter quit. Cycling through different child care options, managing the requirements of her job, and raising two young kids was an endless struggle—one Warren felt she was failing at. During a phone conversation with her 78-year-old Aunt Bee, Warren broke down crying and decided the only option she had was to quit her job.

Without hesitating, Bee told Warren that, though she couldn’t arrive until Thursday, she would be there to help. Sure enough, she arrived with seven suitcases and her Pekingese in tow—and stayed with Warren and her family for 16 years.

“I’m a United States Senator today in part because my Aunt Bee rescued me on that Thursday in 1979,” Warren said. Without child care, I was a goner. And I know how lucky I was because so many working moms don’t have an Aunt Bee who can fly in and help out.”

Though plenty has changed in the decades since Warren began teaching law, affordable, high-quality child care remains one of the most significant challenges for working parents. According to a recent report from the Democratic staff of the Congress Joint Economic Committee, American families spend an average of 15 percent of their income on child care—and in states like California, New York, Arizona, Colorado, and Oregon, it’s not uncommon for that total to hit the 20 percent mark.

For many mothers in two-parent households, leaving the workforce entirely is a more viable financial option than staying at their jobs and paying for child care. But for millions of mothers who serve as the head of household, this is not an option—and they’re spending anywhere from 25 to 50 percent of their earnings on child care. And in order to make ends meet, they may have to sacrifice the best child care options for ones that they can afford.

It goes without saying that the benefits of high-quality, affordable child care are vast—for both women and their children. Women not only have more education and professional opportunities but stand to earn significantly more money during their careers if they’re able to find top-notch child care options for their kids. This is especially true for low-income moms who, according to the JEC report, could earn up to $90,000 more over the course of their professional lives.

And for kids, enrollment in first-rate early learning programs often benefits them beyond their adolescence and well into adulthood. They’re more likely to get higher grades in school, enroll in college, earn more once they’re in the working world, and have overall better health.

Warren, of course, knows just how valuable high-quality child care can be, and she’s taking steps in the Senate to make this a reality. She’s backing legislation that would help cut child care costs for low- and middle-income families. She’s introduced the Schedules That Work Act so that low- and minimum-wage workers so can have some basic fairness in their schedules—and not have to scramble with going back to school, scheduling doctor’s visits, and, of course, handling child care because they work jobs with unpredictable hours. And just like public schools provide a space for kindergarteners to learn how to read, write, do math, and interact with other kids five days a week, she wants to create programs so that two-year-olds, three-year-olds, four-year-olds—and their families—have opportunities to access this type of early childhood education.

“It’s a big goal, but no one builds a future without investment,” Warren said. “Whether you and I have small children or not, we have an interest in the future of this country—and that means we have an interest—and a responsibility—to invest in America’s children. And that means making sure that their teachers and caregivers are adequately paid and trained…and it means making sure that when parents are working, their children are safe and loved and learning and growing.”

As she concluded her remarks, Warren drove home that access to quality child care can’t be a solo endeavor—it’s one that everyone needs to get behind.

“Until we decide, until all of us decide—men and women, married and single, black and white, old and young—that we are willing to invest more in all our children, then we cannot build a country in which women have an equal opportunity to build a future,” Warren said. “The energy to make these changes will come from people like you, people who fight for equality every day. And most importantly, the energy will come from the many people all across the country who have joined this fight and made it a part of their lives.”



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