'Kimmel' Guest Host Diego Luna Offers Hilarious Plan To Escape Trump's America
'Jimmy Kimmel Live' guest host Diego Luna on Wednesday said the number of Americans moving to Mexico has surged by 70% in recent years.
Luna, who is from Mexico, pointed to a reason that number could jump even higher given the American political landscape during President Donald Trump's second term in office.
'I know you're coming to Mexico for the culture, the nature, the diversity ― all the things that will be banned in your country by the end of this year,' the 'Andor' actor said. 'But it's not just Mexico. People are also going to Spain, Italy, France, the Netherlands. Your main export is now yourselves.'
So to help Americans make the move south, Luna and longtime Kimmel sidekick Guillermo Rodriguez ― who is also from Mexico ― created a mock ad for a new relocation service: Gring-Go.
Check it out below:
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Forbes
19 minutes ago
- Forbes
Anastasia Beverly Hills Debuts Skincare: A ‘Jack Of All Trades' SPF
Anastasia Beverly Hills Hydra Prime SPF 50 Photo courtesy of Anastasia Beverly Hills When you've done it all in color cosmetics, there's only one thing left to do: enter a new beauty category altogether. Following more than 20 years of innovation in brows, eyeshadow, blush, contour and recently minimalist foundation sticks and a blurring matte foundation, Anastasia Beverly Hills is dipping its toes into skincare. The venture was a long time coming for product developer and brand president Claudia 'Norvina' Soare. 'I've wanted to do skincare forever,' said the daughter of the brand's eponymous founder during a one-on-one interview for this article. 'The challenge is people always ask what a makeup brand knows about skincare. And then also our retailers have a fear. Let's say I told them, here's a vitamin C serum from ABH. It's too big of a jump, right? So, in the many, many meetings you have with them, they tell us repeatedly to tie it back to makeup.' That left the beauty veteran with one option: an all-in-one product that can tap into either end of the spectrum. The original concept? A primer. 'But not just another primer,' she adamantly said. 'There are so many primers,' she continued. 'They're so competitive, and I think a lot of time, people don't care if they're cheap or expensive. It's extremely risky in my opinion. I knew I needed to make something that is like the Swiss Army Knife of skincare and makeup primer.' And that's when HydraPrime SPF 50 ($48) was born. 'I told myself it's going to be an amazing SPF,' she declared of the lightly scented blend of uplifting citrus and fresh herbaceous undertones. 'It's going to be no white cast, no stickiness. It's also going to be packed with skincare, and there will be major clinicals. It's going to be literally a skincare treatment for your face.' In addition to coinciding with the kickoff to summer, the launch is timed perfectly, as the SPF market is a buzzy one as of late. From emerging sunscreen brands like Ultra Violette and Good Weather Skin, to established beauty brands like Augustinus Bader and a headline-making Tower28, it's rare to find an entity in this space that hasn't tapped into sun care. According to an industry report, the sunscreen market, worth $19.2 billion in 2025, has gone up by $1.4 billion since last year. The report cites increased awareness of skin cancer prevention, focus on anti-aging skincare regimens and expanding recreational activities as reasons for the category rise. It also states that mineral-based formulas are shaping industry standards, while multifunctional products that combine sun care with traditional skincare are gaining substantial traction. For Soare, what started as a primer and led to an SPF resulted in what she finally calls a 'jack of all trades,' all-in-one product that also includes moisturizing properties. 'Calling it just a primer almost cheapens how major the formulation is, and all the actives that we have in there and all the things it does,' Soare says, of the derm-approved, vegan, non-comedogenic formula. 'It's not to say that primers aren't important, but this does so much more.' Packed with barrier-strengthening ectoin, brightening niacinamide and soothing bisabolol, the SPF component made the formulation 'super challenging, like beyond,' Soare said, explaining, 'I started the process in 2020, believe it or not. And then I finished it. And then it takes 18 months to test, so by the time it was done, I forgot about it.' User wearing new Anastasia Beverly Hills HydraPrime SPF 50 multifaceted skincare Photo courtesy of Anastasia Beverly Hills Standing Out In A Saturated Space But now that it's here, HydraPrime SPF 50 fills two major gaps for the brand: all-in-one convenience for travel and on-the-go lifestyle, and the untapped ABH consumer. 'If I go on vacation, I would obviously take my cleanser, and now with the new product, this and cleanser are all you need,' Soare said. 'It's also a great product for guys. This isn't just for the girlies who wear makeup. If your boyfriend wants it, anybody can wear this product. It'll be our first touch into a broader audience. We don't really speak to people who don't wear makeup. ABH never has this chance to do that, so that for me is exciting on its own. It's a little scary, but it's very exciting.' With its makeup benefits out of the way, Soare breaks down how the HydraPrime SPF 50 will serve the skin. 'It's about having up-to-date, major ingredients that are really going to take things to the next level,' she says. 'This will really be able to combat wrinkles, anti-aging and darkness, moisture and texture, which are, like, all my problems. I get a lot of the dark spots and melasma, and I want to be able to prevent that. So the SPF is preventing sun damage, and it's also helping with all of these things that have pretty much ravaged my face. I want people to know that you can wear it every day as a standalone product.' When it comes to 2025 skincare trends, we've seen a rise in tinted formulas, namely with SPF. Merit, E.l.f., Beauty of Joseon and Supergoop! each recently launched tinted, multifaceted sunscreens. Soare, however, said that was lower on the priority list when it came to her latest formulation. 'In order to have that many actives and make it clinical skincare, it was going to be really challenging to also add tint to it,' she explains of HydraPrime SPF 50's formula. 'That was number one, just from a practical reason. And then number two, imagine buying a skincare serum, but it has tint in it—you'd be like, what ? I want it to be taken seriously as skincare, because it is skincare. And if I put makeup in it, then it just becomes a makeup product.'

Los Angeles Times
19 minutes ago
- Los Angeles Times
Heat domes, wildfires, floods and drought. Where's the outrage?
As I write this, the temperature is climbing past 100 degrees Fahrenheit in the mid-Atlantic states, and 170 million Americans are under warnings about a dangerous combination of intense heat and humidity. Is this latest weather extreme linked to global warming? Of course it is, as has been the case with record-setting floods, extreme hurricanes, droughts and wildfires that go back decades and afflict every corner of the globe. Amid these extremes, we have the Trump administration seemingly trying to roll back or reverse every environmental initiative of the past 55 years. Yet nobody seems to care. In the early 1990s, I gave a lot of talks about how environmental awareness had become an American value. The early 1970s saw the passage of the Clean Air and Clean Water acts, the National Environmental Policy Act, the Endangered Species Act, and the formation of the Environmental Protection Agency. Within 20 years, Time magazine was making planet Earth its 'Man of the Year,' and the first Earth Summit met. But now I think I spoke too soon. On June 14, several million people took to the streets in the 'No Kings' protests against Trump's assault on the Constitution, demonstrating that Americans can still be mobilized in support of something they hold dear. By contrast, while there has been ample media coverage of the administration's gutting of the agencies monitoring climate change, pollution, the weather and other environment-related issues, the devastation hasn't produced any major protests. This is all the more striking as many of the looming environmental concerns that provoked action in the 20th century are unfolding faster and causing far worse damage than predicted. To take just one example, climate change is inflicting far higher costs on Americans at a far faster pace than experts predicted back when the public started clamoring for action on global warming. In 1991, for instance, economist William Nordhaus used a model he developed (work for which he became a Nobel laureate in 2018) to predict that 3 degrees Celsius warming would cause a mere 1% drop in global income. As recently as 2018, a refined version of his model predicted that the roughly 1.5-degree Celsius warming already happening would inflict only 0.5% damage to the economy. This number stands in dramatic contrast to a new analysis by Bloomberg Intelligence: In the 12 months ending May 1, 2025, damage from events attributable to climate change amounted to roughly 3% of U.S. GDP, or nearly $1 trillion. Contributing to this number were such catastrophes as Hurricanes Helene and Milton and wildfires in California. While skeptics might question how analysts can precisely measure how much of the damage caused by such events is attributable to climate change, one major tributary to this number is a dramatic increase in insurance costs, and insurers take estimating risk very seriously. Thirty years ago, the president of the Reinsurance Assn. of America told me 'global warming can bankrupt the industry.' But the industry, motivated by the competitive pressures to continue to write policies, and protected by its ingenuity at limiting exposure and offloading risk, underpriced these risks well into the 2000s. No longer. As Californians are well aware, many insurers have pulled out of markets vulnerable to fires, floods, sea level rise and storms, and those that remain have been raising prices where they can. The Bloomberg Intelligence analysis found that insurance premiums have doubled since 2017 (and may still underprice risk in many markets), and even those who are insured will find that many of their losses aren't covered, and that government recovery help falls short as well. Climate change is costing Americans real money — $7.7 trillion since 2000, according to the Bloomberg Intelligence analysis. To put this in perspective, it is substantially more than the total costs of the Iraq and Afghanistan interventions taken together. And these costs are certain to rise as climate change intensifies. Given that the administration's actions are going to leave Americans more vulnerable to climate change at a time when weather-related events are already affecting the average voter's budget, it would be natural to expect protests at least as vigorous as those against deportations or cuts to Medicaid. Instead, in the relative absence of public interest, many large corporations have abandoned climate-related policies, something that began even before Trump was elected. Simple issue overload might explain some of the silence. It's understandably hard to process all the ramifications of what we might call the Trump Blitzkrieg — bizarre, unqualified Cabinet appointments, attacks on due process, attempts at mass deportations, sending troops into Los Angeles to quell garden-variety unrest, bombing Iran without congressional authorization. He has indeed flooded the zone. The familiarity of the problem may be another problem. The warming planet been the subject of innumerable debates, reports, global agreements, protests, lawsuits, political campaigns and media attention going back to 1988 when it became a mainstream issue. Indeed, a changed climate is the new normal for most people alive today because a majority of the global population was born after the signals of a climate going haywire became obvious. Finally, humans aren't great at assessing the relative priority of risks — encounters with deer kill 880 times more Americans each year than encounters with sharks, but guess which threat worries us more? Still, the essence of a value is that it becomes a cherished part of identity, and if environmental awareness really were an American value, commitment to that value would cut through the noise. It hasn't, and that bodes ill for our future. Eugene Linden is the author of 'Fire & Flood: A People's History of Climate Change From 1979 to the Present .'


Washington Post
32 minutes ago
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