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Melissa Rivers is done with 'Fashion Police.' She still has opinions on the Met Gala.

Melissa Rivers is done with 'Fashion Police.' She still has opinions on the Met Gala.

Yahoo07-05-2025

Yahoo is using AI to generate takeaways from this article. This means the info may not always match what's in the article. Reporting mistakes helps us improve the experience.
Yahoo is using AI to generate takeaways from this article. This means the info may not always match what's in the article. Reporting mistakes helps us improve the experience.
Yahoo is using AI to generate takeaways from this article. This means the info may not always match what's in the article. Reporting mistakes helps us improve the experience. Generate Key Takeaways
Melissa Rivers thinks this year's Met Gala dress code — 'Tailored for You' — was hard for the ladies.
On the (well-fashioned) heels of the May 5 event, which focused on menswear and dandyism connected to the museum's 'Superfine: Tailoring Black Style' exhibition, the Fashion Police alum shared her picks for best dressed with Yahoo Entertainment.
'It was really a year of honoring men, which I think is great. It was a tough year on the women,' said Rivers, who is producing the May 13 NBC special Joan Rivers: A Dead Funny All-Star Tribute in honor of her late mom, the comedian and red carpet trailblazer.
Nonetheless, she still hands out high marks to several women.
'I think the one that got the memo and got it right was Tracee Ellis Ross. Nailed it,' Rivers said. 'She went with the time period, the suiting, the tailoring, but elevated it to a Met Gala level,' which she reminded is 'not just another red carpet' but 'high couture fashion runway as art.'
Tracee Ellis Ross at the 2025 Met Gala. (TheStewartofNY/GC Images via Getty Images)
Others she felt understood the assignment and delivered were Janelle Monáe, Mindy Kaling and Rihanna, who she gave extra props for not just hitting the mark but doing so while pregnant.
'For a lot of the women, there was beautiful tailoring and beautiful suits,' Rivers said. 'Otherwise, these women could have been on any red carpet in gorgeous suits.'
An example of that she gave was Zendaya, who wore a custom three-piece white Louis Vuitton suit. (We also gave the Euphoria star rave reviews.)
'Zendaya is always perfect,' Rivers said. 'Between the talent, the face, the body, the style, everything. The suit was amazing. It fit impeccably. The hat was perfect. But we could have seen [that outfit] on any runway or any red carpet. That's all of them.'
Zendaya at the 2025 Met Gala. (Evan Agostini/Invision/AP)
Rivers was 'surprised by how few' women took the road of Christian Dior's 'New Look,' the designer's iconic 1947 collection that revolutionized women's fashion, 'because that was simultaneous and about the tailoring as well.
'You saw Nicole Kidman do that,' Rivers said. 'Monica Barbaro. Whitney Peak did a Chanel that was exactly on [point]' and took over 385 hours to craft.
Whitney Peak at the 2025 Met Gala. ()
Having revolutionized red carpets with her mother, Rivers knows 'the Met Gala … is for professionals only.'
Rivers has 'mixed feelings' about influencers who are now on the invite list for the exclusive event.
'The world is moving so fast, and these influencers are coming in and out of style so fast," Rivers said. "I don't know if they have a place on the Met Gala red carpet. I think there's a level that you have to be so established or so important in that particular cultural moment that you can be there. ... Just because you're this year's big influencer doesn't, to me, give you the right to be at the Met Gala."
That also extends to replacing established media outlets that have long covered the carpet.
Influencers "shouldn't shut out the tried-and-true ... outlets that are really here for the long run and have a proven track record in years of [covering] it just because you're this year's big influencer," she said. "But they got it, so maybe I'm doing something wrong," she laughed.
Rivers is also seasoned enough to know that "everything is timing … and right now is the time of the influencer."
This year was also the time for men to shine at the gala, with the theme leaning in their favor. For the first time, the gala was cochaired by all Black men: A$AP Rocky, Pharrell Williams, Colman Domingo and Lewis Hamilton.
Met Gala cochairs Colman Domingo, A$AP Rocky, Lewis Hamilton, Pharrell Williams and chair Anna Wintour. (Arturo Holmes/MG25/Getty Images for The Met Museum/Vogue)
'The men had fun — and they all looked great,' Rivers said. 'It's time we let the men have a night anyway.'
Joan Rivers: A Dead Funny All-Star Tribute airs May 13 on NBC. An uncensored version streams the next day on Peacock.

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Do Me A Favour And Stop Sending 'Happy Birthday!' Texts In The Group Chat
Do Me A Favour And Stop Sending 'Happy Birthday!' Texts In The Group Chat

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Do Me A Favour And Stop Sending 'Happy Birthday!' Texts In The Group Chat

The past might be a foreign country but if you're an older millennial with a Yahoo email address and a drawer full of trainer socks, the present is no less baffling. Why are grown men trading punches over plushies? What in the name of god is the poop rule? Who's eating all the cottage cheese? Bewildering trends like these are hardly a modern phenomenon, I know, but in the age of TikTok they spread from one side of the world to the other before you can say 'Dubai chocolate'. Consequently for those of us who dip in and out of social media instead of maintaining a constant online presence, logging into Instagram on a Sunday night can feel like climbing the Magic Faraway Tree and finding yourself in a strange new land. Still, crazes come and go and for the most part provoke nothing more than a chuckle or a raised eyebrow. So what if we lose the run of ourselves every now and then? Ultimately the clamour subsides, the dust settles and society rights itself again. Events rarely spin completely out of control because the majority of people, I like to think, know how to behave — online and off. And then a friend drops a message in the group chat. 'Happy Birthday Tash!' It is 7.01 a.m. and you are still in bed, rubbing sleep from your eyes. Within minutes, texts begin to arrive from the other members of the group. You can tell who's made an effort to personalise their message — or, perhaps, who is in a rush — by the presence of an extra exclamation mark here or an abbreviation there. 'Happy Birthday Tash!!!' 'Have a great day T x' 'HBD Tash!' The birthday girl, hopefully having a lie-in, is silent and now you are feeling the pressure to add a greeting to the chorus. The fact that there is a thoughtfully chosen card for Tash propped up on your dresser, to be handed over when you meet her later for a celebratory drink, is neither here nor there. Failure to participate in the birthday pile-on will be noted not just by Tash but by everyone else in the group. Dutifully you tap out a message and head for the bathroom to brush your teeth. Friends coming together to wish another friend happy birthday. Harmless enough, right? Wrong. If you ask me, the person who sends that initial message is committing an egregious act of friendship hit-and-run. Think about it. DM a friend on their birthday and chances are you'll have to send at least one follow-up text when they inevitably ask how you are and what you've been up to. Share your well wishes in the group chat, however, and you sidestep the time-consuming business of engaging in further conversation — a particularly effective strategy if the friend in question is second-tier rather than BFF. Perhaps this is the cynic in me talking but I suspect, too, that the motivating factor for sharing birthday greetings in the group chat is less a desire to make your loved one feel special on their special day and more a compulsion to show off. There is a performative function to dropping a 'Happy Birthday!' text in a space where it can be seen by people other than the intended recipient. The fact that it unleashes, almost invariably, a flood of messages from other members of the group is confirmation for the original texter that they are somehow superior. That they have won the friendship race. (I'm not extrapolating here; check out these posts where proponents of such heinous behaviour confess to relishing this very feeling.) It's the group chat equivalent of the juvenile mentality that was common in the early days of YouTube, when people — probably men, let's be honest — would scramble to be the first to comment on a clip, posting simply and quite pointlessly, 'first'. 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Sabrina Carpenter sparks controversy with provocative 'Man's Best Friend' album cover
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Sabrina Carpenter sparks controversy with provocative 'Man's Best Friend' album cover

Sabrina Carpenter sparks controversy with provocative 'Man's Best Friend' album cover Show Caption Hide Caption Met Gala: Sabrina Carpenter wears bodysuit Sabrina Carpenter is giving "espresso" as she wears a stunning pinstripe bodysuit to the Met Gala red carpet. Sabrina Carpenter's next musical era doesn't have everyone wagging their tail. Following the release of her latest single "Manchild," the Grammy-winning pop princess revealed the title and release date for her new album, "Man's Best Friend," on her social media pages June 11. "My new album, 'Man's Best Friend' 🐾 is out on August 29, 2025," Carpenter, 26, wrote. "I can't wait for it to be yours x" The post also included an image of what appears to be the album's cover. The photo shows Carpenter, dressed in a black dress and high heels, kneeling on the ground in a dog-like pose while an unidentified individual stands off to the side and pulls her by the hair. "Man's Best Friend," Carpenter's seventh studio effort, follows the release of her breakthrough 2024 album "Short n' Sweet." The album, which peaked at No. 1 on the Billboard 200 chart, spawned the hit singles "Espresso," "Please Please Please," "Taste" and "Bed Chem," as well as solidified the singer's playful pin-up girl image. Carpenter first teased "Man's Best Friend" with the release of "Manchild" on June 5. The music video for the synth-pop track drew buzz on social media for Carpenter's bold look, which consisted of a white button-up, baby blue heels and denim "micro" shorts. Sabrina Carpenter divides fans with 'Man's Best Friend' cover Carpenter's album cover for "Man's Best Friend" set the comments section ablaze, with fans online chiming in with their hot takes on the provocative image. "Love (you) Sabrina but in this political climate with Trump as president and women's control over their bodies being taken away in the US… this is kind (of) insensitive," Instagram user @taylorrram wrote. "This just set us back about 5 decades," @uhhhlexa_ wrote, while user @mgracegunderson weighed in, "Excited for new music but this cover is a big no from me, dawg. In this political climate?? Girls, get up!" However, other fans welcomed Carpenter's daring imagery along with the announcement of new music. "SUMMER OF SABRINA FOR A SECOND YEAR IN A ROW," Instagram user @aislinndalston exclaimed. Sabrina Carpenter teases 'Manchild' in 'micro' shorts, fans are in awe "Sabrina is coming for album of the year, artist of the year, pop vocal album, all of it and I'm here for it 😍," @erik_osterberg wrote. Responding to some of the criticism aimed at Carpenter, X user @wickednewshub offered a more analytical view of the album artwork. "For those of you who may lack critical thinking skills, the cover is clearly satirical with a deeper meaning, portraying how the public views her, believing she is just for the male gaze," the user wrote. What Sabrina Carpenter backlash says about changing views on sex Carpenter channels sexual desire unapologetically in nearly every song from her most recent album "Short n' Sweet." On "Juno," a cheeky track about wanting to become pregnant because of how much she adores her partner, she croons: "Wanna try out some freaky positions?" The singer's tour performance of "Juno," in which she flaunted a sequined mini skirt and pantomimed a sex position while singing the line "Have you ever tried this one?," sparked fierce debate among fans, with some defending Carpenter's saucy performance style and others criticizing it as "male-focused." This debate actually focuses on a "false dichotomy," Leora Tanenbaum, author of "Sexy Selfie Nation: Standing Up For Yourself in Today's Toxic, Sexist Culture," previously told USA TODAY. "(People) ask if she's trying to appeal to the 'male gaze' — appearing hot to cater to hetero men's sexual desires — or to the 'female gaze' — looking sexy on her own terms to make a point about women's confidence and sex-positivity." Sabrina Carpenter, hookup culture and why the way we talk about sex is changing In a changing cultural landscape, in which views on female sexual agency are being reevaluated, women like Carpenter are often scrutinized for their overt sexuality. "Carpenter's lyrics are sexually explicit and may not be appropriate for the Disney audience of children she used to cater to, but her sexual frankness is shocking in this day and age only if you believe that women who are open about sexuality are sluts," Tanenbaum said. Contributing: Alyssa Goldberg, USA TODAY

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