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Are Farmer Wants A Wife 2025 Couple Corey & Keeley Still Together?

Are Farmer Wants A Wife 2025 Couple Corey & Keeley Still Together?

Refinery295 hours ago

It's been a rollercoaster on Farmer Wants A Wife 2025, with texting scandals, women walking off the farm, and intruders causing chaos. All of the Farmer Wants A Wife 2025 contestants are now happily paired up, with Farmer Corey Manwaring choosing Keeley Rankin over Chloe Jayne during his final decision.
With 20 Farmer Wants A Wife couples still together today, will Corey and Keeley be another success story? They certainly had a spark from the start, with Keeley always being one of Corey's frontrunners. The one contentious issue between the couple is that Keeley wasn't sure how soon she would want to move to Corey's farm, which would start the pair off on shaky ground.
So, are Farmer Corey and Keeley still together now that their time on the show has finished? We've done some digging to find out what happened to this Farmer Wants A Wife couple.
What have Farmer Corey Manwaring and Keeley Rankin said about their relationship?
After Farmer Corey let Chloe down gently, he declared his love for Keeley in a sweet moment.
"I feel as though I can be my true authentic self around you. Keeley, it makes me happy to say but I feel like I'm falling in love with you," he said. Keeley said she had also "fallen in love" with the Farmer, and was visibly relieved.
Corey told producers he hopes to propose to Keeley in a couple of years and start having kids once they hit the five-year mark. Does this mean they're a solid couple?
Are Farmer Corey and Keeley still together?
An anonymous contestant told Yahoo! Lifestyle that Farmer Corey and Keeley are still in a relationship, although there are doubts as to whether she's moved in with Corey. "They're still together. I believe she is splitting her time between home and the farm, but I don't think she's moved there yet," the source spilled.
However, there's a major hint on Channel Seven's current application form for Farmer Wants A Wife 2026 that could mean Corey and Keeley have called it quits. According to the website, there are 20 couples still together today. If Corey and Keeley were still together, the website would say there are 21 couples still together today.
Corey and Keeley also aren't following each other on social media. Could this be a hint they've had a falling out, or is it to throw us off the scent? It's all rather confusing, so we'll have to get some answers from the Farmer Wants A Wife reunion.

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Are Farmer Wants A Wife 2025 Couple Corey & Keeley Still Together?
Are Farmer Wants A Wife 2025 Couple Corey & Keeley Still Together?

Refinery29

time5 hours ago

  • Refinery29

Are Farmer Wants A Wife 2025 Couple Corey & Keeley Still Together?

It's been a rollercoaster on Farmer Wants A Wife 2025, with texting scandals, women walking off the farm, and intruders causing chaos. All of the Farmer Wants A Wife 2025 contestants are now happily paired up, with Farmer Corey Manwaring choosing Keeley Rankin over Chloe Jayne during his final decision. With 20 Farmer Wants A Wife couples still together today, will Corey and Keeley be another success story? They certainly had a spark from the start, with Keeley always being one of Corey's frontrunners. The one contentious issue between the couple is that Keeley wasn't sure how soon she would want to move to Corey's farm, which would start the pair off on shaky ground. So, are Farmer Corey and Keeley still together now that their time on the show has finished? We've done some digging to find out what happened to this Farmer Wants A Wife couple. What have Farmer Corey Manwaring and Keeley Rankin said about their relationship? After Farmer Corey let Chloe down gently, he declared his love for Keeley in a sweet moment. "I feel as though I can be my true authentic self around you. Keeley, it makes me happy to say but I feel like I'm falling in love with you," he said. Keeley said she had also "fallen in love" with the Farmer, and was visibly relieved. Corey told producers he hopes to propose to Keeley in a couple of years and start having kids once they hit the five-year mark. Does this mean they're a solid couple? Are Farmer Corey and Keeley still together? An anonymous contestant told Yahoo! Lifestyle that Farmer Corey and Keeley are still in a relationship, although there are doubts as to whether she's moved in with Corey. "They're still together. I believe she is splitting her time between home and the farm, but I don't think she's moved there yet," the source spilled. However, there's a major hint on Channel Seven's current application form for Farmer Wants A Wife 2026 that could mean Corey and Keeley have called it quits. According to the website, there are 20 couples still together today. If Corey and Keeley were still together, the website would say there are 21 couples still together today. Corey and Keeley also aren't following each other on social media. Could this be a hint they've had a falling out, or is it to throw us off the scent? It's all rather confusing, so we'll have to get some answers from the Farmer Wants A Wife reunion.

The $200,000 height-enhancing surgery from 'Materialists' is real — and more common than you might think
The $200,000 height-enhancing surgery from 'Materialists' is real — and more common than you might think

Yahoo

time12 hours ago

  • Yahoo

The $200,000 height-enhancing surgery from 'Materialists' is real — and more common than you might think

In Celine Song's new romantic drama, Materialists, Lucy (Dakota Johnson) is perpetually on the hunt for a tall man. Not for herself, however — Lucy is a matchmaker, and her clients have height requirements they refuse to budge on. It's why, early in the film, Lucy says she understands why some men choose to go through with a $200,000 surgery that gives them up to 6 more inches of height: It adds to their value on the dating scene. Without spoiling too much, this surgery comes up for a second time in the film — a twist that reframes what it means to be a catch in today's dating market. But this height surgery isn't just a plot point. It's a real way some people are coping with body image issues around their stature. Dr. Dror Paley, founder of the Paley Orthopedic & Spine Institute's Stature Center in West Palm Beach, Fla., told Yahoo that he's done more than 25,000 limb lengthening surgeries over the course of his 38-year career. Most of these are done in order to correct imbalances in the body — if one leg is shorter than the other, for example. But on average, he said, he performs about 100 surgeries per year on patients who are just hoping to inch up in height. Paley explained that limb lengthening involves gradually pulling apart a broken bone (the tibia or the femur) so that new bone grows in the gap. Traditionally, this was done using external metal frames, but now, it's typical to use implantable devices with motors or magnets that go inside the bone and are controlled remotely and adjusted slowly over weeks. With each adjustment, the devices extend the bone — no more than 1 millimeter per day — and the body naturally generates new bone and soft tissue to fill in the space. Recovery is about five months long, Paley said, and physical therapy is required in order to get back functionality. Depending on the device used, some people may need a walker or crutches to move around initially. As an orthopedic surgeon, Paley corrects 'pain and disability,' not aesthetics, which is why he was initially concerned about being judged by others in his industry for the procedure. 'It's very odd for us to treat patients for cosmetic reasons,' Paley said. 'It took a long time to figure out what the plastic surgeons knew all along: that they were treating body image issues.' The price tag on such a procedure can vary but starts at around $80,000 to lengthen just the tibia, which can give a patient around 3 more inches of height, Paley said. But if a patient wants more height by lengthening the femur as well, that effectively doubles the cost of the surgery. With physical therapy and other recovery costs, Paley said that the $200,000 price quoted in Materialists is more or less accurate. But for many patients, that cost is more than worth it. Paley recalled one patient, a young man fresh out of law school who could barely look him in the eye during their initial appointment. Paley performed the limb lengthening surgery on him, adding 3 inches to his tibia. A decade later, Paley said the patient came back to thank him with a firm handshake. He told the doctor that due to the surgery, he found the confidence to pursue a career in TV writing — something that he said he never would have done had he not had the surgery. 'We're looking to change how patients feel about themselves,' Paley said of the surgery. 'It changes their life.' Alyson Curtis, a New York City-based mental health counselor specializing in body image issues, told Yahoo that she believes many straight men are 'suffering in silence' with body image issues, and that height tends to be a major insecurity for men on the shorter side. 'As a therapist, I fully validate that 'pretty privilege' is real, like no matter who you are,' she said. 'Our clients are swiping on the dating apps, and height is one of those metrics where you might not even be considered if you don't meet a certain requirement. And I think that the movie really accurately portrayed that.' Ultimately, Curtis explained, the society we live in is 'obviously patriarchal' and 'made by men.' 'Their definition of masculinity is to be big and powerful still, and height represents that,' she said, noting that at the same time, many men expect and desire women to be 'very small,' leading to women experiencing body image issues around thinness. (In Materialists, a client tells Lucy that he doesn't want any 'fatties,' while another insists on dating a woman with a BMI no greater than 20.) 'We do live in a world that prefers people in a certain body type, or a taller height, or whatever,' she said. While Curtis said she always validates her clients for feeling bad about the ways in which society judges us, she noted that these standards don't have to define who we are. 'It can be very tormenting to sort of always feel inferior. But is it enough to hate yourself for the rest of your life? Is it enough to undergo a really intense surgery that not everyone has the means to do anyway?' Instead, Curtis said, her work with patients comes from a place of finding acceptance in the things you can't or don't want to change. 'There are people in this world who want to change things about you, who are going to judge you — whether it's a personality attribute or even other features like the color of our skin,' she shared. 'There's so many things about us that people are going to reject that we just can't please everyone.'

The internet has a wild obsession with Sydney Sweeney's body. So she got in on the joke.
The internet has a wild obsession with Sydney Sweeney's body. So she got in on the joke.

Yahoo

time17 hours ago

  • Yahoo

The internet has a wild obsession with Sydney Sweeney's body. So she got in on the joke.

USA TODAY and Yahoo may earn commission from links in this article. Pricing and availability subject to change. What's more shocking: That an A-list celebrity made soap with her bathwater, or that the soap is now re-selling for thousands of dollars online? The internet is divided over a recent marketing gimmick involving Sydney Sweeney, who, in collaboration with the men's personal care company Dr. Squatch, authorized the creation and sale of bars of soap containing, among other things, her bathwater. Yes, this is real. In fact, the actress told E! News at the "Echo Valley" premiere earlier this month it was actually her idea. "I think that's it's more fun to see everybody else talk about it," Sweeney said, when asked for her reaction to the soap. Dr. Squatch made 5,000 bars of the soap − dubbed Sydney's Bathwater Bliss − and sold them online for $8 each. They quickly sold out, and now those bars are getting re-sold for much, much more on eBay. Some are priced as high as $1,600. The soap clearly has its fans, but not everyone's amused by it. "Sad day for humanity," one person wrote on Instagram. "Everyone who bought this is an absolute vile form of human," wrote another. Sweeney clearly wanted to get people talking with her soap, and she's obviously succeeded. But could she also be making a point that her critics are missing? Sweeney has been open before about society's rampant sexualization of her and the challenges this has brought to her life. By selling soap made with her bathwater, could she be calling attention to a deeper issue? "Our culture polices women's sexuality, profits off it at the same time and shames them for profiting from it themselves − especially when it comes to young, beautiful, talented stars like Sydney Sweeney," Shira Tarrant, a women's, gender and sexuality studies professor and the author of "The Pornography Industry: What Everyone Needs to Know." In short: Sweeney's soap is a statement in more ways than one, intentional or not. Sweeney said she got the idea for the soap after seeing the internet's reaction to an advertisement she did with Dr. Squatch last year. That ad, which showed a nearly nude Sweeney sitting in a bathtub, got over 1.7 million likes on Instagram, along with plenty of comments inquiring about how to buy the actress' bathwater from the commercial shoot. What health & wellness means for you: Sign up for USA TODAY's Keeping It Together newsletter Sweeney said she and Dr. Squatch decided to give the people what they want. 'When your fans start asking for your bathwater, you can either ignore it, or turn it into a bar of Dr. Squatch soap,' the actress said in a press release. It seems that, no matter what she does, Sweeney can't escape scrutiny over her body. More recently, the actress stirred buzz for gaining 30 pounds to play boxer Christy Martin in an upcoming biopic. Some have noted that Sweeney's soap stunt seems especially odd, given what the actress has said before about being objectified. Sweeney opened up about the scrutiny surrounding her body last year in an interview with Variety. "I see it, and I just can't allow myself to have a reaction," she told the outlet. "I don't know how to explain it — I'm still trying to figure it out myself. People feel connected and free to be able to speak about me in whatever way they want, because they believe that I've signed my life away. That I'm not on a human level anymore, because I'm an actor. That these characters are for everybody else, but then me as Sydney is not for me anymore. It's this weird relationship that people have with me that I have no control or say over." More: Sydney Sweeney promotes her own bathwater in new soap collab. The internet has thoughts. It's not just Sweeney who's come under fire recently either. Last week, Sabrina Carpenter received similar backlash when she unveiled the cover of her upcoming album 'Man's Best Friend.' The cover shows the pop star on her knees as a man off-camera holds her by the hair. Some defended the cover, while others called it degrading. "It's always so funny to me when people complain. They're like, 'All she does is sing about this.' But those are the songs that you've made popular," Carpenter told Rolling Stone about the controversy. "Clearly you love sex. You're obsessed with it." According to gender and sexuality experts, there are many ways to interpret Sweeney's intentions. On the one hand, it's possible she's acquiescing to society's mistreatment of her. If this is the case, it's something that, unfortunately, many women can relate to, says Leora Tanenbaum, author of the book "Sexy Selfie Nation: Standing Up for Yourself in Today's Toxic, Sexist Culture." "I heard the narrative so many times of 'I may as well monetize my sexuality because everyone else is already exploiting and objectifying me'," Tanenbaum says. View this post on Instagram A post shared by Dr. Squatch (@drsquatch) On the other hand, it's also possible that Sweeney may be leaning into parody and satire in order to call out this objectification. Unless she states her intentions, we can't know for sure. "Sydney Sweeney just found a brilliant way to literally package her own reputation — and sell it," Tarrant says. "Is this simply a money-making publicity stunt or a provocative statement about larger issues? The answer is both." Perhaps the bigger question isn't what Sweeney is trying to say with her soap, but rather what her soap says about us. Tanenbaum says the soap's popularity raises more questions about the people buying it than it does about Sweeney. Degrading or empowering? Why people can't stop talking about Bianca Censori's naked dress. The conversation around Sweeney's soap presents an opportunity for reflection. What does sexual empowerment really look like? There's nothing wrong with wanting to feel sexy − but it's important to know where this desire is coming from and why. "I don't believe it's a good idea to engage in sexual behavior just to fulfill a script that's handed to you, or to prove a point to other people," Tanenbaum says. "When you take ownership over your sexuality to meet the expectations of other people, you actually lose your autonomy because it's about other people, not you." This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Sydney Sweeney and the real message of her bathwater soap

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