‘SI' Swim star rocks braless, tight-and-tiny denim look for concert
Sports Illustrated swimsuit model Xandra Pohl headed to a country concert dressed to the nines — in a tight-and-tiny, all-denim outfit.
The stunning DJ and influencer took to TikTok on Sunday, July 13 to show off her Western look, which included low-hanging jeans and a tiny denim corset-style vest that buttoned up the front. The braless top was so small that it seamlessly flaunted her bare waist.
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'We going country baby,' she captioned one video of her switching from her robe to her concert look as Blake Shelton played in the background. 'Country concert loading,' she wrote over the share.
'Cowboys,' she lip-synced, walking in her outfit and using a cowboy hat as a prop in a second video earlier that day. 'Because no woman has ever dreamed about being swept off her feet by an accountant.' She then played an air guitar. 'Cowboys…that's all,' she captioned the photo.
While a few fans made comments defending dating accountants, many fans raved about the model's flawless outfit.
'The jeans, the hair, the top, everything is sitting so perfectly,' said one commenter.
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'You are trusting that vest,' quipped another.
'How long is this?!' questioned another, who seemingly had been watching the video on repeat. 'I've been watching for hours now.'
'Thirst trap and I am here for it,' gushed a fourth fan.
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Los Angeles Times
7 minutes ago
- Los Angeles Times
Meet Ty Myers, Gen Z blues guitarist turned TikTok country heartthrob
Among the half-dozen tattoos Ty Myers has accumulated in his 18 years on earth, 'probably the dumbest,' he says, is the armadillo he picked out from a set of ready-mades at a festival in Oklahoma. 'They had like 20 options they could do quick,' the singer and songwriter from Austin, Texas, says with a shrug. Myers has a plan to improve the tattoo, though, next time he's home in the city where his hero Willie Nelson famously found renewal in the early 1970s at the Armadillo World Headquarters. 'I'm gonna add a red bandanna and put Willie braids on it,' he says — a music nerd's reference to the fabled honky-tonk that shuttered nearly three decades before he was born. Myers, whose other tattoos include the name Leroy (after Jim Croce's 'Bad, Bad Leroy Brown') and the logo of Muscle Shoals, Alabama's FAME Studios, is a young person with vintage tastes. His 2025 debut album, 'The Select' — its title nods to the Parisian brasserie from Hemingway's 'The Sun Also Rises' — puts bluesy guitar riffs against low-slung soul-rock grooves, as in the twangy 'Let 'Em Talk' and the waltz-time 'Ends of the Earth,' which has been streamed more than 70 million times on Spotify and is slowly moving up the country radio chart. Yet the singer has built his growing audience the new-fashioned way. In 2023, not long after he started posting music online, his song 'Tie That Binds' went viral on TikTok; these days, the platform is filled with videos of teenage girls, many even younger than Myers, screaming along with him at concerts like the one he played this last weekend after a Royals game at Kansas City's Kauffman Stadium. His latest single: a stately '70s-style ballad called 'Through a Screen' about falling in love with someone you've never met in the flesh. 'I knew yall would relate to this one,' he wrote on TikTok in one of the many, many videos that teased the song before its release last Friday. As a clean-cut heartthrob type, Myers stands out somewhat in the country scene, which has been dominated over the last few years by the burly, bearded likes of Luke Combs and Jelly Roll and, of course, by Morgan Wallen, whose lightly villainous bad-boy energy is as crucial to his popularity as his knack for a deviously catchy hook. In Myers' music, which he writes mostly himself, even the drinking songs feel pretty suave; he's always using his dreamy eyes to beam a gentlemanly sincerity. 'I don't think I've ever tried to be seen that way,' he says with a laugh over coffee at the Chateau Marmont during a recent swing through Los Angeles. 'Obviously, when I'm onstage doing the flirtatious stuff and it gets a reaction — that's all part of it. And I love clothes — style definitely plays into it too. But that's never been at the forefront of my mind.' Even so, one of the music industry veterans behind Myers acknowledges that he was 'seeking a gap in the marketplace' when he signed the singer to his label. 'Everything in country was feeling a little mature,' says Barry Weiss, who founded the company he calls simply Records after heading up the Jive and RCA labels in the late '90s and early 2000s. 'You're trying to hit the ball where they ain't. And I felt like there wasn't a male country artist who's really young and really appealing to young folks.' Why not? 'Generally speaking, the Nashville community is very purist,' Weiss says. 'The minute someone feels young, it means they don't have musical credibility, which is so not the case with Ty. I mean, he's basically John Mayer and Otis Redding in an 18-year-old's body.' That's perhaps an overstatement. But it's true that Myers backs up his fresh-faced good looks and his cutesy social media content with real chops. His guitar playing is casually assured, and his voice has a weary scrape beyond his years; as a songwriter, he knows how to punctuate a story with a burst of emotional detail, as in his song 'Help Ourselves,' where he and a duet partner, Harper O'Neill, play a couple stuck — if that's the word for it — in a toxic relationship. 'This ain't no goodbye / You'll come crawling back when you've had your fill,' Myers sings, bruised but still steady. 'I'll get a call in the night at half past 12 / Three months later, I should f— myself.' (Hey, he's a good guy, not a choirboy.) Myers grew up in Dripping Springs, Texas, as part of a musical family that includes a great-uncle who co-founded the band Lonestar and another great-uncle who plays keys for George Strait. By elementary school, he was known around town as a singer — 'I vividly remember my PE teacher making me get up and sing 'Check Yes or No' for the whole gymnasium,' he says of the old Strait hit — and at 11 or 12 he discovered Stevie Ray Vaughan on YouTube. 'It was 'Lenny' from 'Live at the El Mocambo,'' he says, referring to the blues-rock star's classic concert film. 'I was like, 'That's what I want to do.'' Playing guitar and writing songs became 'a borderline addiction,' as Myers puts it, that he squeezed between going to school and playing football and baseball, the latter of which he described as 'a way of life in Texas.' Yet a sports injury in his sophomore year — 'Blew my knee out and tore everything: ACL, MCL, meniscus, PLC' — took him off the field. Myers' mom made him a TikTok profile to help focus his attention on something else; his sister, he says, became 'the mastermind' of his online presence. The 'Tie That Binds' video blew up while the family was on vacation in Key West, Fla.; Myers recalls an instant deluge of queries from record labels and management companies, including Nashville's Starstruck Entertainment, the firm headed up by Narvel Blackstock, who was married to Reba McEntire from 1989 to 2015. 'My mom obviously grew up watching Lonestar on the CMAs and the ACMs, and she remembers every time Reba would win an award, they'd pan to her and Narvel right next to her and pop his name up on the screen,' Myers says. 'So they knew who he was.' (Blackstock's son Brandon, who worked with his father and had two children with his ex-wife, Kelly Clarkson, died this month of cancer at age 48.) Myers signed with Starstruck, whose other management clients include Blake Shelton and Carly Pearce, then spent about a year taking meetings with labels. 'I think we met with all of them,' Myers says. 'By the end, I was about done with meetings.' Weiss recalls flying to Austin to meet with the singer and his parents. 'The mom recognized my name because she saw me written up in the Britney Spears book,' says the exec, who helped shepherd Spears, NSYNC and the Backstreet Boys to stardom. 'That can cut both ways, but it turned out to be a huge positive, because she's a Britney fan.' Myers says he went with Weiss' company, which signed the singer in a joint deal with Columbia Records, in part because Weiss understands 'how to use youth in a way that propels you instead of it being like, 'Well, he's really young …'' Though Weiss predicts that 'Ends of the Earth' will end up a top 5 record at country radio — 'if not a No. 1 record,' he says — both he and Myers are thinking bigger than the country audience. 'We're talking about girls in Greenwich, Connecticut, coming to these shows,' the exec says. Yet 'trying to make super-commercial pop records — that would be the kiss of death,' according to Weiss. Myers has been recording his next album at FAME, the studio known as the cradle of the so-called Muscle Shoals sound popularized by Aretha Franklin, Wilson Pickett and Etta James. And he's playing more gigs on the road this year than he ever has — 109 at last count. It's a number he's thinking of commemorating with one more tattoo, maybe when he fixes his armadillo, since he can get it done legally in Texas now after turning 18 last month. 'Some places are tough with it,' he says. 'We called a shop in Austin a while back: 'Hey, it's a 17-year-old — think you can do it?' They were like, 'No, that's child endangerment.'' He laughs. ''Jesus, I got two months, then you'll do it, no question.''


Elle
39 minutes ago
- Elle
6 Dress And Boot Combinations To Extend That Summer Feeling Into Autumn
Now that temperatures have dropped a little, I keep gazing wistfully at my autumn boots. Then again, I'm not quite ready to part from my beloved summer dresses. The good news is, you can have everything – well not everything, but, you know – since the simple formula of boots and a summer dress solves most between-season styling dilemmas, making the transition into autumn more effortless. If you thought your halterneck mini was nothing without a pair of ballet flats, think again. Its Y2K-leaning sensibility makes it the perfect match for the slouchy boots that made an appearance on the AW25 runways, at Isabel Marant, Khaite and Louis Vuitton. Hold on to your satin slip dress, too – it makes an excellent layering piece when teamed with biker boots and a slouchy knit (and jeans, on extra chilly days). It's certainly not the cowboy boot's first rodeo, as it stomps defiantly onwards into another season thanks to Altuzarra and Isabel Marant, who has long loved Western-inspired styling. Later, wear yours beneath sharply tailored trousers (as at Calvin Klein); now, slip 'em on with a white cotton sundress for late summer festivals and hoedowns. Whether you prefer an equestrian or Victoriana vibe, there is a new-season boot for you. Invest in your perfect pair and wear it right away, combining riding boots with a denim dress or lace-up styles with wafty, boho midis and maxis. Without further ado, here are six tried-and-tested dress and boot pairings for a chicer almost-autumn. You've spent all of summer wafting around town in a Chloé-esque maxi and there's no need to let autumn stop you – simply swap out your ballet flats or jelly shoes for a pair of lace-up boots, either Victorian-inspired (as seen at Bora Aksu's AW25 show) or biker-style, seen at Dior. For chillier, late-summer days, hedge your bets in a long-sleeved, A-line mini dress (in denim, depending on the temperature) and riding boots. ELLE UK's Site Fashion Editor Daisy Murray wears the combo especially well. Crisp cotton sundresses served you well all summer – continue the party into autumn by eschewing sandals for cowboy boots. Judging by Altuzarra and Calvin Klein's AW25 shows, they're not going anywhere. Last seen sometime in the early aughts, the slouchy boot was well overdue a second wind. Well, it's back with a vengeance, thanks to Khaite, Zimmermann and Isabel Marant, whose Edrik boots are perfectly in-keeping with the Y2K look of a halterneck mini dress. Reward the satin slip dress's unerring loyalty in a heatwave by styling it throughout September and into October, with knitwear and buckled boots – the chunkier, the better. Brown boots ruled the runways at Khaite, Alberta Ferretti and Fendi (amongst others) and will be a key part of your winter wardrobe. For now, we love how they look with a flippy, drop-waist dress, like this ruffled Gimaguas number.


Newsweek
39 minutes ago
- Newsweek
Woman Swaps Seats With Kid on Plane, Couldn't Predict What He Would Do Next
Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. A Denver woman says she narrowly avoided a travel nightmare on a United Airlines flight after making a split-second decision to switch seats with a young child—unknowingly sidestepping a midair vomit incident that would leave his father in the "splash zone." The incident was detailed in a video was posted by Chelsea Anderson (@chelseaexplainsitall on TikTok and @Chelsea_Explains on Instagram), a 33-year-old Colorado-based content creator. In the clip, Anderson describes how a simple act of kindness spared her from becoming collateral damage in a turbulent landing. "Sometimes it's a blessing when a person is in your seat on a plane," reads the text overlaid on the video. The incident unfolded on a recent United flight from San Francisco International Airport (SFO) to Denver International Airport (DIA). Anderson originally booked a window seat for the flight. "I actually prefer aisle seats. I had booked the trip last minute, so the window was all that was left," Anderson told Newsweek. When she boarded, she found a young child, around 3 or 4 years old, already seated at the window, with his father in the middle seat. A screenshot from a viral TikTok video of Chelsea Anderson detailing her unexpected seat swap on a plane. A screenshot from a viral TikTok video of Chelsea Anderson detailing her unexpected seat swap on a plane. @chelseaexplainsitall on TikTok Instead of asking them to move, Anderson opted to take the aisle. "It was a win win; the dad and son didn't have to move and I got the aisle," she said. It turned out to be a fortuitous decision. As the flight neared Denver, the weather took a sharp turn. "The flight was a little under three hours, but we only had turbulence when landing," Anderson said. "The weather was so bad that day, we almost had to reroute to Grand Junction [a regional airport]. I wouldn't say it was the worst I'd ever experienced, but it was way worse than a typical bumpy DIA landing." The turbulence during the flight incident in the viral post is not surprising because clear-air turbulence (CAT) was found to have increased over the past 40 years or so, according to a June 2023 study published in Geophysical Research Letters. The study found that the increases were largest over the U.S. and North Atlantic, both of which are busy flight regions. According to the study, "severe-or-greater CAT increased the most, becoming 55 percent more frequent in 2020 than 1979," and CAT is "projected to intensify in response to future climate change." In the case of the TikTok clip, the turbulence shook more than just the cabin. In the video, Anderson says: "I think what happened is that [the child] vomited with such force … that it splashed back on his dad and covered his dad … it was in his eyes, it was in his nose, it was in his mouth, not a pretty sight." While Anderson was spared, the child's father took the brunt of the airborne eruption. Despite the messy situation, Anderson said the dad remained calm and composed throughout. "But the dad stays unbelievably calm," she says in the clip. "He's trying to solve the problem, he's like [telling the child], 'Okay buddy, you threw up. We're gonna try to clean it up. We're not landed yet' … he's so polite and he's so nice to his kid … he's like dad of the freaking year. "And the kid is also very regulated, which tells me that this is how the dad always acts, not just how the dad acts in public," Anderson added. She told Newsweek that several people offered help during the ordeal. "I asked a man across the aisle for a spare barf bag, and he was happy to oblige. A gentleman behind us offered the dad some positive encouragement," she said. "As far as I know only the dad was in the splash zone." She said she was particularly moved by the father's compassion during the chaotic moment. "Obviously it was a stressful situation and I'm sure the dad wanted to make sure no one around them had been impacted, but I was touched with how reassuring the dad was," she said. "He took his son's mind off the situation and made him feel better while also trying to handle the mess, which is hard to do during a bumpy plane landing." As the two walked behind her on the jet bridge after landing, Anderson overheard the dad telling his son that "he was the luckiest dad in the world (not sarcastically!)," she noted in the caption of the video. Do you have a travel-related video or story to share? Let us know via life@ and your story could be featured on Newsweek.