Picture this: It's a Saturday night in New York, and you're going to the SNL afterparty, one of the most coveted tickets in the city. Bad Bunny is going to be there, so you obviously have to dress to impress. What do you wear? If you're Pedro Pascal, the answer is a pair of New Balance 237s. Pedro Pascal is a certifiable street style god, in my books. His style is approachable and effortlessly cool. Whether he's donning a rugged jacket or a vintage tee or a sick pair of kicks, he's keeping things casual, yet never too casual. And after appearing as a surprise guest on Saturday Night Live this weekend, he hit the cast afterparty in what very few could get away with: dad shoes. |
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Which is exactly what he did at a campaign rally in New Hampshire on Monday. |
| In telling the story of the Osage murders, the director strips everything down—and the result is pure horror, laid bare. |
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Welcome to the 2023 Gadget Awards. Our editors spent another year testing every new release across tech, wellness, and smart-home accessories to definitively tell you what's worth your money. This year, the standouts included everything from forward-thinking TVs, big smartphone upgrades (iPhone had a good year for once), Therabody's venture into the wellness space, and even a sofa with built-in subwoofers. |
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The not-so-humble hooded sweatshirt is still the reigning champ. |
| In his (alleged) last novel, the America Fantastica author leaves it all on the floor. |
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Like a lot of 20th-century bands still releasing music in the early part of the 21st, The Rolling Stones have a problem of inverse longevity: The longer they exist, the less essential their new output is. That's because Mick Jagger, Keith Richards, Ronnie Wood, and Charlie Watts (who died in 2021), plus the others who passed through over the years, did their best work in the first two decades after debuting on American stages on June 5, 1964. Grabbing inspiration from the political and cultural turmoil of the 1960s and early '70s, their dark, politically uncompromising music visited heartfelt longing, raw sexual hunger, a schoolboy love of R&B, and societal decay—often in the same tune. But since the Stones have only occasionally been noted for their new work, including 2016's stripped-down Blue & Lonesome and, more recently, 2023's Hackney Diamonds, it seems only right to revisit their 26 studio releases, which have arrived with regularity since their debut. |
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