| Find a steal on a whole slew of wardrobe essentials. | If you have trouble reading this message, view it in a browser. | | | | | The 17 Best Picks from Everlane's Huge 'Choose What You Pay' Sale | | Everlane doesn't exactly have a habit of doing things according to the established playbook. That's why so many people love the internet-friendly, radically transparent brand. It's not every company that'll tell you where your T-shirt or jeans are made, after all. And when you add an eco-conscious streak and a devotion to fair pricing into the mix, you've got a decent recipe for shopping (and style) success. Read More | | | | | | | | | Brad Pitt Knows the Fate of Cliff's Wife in Once Upon a Time in Hollywood | | Quentin Tarantino's Once Upon a Time in Hollywood is a meandering recreation of '60s Hollywood that weaves together dozens of intertwined narratives of both real and fictional people. That makes it somewhat easy to forget some of the film's unanswered questions. In a brief—and controversial—turn in the film, Tarantino introduces the idea that Brad Pitt's Cliff Booth might have killed his own wife. Though it's rumored around this fictional Hollywood that Cliff is a murderer, Tarantino's film never answers the question, leaving it as an ambiguous, and problematic, question mark. Read More | | | | | | | | | All Hail Aaron Rodgers' Glorious Canadian Tuxedo | | Today is a blessed day. Because yesterday, Aaron Rodgers, the quarterback for the Green Bay Packers decided to wear an absolutely fantastic Canadian tuxedo. A photograph of said denim tux was taken. And today, I saw that photo as a single shaft of sunlight filtered through my kitchen window, bathing me in a warm glow as a choir of angels whispered the words "bolo tie" in perfect harmony. Read More | | | | | | | | | Elizabeth Warren Was Well-Received at the Native American Presidential Forum. Mark Charles Was the Main Event. | | The Declaration of Independence refers to Natives as "merciless Indian savages," said Mark Charles, the only Native American running for president, as he neared the climax of his stump speech at the first-ever Native American Presidential Forum in Sioux City, Iowa. "This makes our Declaration of Independence a systemically white-supremacist document," he said, enunciating the syllables of "sys-te-ma-ti-cally," as though the word itself could be broken down into its phonological structures. When he punctuated that line, a few women lele'd at the top of their lungs—a feminine tribal tremolo akin to the snaps you might hear at millennial gatherings these days. Read More | | | | | | | | | Aida Rodriguez Was Kidnapped Twice. Now That's Part of Her Stand-Up. | | Right out of the gate, Aida Rodriguez's stand-up begs the question, "Am I allowed to laugh at that?" In her raucously funny sets, Rodriguez excavates her difficult childhood, plumbing punchlines out of unimaginable heartbreak. As a child, Rodriguez was kidnapped twice—once by her mother, who took her from her father in the Dominican Republic and brought her to America. The second time, Rodriguez's grandmother and uncle took her from New York City to Florida in an effort to protect her from her mother's romance with a murderer. That uncle, a gay man, was later murdered in a hate crime. Rodriguez also speaks candidly about the challenges she overcame to achieve success in the white male-dominated world of stand-up, including racism, misogyny, and raising two children out of her car. This is Rodriguez's genius—using comedy to turn pain into progress, to give voice to the voiceless, and to laugh instead of cry, as she puts it. Read More | | | | | | | | Follow Us | | | | Unsubscribe Privacy Notice | | esquire.com ©2019 Hearst Communications Inc. All Rights Reserved. Hearst Email Privacy, 300 W 57th St., Fl. 19 (sta 1-1), New York, NY 10019 | | | | | | |
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