Another day, another helping of wackadoo from Republican vice-presidential candidate J. Divan Vance. The man is the Comstock Lode of weird ideas, most of which he has decided to share with the world during his fairly brief time as a public figure, and which are now being eagerly mined by various media concerns. On Thursday, it was The Christian Science Monitor that struck the richest vein, discovering a speech JDV had given back in 2021 to a conservative gathering. The topic was the disturbances that had occurred in the wake of the murder of George Floyd by the Minneapolis police. Vance had a...well, a theory, I guess you'd call it. |
|
|
Your ultimate guide to all things outerwear. |
| See if your favorites made our expanded list. |
|
|
Save on the stack your suit deserves. |
|
|
| You have an idea in your head of who Zoë Kravitz is. Edgy. Boho. Hippie. Cool. She probably says "Perú" with an accent. Maybe it's the tiny tattoos that curl around her hands and arms that signal something, or maybe it's her striking resemblance to her mom, Lisa Bonet, who exudes the mystical energy of a shaman or healer. Maybe her dad is the defining factor. After all, Lenny Kravitz has been synonymous with the concept of "cool" since he broke big in the nineties.
The idea of having her own fame felt good at one point, Kravitz admits. She wanted to taste what it was like to be known as more than just someone's daughter or partner or friend. But it wasn't long before, as she says, "I got a lot of anxiety around 'Do I feel confident enough to go outside?'" With Blink Twice coming into view, however, Kravitz is confronting a different type of vulnerability. "I feel like my brain is being exposed to the world," she says. |
|
|
| Headphone jacks are so 2010. |
|
|
| My wife's labor lasted through the night. Around 6:00 A.M., I left the hospital and walked down the street to pick up two dozen bagels, a tub of cream cheese, smoked salmon, and whitefish salad for the hospital staff who had been working tirelessly. By 11:30 A.M., Lulu came into the world healthy and screaming. Our baby girl was born on an overcast May morning on the Upper East Side. She and my wife were resting, so I decided to take a walk. I had mostly forsaken booze over the past nine months out of solidarity with my wife, and I knew exactly where I had to go. |
|
| | Unsubscribe | Privacy Notice | CA Notice at Collection Esquire is a publication of Hearst Magazines. ©2024 Hearst Magazine Media, Inc. All Rights Reserved. This email was sent by Hearst Magazines, 300 West 57th Street, New York, NY 10019-3779
|  | | |
|
|
No comments:
Post a Comment