Esquire has a grooming editor named Garrett Munce. I would bet money that Garrett knows more about deodorants, moisturizers, pomades, and myriad other products for men than anyone else in America, maybe the world. Each year, Garrett spends months testing every grooming product he can get his hands on. Then he compiles the best-of-the-best for an Esquire story. We published that story today, and trust me when I say, there's an embarrassment of good, useful stuff. – Michael Sebastian, editor-in-chief Plus: |
|
|
The very best products of the year, vetted by us so you can stop worrying about what to buy and get busy looking, smelling, and feeling great.
|
The good news: New products are coming out every second that promise to help us groom more effectively, efficiently, and easily. The bad news: New products are coming out every damn second. How do you know which really work? You could rely on influencers, but you can never really tell when they might be on the take. Which is why you have us. Every year, we try hundreds of products—and spend just as many hours in our showers, over our sinks, and everywhere else you can imagine test-driving them in real life—so we can recommend only the very best. Whether you're a grooming obsessive or just want to look and feel better, these picks are the ones that truly make a difference. |
|
|
Though Shane Black has made fantastical franchise movies, like Iron Man 3 (2013) and The Predator (2018), he is at home in the grounded worlds of crime comedies. He launched a franchise with his screenplay for Lethal Weapon in 1987. And his other films, The Long Kiss Goodnight (1996), Kiss Kiss, Bang Bang (2005), and The Nice Guys (2016), have become cult classics that exemplify his taste for hard-boiled noir, quick-witted humor, and the sentimentality of Christmas. So it should surprise no one what he has cooking up next. After a long seven-year absence from directing, Black returns for Play Dirty, a new movie adaptation of the Parker series by crime author Donald E. Westlake and co-written with his The Nice Guy collaborators Charles Mondry and Anthony Bagarozzi. |
|
|
Anybody who tries to harsh the mellows of Zohran Mamdani's supporters in New York City at this point would reduce Howdy Doody to toothpicks. There hasn't been a political campaign that's spread this much joy around the city since Jimmy Walker danced all over Fiorello La Guardia and Norman Thomas in 1929.
Over the weekend, Mamdani sponsored a scavenger hunt in which the only prize was a bag of potato chips—which itself was a dig at incumbent Eric Adams—and a chance to have your picture taken with the candidate at the finish line, which was at an appropriate location, the Little Flower Cafe. Fiorello would have approved. |
|
|
|
No comments:
Post a Comment