
My Favorite Airbnb Experience: In the Studio with Designer Cynthia Rowley
In a city that's defined by its pace, Rowley's new experience with Airbnb offers something distinctly rare in Manhattan's fashion scene: the chance to slow down and see how designs actually evolve and unfold—not in a theatrical sense, but a lived one, from an icon herself. In any case, the event served as a reminder that for all the noise around the fashion world, the most compelling parts are often the quietest: a sketch done by cutting edge creatives at midnight, a question answered humbly and without pretense, a room full of strangers who leave feeling fabulous—all having glimpsed something so unassumingly authentic.
Editor's note: While there are two dates currently open to book through the rest of 2025, more may potentially be added to the calendar. Keep checking back on Airbnb's site for more opportunities to book.
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New York Post
3 hours ago
- New York Post
Marvel leaves Georgia to film superhero movies in UK — gutting state's movie industry: ‘You feel like a jilted lover'
Marvel Studios has shifted most of its production out of Georgia in favor of the United Kingdom — a move that has gutted the Peach State's film industry, wiping out nearly half its spending and leaving once-bustling soundstages largely empty. The Disney-owned studio behind 'Spider-Man: Homecoming' and 'She-Hulk: Attorney at Law' filmed nearly two dozen projects in Atlanta over the past decade. But starting with this summer's 'Fantastic Four: First Steps,' Marvel is shifting its superhero slate — including two new 'Avengers' films and the next 'Spider-Man' — to facilities outside London. Advertisement 4 Tom Holland was recently spotted filming scenes for the upcoming 'Spider-Man' installment in Glasgow, Scotland. UnBoxPHD / While major studios including Disney, Netflix and Warner Bros. Discovery threatened boycotts over Georgia's 2019 abortion law, with some smaller productions leaving in protest, Marvel's current exodus to the UK is driven purely by economics. Rising labor costs in Georgia tipped the scales. In the UK, crews are paid less and studios aren't saddled with health insurance expenses, making it cheaper to shoot overseas, a person familiar with the matter told the Wall Street Journal. The result has been devastating. Georgia's film and TV spending has plunged nearly 50% in three years, with just 245 projects filmed in the fiscal year ending June 2025 — down from 412 in 2022. Advertisement 'You feel like a jilted lover,' Janine Gosselin, 62, a script supervisor who once made $200,000 a year working Marvel sets, told the Journal. She hasn't had steady work since February 2024 and has borrowed from her retirement fund to cover bills. The downturn has film workers so demoralized they've turned the state's famous jingle into a joke. Crew members on the game show '25 Words or Less' sang new lyrics to the 'Made in Georgia' tag earlier this year: 'Unemployed in Georgia.' Advertisement Trilith Studios — Marvel's longtime 1,000-acre production hub near Atlanta, with 34 stages and its own housing village — has gone quiet after years of nonstop demand. 4 Marvel Studios has shifted most of its production out of Georgia in favor of the United Kingdom — a move that has gutted the Peach State's film industry. AFP via Getty Images 'We were fighting over stages on a daily basis because there just wasn't enough room for Marvel and whatever other show was trying to film,' location scout Lenzi Sealy, who worked on four Marvel projects, told the Journal. Now, she says, the lot is 'largely empty.' Advertisement Sealy remembered February's 'Captain America: Brave New World' shoot, when rumors spread it might be Marvel's Georgia swan song. Her fears came true weeks later when the studio held an auction to sell props it had accumulated during its decade in the state. 'That's when it really hit home,' she told the Journal. For local crews, Marvel wasn't just another client — it was the cornerstone. The studio's high-budget blockbusters employed hundreds at a time and kept workers busy year-round. 4 This file image released by Marvel Studios shows, from left, Benedict Cumberbatch, Robert Downey Jr., Mark Ruffalo and Benedict Wong in a scene from 'Avengers: Infinity War.' AP 'Marvel allowed me to do so much with my life and really set the trajectory for my career,' said grip John Grubb, 44, who worked six Marvel films. He even calls his $350,000 home 'the house 'Avengers' bought.' The collapse comes after a meteoric rise that began in 2008, when Georgia expanded of its film tax credit to 30%, uncapped — making it one of the most generous in the world. Advertisement The policy turned Atlanta into the so-called 'Hollywood of the South.' Franchises rushed in: Lionsgate's 'Hunger Games,' Universal's 'Fast & Furious,' Netflix's 'Stranger Things' and AMC's 'The Walking Dead.' At its peak, the industry supported nearly 20,000 jobs, according to a 2023 Georgia State University study. But the global economics have changed. Across the US, 29% fewer big-budget movies and shows began filming in 2024 compared to 2022, according to ProdPro. Advertisement In the UK, that number jumped 16%. 4 This image released by Disney shows the Silver Surfer, portrayed by Julia Garner, in a scene from 'The Fantastic Four: First Steps.' AP Other countries like Canada and Australia continue to lure projects. States including California, New York, New Jersey and Texas are pumping up their own incentives to compete. Lee Thomas, director of the Georgia Film Office, said rising labor costs drove Marvel and others out. Advertisement 'We hope that this is an anomaly where they'll try out other markets and will return to Georgia because they have faith in our crew and facilities and our tried-and-true incentive,' she told the Journal. Trilith CEO Frank Patterson is betting the slump will end, predicting a 'new normal in 2027.' In the meantime, his company is investing in startups that make content exclusively on the studio's stages. The Post has sought comment from the Georgia Film Office and Marvel.
Yahoo
3 hours ago
- Yahoo
Martin Shaw: ‘Lewis Collins behaved so badly'
Passing through the corridors backstage at the Harold Pinter Theatre on the way to meet Martin Shaw, line after line of A Man For All Seasons runs through my head like holy writ. The Robert Bolt play, turned into an Oscar-winning film in 1966, includes some of the most powerful but perfectly weighted dialogue of the 20th century. Shaw is making his second appearance in the play as Sir Thomas More – Henry VIII's martyred chief minister – for a summer West End run. 'I never got this play or Sir Thomas More out of my system,' he says. Shaw's career has oscillated between high theatre and high-profile TV roles such as Judge John Deed, Inspector George Gently and – most famously for those of a certain vintage – as Doyle in the much maligned cop show The Professionals. When we speak, he is an incredibly spritely 80 in his Hush Puppies, with long white hair falling either side of the face of a man 10 years his junior. That's just as well given the demands of playing More, a man with such integrity he would rather die than endanger his immortal soul by taking an oath confirming Henry VIII as Supreme Head of the Church. More's saintly virtues have been called into question recently, with Hilary Mantel's Wolf Hall trilogy and the resulting BBC drama adaptation portraying him as a sadistic schemer of the Tudor court who enjoyed torturing heretics in opposition to his great rival Thomas Cromwell. In A Man For All Seasons, these roles are more or less reversed. 'I think Wolf Hall is one of the greatest dramas with the greatest performances ever produced by British television,' says Shaw. 'I've heard Hilary Mantel partly wrote Wolf Hall as a response to A Man For All Seasons. But from what I know, I think her portrayal of More is probably not accurate.' 'I told the casting director I couldn't work with Lewis' Whatever philosophical puzzles Shaw grapples with on stage, it's the legacy of a much less distinguished TV show he still finds tricky to escape. The Professionals, produced from 1977 to 1981, made Shaw a household name – all high cheekbones, footballer's perms and karate chops. It's remembered for the unbridled machismo of lead characters Bodie and Doyle – part police, part secret agents working for the fictional CI5 – who spent most of their time skidding a Ford Capri around the streets of London, shooting terrorists and making off-colour remarks about beautiful women. The trouble is, Shaw hated every single minute of it, in particular his toxic relationship with Lewis Collins, the actor who played Bodie to his Doyle. 'It was truly, truly horrible and there was a sense of blessed relief when it was over. Ten years after the show finished I met Lewis and everything was healed between us. But the trouble all started when I was a villain in The New Avengers in 1977 and he was my sidekick. Lewis behaved so badly on that set. He had a small part but he was so arrogant. It was beyond that. It was bizarre.' Shaw describes how Collins would boast about his physical prowess at the expense of the other actors and confuse the director by talking about how the scenes would play out if he had to fight for real. 'I looked at the script for The Professionals and was offered the part. I'd done a film with Anthony Andrews and we were good mates so we rehearsed together and I thought he was a shoo-in for the other lead. But the production company wanted an abrasive relationship. 'I'd already said to the casting director, 'I can't work with Lewis because we don't get on', but they cast him anyway. I went up to him on the first day of shooting and said: 'You know I didn't want you to do this but let's get on with it and have fun.' And he told me to f--- off and he never forgave me for the next four years.' There is a notorious episode of The Professionals called 'The Klansman' about a far-Right group Shaw's character has to infiltrate. It was never broadcast in the UK because it featured such a prevalence of racist language. Did Shaw think this seemed insane during filming? 'I thought pretty much every episode was insane,' he replies. The thing Shaw found most uncomfortable then as now is that his work up to that point – the Royal Court and the National Theatre, TV and movie roles – 'vanished' once he was in The Professionals. Shaw, born in Birmingham in 1945, attended the London Academy of Music and Dramatic Art (Lamda) from 1963, served his time in rep and London theatre, and came to prominence playing Banquo in Roman Polanski's film of Macbeth in 1971. Polanski – who owned a flat in Chelsea – asked him to test for the role of Macbeth, though the lead eventually went to Jon Finch. 'When I saw the people testing for Macbeth, including Antony Hopkins who was my hero and with whom I shared a house, I thought I had no chance. But Polanski called me and offered me the role of Banquo.' Shaw recounts the conversation in a Dracula-esque Polanski accent and says the seven months of Macbeth's production were some of the greatest of his life. He's understandably circumspect about Polanski's ongoing exile in France as a result of his flight from the US in 1971 following his conviction for sex with a minor. 'Polanski was great with actors. My admiration and respect for him carried on through the whole production. There is so much gossip about the case he was involved in but it's a terrible loss to the industry.' 'Rhodes did some very bad things but I didn't mind playing that character' In the four decades since The Professionals, Shaw invariably appeared on British TV as a detective or a judge, which he says is attributable more to television's obsession with the law than anything to do with his persona or slow, sonorous voice. One notable blip on this long list of hits was the eight-part BBC epic drama Rhodes in 1996, which told the story of Britain's most infamous 19th-century empire builder Cecil Rhodes in southern Africa. It seems almost inconceivable that this would be made today, given the bitter controversy over Rhodes's reputation. The show was rounded on by critics and the ratings almost halved between the first and second episode. 'Rhodes was hard enough to make even then,' says Shaw. 'The BBC didn't want to support it. I suspect they wanted to kill it. Eventually it was made for £8m instead of £12m. The South African government withdrew their funding, not because of any sensitivities over the theme of colonialism, but because they didn't like Rhodes being portrayed as a homosexual. 'It was clear even in 1996 that Rhodes did some very bad things. I didn't mind playing that kind of character. Those bad things are there in all of us and having a licence to access them as an actor is great.' 'It's almost impossible to be a person of integrity in public life' 'Bad things' are harder to find in Thomas More, but they must be in there somewhere. A Man For All Seasons is Shaw's happy place, having already taken the role in 2005 at London's Haymarket Theatre. Shaw says he went to see the play and the film over and over again in the 1960s, starring the peerless Paul Scofield. Shaw wants to keep evolving his approach to More, as much to make the most of the character's limitless depth as to step out of the great man's shadow. 'This time I'm playing him as a more life-enhancing, life-loving character who could laugh and get incredibly angry as well as his better known qualities.' This is a play that poses one dilemma after another. At its heart is the question of how far a person is prepared to go to preserve their own conscience, their own sense of truth as they believe it to be. Every other character compromises for gain or self-preservation (other than Henry VIII, who doesn't need to). More goes to the block for his beliefs. 'From my point of view, More's stand was borderline ridiculous,' says Shaw. 'For him, his oath was 'words you say to God' so he could not, as his daughter suggested, take the oath and think differently in his heart.' Among many memorable lines – the quickfire battles with Cromwell, More's stirring defence of the law – the exchange between More and former hanger-on Richard Rich stands out. Rich perjured himself to gain promotion to the Attorney General of Wales and his lies provide the only evidence against More. Knowing his trial is all but over, More asks to see the red dragon on Rich's new badge of office. 'Richard, it profits a man nothing to gain the whole world if he should lose his soul … but for Wales?' The script is all but perfect. Shaw recalls the line, 'When statesmen forsake their own private conscience for the sake of their public duties they lead their country by a short route to chaos.' 'That is true now more than ever,' he adds. 'Think about how important conscience and integrity are. It's almost impossible to be a person of integrity in public life – but I truly believe they are out there.' Shaw is full of contradictions. He has been a vegetarian since 1971 and follows Sant Mat, a mystical philosophy movement influenced by Sikhism and Hinduism. There's no reason why that shouldn't co-exist with sliding over the bonnet of an Escort RS2000 in pursuit of a gun runner, but it feels like it might. Still, despite all Shaw's misgivings, he has made something approaching peace with the worst experience of his career. 'There is another side to The Professionals. Years later an actor walked up to me on set and said 'It's so wonderful to meet you. You're my childhood hero.' So that helped me see the show differently. So many people loved it and got some sort of happiness from it.' It's wisdom of which Sir Thomas More would surely approve. A Man For All Seasons is at the Harold Pinter Theatre, London SW1, until Sept 6 Solve the daily Crossword


Fox News
5 hours ago
- Fox News
Joanna Gaines, Lauren Sánchez Bezos share heartbreak and joy as they send kids off to college
School will soon be back in session and tons of celebrities are preparing to send their kids off to college. Lauren Sánchez Bezos got emotional last week after sending her son, Evan, off to college while Julie Bowen's son Oliver will be a freshman at the University of Oregon in September. Heather and Terry Dubrow's daughter, Katarina, will be a freshman at Yale this fall. Heather previously told Fox News Digital that as much as she is excited for her daughter, she will always worry about her. "I mean, you always worry when your kid is off to college, right? It's a whole new environment. And not only are they still going to school and dealing with social issues, but they're adulting, you know, they're living on their own and doing their laundry and eating meals with all these new people and all of that. It's a lot to take in. "And I think the take-home message for all of them is, you know, make sure you're eating properly, make sure you're exercising, make a study plan, stick to a routine, call home, take deep breaths and protect your peace," she said. Here is a look at stars sending their kids off to college this fall. The wife of Amazon founder Jeff Bezos took to Instagram to share a heartfelt moment with her son setting up his dormitory. "Dropped off Evan at college today. 18 years of early mornings, late night snacks and family dinners... and then there he was building his own dorm cabinet," Sánchez Bezos wrote, as she reflected on an emotional moment. "A small thing but in that moment I saw the start of his next chapter. Proud. Heartbroken. Grateful," she added. Earlier this month, proud mom Sánchez Bezos also took to social media to document her son's journey to college. In an Instagram Story, Sánchez Bezos related to other moms trying to process the moment when their little kids suddenly aren't so little anymore. "Shout out to all the moms who feel like we were just dropping off our kids at kindergarten... then you blink and now we are packing them up for college. I'm in tears!" she shared. Sánchez Bezos shared a photo Saturday of large blue bags that appeared filled with dorm essentials, sitting in front of framed comic book artwork. According to People, Sanchez Bezos announced on her Instagram story in December that Evan would be attending the University of Miami this fall. "Spider-Man" star Tobey Maguire is sending his daughter off to college in September. Maguire's ex-wife, Jennifer Meyer, took to Instagram in May to share photos of their daughter's high school graduation. "Congratulations Ruby!!!!! Graduate of our dreams. We are so proud of you in every way. We love love love love love you baby," she captioned the carousel of images. Tobey and Jennifer posed with Ruby in one of the shots. "Modern Family" star Julie Bowen is gearing up to send her son Oliver Phillips off to the University of Oregon in September. In an interview with E! News in July, Bowen confirmed her son's college plans. "He's going to college. He's going to [the University of] Oregon. He's very, very excited," she told the outlet at the time. Oliver was planning on making the trip to Oregon alone, but Julie had other plans. "He doesn't know I'm gonna road-trip up to Oregon. He said he's road-tripping and I'm like, 'I'm coming with you,'" she told the outlet. Bowen is excited for her son, who she shares with her ex-husband, Scott Phillips, but she admitted that she's "terrified that he's being released onto the world." "I love that kid, I love him so much. But I do wonder – nature versus nurture. You do so much parenting, and then you're like, 'You were always gonna be this person. You're always gonna be who you are,'" she said. In June, Julie took to Instagram to share photos from Oliver's high shook graduation. In the shots, her son was seen smoking a large cigar. "To the most original, interesting, and funny kid I know… congratulations @itsoliverphillips! You are a high school graduate! The future is yours (but that cigar will definitely make you puke)," Bowen captioned her post. Joanna Gaines is sharing the difficulties that have come with sending her daughter, Ella, off to college for the first time and saying goodbye to her son, Drake, as he tackles his third year of college. On Aug. 10, Gaines took to Instagram and shared a room full of boxes with an emotional caption. "They told me it would go by quicker than I think. That the days are slow but the years are fast. And darn it if they were right. This beautiful gift of time has roared past us all just like I was told." "Help me to embrace change with a heart filled with hope for the part I know to be truer than the rest – my kids and I may have been made for each other, but I also believe they were made for more. More experiences, more knowledge, more growing than could ever happen within our walls," Gaines said. She continued, "My oldest son left for his third year of college while my oldest daughter packs for her first year across the country. This season already feels like one big, breathless surrender. Lord, how do I hold them close while also letting go?" Gaines signed off by addressing parents who are sending their kids off to college and those who still have their children at home. "And let's all lean on each other when the time comes to hold it together," she concluded. Joanna and Chip Gaines are parents to five children: Ella, Drake, Crew, Emmie and Duke. The Gaineses have not shared where Ella or Drake are attending college. "Grey's Anatomy" star Patrick Dempsey celebrated his twin sons Darby and Sullivan's high school graduation in May. Patrick took to Instagram at the time and shared a photo with his wife Jillian and their sons. "Graduation!! So proud of you boys and cannot wait to see where the next chapter of your lives will take you!" he captioned the photo. The boys graduated from Crossroads School for Arts & Sciences in Santa Monica, California. Heather and Terry Dubrow's daughter, Katarina, is heading to Yale at the end of August. Terry told Fox News Digital, "For me, she's a uniquely brilliant kid. I mean, she was going to an amazing school. She got the highest scores. She was, you know, the greatest recommendation, the straight A's. She's super gifted, but she's a little scattered. We forget, we're concerned. She's the type of person who'll set her wallet down at a party." Terry's wife chimed in on her thoughts on Katarina heading to the Ivy League in a few weeks. "I mean, I would tell you as a mother, I think I've been really good at enjoying each of the stages. I love the baby stage, the toddler stage. I mean the middle school stage, not so much, but the rest of it, amazing. But watching each of our kids go off and find their passion and fly and start, you know, figuring out what they want to do with their lives. It's a really cool thing. So we just have one little guy left at home. He's going to get through high school and then Terry and I are free," she said. In April, Heather took to Instagram to celebrate her daughter's decision to head to Yale. "CONGRATULATIONS KATARINA!!!!" the proud mom wrote. "We are so proud of you and excited to watch you SHINE in college !!!! WE LOVE YOU," she captioned the images. Linda Evangelista's son, Augustin James, will be heading to college this fall. In June, Evangelista shared images of Augustin's graduation, which included his father, French billionaire François-Henri Pinault, and his wife, Salma Hayek. "Then this happened. 🎓♥️✨🙏🏻 I'm one proud momma. Blessed blessed blessed…" Linda captioned her carousel of images. The last slide of Evangelista's Instagram post was Augustin's graduation cake. "Congratulations Augie, David, Eli and Dylan!" the cake read. Included on the cake were USC's logo and Yale's logo. It's unclear exactly where Augustin will attend college. Buddy Valastro's son Marco is heading to Syracuse at the end of the month. The "Cake Boss" star took to Instagram in June to congratulate his son on his high school graduation and shared his college plans. "Congratulations Marco! Graduated and now college-bound, right alongside your brother at Syracuse! Proud doesn't even begin to cover it. Go show them what you're made of, we love you," Buddy captioned his post. Naomi Watts and Liev Schreiber's son graduated from high school this year. Liev took to Instagram in June to share an image of Sasha's graduation. Naomi was in the shot, as well as the former couple's current partners: Taylor Neisen and Billy Crudup. Naomi and Liev split in 2016. "The graduate!!!" Liev simply captioned the image.