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Art Partner unveils the 2025 Earth Partner Prize

Art Partner unveils the 2025 Earth Partner Prize

Vogue5 hours ago

Art Partner has unveiled the 2025 Earth Partner Prize—an international competition dedicated to empowering young people to take impactful action in response to the climate emergency. Submissions open on Wednesday, June 11, and close at 23:59 CET on Friday, October 10.
Young creatives between the ages of 14 and 30, from all backgrounds and identities, are encouraged to present original works that reflect on environmental and social challenges facing the planet. Entries are welcome across a broad spectrum of formats, including but not limited to visual storytelling, experimental or documentary film, live or recorded performance, poetry, sound and music, fashion innovation, digital tools, choreography, multimedia, and social media campaigns.
Applicants may interpret topics such as species extinction, environmental equity, disinformation by polluting industries, Indigenous knowledge systems, sustainable materials, ecosystem protection, plastic overconsumption, grassroots resistance, waste transformation, climate anxiety, economic structures, and ancestral ecological wisdom.
Eight winners will receive monetary awards of $10,000, $5,000, or $2,000. An additional twenty participants will earn special recognition from a distinguished international jury, to be revealed later this summer.
All selected finalists and honorable mentions will have their work presented in an online showcase hosted by artpartner.com and earthpartner.com, and promoted through Art Partner's social media channels. Moreover, their projects will be considered for inclusion in future editions of the Earth Partner Exhibition—an evolving physical show that has appeared at venues such as the United Nations Headquarters in New York, Fotografiska Shanghai during Shanghai Climate Week, and Photo London 2024, with a forthcoming presentation scheduled at Borgo Laudato Si' in Vatican City during the 2025 Jubilee.
Through the Earth Partner Prize, Art Partner seeks to involve young people in discussing environmental matters by offering a high-visibility platform for emerging talent—especially from underrepresented communities.

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Sizzling at 60 and beyond! Senior stars share their secrets to looking smokin' hot
Sizzling at 60 and beyond! Senior stars share their secrets to looking smokin' hot

News24

timean hour ago

  • News24

Sizzling at 60 and beyond! Senior stars share their secrets to looking smokin' hot

Stripping down at 60 for a birthday snap to share with the world may not be for everyone – but when you look like Liz Hurley, why the heck not? The British actress has never been one to hide her light under a bushel and she can rock a bikini like nobody's business. But Liz went a step further when she recently celebrated her big 6-0 – by whipping off all her kit and posing in a field in nothing but her birthday suit. 'Happy birthday to me!' she said. 'This past year has been a wild ride.' She paid tribute to her 30-year collaboration with cosmetic house Estée Lauder before saying she's 'in love' – a nod to her burgeoning relationship with her new boyfriend, American country singer Billy Ray Cyrus. View this post on Instagram A post shared by Elizabeth Hurley (@elizabethhurley1) Yet while Billy no doubt has something to do with her glow, the fact remains: Liz has barely aged a day since she set temperatures soaring in that Versace safety-pin dress in 1994, back in the days when she was dating Hugh Grant. 'Liz feels as good as she looks and she looks like a million bucks,' a friend says. 'The photos she posts aren't at all filtered. She really looks that incredible face-to-face.'So how does she do it? Last year the Austin Powers star shared some of her secrets for staying in shape – and it turns out she's pretty low maintenance.'My mantra is: don't eat too much, too fast, too often or too late. Or, put another way, eat smaller meals, chew properly, ban snacking and eat dinner earlier. I eat pretty much everything but only have junk food as an absolute treat.' She swears by a lot of veggies, barely touches alcohol and ditched the ciggies years ago. Liz also says she's no fan of cosmetic procedures.'I don't think fillers make you look younger – it just makes you look like you've got filler.' The one thing she does swear by is moisturiser, and lots of it. When it comes to exercise, she doesn't 'go to the gym or do any set exercise'. 'But I am extremely active,' she says. One of her favourite activities is gardening and that means lots of 'bendy-downy, picking stuff up'. And, Liz isn't alone when it comes to sizzling in the official pensioner-age era. SHARON STONE (67) How she keeps so hot The Basic Instinct star set social media alight with her banging bikini body last year when she shared a clip of herself emerging from a swimming pool wearing two ankle weights. Her physique is down to regular workouts – she loves swimming and aqua aerobics and is a fan of yoga and Pilates too. She also sticks to a mainly low-glycaemic diet with little processed food. On ageing Staying healthy is extremely important to the actress, especially after she spent two years learning to walk and talk again after suffering a stroke in 2001. 'I work for it. I work at everything. To me, discipline is a kind of freedom' Sharon Stone Sharon is a firm believer in ageing naturally. 'I think there's a sexuality in having those imperfections. It's sensual. 'I don't think there's anything wrong with cosmetic surgery, but I don't think it's all right to distort yourself.' LISA RINNA (61) How she keeps so hot The actress and Real Housewives of Beverly Hills star has been a fitness junkie her whole life. 'Luckily, I was born with good genes, first and foremost, and I know that, but I started working out at a very young age – from around 16.' I think it's wonderful to see what works for you. And if it doesn't work for you, it doesn't work for you Lisa Rinna Lisa has come in for some flak from critics who say she's too heavy-handed with the filler treatments, but she remains unapologetic about it. 'There's so much available to us now, which is so great.' She's a big believer in moderation, 'even though it seems like I live very loudly and largely. 'I get my rest. I eat mostly healthy. I'm moderate.' On ageing Lisa has a simple motto. 'I just don't give a sh*t about what people think about me. I've gotten to that place where at 60, I'm so much more confident than I was at 30. 'There's this whole thing about ageing gracefully, and I'm like, 'F**k it. I'm going to age disgracefully.'' GAYLE KING (70) How she keeps so hot Oprah's bestie dropped jaws when she appeared in the Sports Illustrated Swimwear edition last year, showing off a bod she trimmed down with the help of Weight Watchers. The CBS Mornings co-host works out five to six days a week and does 30 minutes of cardio on the treadmill and 30 minutes of strength training. She swears by Jim Karas' book The Business Plan for the Body, which provides motivation and inspiration to achieve fitness goals. 'Before I was doing cardio, cardio, cardio,' she told 'And I wasn't losing weight the way I'm losing now. Jim said to me that building up muscle really does burn calories faster. For me, that's been the case.' On ageing Gayle is all about welcoming the passage of time. 'Each passing year is an opportunity to look at your life and think about what's working for you and what's not,' she says. Remember life is short and you should take advantage of every single minute Gayle King 'Take care of yourself so you're healthy enough to enjoy life and figure out what makes you truly happy. Get rid of sentiments like, 'I'm too old for that'.' 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Botox and filler aren't for her, Jane adds. 'I've been playing a lot of amazing roles, recently two women with Alzheimer's with very emotional scenes, and if you're going to be that emotional, you need every muscle in your face.' On ageing Being older can be the best phase of your life, the four-times-married star says. 'A woman reaches a certain age where they've been married or have worked their entire lives or raised their kids, and then suddenly the everyday purpose shifts. Everything just changes and you suddenly think, 'Wait a minute, who am I?' This is a phase in life when you can give yourself permission to do what you need to do for you Jane Seymour 'I'm going to live my life to the full. I'm going to be there with my friends, help people where I can and keep the mantra that beauty is body, mind and spirit.' Demi Moore (62) How she keeps so hot She admits she used to be obsessive about her figure but now has a new approach to health, focusing on self-acceptance. 'I was dieting and exercising in a very obsessive-compulsive way,' the award-winning actress says. I changed my body multiple times but wasn't really myself Demi Moore 'I couldn't go on fighting my body and my weight – I had to make peace. I started by giving up hard exercise.' Demi turned her attention to more low-impact workouts and took up hot yoga before switching to kundalini and is now a qualified kundalini yoga teacher. She follows a raw vegan diet, sticking to vegetables, nuts, seeds and legumes in their raw or minimally heated she hasn't addressed rumours she's had plastic surgery, it's widely believed she's had work done. 'Demi does have incredible bone structure, but it seems she's had a lip lift and possibly a face lift, a lid lift and Botox,' plastic surgeon Mark Solomos says. On ageing Demi believes ageing and 'being old' are two different things. 'Somehow we've confused that, and ageing is actually a tremendous gift.'I wouldn't trade it – you couldn't pay me to be 21. As good as it might sound, it was torture!' The mom of three is in the 'most exciting time of my life'. 'My children are grown and I have the independence to really redefine where I want to go. I don't know what that looks like or where it is, but I'm just excited to be living in it.'

Autodesk CMO Dara Treseder on how brands are navigating attention and polarization at Cannes Lions
Autodesk CMO Dara Treseder on how brands are navigating attention and polarization at Cannes Lions

Fast Company

timean hour ago

  • Fast Company

Autodesk CMO Dara Treseder on how brands are navigating attention and polarization at Cannes Lions

At the Cannes Lions International Festival of Creativity, top agencies and brands vie for awards and hustle to close deals. As this year's event wraps up, Autodesk CMO Dara Treseder shares the insider buzz—from the continued rise of creator-led content to how brands navigate getting the right kind of attention in a polarized market. This is an abridged transcript of an interview from Rapid Response, hosted by Robert Safian, former editor-in-chief of Fast Company. From the team behind the Masters of Scale podcast, Rapid Response features candid conversations with today's top business leaders navigating real-time challenges. Subscribe to Rapid Response wherever you get your podcasts to ensure you never miss an episode. What are you hearing people talk about here at the festival? A lot is going on. There's a recurring theme. I think . . . everyone is trying to figure out, How can I cut through without being cut out? How can I cut through without alienating a core part of my audience? Because we're living in such a polarized time, where there are very few things people can align on. And so there is really that, but we are also in an attention recession, where it's so difficult to get attention, and getting attention is not enough, because you have to convert that attention into intention, right? To get people to actually go into discovery, consideration, and ultimately purchase. So, it's not just getting the attention, but the attention in the way that's right for your brand. Exactly. Getting attention in a way that's right for your brand and drives action, drives engagement. And now, there's just so much that grabs people's attention, so grabbing attention isn't enough. It's actually converting the attention into intention, into buyer intent. Are there any rules about it, or is it that each brand has to do it in its own way? I think that there are some themes that we're seeing about how brands in general are doing this, across all industries, B2B, B2C, healthcare, technology, beauty, retail. We're seeing some recurring themes. And I think one of the big themes is leaning into creators and community, because people show up for people. They might not necessarily show up for brands in the same way as we've seen in the past. So a lot of brands are leaning into [that]. I mean, creators are all over the place. Creators and athletes. Because creators and athletes come with a more dedicated and a more engaged and a more, I'm going to use the word rabid, a little bit, fan base. Yes, real fans. Real fans, rather than just celebrities that you see. I mean, we've been talking for a few years about influencers and how that has sort of changed the marketplace. It sounds a little bit like we've broken through to a new layer with that? We've certainly broken through to a new layer. And in fact, they don't want to be called influencers. They want to be called creators. Because they're saying, 'Hey, I'm not here to just influence. I'm here to co-create with you to drive a certain outcome.' So we're seeing that happen more now. And does that change the relationship that a brand like yours has with a traditional advertising firm? Are you going to creators in a different way? It definitely changes, because creators have, I think, a lot more say and a lot more power, and they're taking a bigger space at the table. So, gone are the days, I think, where it's just you find a creator, you tell them exactly what you want to do. If you're actually trying to drive real results and you want their fans to show up, they're taking an audience-first approach. So first of all, you've got to find that creator that aligns with your values. So you have to know they agree with you or they're simpatico in that way before they start. There's got to be trust. . . . And the trust goes both ways. You have got to trust that they are aligned to your brand values, they are aligned to your customer base, because remember, you want to cut through, you want to break through, but you are not trying to cut out a big portion of your customer base. So you need to make sure that you have that trust that yes, they are aligned to your brand values, they're aligned to your purpose, they're aligned to the outcomes, but then you also have to trust them to give them the space to do what they do. Because it can't come across as an ad. It has to come across as something more organic, something that they would truly want to do on their own, because that's when their audience shows up, and that's what determines the result. Are you, in your conversations with your peers, with other CMOs, are you hearing them privately acknowledge like, 'Oh, we didn't do that quite right? We alienated a group we didn't want to.' One hundred percent, especially in today's world. . . . As we're having these private CMO roundtables, we're all sharing, here's what went wrong, here's what went right, here's what I learned. And a lot of it is just, the margin for error is a lot slimmer than it ever was. There is a very thin line between cutting through and cutting out. It's like walking on high heels on a teeny-tiny thread. There is no margin for error. And so . . . a lot of CMOs are thinking about, How do I do this and how do I do this well?. . . And I think one of the things that's really important is making sure that you have a broad pull at the table as these decisions are being made, and that you are also able to pivot and adjust very quickly. Yes. The idea that to break through, you have to say something sharp, but you're also saying that the risk is higher than ever, but you have to take that risk. There's no way out of this bind. There's no way out. Let me tell you. We've got to give CMOs and marketers, all marketers at all levels, we've got to give [them] a break. It is a tough world out there. And so, yes, you have to opine with a spine, but you got to be careful what you opine on. So you need to pick the thing that truly makes sense for your brand and business. You cannot opine on everything. If you speak about everything, you're speaking about nothing. And if you end up speaking about things that you have not earned the right to speak about, you don't have the credibility to speak about, you could end up in some real hot water that you don't want to be on. Not the good kind of bath, the scalding kind of bath. So there really is that thoughtfulness that has to go into it.

Mom Is Accused of Never Putting ‘Limits' on Her Daughter's 'Fun' in a Fight With Her Husband Over a Playdate
Mom Is Accused of Never Putting ‘Limits' on Her Daughter's 'Fun' in a Fight With Her Husband Over a Playdate

Yahoo

time3 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Mom Is Accused of Never Putting ‘Limits' on Her Daughter's 'Fun' in a Fight With Her Husband Over a Playdate

A woman said that her husband 'was not happy' when she allowed their 5-year-old daughter to have an unplanned playdate with a friend She added that he claimed it would throw off their afternoon and argued that their daughter already had 'more than enough fun' that day The woman detailed her story on a popular community site, and opinions were mixed over which parent was in the rightA woman says she and her husband had differing opinions on the best way to handle a situation with their 5-year-old daughter — and she's asking others for an outside perspective. The woman detailed her experience in the 'Am I Being Unreasonable?' forum on the U.K.-based community site a place where parents can seek advice about interpersonal dilemmas. In her post, the woman said that her husband is generally slow to get ready when leaving the house, and that she is 'always' waiting for him. The woman explained that their daughter recently had a birthday party to attend. She continued, 'My [daughter's] friend's mom asked if I could watch her [daughter] for a couple of hours after the party. It was a morning party, so she'd be ready to be picked up at 2:30 from my house.' The original poster said that while she and her husband had plans to drop by his parents' house that day, the timing was flexible so she didn't think a playdate after the birthday party would be an issue. She added that she figured she could watch the children while her husband took the extra time he needed to get ready for the next part of their day. Because of this, she agreed to the playdate. The PEOPLE Puzzler crossword is here! How quickly can you solve it? Play now! 'My [daughter] was so excited,' the woman recalled, adding that her daughter is 'constantly asking for playdates with her friends and we don't do it that often. However, the mom said that her husband 'was not happy about this,' claiming that the playdate would 'hold them up' for the rest of their day. He also told her that she never puts 'limits' on their daughter's fun and that 'going to a party was more than enough fun for her in one day.' The woman said that by the time they got back from the party, the other child was only with them for 'an hour or so," at which point they went about their day as planned. 'Who's unreasonable?' the woman asked her fellow community members at the end of her post. Many commenters said that they think the woman's husband was being unreasonable in this situation. 'He wants you to put limits on your daughter's fun…..? Wha…? YANBU [you are not being unreasonable],' one person said. Another person added, 'He's the unreasonable one. I wouldn't have even considered this as being a 'play date.' It's doing a favor for another parent, and you never know when you might need a favour in return.' 'He sounds quite irritating,' yet another commenter replied. Never miss a story — sign up for to stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer​​, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories. One person, however, admitted that they would have been irritated as well if a spouse changed the day's plan without consulting them first. 'I don't like the 'limits on fun' part, but it seems you did unilaterally make plans on what's actually a shared family day, without consulting or discussing with him. So I think overall, YABU [you are bring unreasonable],' they said. Read the original article on People

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