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Donna Dees-Thomases, Glamour’s 2000 Woman of the Year, Is the Friendliest Person to Change The World


In 2000, Donna Dees-Thomases celebrated Mother’s Day by going for a walk.

About 1 million people joined her.

It was the Million Mom March, a giant grassroots mobilization of moms against gun violence that Dees-Thomases had organized over the course of just 10 months. A mother of two girls living in suburban New Jersey, she had watched the Columbine massacre open up a summer of violence that ended with an attack on a day camp at a Jewish Community Center outside of L.A. in August of 1999 that left one dead and five injured. The sight of terrified children fleeing a gunman shocked her into action.

At this point in the story, which Dees-Thomases is telling me from the backyard of her home in Louisiana, she interrupts herself to pet a dog that has wandered into her yard. I hear panting in the background, as she begins to talk again about governmental inaction in the face of gun violence. Then she adds, ecstatically, ”Two goldendoodles! Beautiful.”

It’s this kind of extreme, almost comic friendliness that helped her organize a historic event and launch a national movement—and the reason Glamour honored her in 2000 as a Woman of the Year.

Dees-Thomases spent 10 feverish months working part-time as a publicist for Late Show With David Letterman, parenting, and organizing the Million Moms March. In the days before social media, before smartphones, before virality, Dees-Thomases used every connection she had ever made and worked every hour she could stay awake. As her plan, which had started as bullet points on scratch paper, grew into a national news event, she promoted it by debating the head of the National Rifle Organization on Meet the Press and securing a spot on Oprah. She wore denim overalls most of the time. On the day of the march, she was so tired she nearly put on mismatched sneakers. The day was a smash success, and honors, including Glamour’s Woman of the Year award, followed.

And then? You know what happened, even if you don’t know Dees-Thomases’s story. The Million Moms March was a massive success. But the mass shootings of the Columbine era continued. Innocent people died. Children died, all the time. There was no runaway movement that defeated the gun lobby and changed federal regulations and took over state houses. In 2019 there were more mass shootings than days in the year.

“Grassroots, progressive causes are not easy,” says Dees-Thomases, who is remarkably open about her own shortcomings. “We struggled so much to create an organization out of it. We attempted two mergers after the march, we struggled as an organization, we had branding issues. I think we overused our database for fund-raising.” She shares these lessons with the leaders of the other organizations she supports (and thinks you should support too): Moms Demand Action, Brady Chapter, the Coalition to Stop Gun Violence, Giffords, and March for Our Lives.

“Twenty years later I’m beating myself up a little less, because I’ve watched groups like the Women’s March struggle,” she says. “It’s difficult when you go from a Facebook page to activists across the country.” And gun-violence work, in particular, is hard (“No one wants to have a movement created by trauma and death”). She believes—she knows—that grassroots organizing to change law and life is possible and necessary. “Million Moms March was a grassroots group of women, many of whom had never organized so much as a carpool before,” she says. “But they found inner strength, used their talents and their ability to stand up to the gun lobby, and say, ‘This is what we’re doing.’”



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Glamour Women of the Year 2002: Oral Lee Brown


To celebrate the thirtieth anniversary of Glamour’s Women of the Year awards, we are delving back into our archives to highlight some of the incredible women we have honored over the last three decades.

In January, we’ve cast the spotlight on activism – and the incredible Oral Lee Brown. Today, when you think about activism, you might conjure up Greta Thunberg, for example – and a WOTY recipient in 2019 – or the #womensmarch or the powerful Black Lives Matter movement. But sometimes, the actions of one person alone, even in the smallest of communities, can leave an also indelible mark.

In our December 2002 issue, Oral Lee Brown was photographed with five of the kids she was putting through college. 

1987 was the year that Oral Lee Brown met an eight-year-old girl on the street in Oakland, California. The girl asked for a quarter – Oral Lee Brown responded with the question: why aren’t you in school? The little girl shrugged.

Unable to shake her encounter, the real estate agent made up her mind to help Oakland’s at-risk children. That year, she adopted an entire first-grade class at Brookfield Elementary School, promising to pay for their college education if they graduated high school.

Oral Lee Brown accepts a Minerva Award on day 3 of Maria Shriver's Women's Conference 2010
Oral Lee Brown accepting a Minerva Award at Maria Shriver’s Women’s Conference 2010.Dr. Billy Ingram/Wire Image

She saved $10,000 a year from a $45,000 a year salary – and through careful investments and local fundraising events managed to grow her pot for the kids to over $1million dollars. 19 of the 23 children graduated. Oral Lee came through on her promise and sent them to college.

That was in 2002. Since then, she established the Oral Lee Brown Foundation, which has, to date, supported 136 students from low-income families. She offers mentoring, tutoring and financial bursaries and in 2005 established a Saturday school, where they could take children from all grades, rather than just first.

Oral Lee Brown at the 2002 Glamour Women of the Year Awards.
Oral Lee Brown at the 2002 Glamour Women of the Year Awards. Matthew Peyton/Getty Images

There have now been eight phases of her official first-graders’ program. Phase 5 kids graduated high school in 2017 and are now attending colleges, while the children in Phase 6, 7 and 8 are in high school, middle school and elementary school respectively.
The actions of one woman sparked a movement that has continued to have an enormous impact on the long-term futures of some of the most at-risk children in Oakland, California.

www.oralleebrownfoundation.org



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Pregnant Celebrities 2020: All the Stars Who Announced They’re Expecting Babies This Year


Check back here for updates on pregnant celebrities, celebrities expecting, due dates, and so much more.

The new decade has only just begun, and it’s already filled with so much happy news from celebrities expecting babies in 2020. If this year is anything like 2019, the Hollywood baby boom will keep going strong. America Ferrera ended the year with the announcement of her second child, while Michelle Williams kicked off the new one with a pregnancy, an engagement to Hamilton and Fosse/Verdon director Thomas Kail, and a major Golden Globes speech about women’s choices. Oscar nominee Chloë Sevigny also announced in 2020 that she’s pregnant with her first child.

We can’t wait to see who else announces they are expecting new little bundles of joy as the year goes on. For now, though, here are all the pregnant celebrities and celebrities who are expecting that you’ll be hearing about in 2020. A big congratulations to all of them is in store.



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The Women's March 2020 Is This Weekend. Go, So You Don't Have to Go Next Year.


In 2018, the marches were smaller, which was to be expected—it’s almost impossible to recreate a historic event.

In 2019, discord among the national leadership of the march and serious accusations of anti-Semitism against some of its leaders fractured and fizzled the momentum. (Since then, the original leadership has been almost completely replaced with a new board of directors.)

Millions of marchers in 2017 turned into hundreds of thousands in 2018 turned into tens of thousands in 2019. Now what? The relentlessness of bad news—and the feeling of our powerlessness in the face of it—is overwhelming. The world is burning and kids sicken and die in cages and women’s rights to health can be rescinded and wars can be started on social media. How do you even presume to respond to that?

“I think that there’s a lot of sense of people not necessarily knowing how to make their best contribution” says Rachel O’Leary Carmona, the new COO of the Women’s March. “There’s been a lot of efforts to distract women from building power, and a lot of distractions in the news—it’s very hard with a country going through an impeachment of the president, an international provocation that brought us to the brink of war, and in the midst of a presidential election,” she added. “But I think that’s why it’s more important than ever all those things are a demonstration of the abuses of power that Trump has engaged with.”

“How do I contribute?” is the first question that so many of us ask about our role in making the world feel less like one all-encompassing PortaPotty. After Trump’s election, thousands of people—and women in particular, if the outcome of the 2018 midterms is an indication—were spurred to participate in politics and political activism far outside their comfort zone, whether it embarrassed them or felt a little lame or not. Women surged into office. But for more of us, “How do I contribute?” is also the last question we ask before throwing up our hands.

The thing that the Women’s March did so well was give us an answer that made political engagement simple. In sending a national invite to join a clear action that required merely that people be able to move in one direction, it welcomed millions of people to the world of protest. The Women’s March allows people to participate in an act of organized political protest at little personal cost. To be a part of a march, show up. It’s quicker and easier than (but not a replacement for) voting. It’s a bridge between the isolation of reading the news and the much bigger ask of phone banking or donating. It’s not sufficient on its own, but it’s also the easiest possible first step.

The Women’s March also made people feel good. That’s partially why it’s treated with suspicion, as if having a good time means what you’re doing isn’t also serious. (Meanwhile, attendees at Trump rallies don’t seem to do a lot of hand wringing about mixing fun and politics.) Marching in 2017 made joining together in a massive action feel both consequential and joyous. Winning in 2020, not to mention the general project of making America more just and more livable, will require more from us than spending a few hours in the streets. Marching is often less like protesting or canvassing, and more like praying—it refocuses and centers you, it sharpens your resolve, it can form exceptionally strong bonds and build a sense of fellowship.

“The broader goal is to create a big tent for people to organize with community and build capacity and build relationships so that there’s an infrastructure for feminist organizing in 2020,” Carmona says. Marching isn’t a replacement for other forms of activism, it’s fuel for them. If marching isn’t your thing, there are plenty of alternatives, even more effective ways of influencing political and social change. But we shouldn’t dismiss the form of activism that welcomed millions of people to political involvement—or worst of all, feel embarrassed about it.

Don’t wait for 2021, for the fifth march, for another Trump administration. If you’d go next year, go this time too. Better to be there when we still have time to march, to donate, to register ourselves and others, and to vote. Better to feel a little dumb at an under-attended march, a little cold in the January weather, a little unsure if waving a sign around makes a difference. Ask the woman next to you—maybe she’ll have an idea.

Jenny Singer is a staff writer for Glamour.



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Selena Gomez Rang in the New Year Lounging on a Yacht in Hawaii


We aren’t even through the first week of January yet, but Selena Gomez’s style is already winning 2020.

Rather than spending New Year’s Eve at a crowded party, Gomez jetted off to the islands of Hawaii with a group of friends to ring in the new year both in warmth and in style.

“Selena is spending a week on the Hawaiian island of Oahu to ring in 2020,” a source shared with E! News. “She is staying in a house with her group of close girlfriends and they all are enjoying a relaxing vacation with beach time and hanging out together.”

The source added that on December 31 the group boarded a private yacht for a sail around the island where the singer was photographed lounging atop the deck in an adorable olive green bathing suit by wanderlust.

The exact top and bottom that Gomez wore are sold out on Wanderlust’s website, but, the swimsuit’s matching bandeau top is still available—and on sale—for $63. And a pair of lowrise bikini bottoms are still available in the same olive green color as well.

“Selena seemed completely relaxed and happy. She had no makeup on and was very casual and comfortable with everyone,” the source noted to E! about Gomez’s time in Hawaii. “It was a mellow day and just a chance to be out on the water enjoying the perfect weather.”

The photos of the starlet’s island vacation came on the same day Gomez herself shared some of her own favorite photos and videos of 2019 to her Instagram Stories.

As Glamour previously reported, the photos included snaps of Gomez playing with Taylor Swift’s cat; a group photo of Gomez and her friends at a Kacey Musgraves concert; footage of her recording her song “Look at Her Now;” and video clips from her other travels in 2019 including her trip to Kenya.

Gomez’s 2020 is looking to be just as good as her 2019 considering her third album, Rare, will drop on January 10.



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Here's How Your Favorite Celebrities Celebrated a Happy New Year


Happy New Year—and welcome to a new decade!

Celebs celebrated 2020 everywhere from house parties to their own couches, proving sometimes they are just like us. However, some—like Jennifer Lopez and Kylie Jenner—went super glam for their New Year’s Eve shindigs at undisclosed locations. Reese Witherspoon popped bottles of champagne and Joe Jonas and Sophie Turner busted out goofy glasses, because of course they did.

Here’s how all your favorites said happy new year and hello to 2020.

Jennifer Lopez and Alex Rodriguez

The power couple rang in 2020 at a party with all of their children. Obviously, it was super glam.

J. Lo also posted a retrospective video looking back at all the happened in 2019—from her engagement to Hustlers. “2019… it’s the last day of a decade… wow… when I think back to 2010… and think of all the things that happened between now and then I smile softly and contently on the inside… because even though some of the tougher moments popped into my head first, I realize I survived them all and they led me into the best time of my life so far,” she wrote on Instagram. “I honestly wouldn’t change a thing…I feel stronger and more at peace with who I am now than I ever have… I hope that you all can look back in the same way and enjoy every moment of your journey. Savor it, enjoy it!!!! It’s the 20’s. Get ready to roar!!! And laugh and dance and live live live! ♥️♥️♥️ “

Leah Remini

Remini joined J. Lo and A-Rod to ring in 2020. “Just because you don’t make the cut doesn’t mean we don’t love you @arod. We just loved our picture more…Happy New Year!!!” she wrote in an Instagram caption.

Joe Jonas and Sophie Turner

We’re not sure where they were, but as usual, Jonas and Turner looked to be having the most fun in their 2020 gear. “Happy New Years Everyone! The best year of my life. So far. 2020 vision all they Way! ❤️?,” Jonas posted on Instagram.

Jenna Dewan

Dewan’s daughter Everly was sick so she and boyfriend Steve Kazee spent a quiet evening at home celebrating. The pair will welcome their first child together in 2020.



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