| The style king stepped out in Brussels wearing a look you can and should copy. | If you have trouble reading this message, view it in a browser. | | | | | Brad Pitt's Enviable Fit Is the Stuff of Your Monochrome Dreams | | No one has demonstrated easygoing style more masterfully of late than Brad Pitt. Pitt did it again Wednesday when he was spotted stepping out in Brussels draped in shades of blue and gray, mastering the art of near-monochrome-dressing and offering a few doses of style inspiration you can steal. Read More | | | | | | | | | Todd Snyder's Massive Sale Is Destroying Any Semblance of Our Self Control | | The hardest thing about clicking over to Todd Snyder's ongoing sale section might just be making sure you have enough time—and self control. There's so much good stuff to get through, and so much that could easily take up residence in your closet, that picking just one thing (or, hell, five things) poses a very real challenge. We've scoured the entire sale section to find 27 things you should consider buying right this instant and wearing all through the remaining days of winter, then well into spring (and summer, and fall). Happy shopping. Read More | | | | | | | | | Lululemon's 'We Made Too Much' Sale Has Everything You Need to Get Moving Again | | Lululemon's 'We Made Too Much' Sale Has Everything You Need to Get Moving Again DEK: Are you itching to get back to an exercise routine unfettered by the direst realities of a pandemic? Maybe you're in the market for some new stuff to complement a regimen you picked up over the last year that you're actually enjoying and want to keep pursuing. Or maybe you just want to take a walk around in the sun and feel hopeful for a few minutes, because goddamn do we ever deserve a little bit of hopefulness nowadays. Whatever the reason you're getting out there and moving again, Lululemon's "We Made Too Much" sale has the gear to help you do it. From the brand's much-beloved casual pants and sweats to workout-ready shorts and tops, the brand has you covered for running, jumping, or just hanging. The only catch? Styles and sizes are going fast. We rounded up some of the very best options to scoop now—before someone else does. Read More | | | | | | | | | The NCAA Ends Up Looking Silly in Any Venue It Cannot Control. Like, Say, the Supreme Court. | | "As someone who has been banging his head against the wall for almost five decades on the subject of the fundamental absurdity of the National Collegiate Athletic Association," Charlie P. Pierce writes, "it never ceases to amaze me how threadbare and silly the NCAA's arguments for its business model—nay, its continued existence—appear whenever the NCAA makes them in a venue it cannot control, or one not shot through with its apologists and sycophants." Like, say, a court of law. Read More | | | | | | | | | Should Hollywood Be Boycotting Georgia Over Its Voting Law? It's Complicated. | | If you're familiar with the inner workings of filming a big-studio Hollywood movie nowadays, you might know that Georgia is a pretty popular place to shoot a film. Now, the future of Hollywood and Georgia's working relationship could be in jeopardy. On March 25, Republican Governor Brian Kemp signed a voting bill that implements several restrictions to voters. The restrictions include ID requirements for absentee voting, fewer ballot drop boxes, and the banning of giving food and water to voters in line. Logan director James Mangold and Luke Skywalker himself, Mark Hamill, have tweeted that they will not film any more movies in Georgia—which could be the beginnings of a Hollywood boycott of working in the state. While we have yet to see if Hamill and Mangold's comments will lead to any significant change in Georgia's film industry, it's already clear that not everyone agrees with the idea of a full-on boycott. Read More | | | | | | | | | Why We're Still Talking About Tommy Boy | | Released on this day in 1995, Tommy Boy should have been just another disposable, slapdash Lorne Michaels cash-grab. In the wake of the one-two box-office triumphs of The Blues Brothers and Caddyshack in the summer of 1980, the SNL impresario quickly recognized that there was piles of money to be made in farming out his legendary sketch show's cast members to Hollywood in exchange for a lucrative producer credit via a sweet deal with Paramount. But what makes Tommy Boy such a giddy and guilt-free guilty pleasure is the sublime push-pull joy-buzzer hilarity that shoots like sparks between David Spade and Chris Farley. Read More | | | | | | | | Follow Us | | | | Unsubscribe Privacy Notice | | esquire.com ©2021 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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