AP PHOTOS: Kids Choice Awards 2025
The Kids Choice Awards ceremony was held in Los Angeles on Saturday.
This is a photo gallery curated by AP photo editors.
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Vogue
32 minutes ago
- Vogue
Selena Gomez Is Back in Her Bangs Era
Welcome back to Team Bangs, Selena Gomez. After a dalliance with slightly longer lengths, a brief escapade into blonde, and some variations on the bob (the lob and the puffed variety), the pop star and Rare Beauty founder has settled on her summertime hair refresh. Her longtime makeup artist Hung Vanngo dropped the first picture on his Instagram yesterday (June 21). Her new haircut was done by another go-to Gomez glam team member, Orlando Pita. (Who also often works with Julianne Moore, Sofia Coppola, and Anne Hathaway on their refined, elegant styles.) Photo: Instagram (@hungvanngo) Of recent, Gomez had been wearing her hair in a grown out bob, hitting just below her shoulders. She often sticks to a middle parting, and has been styling it in slicked back buns and high ponytails for the last few months. This time, her new cut features wolf cut-esque choppy layers, with the shagginess from her natural curls providing lots of volume and texture to graze the top of her collarbones. The bangs fall thickly across her brows, but have been cut into to resist any density, and to keep them easy in the summer heat. It's an easily replicable cut, light and breezy for this time of year and requiring little maintenance. Selena Gomez is no stranger to the bob, which has become somewhat of a signature look for her red carpet appearances. There was a soft and waved bob worn at the American French Film Festival, a glamorous old Hollywood bob for the Golden Globes, and a more experimental wet-look, flipped bob at the 4th Academy Museum Gala last year. A longtime fan of the bob, Selena Gomez JB Lacroix BEVERLY HILLS, CALIFORNIA - MARCH 02: Selena Gomez attends the 2025 Vanity Fair Oscar Party hosted by Radhika Jones at the Wallis Annenberg Center for the Performing Arts on March 02, 2025 in Beverly Hills, California. (Photo by Karwai Tang/WireImage) Karwai Tang Bangs, too, have called Gomez back time and time again. Last year, she debuted some '70s style curtain bangs that hit below the brow. On other occasions, she switched it up to a more messy, piecey fringe that looks great with up-dos, face-framing Brigitte Bardot-esque bangs, and a casual curly set. A beauty mogul, Gomez is a serial re-inventor unafraid of the style switch up, whether that's a statement lip or total hair transformation. Anadolu/Getty Images Photo: Courtesy of Selena Gomez/@selenagomez For Selena Gomez and her glam team, the bob + bangs combo is limitless.


New York Post
44 minutes ago
- New York Post
Hollywood and Obama should be judged for covering up Joe Biden's frailty
One year ago this month, attendees packed the 7,100 seats inside the Peacock Theater in Los Angeles to watch a parade of A-list celebrities — George Clooney! Julia Roberts! Barbra Streisand! — unite in a common goal: to raise more money for President Biden's re-election campaign than had ever before been tallied for a single fundraising event. By that standard the evening was a smashing success: Over $30 million, a record, was raised. 6 George Clooney, Joe Biden, Julia Roberts and Barack Obama at the Los Angeles fundraiser last June 15th, the beginning of the end of the wide-scale cover-up of Biden's inability to maintain his presidential campaign. X/Chris Jackson 'How important the event was to his re-election bid could be seen,' the Associated Press reported, 'in Biden's decision to fly through the night across nine time zones, from the G7 summit in southern Italy to Southern California, to attend.' Advertisement Nothing was left to chance. Outside the Peacock, riot police ringed the Gaza protesters; inside, the biggest weapon was rolled out. Former President Barack Obama appeared onstage with his old No. 2, the pair of presidents interviewed by the ABC late-night host Jimmy Kimmel. Their recurring theme: A second Trump presidency would ruin America. Obama called the current moment 'a by-product of 2016,' when, he said, 'a whole bunch of folks . . . sat out . . . Hopefully, we have learned our lesson, because these elections matter.' When Roe v. Wade came up, and the audience hissed, Obama scolded them: 'Don't hiss; vote.' 6 Within weeks of the event at the Peacock Theater, Biden would bow out of the campaign, which passed onto Vice President Kamala Harris. AP Still sharp, still charming, the familiar smile still beguiling, the forty-fourth president deployed all his gifts to urge the high rollers at the Peacock — and by extension, all Americans — to support Biden with money and votes: the most precious commodities a civic-minded American can be asked to invest. Advertisement The only problem was: Biden. At the event's end, as he and Obama waved goodbye with Kimmel, the incumbent became catatonic, just as he had five days earlier, at a Juneteenth concert at the White House. His whole body froze, as if immobilized by a science-fiction ray-gun. Obama had to guide his friend, gently but firmly, off the stage. As the Washington Post later reported, the commander-in-chief, keeper of the nuclear option, appeared 'slow . . . frail.' 'Even with Kimmel posing softball questions, and Obama frequently interjecting to provide support,' the story said, 'Biden struggled to explain key parts of his campaign platform, with attendees saying that the president frequently stumbled over his remarks, trailed off or was simply confusing.' 6 Pres. Obama has staked his post-presidential legacy on moral authority, clarity and legitimacy. His role in clouding Biden's health demands that legacy be reconsidered. AP Advertisement By June 27, Biden's disastrous performance in the CNN debate with former President Trump in Atlanta had triggered an open revolt, with leading Democrats and rank-and-file primary voters clamoring for Biden to withdraw from the contest. Throughout the incumbent's long political death-spiral, former President Obama — who had urged Biden against running in 2016 and 2020, worried the older man might 'embarrass himself' — remained silent. In what the Associated Press called 'the most delicate political moment for Democrats since former President Bill Clinton's impeachment,' Obama was seen struggling 'to balance his role as a party elder and an honest broker for Democrats seeking advice while avoiding being seen as betraying his former vice president.' Missing from this depiction was a key group: the American people. In Biden's season of torment, Obama may have deemed it prudent to keep his own counsel; but that doesn't explain his presence at the Peacock Theater in the first place. Could someone as perceptive and politically astute as Obama, a bestselling memoirist and two-time winner of the Electoral College, really have failed to discern Biden's unfitness until the fundraiser? Advertisement 6 Despite being enabled by sycophantic aides — and his Vice President — Biden's deterioration was well-known among much of Washington. Getty Images And even if that were true, why did Obama wait until after the debate, almost two weeks, before taking action to protect the electorate? By July 11, 'Morning Joe' relayed the whispering of top Democrats who believed Obama was 'working behind the scenes to orchestrate' Biden's withdrawal. In short: What took him so long? Barack Obama entered office with a Gallup approval rating of 67% and, after sinking to 40% in 2011, left office with a robust 59%. Polling on former presidents is scant; but Gallup still has Obama at 59%, while a recent YouGov survey lists him at 62%. 6 Following his humiliating defeat to Ronald Reagan in 1980, Jimmy Carter went on to rehabilitate his legacy via ambitious, progressive humanitarian efforts. Getty Images What does it say for a man who, trusted by so many, colluded in a lie to them — that Joe Biden was fit for office — and moreover participated in an enormous transfer of wealth, $30 million in a single evening, to prop up that lie until it became impossible even for the most deluded souls to believe? Rather than use his enduring appeal to force the Democratic Party to do the right thing in mid-2023 — when Biden was still officially mulling whether to seek re-election — Obama held his tongue and hoped for the best. For the winner of the 2017 Profile in Courage Award, the crucible of 2024 was not a Profile in Courage moment. 6 Biden and Obama on that fateful Peacock Theater stage last June, which raised $30 million. AP Advertisement Obama's historical legacy won't rest entirely on the arc and perceptions of his presidency. His actions since 2017 matter, too; and in covering for Biden for so long, Obama displayed a contempt for our democracy, and his own party, unbefitting of a two-term president. Jimmy Carter's post-presidency helped lift his standing in history. For Barack Obama, at least so far, the narrative runs in the other direction. James Rosen is chief Washington correspondent at Newsmax and the author, most recently, of 'Scalia: Rise to Greatness, 1936-1986.'


Fox News
an hour ago
- Fox News
Elon Musk and Trump appear to end nasty feud
Pride parades were held across the world on weekend during Pride month. This is a photo gallery curated by AP photo editors.