Friday, September 19, 2025 |
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We're living in the golden age of fragrance. Today, you have a plethora of options that enable you to smell, well, great. But a number of these colognes are quite expensive. If you can afford them, go for it. If not, here's some good news: you can still smell great for less. We tested colognes that cost less than $100 and shared the best of them with you. – Michael Sebastian, editor-in-chief Plus: |
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They're cheap, but these scents don't skimp on quality. |
I've sniffed my fair share of perfumes that cost upwards of $300. Let me tell you, price isn't always synonymous with quality. In fact, several of our editors' favorite colognes clock in at $100 or less. At that price, you might have to give up the elevated packaging you want for your unboxing videos, but you can still get the stuff that matters like scent complexity, strength, and longevity. Don't believe me? I've rounded up a dozen affordable colognes that prove smelling good doesn't have to come in a package deal with credit card debt. |
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"There was no 'before the music,'" says Compton-born, Grammy-winning rapper Roddy Ricch when I ask him about his time prior to becoming an artist. "It was all music. It's one of my greatest inspirations and accomplishments." You probably know who Roddy Ricch is. And even if you think you don't, there's little chance you escaped the infectious eee err refrain from his huge 2019 single "The Box." (Go ahead and look it up if you doubt me.) Something I've found with the best rappers is that they'd rather let their music do the talking. The medium requires a heavy word count and deep introspection; it takes a lot of energy to tap into that. During our morning together, Roddy was reserved. I got the impression he was protecting that energy, which is honestly refreshing—especially in this era of oversharing. |
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If you turned on your TV last night hoping to catch Jimmy Kimmel interview some of your favorite celebrities, you may have been surprised to find Steve Harvey instead. ABC ran a re-run of Celebrity Family Feud on Thursday night in place of Jimmy Kimmel Live!, which is suspended indefinitely following a controversy involving major TV networks, the FCC, and comments Kimmel made about Charlie Kirk's alleged shooter on Monday night's show. But if you tuned in to hear what Stephen Colbert, Jon Stewart, Jimmy Fallon, or Seth Meyers had to say about their fellow late-night host being taken off the air, the common refrain was that Kimmel's suspension is "blatant censorship," as Colbert stated plainly. Others, like Fallon and Meyers—who have to be feeling the pressure—more gently joked that the administration was censoring late night hosts who didn't play nice with the President. "I just want to say, before we get started here, that I've always admired and respected Mr. Trump," Meyers said. "I've always believed he was a visionary, an innovator, a great president, an even better golfer. And if you've ever seen me say anything negative about him, that's just A.I." |
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