
Sip the 'absolutely delicious' seltzers that offer chill vibes and NO hangover! 'These have replaced alcohol for me completely'
The brand specializes in 'absolutely delicious' THC and CBD seltzers that deliver a subtle buzz for the ultimate laid-back chill — without the risk of a hangover. Available in a variety of flavors and potencies, they start at just $14.99 for a pack of six.
Cycling Frog Seltzer
Stay cool and chill with a Cycling Frog seltzer in your hand!
With a blend of THC and CBD, these perfectly balanced beverages are available in a variety of delicious flavors like lemon, black currant, and iced tea lemonade.
Plus, you can choose from dosages (ranging from two to 50 milligrams), so you can be sure there's an option that's just right for you!
From $14.99 Shop
Good vibes only! Now you can finally chill out and truly unwind without the risk of an unpleasant hangover thanks to Cycling Frog seltzers
This is the perfect alternative to alcohol whether you want to unwind at the end of the day or socialize without losing control of your inhibitions.
What makes Cycling Frog especially appealing is the sheer variety of both flavors and THC levels. Even if you're completely new to the concept, you can enjoy the benefits of these alcohol-free sips.
In fact, if you're new to cannabis consumption entirely, you may want to give the brand's mouth-watering passion fruit or lemon flavors a try. Each contains two milligrams of Delta-9 THC each, which is an ideal, low-dose starting point to help you gauge your tolerance.
You can work your way up from there, with tasty options like ruby grapefruit, black currant, and wild berry offering five milligrams per can. There's also a limited-edition Italian plum with 10 milligrams, as well as raspberry lemonade and iced tea lemonade with 50 milligrams each.
In other words, whether you're after a hint of a buzz that's super manageable or a more intense, chilled out vibe, you can sip your way to laid-back bliss with Cycling Frog's many seltzers.
All of the flavors also contain CBD, providing a balanced blend that's formulated to relax you while providing just enough euphoria to help you feel really good — again, without dealing with the dreadful hangover effects.
And it takes just 10 to 15 minutes for the ingredients to take effect. Once they set in, you can expect them to last for anywhere from one to four hours! That's decent payoff for a product that helps you feel great without leaving you sick later.
Elevate a relaxing night in with Cycling Frog seltzers, which contain a balanced blend of THC and CBD to help you unwind
All Cycling Frog seltzers are crisp, light, and refreshing. Whether you sip them straight from the can or on ice, you'll be delighted with the way they cool you down on hot days or elevate any celebration.
'A can will have you feeling relaxed and chill,' raved one happy customer. 'It's perfect for a night in with a light buzz.'
Another shopper agreed, sharing, 'So refreshing, and then the chill! I did the light dose because I'm a lightweight so it's been perfect for me.'
'I've tried my fair share of THC seltzers and this brand is top notch,' reported a third. 'Black currant is my favorite flavor, but I haven't tried one I didn't love. These have replaced alcohol completely for me.'
Just consider Sparkling Frog the antidote to zero chill. You'll mellow out just enough to take the edge off, but without all the drama. We can definitely get behind that kind of calm!

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Daily Mail
2 hours ago
- Daily Mail
US Open star Sachia Vickery's sex-work confession sends shockwaves through tennis world
American tennis player Sachia Vickery may be attempting to qualify for the US Open this week where a staggering $5million awaits the champion, but away from the court she's already raking in the cash. That's because Vickery, 30, 'no longer dates for free.' The American, ranked No. 559, played her first match since February on Tuesday when she beat Anastasiya Soboleva in the first round of US Open qualifying. However, Vickery has discovered more lucrative means of keeping herself busy over the past few months - and they don't require her to swing a racket. In fact, they are far from the customs of the traditionally upper class sport, that demands certain standards of its players. The athlete, who has 'God First' written in her Instagram bio, has carved out a successful side career, selling steamy photos of herself and charging men to date her. Vickery joined adult content side OnlyFans earlier this year, breaking the news to her stunned fans in a bombshell update on her Instagram. Sachia Vickery of the United States plays a forehand in her match against Barbora Krejcikova of the Czech Republic during 2020 Australian Open Qualifying at Melbourne Park on January 18, 2020 in Melbourne, Australia 'Tennis anyone? OF link in my bio Big project and features coming soon ( p.s happy Valentine's Day ),' the shocking announcement read, alongside a racy snap of her in far-from-traditional tennis whites. For $12.99 a month, subscribers have access to 'the content too spicy for Instagram,' according to Vickery's OnlyFans bio, which also describes her as 'your favorite pro tennis player.' Her platform teases her 'longest shower vid yet,' strip teases and 'spicier' pictures, while also asking her fans to rate her 'riding skills' as she shares risque videos and saucy snaps. Vickery has banked just over $2million throughout her 14-year career on the court. Outside of the sport, she demands a $1,000 deposit fee just to date her. 'I no longer date for free due to the behavior of men I now require a pre-date deposit send me 1,000 and we can make it happen my cashapp is $Sachiavick,' she told her 39,4000 followers during an Instagram Q&A session earlier this week. However, Vickery has faced harsh criticism from traditional tennis fans, who have brutally torn into her over the decision. 'Who the f*** is going to take Sachia Vickery on a date or even pay to take her on a date when she has let dudes see her naked for less than a price of a happy meal,' one post read. While Vickery's move may have sent ripples through the tennis world, she has no regrets. She previously revealed that she's always seen herself as something of a revolutionary. For $12.99 a month, OnlyFans subscribers have access to 'the content too spicy for Instagram' 'I've always pushed boundaries,' she said on the Black Spin Global podcast earlier this year. 'I've always been outspoken about racial hate I get online, bodyshaming. I'm very open about a lot of stuff. 'I'm still playing tennis, my career is still going but I also want to do things outside of tennis. I'm starting to explore more opportunities on social media.' 'Obviously there are levels to OnlyFans, you have athletes like Nick [Kyrgios] and Alex [Muller] who are going to be posting tennis content for the most part and then you have the other complete extreme, which I'm not. I'm in that middle gap,' she added. 'I set it up in January and it just took off. Being a tennis player definitely helped my marketing. I'm at a stage where I don't do the absolute most on there but I'm comfortable as I need to be. I'm doing really well. 'Obviously, I'm going to get some negative feedback but that's just normal. Whatever you do in life there's always going to be some criticism. If I was doing nothing I'd be getting criticism, so I might as well get on the platform and make money while I'm at it.' Yet as she stepped onto the Grand Slam stage in Flushing Meadows again this week, Vickery once again hit back at her critics. 'I'm very open-minded and I don't care what people think of me … it's also the easiest money I've ever made and I enjoy doing it,' said Vickery when asked about balancing the two entirely different worlds together in an Instagram Q&A session. 'I will never talk s*** about girls on OnlyFans ever again for the rest of my life. Because the amount I made on there in my first two days, I am overwhelmed. I am just shook really.' Vickery, whose father Rawle is a former soccer player and brother Dominque Mitchell played football at South Carolina State, turned professional in 2011 after training with USTA and Mouratoglou Academy in France. But her career peaked back in 2018, when she managed a career-high ranking of World No 73. She has insisted that she is still pursing her tennis career while exploring other opportunities Now, the Florida native has slumped to No 559, without a single victory to her name. She failed to qualify for the Australian Open in January, stumbling in the third round of qualifying, and skipped Roland Garros and Wimbledon all together. However, she appears to save her best performances for the US Open with her best Grand Slam record coming in New York. She's made the second round of the tournament four times. Vickery is far from the first tennis player to have flirted with an alternate career on the x-rated website to fund their tennis ambitions. The sport's renowned babd boy, Nick Kyrgios, raised eyebrows earlier this year when he signed onto a saucy OnlyFans collaboration after his breakup from longtime girlfriend Costeen Hatzi. Kyrgios, who publicly split from his girlfriend of four years in March, hosted a new reality series for OnlyFans TV alongside adult entertainers Sophie Stonehouse and Rachel Starr in June. Titled Smash City, the series saw OnlyFans creators, including Vickery, battle it out on the pickle ball court to win $20,000. Kyrgios first joined OnlyFans in 2023, revealing in a statement that he wanted fans to see 'all different sides' of him after an injury saw him sidelined from his sport. Frenchman Alexandre Muller, the world No 38, also has a deal with the platform, even donning the OnlyFans logo on his kit on occasion. In his OnlyFans bio, Muller brands himself the 'sexiest professional tennis player.' Ashley Harkelroad, a former world No 39, briefly joined the site in 2022, while Australian Arina Rodionova signed up earlier this year after splitting from her husband Ty Vickery, the former Australian rules footballer with whom she tied the knot in December 2015. Meanwhile, Vickery is back in action in the Big Apple as she pauses her x-rated extracurricular activities to take on Germany's Ella Seidel in the second round of US Open qualifying.


Daily Mail
4 hours ago
- Daily Mail
Viral 'Christian Girl Autumn' influencer SOBS as she reveals why she won't be sharing fall content this year
Influencer Caitlin Covington, the face of 'Christian Girl Autumn,' has tearfully revealed that she will not be able to make fall content this year in an emotional new TikTok video. Covington, known for her suede hats, pumpkin spice lattes, and cozy sweaters, has been showcasing her fall style and decorating since she was a junior at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill in 2012, according to People, but her content went viral in 2019. An account by the name of Blizzy McGuire had jokingly tweeted out her photos at the time, writing, 'Hot Girl Summer is coming to an end, get ready for Christian Girl Autumn.' However, it looks like there will be no 'Christian Girl Autumn' for Covington this year, as she revealed last night that she would be taking a break from her content. 'Hi guys, this is my fourth time recording, and I just don't know how I'm gonna tell you guys that I just am not gonna be able to post Fall videos this year,' Covington said through sobs. 'It's just a lot of pressure and it's just a lot of pressure to make each video better than the last, and make each fall trip better,' she explained. As part of her autumn content, Covington always takes a fall trip with her family to scenic places like Vermont or Maine, where she does stunning photoshoots in front of colorful leaf piles, mountains, and trees. But not this year. Covington, known for her suede hats, pumpkin spice lattes, and cozy sweaters, has been showcasing her fall style for years, and has become a viral sensation 'I just really need a break this year, and I'm really sorry,' Covington concluded at the end of her video. In the caption, she said it was the 'hardest post' that she's ever had to make, and that she would provide a further update for her followers soon. In the comments section of her TikTok, many joked that autumn was now 'canceled' due to her shocking announcement. 'Fall is officially cancelled till further notice,' one person wrote. Another agreed, 'Yeah autumn is so over this year.' 'Guess we're skipping to 2026 since fall is canceled... which means Mariah Carey won't ever defrost and Christmas won't come. Happy new year,' another typed. However, others supported her decision and offered her some words of encouragement. 'We understand diva! We still love you! You're always our queen of fall,' a user wrote. Another seconded, 'We love you in all seasons! You deserve rested girl autumn.' Last year, Covington revealed in an interview with People just how much planning goes into her fall content each year. 'The outfit planning is probably the most time-consuming part,' she shared with the outlet at the time. 'We review various retailers, place orders, and then I spend hours trying on different outfits. Right now, I'm in the middle of trying on outfits for our Maine trip,' she said. Covington told the outlet that she has 'very specific' ideas for content, and it takes a lot to get organized for it. In fact, she admitted it's probably around '100 hours of work' that goes into each year's fall trip. 'I'll find an outfit that fits that theme, pack it down to a tee 0 including sunglasses, socks, everything - and then wear it on the trip. It's probably around 100 hours of work that goes into each trip,' she said. At the time, the influencer also spoke about the pressures that come with creating her fall content. 'I do feel pressure, especially during fall because I feel like everyone looks to me for fall content,' she admitted. 'So I try to hold myself to a certain standard and brainstorm new creative ideas. I spend hours researching and planning outfits for fall.


Telegraph
5 hours ago
- Telegraph
The women who could fill the Anna Wintour gap at Vogue
' No-one can replace Anna ' has long been the refrain among fashion's highest echelons. Not being a 500-year-old immortal like the Highlander, however, someone eventually must. Nothing – not even a diet of rare steak and daily tennis – can make a person live forever. And yet Anna Wintour's 37-year reign at American Vogue was so formidable that many assumed she might go on editing indefinitely. Which is why June's announcement that she would be stepping back from her day-to-day duties at Vogue came as such a surprise – and why speculation over her successor is now at fever pitch. While Wintour still holds two powerhouse titles – chief content officer of Condé Nast and global editorial director of Vogue – relinquishing the hands-on editorship of US Vogue marks the end of an era. It also signals the fading of a golden age for glossy magazines, when seven-figure salaries, chauffeured limousines and lavish expense accounts were de rigueur. Her successor, taking on the newly created role of head of editorial content, will face a daunting challenge. With magazine sales in decline, they will need to combine journalistic rigour, marketing acumen and managerial diplomacy with formidable networking skills, elite hosting and fundraising prowess – not to mention the hide of a rhinoceros. 'This is an extremely challenging role, and it's a big reach to assume that any one candidate will possess all the necessary skills,' says one well-placed source in New York. 'We talk a lot about musical chairs in the fashion industry, usually in relation to the steady turnover of designers at luxury houses. This role is likely to feel like a game of its own – only instead of chairs disappearing, it's staff and budgets.' Multiple sources say that Vogue's parent company, Condé Nast, hopes to make a decision before the next round of shows – New York Fashion Week begins on Sept 11 – suggesting an announcement is imminent. With rumours that the shortlist has been cut to single digits, we assess who might soon be wearing a smaller, meeker version of Wintour's crown. Cast your vote at the end. The frontrunner Chloe Malle, 39 The current frontrunner, Malle, studied comparative literature and writing at Brown University, landed her first internship at The New York Observer, and joined US Vogue in 2011 as social editor – despite admitting in a 2013 interview that she was 'hesitant […] because fashion is not one of my main interests in life.' An instant disqualifier, surely? Malle now serves as editor of and is well-regarded for a down-to-earth manner somewhat at odds with her privileged upbringing. She has two children with her asset manager husband and, like Wintour, is a Democrat unafraid to express her views. The Francophile Claire Thomson-Jonville, 40 Vogue editor, or cover star? Much has been made of Thomson-Jonville's 'model looks', with breathless profiles lingering on the bikini shots she shares with her 201,000 Instagram followers. Born in Glasgow, educated at Edinburgh University and once editor of indie style mag Self Service, she has been head of editorial content at French Vogue since 2021. 'Anna and I have a very similar vision […] a definite complicité,' she has said (she's fluent in French). That's not all they share: both have two children (though the father of Thomson-Jonville's remains unknown), both are exercise devotees (tennis for Wintour, yoga for Thomson-Jonville) and both are famously disciplined, rising at 5am. Where they part ways is in their fondness for motivational mantras – you wouldn't catch Wintour posting 'energy flows where intention goes'. The protégée Amy Astley, 58 Michigan State University-educated Astley is a Wintour protégé of long standing, joining US Vogue in 1993 and rising to become beauty director before being tasked with launching Teen Vogue in 2003. In 2016, Wintour handed her the editorship of Architectural Digest, which Astley swiftly transformed into a must-read with cachet and relevance well beyond the design world. A recent feature on Pamela Anderson's love of gardening underlined her sharp commercial instincts. Some insiders suggest Astley is being groomed to replace Wintour as chief content officer when she finally retires. If she ever does. The digital savante Eva Chen, 45 With magazine sales in terminal decline, who better to refine and drive Vogue's digital strategy than Instagram's head of fashion partnerships? Another Wintour protégé, Chen was recruited by the platform in 2015 and has been monetising its fashion and e-commerce potential ever since. Armed with a master's in journalism from Columbia University and a CV that spans Harper's Bazaar, Teen Vogue, Elle and Lucky (where she became the youngest editor-in-chief in the magazine's history), the question isn't so much whether Chen could do the job, but whether Condé Nast could afford her. The safe pair of hands Nicole Phelps, 53 As global director of Vogue Runway and Vogue Business – and former executive editor of the now-defunct – Phelps is a longtime Condé Nast insider who is both unflappable and well regarded. A Wesleyan University graduate with a degree in Women's Studies, she is also a confident public speaker who knows the fashion industry inside out, having cut her teeth at WWD and W Magazine before joining Vogue in 2004. With 100,000 Instagram followers and years of digital-first expertise, she is certain to be in contention. The stylist Edward Enninful, 53 Enninful's name was bound to be in the mix: Wintour hand-picked him to succeed Alexandra Shulman at British Vogue, which he led from 2017 to 2024. Rumours of a rift with his former boss are wide of the mark – it's less a case of bad blood than bad timing, even if he was once thought to covet the role. Rather than wait in the wings for Wintour's abdication, he has built his own fiefdom. In May, he announced the launch of EE72, a media and entertainment company co-founded with his sister, Akua Enninful. Next month brings the debut issue of a glossy magazine, staffed largely by former Vogue employees. 'Edward would never cede EE72 for a job at Vogue,' says a source. 'Especially when he stands to make so much revenue. Vogue is old media; EE72 is new.' Indeed. Where Condé Nast's rules around lucrative brand consultancy work remain opaque, as head of his own company Enninful can set the terms – and make a fortune in the process. The newspaper journalist Jo Ellison, 45 A former fashion features director at British Vogue, Edinburgh University-educated Ellison ticks every box on the Wintour Approvability Chart: the right experience (including extensive event-hosting of the kind Vogue increasingly needs to monetise), the right look (tall, sharp cheekbones, a wardrobe heavy on old Céline) and the right character (dry wit, little patience for fools). She also has the right job. As deputy editor of the Financial Times and, more pertinently, editor-in-chief of HTSI [formerly How To Spend It], the FT's weekend lifestyle supplement, Ellison enjoys unfettered access to luxury's highest echelons – not to mention almost any A-list name she chooses to feature. Crucially, she avoids the pressure of generating robust news-stand sales, since HTSI is not a standalone magazine. Why would she trade all this for the headaches of Vogue? Unlikely. The wild card Lauren Sánchez Bezos, 55 Could she? Would she? For many Vogue readers, it would be the stuff of nightmares. While Sánchez holds a journalism degree from the University of Southern California (pre-Bezos, she worked as a newsroom anchor and TV host), she is unlikely to be in contention for this particular role – not least because her sights may be set elsewhere. If rumour is to be believed, her husband is plotting an acquisition of Condé Nast, Vogue's parent company – a move that would change everything, should he succeed. After her cover appearance in the June issue, sources even claimed Bezos was considering buying Sánchez the title as a 'wedding gift'. Katy Perry on the cover in a space suit? Brace, brace.