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Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce fans go wild over 'perfect' red carpet debut

Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce fans go wild over 'perfect' red carpet debut

Daily Mail​5 hours ago

Taylor Swift and her boyfriend Travis Kelce delighted their fans when they finally checked off a relationship milestone with a joint appearance at opening night of his Tight End University.
Tuesday's event in Nashville, Tennessee, marked the hitmaker and the Kansas City Chiefs star player's first time walking the red carpet as a couple.
The 35-year-old songstress celebrated her red carpet debut with Travis more than a year into their relationship, after they began dating in late 2023.
Travis' Tight End University Instagram account shared a slow-motion clip of the lovebirds walking down the casual 'red carpet' as the entered the event with cameras flashing.
Fans gushed in the comments that their casual entrance at the low-key event was the 'perfect' way for the two to make their red carpet debut as a couple.

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Zohran Mamdani offers a terrifying glimpse into the future of Left-wing politics
Zohran Mamdani offers a terrifying glimpse into the future of Left-wing politics

Telegraph

time27 minutes ago

  • Telegraph

Zohran Mamdani offers a terrifying glimpse into the future of Left-wing politics

If it can happen in New York, it can happen anywhere. Last night, Democrats in the second most Jewish place on Earth, home to Isaac Bashevis Singer, Woody Allen and pastrami on rye, elected a Corbynite mayoral candidate who has defended the slogan 'globalise the intifada'. Zohran Mamdani, the proud 33-year-old socialist who was born in Uganda and worked as a rap music producer before turning to politics, pulled off a traumatic political upset when he beat the former state governor and moderate frontrunner Andrew Cuomo to win the nomination. Until recently, Mamdani, who only became an American citizen in 2018, was all but unknown to most New Yorkers. After all, this was the city of mayor Eric Adams, the pugnacious supporter of Israel whose popularity only collapsed after he was indicted on federal charges including bribery, fraud and soliciting illegal foreign campaign donations last year, all of which he denies. In hard-Left circles, however, the Mamdani was fast becoming a poster boy. The photogenic son of a professor of post-colonial studies at Columbia University ran on a platform of free universal childcare, free buses, a rent freeze and – you guessed it – condemning the Middle East's only democracy, which he has lavishly accused of 'genocide'. Predictably enough, the emetic Mamdani campaign has been fuelled by umpteen vacuous TikTok videos, together with endorsements from the usual coalition of socialist dinosaurs like Bernie Sanders and airhead celebrities like model and activist Emily Ratajkowski and comedian Bowen Yang (who once put his name to a 'queers for Palestine' letter). 'This is not just about New York, this is about the Democratic Party,' Ratajkowski said in a video with Mamdani. 'It's about the hope that we have that there is a belief that people can win elections, and not just money.' Pass the sick bag. Here was yet another expression of the unifying power of Palestine on the Left, which has somehow become the meeting-point of narcissistic progressive posturing, eyepopping sexual experimentation, race radicalism, petulant teenage rebellion, climate fanaticism, Cold-War era anti-capitalism, and amongst some the venomous cause of global jihad and the sheer hatred of Jews. With the murder of two Israeli diplomats in Washington DC in May, the adolescent rage turned deadly. With the invasion of RAF Brize Norton this month, it crept in the direction of terror. And on both sides of the Atlantic, from Leicester South to Manhattan, it is becoming increasingly political. There is no shortage of irony here. As one Jewish-American writer put it: 'I hope this puts to rest the notion that Jews control politics. We couldn't even elect a non-antisemite in the most Jewish city in America.' Clearly, if you thought the Democrats had begun to learn the lessons of their drubbing by Donald Trump last year, you were wrong. There could have been no louder howl of American rage at the ultra-progressive agenda than the 2024 presidential election. New York, that most liberal of cities, has turned itself into a battleground for the soul of the Democrats. Partly, of course, this is generational: many of Mamdani's voters were young zealots who took on the old guard and crucified them. But in the bigger picture, it is a battle between the ideologues and the pragmatists. And the ideologues are winning. Wherever you look in the West, the same pattern is playing out. A small number of hardened Islamists and their fellow travellers are reaching for the levers of power over the heads of the bovine silent majority. With the moderates on their own side unable to muster anything other than appeasement, the tide is turning by increments. History is not always written by the masses. It can be written by the fanatics. With our democratic traditions unable to compensate for the rampant radicalism and apathy muting our immune systems, we are watching our societies slip away.

Jaclyn Smith, 79, stuns in a white suit as she joins fellow 80s icons Morgan Fairchild, Dyan Cannon and Alana Stewart while hosting starry LA dinner
Jaclyn Smith, 79, stuns in a white suit as she joins fellow 80s icons Morgan Fairchild, Dyan Cannon and Alana Stewart while hosting starry LA dinner

Daily Mail​

time32 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

Jaclyn Smith, 79, stuns in a white suit as she joins fellow 80s icons Morgan Fairchild, Dyan Cannon and Alana Stewart while hosting starry LA dinner

reunited with her fellow 80s Hollywood icons Morgan Fairchild, Dyan Cannon and Cynthia Sikes Yorkin while hosting a star-studded dinner in Los Angeles. The Charlie's Angels star, 79, and Patrick Foley both played host to some of Hollywood most recognisable 80s sex symbols for the glitzy meal at Hotel Bel-Air. For the occasion, Jaclyn cut a sophisticated figure in a fitted white suit, made up of tailored trousers and a blazer with padded shoulders. She styled her chic ensemble with a striped grey shirt and added to her frame with a pair of pointed heels, while she toted her essentials in a coordinated handbag. Jaclyn, best known for playing Kelly Garrett in the Charlie's Angels TV series for its complete five-year run, added to her features with a blush make-up palette. She posed alongside model Alana Stewart, 80, who coordinated in a sheer white gown with a tiered skirt which showed off her incredible figure. Alana, who was married to Rod Stewart from 1979 to 1984, showed off her ageless features as she beamed for the cameras alongside Jaclyn. Mork & Mindy star Morgan, 75, also milled around the star-studded event and cut a vibrant figure in a purple patterned blazer and matching lilac trousers. She posed alongside Cary Grant's ex-wife Dyan, 88, who looked effortlessly stylish in a black turtleneck and beige drawstring trousers. Also in attendance were the likes of Blake Runner 2049 star Cynthia Sikes Yorkin, Ann Turkel - the former model and ex-wife of Richard Harris - and Rich Man, Poor Man star Susan Blakely. Jaclyn hosted the star-studded alfresco meal with theatre and film star Patrick and in collaboration with Sisley Paris. Jaclyn famously starred alongside Farrah Fawcett and Kate Jackson in the Charlie's Angels TV series, and recently insisted their was no drama between the trio. 'It was just girls having fun. We were like college roommates. Just independent women, making our way,' she told People in October. 'We crossed that bridge and it changed our lives. There was no walking into a grocery store in an anonymous way anymore and so, for all three of us, there was a special bond.' Tracey E. Bregman - famed for starring in The Young and the Restless, and The Bold and the Beautiful - cut a trendy figure in a leather-look co-ord set Farrah devastatingly died on June 25, 2009 at age 62 after a long, painful battle with cancer, while Jaclyn remains very close with Kate. 'She was a true girlfriend,' she said of Farrah. 'Not a competitive girlfriend, she wished everybody well.' In more recent months, she was caught up in the devastating Los Angeles fires, which saw many people - including a long list of Hollywood stars - lose their homes. The Rage Of Angels actress fled to Santa Barbara, California, in January after leaving her $20million Beverly Hills mansion and posted about the devastation at the time. 'Too many friends have lost homes, families have lost precious mementos from their loved ones, heirlooms, books, art and the treasures that tell the story of a life. . . all gone in an instant,' she wrote. 'Despite this unimaginable tragedy, what remains is resilience, and the unwavering resolve of the human spirit.' It is not known exactly where Jaclyn lives in Beverly Hills, but more than 80,000 people were displaced in the fires including stars Paris Hilton, Mel Gibson, Anna Faris and Leighton Meester and Adam Brody, among many others. Jaclyn was seen keeping her make-up perfect as she touched up her lipstick with a helping hand from Susan

'It validated the experiences of black women who loved women': The 1928 song that is one the world's first gay anthems
'It validated the experiences of black women who loved women': The 1928 song that is one the world's first gay anthems

BBC News

timean hour ago

  • BBC News

'It validated the experiences of black women who loved women': The 1928 song that is one the world's first gay anthems

Cited as one of the first representations of black queer popular culture, Ma Rainey's sensational Prove It on Me Blues is a landmark song that had a profound and lasting effect. One night in 1925, a party in a Chicago apartment was broken up by police. Such raids were commonplace in the era of speakeasies and Prohibition, but this one was different: all the revellers were women and they were in a state of undress. The singer Ma Rainey, the host of the party, known as the "mother of the blues", was arrested. But far from hushing up the incident and the outing of her sexual interest in women, she made a record about it, Prove It on Me Blues, released in 1928. "They say I do it, ain't nobody caught meSure got to prove it on me;Went out last night with a crowd of my friends,They must've been women, 'cause I don't like no men…" With its out-and-proud assertion in the second verse, "I want the whole world to know," this unapologetic proclamation of being what was then labelled as "a lady lover" is one of the world's earliest gay anthems. Prove It on Me Blues was "one of the first representations of black queer popular culture", Dr Cookie Woolner, associate professor of history at the University of Memphis and author of The Famous Lady Lovers: Black Women and Queer Desire before Stonewall (2023) tells the BBC. "I would imagine that the song resonated with and validated the experiences of many black women who loved women at this time," she adds. Born Gertrude Pridgett in 1886, this icon of female empowerment actually owed her stage name to her husband, "Pa" (William) Rainey, a comedian, singer and dancer with whom she performed a double act in minstrel shows before their separation in 1916. As a solo artist, Rainey fused the vaudeville style of her early performances with the soulful rhythms of Southern blues. In 1923, she was signed by Paramount Records and made more than 100 recordings for them, including her best-known song Ma Rainey's Black Bottom (1927), which took its name from a crouched Charleston-like dance and inspired the play (1984) and film (2020) of the same name. Rainey and her gravelly contralto voice were part of a wider lesbian blues counterculture − much of it focused around Harlem, New York City − that included Gladys Bentley, Bessie Smith, Ethel Waters and Alberta Hunter. Beyond mainstream society, marginal narratives found voice in speakeasies, dive bars and "buffet flats": apartments created within larger properties where under-the-radar entertainment took place. Bessie Smith describes this underground scene in Soft Pedal Blues (1925), which urges music makers to "put that soft pedal on" to avoid attracting the attention of the authorities. Having paid Rainey's bail the night of her arrest, she knew the value of discretion. Ma Rainey had a white management team and performed to both black and white audiences, bringing black queer culture into the consciousness of a diverse group of Americans. For some, this was an unwelcome commodification of black culture. In a short piece titled Harlem, which appeared in the September 1927 issue of The Crisis, the sociologist and civil rights activist WEB Du Bois lamented the "white desire for the black exotic" and the trend for white visitors to come into black communities in search of "a spectacle and an entertainment". A legacy of white oppression For black performers, the blues was not just entertainment, but a sensitive art form, born from a legacy of discrimination and white oppression. "The blues as a musical genre was created by the descendants of enslaved people in the Mississippi Delta and has always been grounded in everyday life, survival, and resistance, with early blues songs discussing social issues in matter-of-fact ways," says Woolner. "In eras when topics such as female sexuality and queerness were not considered respectable for public discussion, female blues singers nonetheless dared to broach such topics." Blues was also, she adds, "the soundtrack" of the "Great Migration" of African Americans from the rural South to the more anonymous urban North − a move which granted black migrant women greater freedom, she says, "to take part in queer behaviours, away from the prying eyes of family and nosy neighbours". The bawdy "hokum blues" genre reflected this freedom, laying a woman's claim to sexual satisfaction and celebrating when she found it. Ida Cox's One Hour Mama (1923) advocates for "endurance" in the bedroom, while Ethel Waters' My Handy Man (1928) is rife with innuendos: "Never has a single thing to sayWhile he's working hard;I wish that you could see the wayHe handles my front yard!" Female blues singers broadened concepts of black female identity, contesting the patriarchy and satirising domesticity. In Safety Mama (1931), for example, Bessie Smith proposes a reversal of traditional gender roles. The way "to treat a no-good man", she sings, is to "make him stay at home, wash and iron". Appearance also played a role. Dressed up in ostrich plumes, diamond tiaras and necklaces made of gold coins, all while flashing her gold teeth, Ma Rainey made a deliberate show of financial independence and self-worth. Yet, like her contemporaries − most notably Gladys Bentley, famous for her stylish three-piece suits − she would also wear outfits that subverted gender norms. The advert for Prove It on Me Blues, for example, revels in her notoriety, depicting Rainey in suit jacket, tie and hat, flirting with two women while a policeman looks on. "It's true I wear a collar and a tie," she sings on the record. "Crucially, these performers made black queer female possibility visible," lecturer and researcher Eleanor Medhurst, the author of Unsuitable – A History of Lesbian Fashion (2024), tells the BBC. "They were clever with how they used clothing − it wasn't always an overt sign of queerness… but to those in the know, or 'in the life' [the 1920s euphemism for lesbianism]… it meant more." Blues singers such as Ma Rainey brought a female specificity to their music, sharing themes such as infidelity and domestic violence from a woman's perspective. Songs such as Black Eye Blues (recorded in 1928) tell a story of a woman who is not an object, whose feelings matter, but who is strong and can exact revenge. "Take all my money, black up both my eyesGive it to another woman, come home and tell me liesYou low-down alligator, just watch me sooner or laterGonna catch you with your britches down." There's a powerful defiance to these songs. In 'Tain't Nobody's Bizness if I Do (1923), Bessie Smith stands up to criticism about her way of life. "I'm goin' to do just as I want anyway. And don't care if they all despise me," she sings. Ethel Waters, who was married aged 12 or 13 to an abusive husband, and later entered into a nine-year relationship with her performance partner Ethel Williams, takes it a step further, celebrating her divorce and envisaging a life without men. "I'm gonna label my apartment 'No Man's Land'," she declares in No Man's Mamma Now (1925). Bold and transgressive message Until scholars such as Sandra Lieb, Daphne Duval Harrison and Angela Davis emphasised the contribution of female blues artists in shaping modern US culture, music historians had tended to overlook them, says Woolner. "There has long been this masculine idea that a lone, itinerant male blues singer, travelling the South with a guitar slung over his back, was the authentic representation of the blues," she explains, "while female performers like Rainey, who drew from vaudeville and blackface minstrelsy, were commercial entertainers and not artists." More like this:• The forgotten story of America's first black superstars• The US jazz icon with a controversial legacy• Pop music's most mysterious sensation In Blues legacies and Black feminism: Gertrude "Ma" Rainey, Bessie Smith and Billie Holiday (1998), Davis sets the record straight. "They redefined women's 'place'," she writes. "They forged and memorialised images of tough, resilient, and independent women who were afraid neither of their own vulnerability nor of defending their right to be respected as autonomous human beings." Within this subversive and uncompromising blues scene, Prove It on Me was an anthem of prime importance. It was, notes Davis, "a cultural precursor to the lesbian cultural movement of the 1970s". A cover version of it even featured in the 1977 anthology Lesbian Concentrate, a record released in response to anti-gay campaigning. The song, agrees Woolner, was seminal. "Few other sites in 1920s American culture allowed for such bold messages about gender transgression and same-sex desire as Prove It on Me Blues," she says. A song can have a profound effect on a community, as Rainey was well aware. "The blues helps you get out of bed in the morning," her character says in the play. "You get up knowing you ain't alone. There's something else in the world. Something's been added by that song." -- For more Culture stories from the BBC, follow us on Facebook, X and Instagram.

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