
Rosalía on Labeling Sexuality After Hunter Schafer Relationship
During her September cover story for Elle, the Spanish singer-songwriter revealed that she doesn't feel the need to define her sexuality for anyone. 'No, I do not pressure myself,' she told the outlet. 'I think of freedom. That's what guides me.'
In April 2024, Hunter shared that she and the 'La Combi Versace' singer dated over five months in the fall and winter of 2019. She admitted that her former flame is 'family no matter what,' telling GQ, 'I have really beautiful friendships with people that I was once romantically involved with.'
Hunter went on to add, 'It's been so much speculation for so long. Part of us just wants to get it over with, and then another part is like, 'It's none of anybody's fucking business!'' That said, she noted that the relationship is 'something I'm happy to share. And I think she feels that way, too.'
Since Hunter, Rosalía has been romantically linked to actor Jeremy Allen White and musician Rauw Alejandro (to whom she was engaged), while Hunter previously dated her Euphoria costar Dominic Fike.
And how does Rosalía feel about joining the Euphoria cast alongside her ex (and her ex's ex)? As she told Vogue on the Met Gala red carpet, she's just 'trying not to forget' her lines. 'It's been very inspiring to be with these amazing actors,' she added. 'It's great.'

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Time Business News
7 hours ago
- Time Business News
The 9 Best Sports Bars in Barcelona
Barcelona isn't just a paradise for architecture, beaches, and tapas, it's also a city where sports culture runs deep, from the roar of Camp Nou to the hum of neighborhood bars on match day. Whether you're a die-hard football fanatic, a casual NBA watcher, or someone who simply enjoys a cold beer with friends while the game's on in the background, the city offers a wide variety of venues to suit every taste. From bustling beer halls with craft brews and multiple screens to cozy local pubs steeped in tradition, here's a look at some of the best spots to watch sports in Barcelona. 1. CocoVail Beer Hall Nestled in the Eixample district, CocoVail stands out as a spacious, American-style craft beer haven. With 24 rotating craft beers on tap, including local Catalan and Spanish brews, it's a beer lover's paradise. They also serve up to 17 flavorful chicken wing variants, burgers, and sandwiches, perfect for sharing, especially when paired with board games while you wait. CocoVail features 6–7 large-screen TVs, ensuring you can catch multiple games, from NBA and NFL, to UCL, golf, rugby, Formula 1, and March Madness. Reviewers love the laid-back vibe and friendly service. 2. Belushi's Bar A familiar face among expats and students, Belushi's offers an international pub atmosphere with multiple screens and a global crowd vibe. Expect a solid mix of pub food, beers, and broadcasts of major sports from around the world. 3. The George Payne Located centrally near Plaça Catalunya, this lively Irish pub delivers a genuine match-day atmosphere. With ten 60' screens across two floors, you'll never miss a moment. Known for its long beer list, 'Messi World Class Burger,' fiery chicken wings, and even humorous food challenges like the 'Luis Suárez Big Bite,' this spot turns sports viewing into full-on entertainment. 4. Flaherty's Irish Bar & The Old Irish Pub Also recognized as strong choices in Barcelona's sports bar lineup. Both offer cozy, authentic pub interiors and frequent broadcasts of football, rugby, and more, great for tourists or locals seeking a classic Irish pub vibe. 5. Sonora Sports Tavern Listed among the top sports pubs in the city, Sonora rounds out a solid lineup with its welcoming setting and reliable sports coverage. It's also in an interesting area of the city that is more modern, Poble Nou. 6. Casa de Tapas La Cañota For those seeking a family-friendly, restaurant-style alternative, this Montjuïc gem delivers seafood tapas and burgers, alongside four TV screens to catch Barça matches in a relaxed, but vibrant setting. 7. L'Ovella Negra A rustic, convivial tavern with large spaces, table football, sangria-by-the-pitch-volume vibes, and big screens for match nights. It's a mix of local tradition and festive sports culture. 8. Bar Llopart & Bar Versalles For a more local experience, these neighborhood havens offer an authentic sporting atmosphere with Catalan flair. Bar Llopart in Sants, with its Barça scarves, chants, and budget-friendly beers, attracts true fans. Bar Versalles in Sant Andreu, with historic charm and modernist touches, screens matches amid a genuine community feel. 9. Additional Favorites & Local Tips Travelers and students frequently recommend Irish pubs like Michael Collins, James Joyce, and George Payne as go-to places for casual match watching, even if the concept of a 'sports bar' isn't ingrained in Catalan culture. Others point to a local ambiance, where regular bars simply tune into big games in the background. Final Word Whether you're hunting for craft beers, fiery wings, and big screens (CocoVail), or an adrenaline-charged, challenge-fuelled environment (George Payne), Barcelona offers diverse options. Belushi's and other Irish pubs keep things steady and social. Meanwhile, more traditional locales like Bar Llopart or La Cañota cater to local fans, families, and foodies alike. There's a perfect place in Barcelona for every kind of match-day mood, cheers to that! TIME BUSINESS NEWS
Yahoo
8 hours ago
- Yahoo
Rosalía Reflects on Her Next Album, Creative Breakups, and 'Euphoria'
"Hearst Magazines and Yahoo may earn commission or revenue on some items through these links." One Wednesday morning in June, Rosalía decided to start her day with a pensive walk in the woods. She ambled up the steep trail at the Carretera de les Aigües—Barcelona's answer to Runyon Canyon in the Hollywood Hills—and peered out into the distance toward Sant Esteve Sesrovires, the Catalan town where she grew up. She slipped on a pair of headphones and listened to The Smiths' compilation album, Louder Than Bombs. As she recalls the scene to me now, she mimics Morrissey's yearning croons, in the supple vibrato of her own voice. Lifting her manicured hand, exulting in the melodrama of it all, she sings, 'Please, please, please let me get what I want…this time.' This is how we start our conversation inside Pècora, a chic, minimalist coffee shop in the seaside neighborhood of Poblenou that has opened just for us. Rosalía is sitting with her back to the windows—so that potential customers would squint at the Closed sign and overlook the country's most game-changing pop star on the other side of the glass. She's wearing a floor-length Gimaguas dress in baby blue plaid, revealing Dior biker boots when she crosses her legs. Her long curls cascade around her shoulders when she leans in to talk. 'The rhythm of everything is so fast, so frenetic,' says Rosalía, who turns 33 in September. 'And I think, 'My God, it's been eight years since I released my first work.' That's insane to me.' When we meet, it seems as though Rosalía is pushing her way through a creative impasse. Her forthcoming album, the follow-up to 2022's Grammy-winning Motomami, is yet to be completed. 'What is time?' she says, laughing. 'That's so relative! So there's always a deadline and, well, the deadline can always change.' Although she won't divulge what her new record sounds like just yet—she's quite elusive about the whole thing, really—she's shared videos of herself writing and producing tracks as part of a creative campaign for Instagram, as if to prove to fans that she is, indeed, at work. In fact, she's scheduled time at a local studio immediately after our chat to fine-tune her new material. 'I'm in the process,' she says. Of course, there's no shortage of distractions to be had this summer. She wedged our conversation between visits with her family and a detour to Barcelona's famed Primavera Sound festival with her sister, Pili. Soon she'll return to Los Angeles to film the remaining scenes for her guest-starring role in HBO's Euphoria. She's also been seen in Los Angeles, Munich, and Barcelona with her rumored love interest, the German actor-singer Emilio Sakraya. Regarding her dating life, she only says, with a wide, playful grin: 'I spend many hours in the studio. I'm in seclusion.' Her closest relationship right now may be with her piano. The global anticipation for new music is understandable. In her major label debut under Universal Music Spain, 2017's Los Ángeles, she introduced newcomers to the brooding Spanish flamenco standards that she studied at the prestigious Escola Superior de Música de Catalunya. Rosalía then entered the Latin pop stratosphere with her 2018 sophomore album, El Mal Querer—which also served as her baccalaureate thesis, using the 13th-century novela Flamenca as source material to illustrate the workings of an abusive relationship. El Mal Querer would go on to win the Latin Grammy for Album of the Year, then the Grammy for Best Latin Rock or Alternative Album. In 2022, she dropped Motomami, a bold work of avant-pop daredeviltry, inspired by music from the Caribbean and fortified with the dauntless, feminist spirit of her mother, who took young Rosalía out for rides on the back of her Harley-Davidson. Motomami won her the same two prestigious Grammy categories as the previous album—a feat that catapulted Rosalía to global stardom, yet inevitably raised the bar for future projects. The pressure to answer to industry demands, she says, is increasingly at odds with her freedom-seeking spirit. 'The rhythm [of the music industry] is so fast,' Rosalía tells me. 'And the sacrifice, the price to pay, is so high.' The only way she can continue without burning out is if her motives feel true. 'The driving force that leads you to continue making music, to continue creating, has to come from a place of purity,' she says. 'Motives like money, pleasure, power…I don't feel that they are fertile. Nothing will come out of there that I'm really interested in. Those are subjects that don't inspire me.' To begin her next chapter, Rosalía sought space far from Spain, in the quiet of Mount Washington, a hilly enclave in northeast Los Angeles. There, she worked from a private music studio, recording songs she'd written almost entirely from bed in a nearby Hollywood apartment. She broke up her days with films by Martin Scorsese and Joachim Trier, and read the novel I Love Dick, a feminist inquiry of desire by Chris Kraus. ('I love this woman! I love how she thinks,' she says of Kraus.) In L.A. last summer, paparazzi caught Rosalía outside Charli XCX's 32nd birthday party wielding a bouquet of black calla lilies filled with cigarettes, sparking a microtrend. ('If my friend likes Parliaments, I'll bring her a bouquet with Parliaments,' Rosalía says. 'You can do a bouquet of anything that you know that person loves!') She also made frequent stops at the local farmers market, where she says she tapped into her primordial gatherer spirit. 'Many times, the more masculine way of making music is about the hero: the me, what I've accomplished, what I have…blah blah blah,' she says. 'A more feminine way of writing, in my opinion, is like foraging. I'm aware of the stories that have come before me, the stories that are happening around me. I pick it up, I'm able to share it; I don't put myself at the center, right?' It is a method she cultivated as an academic, which directly informs her approach to composition. Like works of found-object art, her songs are assemblages of sounds with seemingly disparate DNA, brought together by her gymnastically limber voice. In her 2018 single 'Baghdad,' she interpolated an R&B melody made famous by Justin Timberlake; in her 2022 smash 'Saoko,' she rapped over jazz drum fills and pianos with sludgy reggaeton beats. The visual culture of Rosalía's work is executed with similarly heady intentions, inspired by TikTok videos and the fractured nature of her own presence on the internet. A staple of her Motomami world tour was the cameraman and drones that trailed her and her dancers across the stage. One of my most lasting memories from her shows was just the internal frenzy of deciding whether my eyes would follow Rosalía, the real live person on stage, or Rosalía, the image replicated and multiplied on the screens behind and around above her. 'In a cubist painting, which part do you choose?' says Rosalía of her concept. 'Everything is happening at the same time, right? So you just choose what makes sense for you, where you want to put the eye and where you want to focus your energy.' She's gone mostly offline since her last project. 'Björk says that in order to create, you need periods of privacy—for a seed [to] grow, it needs darkness,' she says. She has also shed some previous collaborators, including Canary Islander El Guincho, the edgy artist-producer who was her main creative copilot in El Mal Querer and Motomami. She says there is no bad blood, though 'we haven't seen each other [in] years. I honestly love working with people long-term. But sometimes people grow apart. He's on a journey now, he's done his [own] projects all these years. And yes, sometimes that can happen where people, you know, they grow to do whatever their journey is. Right now, I'm working by myself.' Going it alone poses a new challenge for Rosalía, who, in true Libran fashion, derives inspiration from the synergy she experiences with others. She has famously collaborated with past romantic partners, like Spanish rapper C. Tangana, who was a co-songwriter on El Mal Querer. In 2023, she released RR, a joint EP with Puerto Rican singer Rauw Alejandro, to whom she was engaged until later that year. She does not speak ill of her exes, if at all, but simply says, 'I feel grateful to each person with whom life has made me find myself.' Rosalía was also linked to Euphoria star Hunter Schafer, who, in a 2024 GQ story, confirmed their five-month relationship back in 2019, and described the singer as 'family, no matter what.' When I ask Rosalía if the experience put pressure on her to publicly define her sexuality, queer or otherwise, she shakes her head. 'No, I do not pressure myself,' she says. 'I think of freedom. That's what guides me.' The two remain friends and, more recently, costars: Earlier this year, Rosalía began shooting scenes for the long-awaited third season of Euphoria. She appreciates the controversial, controlled chaos engendered by the show's writer, director, and producer, Sam Levinson. Equally a fan of the singer, Levinson tells ELLE that he gave her almost free rein to shape her part. 'I love unleashing her on a scene,' he says. 'I let her play with the words, the emotions, in English and Spanish. I never want to tell her what to do first, because her natural instincts are so fascinating, charismatic, and funny. Every scene we shoot, I'm behind the camera smiling.' Rosalía, who first developed her acting chops through the immensely theatrical art of flamenco, says that she likes to put herself 'in service of the emotion, in service of an idea, in service of something that is much grander than me.' Although she can't share much about her role while the season is in production, she says she's enjoyed running into Schafer on set, and developing rapport with costars Zendaya and Alexa Demie. 'I have good friends there. It feels really nice to be able to find each other.' Rosalía's first foray into professional acting was in Pain and Glory, the 2019 film by the great Spanish director Pedro Almodóvar. Before filming, Almodóvar invited the singer out to lunch with her fellow countrywoman and costar Penélope Cruz. They would play laundresses singing together as they washed clothes in the river. 'I was terrified to have to sing with her,' Cruz recalls. 'She was nervous about acting, and I was nervous about singing—and it was funny to be sharing that nervousness.' Cruz and Rosalia would become great friends—two Spanish icons who have brought their country's culture to a global audience. But between the two divas, there existed no air of gravitas—only genuine, hours-long talks and banter built on mutual admiration. 'I've always been mesmerized by her voice,' Cruz says, 'and her talent also as a composer, as a writer, as an interpreter. The way she performs and what she can transmit is something really special.' She notes that Rosalía's artistry has had a ripple effect in Spain, sparking a wave of experimentation. It's a legacy that Rosalía helped accelerate, but she declines to take credit for it. She's more inclined to cite her forefathers in flamenco, Camarón de la Isla and Enrique Morente, as well as Björk and Kate Bush, who she says are part of the same matriarchal lineage in pop. '[If] Kate Bush exists, and then Björk exists, then another way of making pop exists,' Rosalía says. 'I couldn't make the music I make if there wasn't a tradition behind it, which I could learn from and drink from. I hope that in the same way, what I do can make sense for other artists.' But when it comes to matters of fashion, Rosalía is much more protective of her own steeze, an ultrafemme, Venus-like biker chic she's spent her life cultivating. 'Girl,' she says, motioning at her own body, 'I am a moodboard in flesh! I feel that as an artist, I cannot only express myself through music. You can be creative in your life 24-7. It's just about allowing yourself to be in that state. For me, style is an elongation, an extension of the expression.' Yet before we leave, she stresses that—whether she releases one more album in her life, or 20—music will be the compass that orients her for the rest of her days. 'It's funny when people say I quit music,' Rosalía says. 'That's impossible! If you are a musician, you can't quit. Music is not something you can abandon. 'Sometimes it takes a second for you to be able to process what you've done,' she adds. 'It's a blessing in an artistic career to process things, or rewrite how it should have been done before—in your life or in anything. The immediacy of today's rhythms is not the rhythm of the soul. And to create in an honest way, you have to know what rhythm you're going with.' Hair by Evanie Frausto for Pravana; makeup by Raisa Flowers for Dior Beauty; manicure by Sonya Meesh for Essie; set design by Lauren Nikrooz at 11th House Agency; produced by John Nadhazi and Michael Gleeson at VLM Now You Might Also Like The 15 Best Organic And Clean Shampoos For Any And All Hair Types 100 Gifts That Are $50 Or Under (And Look Way More Expensive Than They Actually Are)


New York Post
12 hours ago
- New York Post
American Eagle ‘almost paralyzed by body positivity' before it launched ‘sultry' Sydney Sweeney ads
American Eagle Outfitters has made a bold, divisive bet on its 'sultry' Sydney Sweeney ads — but only after its commitment to the 'body positivity' movement started to falter, experts told The Post. A decade ago, the mall-based chain's 20-year-old lingerie brand Aerie famously took off as millennials shunned Victoria's Secret and its leggy, angel-winged supermodels in favor of Aerie's ads featuring ordinary women and diverse body types. But recently, American Eagle's flagging sales show that 'inclusive fashion' has its limits — especially after the election of President Trump, experts say. Advertisement 7 Sydney Sweeney's provocative ad for American Eagle Outfitters has created a firestorm that's even drawn in President Trump. American Eagle 7 Sydney Sweeney's American Eagle was ratcheting up the provocative ads before the Sweeney campaign. American Eagle 'They were almost paralyzed by their body positivity movement and were cautious about coming across too sexy,' according to retail analyst Gabriella Santaniello, who heads up A-Line Partners. Advertisement In recent months, the retailer has been pivoting to more provocative looks — even before the Sweeney campaign rocked the internet late last month, Santaniello said. String bikinis and 'cheeky bottoms' that expose more of women's butts, for example, were previously only available on American Eagle's website, but started cropping up in its stores earlier this year, she noted. Susan Scafidi, director of the Fashion Law Institute, has likewise noticed 'edgier' looks and 'more sultry styling. 'This means featuring fewer boxy t-shirts and more cropped camisoles,' she said. 7 American Eagle has been edgier in its marketing even before the Sydney Sweeney campaign, experts told The Post. American Eagle Advertisement What's more — unlike competitors including Abercrombie & Fitch, Hollister, and the Gap — some pages on American Eagle's website have lately shown models going braless under various tops — and they aren't always subtle about it. 'All of the teen retailers shy away from the nipple,' Santaniello said. 'That's why it's so odd that they're going for it.' 7 Most teen retailers avoid the nipple look, according retail analyst Gabriella Santaniello. American Eagle Then, in late July, came the Sweeney spots. In one video, the 'White Lotus' and 'Euphoria' star tinkers under the hood of a vintage Mustang GT350 before slamming it shut, wiping her hands on the butt of her jeans — and peeling off in a cloud of burning rubber. Advertisement Days later, President Trump gushed that the ads were 'hot' and 'fantastic' after he learned Sweeney was a registered Republican. The company's shares surged 23% on Trump's comment, drawing comparisons to meme stocks. 7 American Eagle has been among the leading voices among retailers on body positivity messaging. Getty Images for Aerie 'They had to do something different,' said Hitha Herzog, a fashion management professor at Parsons School of Design. 'We have a conservative president in office and we are seeing conversations that skew away from body positivity, inclusion and diversity. 'American Eagle has always been good about knowing where the conversations are going,' Herzog added. Traffic to American Eagle's US website soared following the campaign's rollout on July 23, rising more than 60% on July 28 compared to the same day last year, according to data and insights company Consumer Edge. Meanwhile, however, left-wing critics seized upon the campaign's tagline 'Sydney Sweeney Has Great Jeans'. In one clip, Sweeney explains that genes 'often determin[e] traits like hair color, personality and even eye color,' before declaring, 'My jeans are blue.' 7 The Sydney Sweeney American Eagle campaign includes scenes of the star looking under a hood of Mustang. American Eagle An ensuing fracas claimed the ads were promoting Nazi ideology, calling for boycotts of the 48-year-old company. According to a survey this week by Axios and Generation Lab, 39% of young women and 42% of Democrats said the ads made them less likely to buy American Eagle jeans. Advertisement In the week of Aug. 3, foot traffic at American Eagle stores dropped 8.9% on top of a 3.9% decline the previous week — far steeper than drops at rival chains including Abercrombie and the Gap, according to Pass_by. 'When a brand sees momentum stall so sharply, it often reflects a reputational or cultural factor,' said James Ewen, vice president of marketing for Pass_by. 7 Aerie won market share from Victoria Secret's teen brand, Pink. Bloomberg via Getty Images Advertisement American Eagle posted its only message about the ad so far on Aug. 1 on its Instagram account. 'Sydney Sweeney Has Great Jeans is and always was about the jeans. Her jeans. Her story. We'll continue to celebrate how everyone wears their AE jeans with confidence, their way. Great jeans look good on everyone,' the company said.