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Hailey Bieber Is Shutting Out the Noise—and Finding Her Bliss

Hailey Bieber Is Shutting Out the Noise—and Finding Her Bliss

Vogue20-05-2025

The line begins around the corner. It curls through a hedge and down Melrose, these excited young women in baggy jeans and baby tees, slicked-back center-parted buns, glossy pouts, and perfect, almond-shaped manicures, all patiently waiting for the doors of Rhode's Los Angeles pop-up to open and let them inside. It is a warm morning in February, and some have been here for hours, hoping to get that much closer to Hailey Bieber, the inspiration behind such beauty crazes as 'clean girl,''vanilla girl,'and 'strawberry girl'(the ingestible theme continues with 'glazed-donut skin,' 'latte makeup,' 'brownie-glazed lips,' and 'cinnamon-cookie-butter hair'). Around 9,000 people will show up here over the course of six days for Rhode skin creams, face balms, lip glosses (or the ultra-Instagrammable phone-case holders), and more, but really they've come for the model turned businesswoman who dreamed them up.
What is it about Hailey Bieber? What makes her fans stop this particular 28-year-old on the street, paint facsimiles of her freckles on their faces, and wait in line to buy her $20 smoothie collab at Erewhon? What drives others to fixate on her flaws in comments sections, or even, she'll tell me later, follow and berate her in the street? For the former, it's her palpable warmth and kindness, her '90s­­-­nostalgia-influenced style, her seemingly untampered-with good looks, and her charmed life as the devoted Mrs. Justin Bieber. From what I can tell, after several perilous hours spent online, her dissenters believe she's successfully executed an evil master plan to entrap their favorite childhood pop star into marriage and keep him from his one true love, which they believe to be his girlfriend from when he was 16, Selena Gomez. As in the case of most celebrity news, or really news in general, the negative version gets disproportionate airtime; disasters and villains sell.
When I meet Hailey Bieber in March for lunch in Los Angeles at a homey neighborhood deli she and Justin frequent, the week's headlines have proclaimed that they are moving to Europe for Justin's mental health; they are in 'crisis'; he is 'manic,' 'disengaged and disheveled,' strange, and spiraling; and she is planning legal action against the creator of an inaccuracy-riddled video that purports to have done a Zapruder-style analysis of her preteen digital output cross-referenced with Justin Bieber concert appearances. (There has also been talk online that influencers are paid to join the pile-on.)

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‘Sinners' Won't Get A Sequel And That's Exactly Why It Works
‘Sinners' Won't Get A Sequel And That's Exactly Why It Works

Forbes

time21 minutes ago

  • Forbes

‘Sinners' Won't Get A Sequel And That's Exactly Why It Works

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George Wendt's mistaken jabs at John Boehner link 'Cheers' and Ohio politics

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George Wendt's mistaken jabs at John Boehner link 'Cheers' and Ohio politics

There was no mistake when the beloved but forlorn accountant Norm Peterson chugged his way into the fictional TV bar "Cheers." "Norm!!!" hollered the regulars in unison, ranging from mail carrier Cliff Clavin to "Mayday" Sam Malone, the former Major League pitcher-turned barkeep. If only former House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, or late Rep. Buz Lukens, R-Ohio, had been as recognizable to George Wendt, the actor who played Norm on the sitcom. Wendt died last week at age 76. The portly, everyman, "Willy Loman" character Wendt created was one of the most iconic in the history of comedic television. Wendt's portrayal of Norm earned him six consecutive Emmy nominations for Best Supporting Actor in a primetime series. But during Boehner's first race for Congress in 1990, Wendt inadvertently manufactured a bizarre and permanent connection to the future Speaker of the House. In 1989, Lukens represented Ohio's 8th Congressional District. 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Despite the scandal, Lukens remained popular in the district. He had served as the congressman decades earlier and returned to the House when Kindness ran unsuccessfully for the Senate against late-Sen. John Glenn, D-Ohio, in 1986. So with the Lukens scandal, Kindness wanted his job back. And Boehner hoped to capitalize on the opportunity. Can you top a name like that? "Congressman Kindness." No wonder it was such a challenge for the upstart, future Speaker with the unpronounceable, Teutonic surname. But Boehner won. And even though he felled Lukens and Kindness, it was not a done deal that Boehner would win the general election. Boehner ran against Democrat Greg Jolivette, the mayor of Hamilton, Ohio, the biggest city in the 8th Congressional District. Jolivette was best known for changing the name of "Hamilton," to "Hamilton!" in the 1980s. He also ran Jolly's Drive-Ins in Hamilton. Imagine 1970s hamburger joints where you can order from your car, bedecked in orange. 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So Hall asked him about Wendt's political involvement and Jolivette. Wendt proceeded to essentially libel Boehner on the air. Wendt never mentioned Boehner by name. But Wendt mixed up Lukens and his sex scandal with Boehner. On national TV, no less. "The guy he's running against had some problems a while back," said Wendt, referring to Jolivette's opponent, but mixing Boehner up with Lukens. "The guy from the 8th District had some convictions, some felony or a misdemeanor or something. So I think it's time for a change. One thing's for sure, I know, Greg's not going to be a criminal." Hall is an Ohio native. But he was apparently not versed in the Lukens scandal – even though it was a national story and commanded daily headlines. He didn't inquire further or correct Wendt. After all, this was a late-night comedy and variety show. Not "Meet the Press." A publicist for Hall blamed the issue entirely on Wendt, saying the host has no control over "what (guests are) going to say." 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Guillermo Del Toro's ‘Frankenstein' Debuts First Teaser At Netflix Tudum
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  • Yahoo

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