Tag Archives: beauty

Gabourey Sidibe — Beauty Comes in All Sizes

Filed under: Beauty , Exclusives , Gabourey Sidibe Gabourey Sidibe might have a weight problem, but it doesn’t mean she’s unhealthy … this according to the National Association to Advance Fat Acceptance (NAAFA). Yes, that’s a real group.As we first reported, a weight loss company is reaching out to … Permalink

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Gabourey Sidibe — Beauty Comes in All Sizes

Lauren Conrad Previews Kohl’s Fashion Line

Where does Lauren Conrad turn when she needs a wardrobe update? To the fashion collection she herself designed for Kohl’s, of course. “I think if you’re not willing to wear your own clothes, you’re doing something wrong,” she says. “This line was meant to be about my style, pieces I want to walk into a store and buy. If you’re not wearing your own line, you’re taking the fun out of it!” Known for her flirty frocks and California cool girl style, Lauren tells Glamour her staple piece is the blazer. “We have one in every collection, and we usually

Jessica Simpson Says ‘Good Morning America’

Jessica Simpson arrived at Good Morning America this morning. The blonde bombshell is promoting her new VH1 show The Price of Beauty and has been making the rounds all over New York City. Has anyone checked out her show yet?

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Jessica Simpson Says ‘Good Morning America’

Andy Garcia: Good Genes or Good Docs?

Filed under: Beauty On a scale of one to ten, Andy Garcia is an “Ocean’s 11.”Here’s the 32-year-old back in 1989 (left) — and 21 years later, the 53-year-old in NYC on Wednesday (right).Untouchable. See Also Ellen Barkin: Good Genes or Good Docs? … Permalink

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Andy Garcia: Good Genes or Good Docs?

Gal with 3 Breasts in ‘Total Recall’: ‘Memba Her?

Filed under: Movies , Beauty , ‘Memba Them?! Lycia Naff is best remembered for playing the mutant prostitute with three breasts in the 1990 film “Total Recall.” Guess what she looks like now! … Permalink

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Gal with 3 Breasts in ‘Total Recall’: ‘Memba Her?

Name That Face!

Filed under: Beauty Can you guess whose sad face showed up to a tattoo parlor in West Hollywood on Thursday? … Permalink

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Name That Face!

The Kid in ‘Almost Famous’: ‘Memba Him?

Filed under: Beauty , ‘Memba Them?! Patrick Fugit became famous as the teenage Rolling Stone reporter in Cameron Crowe’s 2000 film “Almost Famous.” Guess what he looks like now! … Permalink

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The Kid in ‘Almost Famous’: ‘Memba Him?

Happy Birthday, Olivia Wilde!

One of the most talented young actress on the planet celebrates a birthday today. No, not Kristen Stewart. No, definitely not Miley Cyrus. We’re talking about Olivia Wilde. Because the actress poses for so many sexy photo shoots , and because her character doesn’t exacty utter the wittiest or most interesting House quotes , Wilde is often overlooked for her on-screen skills. But this beauty can really act! Tune in to the aforementioned Fox drama once in awhile and see for yourself. Below, we’ve posted a bunch of Olivia Wilde pictures in honor of the birthday gal, who turns 26, and we encourage readers to send in their best wishes on her special day…

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Happy Birthday, Olivia Wilde!

Jessica Simpson: It’s Time to Say Goodbye [Goodbyes]

With her latest stab at relevancy—a new single and a VH1 show— Jessica Simpson is yet again being shoved down our collective gullet. It’s time for this uninteresting, talentless person to take a hike. Forever! I usually scoff at people who criticize celebrities by saying, “They’re just famous for being famous.” But Jessica Simpson is something worse—she’s famous for trying to be famous. She isn’t defined by any quantifiable event, talent, or success, but by a constant striving, one that often leads to disastrous failure. The same came be said for “Who We Are” her new single (below), which is a indistinguishable amalgam of pleasant electronic bleeps that will float across your brain as amiably and forgettably as a cloud in a bright sky. It’s the theme song for her new show, The Price of Beauty , that starts next month on VH1 and which features her traveling around the world trying out beauty regimens from different cultures. Not a bad concept if we weren’t so sick of seeing her face—plastered over with cosmetics—glaring back at us in the televised version of hell. When she started, she was just another big-breasted, blonde Britney Spears impersonator with a good voice and very determined father. She had some moderate success thanks to corporate marketing and a naive female fan base, but none of her early hits are that memorable. We probably would have been rid of her by now if it weren’t for a little thing called reality television. In 2002, MTV debuted Newlyweds , an “inside look” at her recent marriage to boybander Nick Lachey . Her ditsy persona (or was it her real personality?) took off immediately and America tuned in to see her latest bout with sitcom stupidity and her grappling with various food-related mysteries, like what kind of animal a Chicken of the Sea is and where Buffalo wings come from. Simpson quickly morphed into a marketing robot, hawking pizza and dubious skin care regimens. With the sound of cash registers echoing in her voluminous hair, Americans soon forgot who she was. You never said, “She sings that song,” or “She’s the star of that movie.” You said, “Oh, she’s the stupid girl from MTV.” For a while, Simpson was everywhere and we had no real idea why that was, other than we were told to like her and she was busy pawning stuff off on us. She tried to be more than that, sure. She wanted to be a real star who could do things other than pitch unnecessary corporate goods. But her albums soon stopped selling and she skipped from dud to dud, trying to act in Dukes of Hazzard and something ineffable with Dane Cook. Then, like Jean-Claude Van Damme before her, her flicks went direct to DVD. She tried to make the switch from pop to country, but even stupid Christians in the Bible Belt didn’t want her at that point. Like a rotten tomato stuck behind the crisper, she was starting to stink up the joint, but no one could clean her out. Why? Blame the Celebrity Industrial Complex ! Even though we were no longer interested in her entertainment products, she’d started a career as a professional girlfriend, going out very publicly with musician John Mayer and then Dallas Cowboy Tony Romo . The rumors are still swirling that she’s inexplicably dating Smashing Pumpkins singer Billy Corgan , which would be the most interesting thing she’s done in five years. And when she needs a little career bump she hits the cover of Vanity Fair or Oprah —not to talk about a project, but her personal life. We find it hard to care about either. Now she’s back for another round through the publicity cycle, as if she might have something new or interesting to share with us. Sorry, Jessica, you don’t. You’re like that sweater we once bought on sale hoping that we would one day fit into it, but we suddenly realized that we will never wear, no matter how hard we try. You won’t ever fit us and it’s better that we donate you to charity and clear you out of the closet. Because we only have room for so much, and newer, prettier things have come along that we like. Yes, Jessica we’re getting rid of you. And since we barely even wanted you in the first place, please do us the courtesy of staying away. [ Image via Getty ]

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Jessica Simpson: It’s Time to Say Goodbye [Goodbyes]

Biggie’s Best: Debating The Brooklyn MC’s Finest, 13 Years Later

More than a decade after the Notorious B.I.G.’s death, our Mixtape Daily team is still hashing it out. By Shaheem Reid and Rahman Dukes Notorious B.I.G. Photo: Getty Images Legacy Salute: Biggie’s Best, Part 1 Tuesday (March 9) marks the 13th anniversary of the death of the Notorious B.I.G. There aren’t enough accolades to give the Brooklyn bone-crusher. Biggie helped mold one of the greatest eras in hip-hop with a versatile style and gift for wordplay that has him perennially listed in the top three when you ask most hip-hop fans to name the greatest MCs of all time. Here, your favorite hip-hop team chooses some of Frank White’s pre-eminent musical accomplishments. Best Album Shaheem Reid : Life After Death How do you distinguish extreme excellence? How do you look at two albums by the same artist — both of which you feel are in the top 10 greatest hip-hop creations ever made — and put one over the other? Ready to Die vs. Life After Death is a subject I’ve debated going on 10 years now. No argument has a clear-cut winner. Both albums are classics. Both have stood the test of time. You can’t logically dis a song on either LP. There might be some records you prefer over others, but Big didn’t have anything wack on his albums. For me, though, I go with Life simply because I feel that it was Biggie at his best. He had evolved. He grew. Big touched all bases from the ‘hood to Hollywood in two immaculately put-together discs — a feat that no other MC has been able to duplicate since. Nothing could ever replicate the initial euphoria that Ready brought, but Life was the master with his craft fully perfected. Rahman Dukes : Ready to Die Nothing can replace that feeling hip-hop heads in New York City experienced in the days leading up to this release. I specifically recall the Friday before RTD was set to shock the world. It seemed like every car from Brooklyn to Queens was pumping “Juicy” and “Unbelievable.” Back then, albums were on cassette tapes and not bootlegged. Imagine hearing this flawless masterpiece for the first time in its entirety. The East Coast ran hip hop in the ’90s, and Ready was the icing on the cake. The movement the album set off in the Tri-State Area was the first to do it, only duplicated years later when 50 Cent dropped Get Rich or Die Tryin’. Hmm, that title Get Rich or Die Tryin’ sounds eerily similar to … you know the rest. Best Single Unanimous Choice : “Hypnotize” “Hypnotize” had the million-dollar video with the mermaids and the car chases, but it’s way more than the visual production that puts this record slightly above our other favorites Big singles like “Big Poppa” and “One More Chance.” “Hypnotize” was so hot in its heyday that it felt like the walls in the club would just melt when the DJs pulled it back (sometimes up to 10 times in a row). We were absolutely devastated that Big was gone, but this record helped us get through it. Big left us three and a half minutes of pure jubilation to celebrate his life and legacy. Best Album Cut Reid : “The What” from Ready to Die The Bad Boy/ Wu-Tang Clan pairing was too much. “N—as know soft like the Twinkie fillin’/ Playing the villain/ Prepare for this rap killin’/ Biggie Smalls is the illest/ Your style is played out like Arnold and that ‘What you talkin’ bout Willis.’ ” Big was as merciless as an NFL linebacker attacking the blindside of an unsuspecting quarterback, wonderfully cocky and as humorous as eight episodes of “Def Comedy Jam” all in just a few bars. You put that with a hungry and focused Method Man, who lyrically spat broken glass all over the track, and you wonder why Diddy — in his infinite wisdom — never pushed the button on this classic with radio adds and a video. Dukes : “Everyday Struggle” from Ready to Die B.I.G. was a true master at making some of the most hard-core tracks come off as commercial material. If you tune out exactly what he was saying on songs such as this one, you’d think it was something that you could expect to hear on regular rotation. But then there are lines like this: “I got my honeys on the Amtrak/ With the crack in the crack of her ass/ Two pounds of hash in the stash/ I wait for hon to make some quick cash/ I told her she could be lieutenant, bi— got gassed.” It’s a bit explicit, but I’m sure you get my point. Best Guest Appearance Reid : Jay-Z’s “Brooklyn’s Finest” Another tough one. Big was prolific not just with his own projects, but with doling out the love on his peers’ records as well. I had an inner conflict trying to figure out if I should go with Shaq’s “You Can’t Stop the Reign,” where the swagga was off the Richter, or Puff’s “Victory.” But in the end, I had to give it to his back-and-forth with Jigga. Both MCs were relentless, neither one wanting to let the other get the upper hand. In the end, Big and Jigga made the best tag-team duo since Slick Rick and Doug E. Fresh on “The Show.” Dukes : Shaquille O’Neal’s “You Can’t Stop the Reign” I think the beauty behind this monster is that this record came out around the time when B.I.G. was in rehab and took a break from the rap game. The wordplay on this song is historical. “A lime to a lemon/ My D.C. women bringin’ in to G-minimums/ To condos with elevators in them/ Vehicles with televisions in them/ Watch they entourage turn yours to just mirages/ Disappearin’ acts, strictly nines and macs/ Killers be surreal, Copperfield material/ My dreams is vivid, work hard to live it/ Any place I visit I got land there/ How can players stand there and say I sound like them, hello.” Ten years since the release of this song, nothing comes close to what Big had to say. The irony is that he gave such a jewel away to Shaquille O’Neal. Shaq, you owe the Christopher Wallace estate big time for this one. For other artists featured in Mixtape Daily, check out Mixtape Daily Headlines . Related Videos Mixtape Daily: Tyga

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Biggie’s Best: Debating The Brooklyn MC’s Finest, 13 Years Later