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Shop the Dermaflash sale to save 25% on at-home dermaplaning tools

Shop the Dermaflash sale to save 25% on at-home dermaplaning tools

USA Today15-02-2025

Shop the Dermaflash sale to save 25% on at-home dermaplaning tools Save on premium Dermaflash dermaplaning devices, pore extractors and skincare products.
— Recommendations are independently chosen by our editors. Purchases you make through our links may earn us and our publishing partners a commission.
I think most of us dream of achieving a flawless, glowing complexion without constant visits to the esthetician. Don't let unwanted peach fuzz or flaky skin put a damper on your Valentine's Day weekend date night plans. Dermaflash is one of the most popular brands in the world of skin-smoothing technology and right now, you can save 25% sitewide with code LOVE2GLOW at checkout. You can shop for best-selling at-home dermaplaning tools, top-rated pore extractor devices, premium skincare products and more just in time to reveal more radiant skin for winter 2025 and beyond! Check out a few of the best deals at the Dermaflash sale below.
Shop the Dermaflash sale
Shop the best deals at the Dermaflash sale
1. Dermaflash Luxe+
Originally $199, now $149.25 with code LOVE2GLOW
Dermaflash Luxe+
Save 25% on this peach fuzz removal set. Includes Luxe+ device, 4 single-use Microfine edges and PreFlash Cleanser.
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🛍️ Save 25% on the Dermaflash Luxe+ With Monthly Refills
2. Dermaflash Dermapore+
Originally $109, now $81.75 with code LOVE2GLOW
Dermaflash Dermapore+
Save 25% on the ultrasonic pore extractor and skincare infuser set.
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3. Dermaflash Ultimate Sonic Skincare Set
Originally $224, now $168 with code LOVE2GLOW
Dermaflash Ultimate Sonic Skincare Set
Get this duo on sale to exfoliate, de-fuzz and unclog your pores for Valentine's Day 2025.
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💖 More: Boost your libido, enhance your stamina and improve your sleep at The Vitamin Shoppe
4. Dermaflash Luxe+ Sonic Skincare Set
Originally $232, now $174 with code LOVE2GLOW
Dermaflash Luxe+ Sonic Skincare Set
Save on this trio of the Luxe+ device, Botanical Ketoacid Toner and the Hydraflash Cocooning Serum.
Buy at Dermaflash
5. Dermaflash Complete Sonic Skincare Set
Originally $306, now $229.50 with code LOVE2GLOW
Dermaflash Complete Sonic Skincare Set
Enjoy the ultimate at-home spa day with this set with the Luxe+ and Dermapore+ devices and two skincare products.
Buy at Dermaflash
💝 More: Find out why people think the Fit + Fresh Neoprene Weekender Bag is a Dagne Dover dupe
Shop Valentine's Day gifts for her: Stanley, Sol de Janeiro, Wavytalk
Shop our favorite last-minute Valentine's Day gifts for her on Amazon from Stanley, Wavytalk, Sol de Janeiro and more top-rated brands.
Why do people like Dermaflash devices?
Dermaflash products are designed to exfoliate dead skin cells, remove peach fuzz and help your favorite skincare products absorb into the skin more effectively. Dermaflash offers at-home devices like the Pore Extractor and the viral Dermaflash Luxe+ to help reveal a more luminous complexion that looks and feels healthier and youthful.
Shop Dermaflash
Prices were accurate at the time this article was published but may change over time.

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Trump administration races to fix a big mistake: DOGE fired too many people
Trump administration races to fix a big mistake: DOGE fired too many people

Boston Globe

timean hour ago

  • Boston Globe

Trump administration races to fix a big mistake: DOGE fired too many people

Across the government, the Trump administration is scrambling to rehire many federal employees dismissed under DOGE's staff-slashing initiatives after wiping out entire offices, in some cases imperiling key services such as weather forecasting and the drug approval process. Get Starting Point A guide through the most important stories of the morning, delivered Monday through Friday. Enter Email Sign Up Since Musk left the White House last week, he and Trump have fallen out bitterly, sniping at each other in public over the cost of Trump's sweeping tax legislation and government subsidies for Musk's businesses. But even before that, the administration was working to undo some of DOGE's highest-profile actions. Advertisement Trump officials are trying to recover not only people who were fired, but also thousands of experienced senior staffers who are opting for a voluntary exit as the administration rolls out a second resignation offer. Thousands more staff are returning in fits and starts as a conflicting patchwork of court decisions overturn some of Trump's large-scale firings, especially his Valentine's Day dismissal of all probationary workers, those with one or two years of government service and fewer job protections. A federal judge in April ordered the president to reinstate probationary workers dismissed from 20 federal agencies, although a few days later the Supreme Court - in a different case - halted another judge's order to reinstate a smaller group. Advertisement Some fired federal employees, especially those at retirement age or who have since secured jobs in the private sector, are proving reluctant to return. So the administration is seeking work-arounds and stopgaps, including asking remaining staff to serve in new roles, work overtime or volunteer to fill vacancies, according to interviews with 18 federal workers across eight agencies and messages obtained by The Washington Post. A Post review found recent messy re-hirings at agencies including the Food and Drug Administration, the IRS, the State Department and the Department of Housing and Urban Development. The ever-shifting personnel changes are yet another strain on a workforce already weary of Trump-induced uncertainty, said current and former employees, most of whom spoke on the condition of anonymity for fear of retaliation. 'They wanted to show they were gutting the government, but there was no thought about what parts might be worth keeping,' said one FDA staffer who was fired and rehired. 'Now it feels like it was all just a game to them.' A White House official said in an interview that it is no secret Trump arrived in Washington determined to streamline the government. During that downsizing, the official acknowledged, some people were fired who shouldn't have been. The official spoke on the condition of anonymity to candidly discuss a complex issue that spans many federal agencies. Advertisement 'Each agency has made an appropriate determination as to who should be on the payroll in the respective agency,' the official said. 'If by chance mistakes were made and critical employees were dismissed, each individual agency is working diligently to bring these people back to work to continue the adequate functions of the federal government.' In statements, some agencies also admitted to errors, while promising the government is working to fix them. 'During this process,' said an Agriculture Department spokesperson, 'USDA has been transparent about any mistakes that were made.' 'They need some of the expertise' Lynn McKerral holds a sign in support of Social Security Administration workers in front of the agency's headquarters in Woodlawn, Maryland, on May 20, 2025. Wesley Lapointe/For The Washington Post The administration has already had to race to undo its own cuts. In February, the Agriculture Department launched a campaign to rehire bird flu response workers after avian influenza sent egg prices soaring. That same month, the Trump administration fired nearly 17 percent of the National Nuclear Security Administration's workforce, temporarily imperiling the safety and security of America's 5,000 nuclear warheads - before hiring them back after an outcry. In recent weeks, other agencies have seen similar patterns. At the start of April, the FDA let go of thousands, including laboratory staff, librarians and those who helped manage the budget. The dismissals hit particularly hard at the Office of Drug Policy, the Office of Regulatory Policy and teams that worked on Freedom of Information Act requests and patent extensions, according to interviews with eight current and former FDA employees. But three weeks later, fired workers began getting calls on their personal cellphones - and soon, a message to their personal emails: They were all due back. The 'Notice of Reduction in Force (RIF) issued to you … is officially RESCINDED [and] you will not be separated from employment,' read an email sent to terminated staff in May and obtained by The Post. 'You are expected to return to duty the next business day following your receipt of this notice.' Advertisement One FDA worker said she complied only because she hadn't found other employment yet. 'Being back feels like a funeral,' she said. 'Morale is terrible. Everyone is stressed and feels the absence of our colleagues. … I'm looking for another job.' At the IRS, managers received a notice on May 19, a Monday, that all probationary workers would be coming back to the office on Friday, according to a copy obtained by The Post. The turnaround was so swift that some probationary staff probably wouldn't have a desk or a laptop initially, the announcement acknowledged: 'If a seat assignment is not available … your employees should begin teleworking until local management secures a seat assignment for them.' Asked about the FDA's back-and-forth, a Health and Human Services spokesperson wrote in a statement that 'any reassignment or restructuring is being done to strengthen outcomes. Our restructuring is delivering leaner and better government services to the American people.' The IRS did not respond to requests for comment. At USAID, thousands have been out of work since early this year, when their agency became ground zero for Trump and Musk's overhaul of government. But at the start of this month, some ex-USAID officials began hearing from former colleagues about potential new jobs at the State Department, which has assumed responsibility for distributing foreign aid, once USAID's task. 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'I'm not risking it again' Meteorologist Joe DeLizio prepares to release a weather balloon for the National Weather Service in Gaylord, Michigan, on April 28, 2025. Marvin Joseph/The Washington Post As other agencies grapple with fallout from dismissals and departures, managers are leaning on remaining employees to fill the gaps - and in some cases, hiring new workers to replace those who have left. At the National Weather Service, waves of DOGE-led early retirements and probationary firings left some local forecasting offices without enough staff to maintain 24/7 operations, while others lost the ability to launch as many weather balloons, a key forecasting tool. In one Kentucky office, the agency had to stagger shifts ahead of a tornado outbreak to ensure enough meteorologists were working to cover the overnight threat. 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'Together, these hiring authorities and staffing flexibilities will allow us to continue meeting our foundational mission, including issuing timely and accurate forecasts and warnings,' he added. The agency confirmed the hiring in a statement and said it was part of a series of steps to address staff losses. At the Department of Housing and Urban Development, some offices saw so many people take Trump's early resignation offer that officials are now seeking to redeploy staff to cover the absences. Community Planning and Development, a HUD department that responds to wildfires and hurricanes and administers billions of dollars in grants, is especially strained. That department's Office of Field Operations has 13 field offices with two or fewer employees left, according to an internal presentation from May 27 obtained by The Post. More than 30 field offices have broader staffing concerns, the presentation showed. Department staff sent a 'voluntary reassignment' offer to employees within Community Planning and Development, where about 40 percent of employees had already resigned. Headcount dropped from 936 employees at the start of Trump's term to 560 by May, according to a staffer who attended the presentation. Officials 'learned that certain Regions and Field Offices have lost serious staffing capabilities,' according to a May 23 message to staff obtained by The Post, which noted the reassignment offers are meant to 'immediately cover skill gaps and critical functions.' Staffers would be required to work in person but will not have moving costs covered, according to the employee. 'In some cases, supervisors are left with no staff, or staff are left with no supervisors, or offices are left with nobody to keep programs delivered,' the email to staff read. A HUD spokesperson wrote in a statement that, given roughly 2,300 employees are 'taking the opportunity to find a new path, it only makes sense that the department would have a plan in place to ensure that mission critical functions and the highest quality service to rural, tribal and urban communities remain uninterrupted.' Within the FDA, the Center for Drug Evaluation and Research is struggling to recover from the loss of too many 'timekeepers,' personnel who handle pay, leave and travel logistics, emails show. A plaintive message sent to the center's staff in early May noted the department 'is still working on a long-term solution for our timekeeping needs.' It asked for volunteers. 'If folks are willing to be trained as a timekeeper or have prior timekeeping experience (does not need to be recent),' the missive said, 'please respond back to this email to let us know if you are interested.' 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A customer service representative who was supposed to answer the 800 number couldn't take calls for three days while her computer was in disrepair. 'It really sent everyone for a loop,' Bryant said. After three days, the agency told the union the decision had been reversed. The employees got back their equipment and resumed their normal jobs in Wilkes-Barre. Asked about the IT workers, Social Security provided an emailed statement from an unnamed official, whom it declined to identify. The statement did not address the reassignments but criticized 'the fake news media, specifically the Washington Post' for 'pushing a false narrative about Social Security. The truth is that President Trump is protecting and strengthening Social Security just like he promised.' Federal workers caught in similar situations described being on an unsettling roller coaster. One USDA safety inspector remembered answering a call from their manager one weekend to learn they were fired for 'performance,' even though they had received positive reviews, according to personnel documents reviewed by The Post. But by Monday - the day before the employee was supposed to turn in their badge - the manager called back to say the termination was rescinded. In April, when the Trump administration offered early retirement, the employee leaped at it and was soon placed on administrative leave. A few days later, former colleagues reached out: The government was now looking to fill the person's job again. Did they want back in? 'I was like, yep, nope, I'm not risking it again,' the employee said. 'I'm gonna try to take the money and try to find something else.'

Walmart's army of bakery decorators take the cake when it comes to hourly store pay
Walmart's army of bakery decorators take the cake when it comes to hourly store pay

Yahoo

time5 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Walmart's army of bakery decorators take the cake when it comes to hourly store pay

NEW YORK (AP) — Inside a Walmart store in New Jersey, a worker puts the finishing touches on a cake with an edible ink Sponge Bob on top. A colleague creates a buttercream rosette border for a different cake, while another co-worker frosts a tier of what will be a triple-deck dessert. It's graduation season, the busiest time of year for the 6,200 employees the nation's largest retailer trained to hand-decorate cakes per customers' orders. The cakes themselves come, pre-made, frozen and in a variety of shapes and sizes, from suppliers, not Walmart's in-store bakeries. But there's no sugar-coating the importance the company places on its custom cake business. Its army of icing artisans are the highest paid hourly workers in a typical U.S. Walmart, excluding managers. Cake decorators earn an average of $19.25 per hour, compared with $18.25 for all non-managerial store workers, a company spokesperson said. Melissa Fernandez, 36, started working in the electronics area and then the wireless services department of the Walmart in North Bergen, New Jersey, before she transferred to the deli area in search of better pay. But Fernandez had her eye on a cake decorating job and after spending two months getting trained by a store colleague, she picked up a piping bag full-time in 2021. 'I love baking at home. I love painting,' Fernandez said. 'I love doing anything artistic, and I just always wanted to be a part of it.' After 11 years with Walmart, she said she now makes about $24.40 an hour. Despite their elite status within Walmart, the retailer's cake decorators have attracted detractors on social media. The company promotes its personalized baked goods on TikTok and encourages the workers behind such creations to do the same. Critics have accused Walmart decorators of stealing ideas and undercutting the work of professional cake artists with their low-priced products. After TikTok videos praising Walmart's $25 heart-shaped cakes with borders that resemble vintage lace cropped up before Valentine's Day this year, a few bakers produced their own videos explaining why their cakes cost so much more and critiquing Walmart's. Debates ensued in the comments sections over whether Walmart represented evils of capitalism or served the needs of the masses. A customized sheet cake that can be sliced to serve 96 people costs $59 at Walmart, about one-third to half the price that a nationwide sample of independent bakeries list online for similarly sized cakes. For $5.20 more, Walmart customers can add strawberry or 'Bavarian creme" fillings, which like the bare cakes, are vendor-supplied. The slice of the celebratory occasion cake market Walmart holds appears vast based on company-supplied figures. One out of four cakes sold in the U.S. comes from Walmart, and its employees will collectively decorate more than 1 million cakes during May and June, according to a company spokesperson. The number of cakes decorated each day at the location where Fernandez works nearly doubles to 50-60 when school graduations come around, compared to 30-35 a day during the rest of the year, said Michael DeMarco, the manager of the store's fresh food department. He credits the decorators' talent and promotional efforts on TikTok. "We're getting a lot of repeat customers. We're doing a lot more business because of just the viral sensations,' DeMarco said. A TikTok video that showed Fernandez designing a $24 version of a customized bouquet cake — 12 cupcakes that are individually decorated and arranged to look like a bunch of flowers — received nearly a half-million views. The bouquet design was one of the North Bergen store's most popular cakes last month, a company spokesperson said. The dressy heart-shaped cakes, as well as cakes that resemble meals like sushi or a pile of spaghetti and meatballs, are popular too, she said. Fernandez also has created 'burn away' cakes: an iced cake topped with an image printed on paper, which is set ablaze to reveal a different image underneath. 'TikTok helps me stay up to date,' she said. 'A lot of trends that I see on there, within that week or within that month, customers will come asking about it. And we're pretty up to date as well.' Jazzing up a cake by hand requires skill, whether or not someone else did the baking, she said. Funneling buttercream frosting through a bag and various sized piping tips to yield the desired design without misplaced blobs is not the same as drawing or painting, Fernandez explained. 'There's a lot of pressure points that you have to practice in order to get the borders correct and the right thickness or the right texture,' she said. Tiffany Witzke, who has been a Walmart cake decorator since July 2016 and works at a store in Springfield, Missouri, has more than 912,000 followers on TikTok. The job attracts people who "can be extremely skilled and talented,' Witzke said, adding that customers want increasingly complicated designs. 'When I first started, it was basically just borders and writing," she said. 'Now, everybody wants more and more and more on their cake.' Liz Berman, owner of The Sleepy Baker, in Natick, Massachusetts, said she's not worried about losing customers to Walmart because of her attention to detail and the premium ingredients she uses. She charges $205 and up for a half-sized sheet cake, the bouquets made up of two dozen miniature cupcakes cost $110. All the cakes are made from scratch, and Berman said she designs everything herself. 'It's just a totally different business model," she said. 'Everything I do is custom.' For Walmart, the cake decorating business delivers higher profit margins than some other areas, such as groceries and electronics, according to Marshal Cohen, chief retail advisor at market research firm Circana. But it's also resonating with shoppers looking for affordable luxuries. 'We've gone into a period where the consumer is saying, 'This is good enough,'" Cohen said. Customers interviewed at the North Bergen store on a recent weekday seemed to be satisfied. George Arango, 34, picked up two customized cakes, one to celebrate a co-worker's retirement and the other for a colleague getting another job. After researching prices on various store websites, he decided to give Walmart a try. 'The price is fantastic," he said. "I'm walking out with two cakes for $40.' Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data

Walmart's affordable cakes may be local bakeries' biggest competition
Walmart's affordable cakes may be local bakeries' biggest competition

New York Post

time6 hours ago

  • New York Post

Walmart's affordable cakes may be local bakeries' biggest competition

Inside a Walmart store in New Jersey, a worker puts the finishing touches on a cake with an edible ink Sponge Bob on top. A colleague creates a buttercream rosette border for a different cake, while another co-worker frosts a tier of what will be a triple-deck dessert. It's graduation season, the busiest time of year for the 6,200 employees the nation's largest retailer trained to hand-decorate cakes per customers' orders. The cakes themselves come, pre-made, frozen and in a variety of shapes and sizes, from suppliers, not Walmart's in-store bakeries. 8 Cake decorators earn an average of $19.25 per hour, compared with $18.25 for all non-managerial store workers. Christopher Sadowski But there's no sugar-coating the importance the company places on its custom cake business. Its army of icing artisans are the highest paid hourly workers in a typical U.S. Walmart, excluding managers. Cake decorators earn an average of $19.25 per hour, compared with $18.25 for all non-managerial store workers, a company spokesperson said. Melissa Fernandez, 36, started working in the electronics area and then the wireless services department of the Walmart in North Bergen, New Jersey, before she transferred to the deli area in search of better pay. But Fernandez had her eye on a cake decorating job and after spending two months getting trained by a store colleague, she picked up a piping bag full-time in 2021. 'I love baking at home. I love painting,' Fernandez said. 'I love doing anything artistic, and I just always wanted to be a part of it.' After 11 years with Walmart, she said she now makes about $24.40 an hour. 8 The cakes themselves come, pre-made, frozen and in a variety of shapes and sizes, from suppliers, not Walmart's in-store bakeries. AP Despite their elite status within Walmart, the retailer's cake decorators have attracted detractors on social media. The company promotes its personalized baked goods on TikTok and encourages the workers behind such creations to do the same. Critics have accused Walmart decorators of stealing ideas and undercutting the work of professional cake artists with their low-priced products. After TikTok videos praising Walmart's $25 heart-shaped cakes with borders that resemble vintage lace cropped up before Valentine's Day this year, a few bakers produced their own videos explaining why their cakes cost so much more and critiquing Walmart's. Debates ensued in the comments sections over whether Walmart represented evils of capitalism or served the needs of the masses. 8 Critics have accused Walmart decorators of stealing ideas and undercutting the work of professional cake artists with their low-priced products. AP A customized sheet cake that can be sliced to serve 96 people costs $59 at Walmart, about one-third to half the price that a nationwide sample of independent bakeries list online for similarly sized cakes. For $5.20 more, Walmart customers can add strawberry or 'Bavarian creme' fillings, which like the bare cakes, are vendor-supplied. The slice of the celebratory occasion cake market Walmart holds appears vast based on company-supplied figures. One out of four cakes sold in the U.S. comes from Walmart, and its employees will collectively decorate more than 1 million cakes during May and June, according to a company spokesperson. 8 For $5.20 more, Walmart customers can add strawberry or 'Bavarian creme' fillings, which like the bare cakes, are vendor-supplied. AP The number of cakes decorated each day at the location where Fernandez works nearly doubles to 50-60 when school graduations come around, compared to 30-35 a day during the rest of the year, said Michael DeMarco, the manager of the store's fresh food department. He credits the decorators' talent and promotional efforts on TikTok. 'We're getting a lot of repeat customers. We're doing a lot more business because of just the viral sensations,' DeMarco said. A TikTok video that showed Fernandez designing a $24 version of a customized bouquet cake — 12 cupcakes that are individually decorated and arranged to look like a bunch of flowers — received nearly a half-million views. The bouquet design was one of the North Bergen store's most popular cakes last month, a company spokesperson said. 8 One out of four cakes sold in the U.S. comes from Walmart, and its employees will collectively decorate more than 1 million cakes during May and June. AP The dressy heart-shaped cakes, as well as cakes that resemble meals like sushi or a pile of spaghetti and meatballs, are popular too, she said. Fernandez also has created 'burn away' cakes: an iced cake topped with an image printed on paper, which is set ablaze to reveal a different image underneath. 'TikTok helps me stay up to date,' she said. 'A lot of trends that I see on there, within that week or within that month, customers will come asking about it. And we're pretty up to date as well.' Jazzing up a cake by hand requires skill, whether or not someone else did the baking, she said. Funneling buttercream frosting through a bag and various sized piping tips to yield the desired design without misplaced blobs is not the same as drawing or painting, Fernandez explained. 8 The dressy heart-shaped cakes, as well as cakes that resemble meals like sushi or a pile of spaghetti and meatballs, are popular too. AP 'There's a lot of pressure points that you have to practice in order to get the borders correct and the right thickness or the right texture,' she said. Tiffany Witzke, who has been a Walmart cake decorator since July 2016 and works at a store in Springfield, Missouri, has more than 912,000 followers on TikTok. The job attracts people who 'can be extremely skilled and talented,' Witzke said, adding that customers want increasingly complicated designs. 'When I first started, it was basically just borders and writing,' she said. 'Now, everybody wants more and more and more on their cake.' 8 Fernandez has created 'burn away' cakes: an iced cake topped with an image printed on paper, which is set ablaze to reveal a different image underneath. AP Liz Berman, owner of The Sleepy Baker, in Natick, Massachusetts, said she's not worried about losing customers to Walmart because of her attention to detail and the premium ingredients she uses. She charges $205 and up for a half-sized sheet cake, the bouquets made up of two dozen miniature cupcakes cost $110. All the cakes are made from scratch, and Berman said she designs everything herself. 'It's just a totally different business model,' she said. 'Everything I do is custom.' For Walmart, the cake decorating business delivers higher profit margins than some other areas, such as groceries and electronics, according to Marshal Cohen, chief retail advisor at market research firm Circana. But it's also resonating with shoppers looking for affordable luxuries. 8 For Walmart, the cake decorating business delivers higher profit margins than some other areas, such as groceries and electronics. AP 'We've gone into a period where the consumer is saying, 'This is good enough,'' Cohen said. Customers interviewed at the North Bergen store on a recent weekday seemed to be satisfied. George Arango, 34, picked up two customized cakes, one to celebrate a co-worker's retirement and the other for a colleague getting another job. After researching prices on various store websites, he decided to give Walmart a try. 'The price is fantastic,' he said. 'I'm walking out with two cakes for $40.'

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