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EXCLUSIVE The REAL damage you are doing if you walk around your home with shoes on like Carrie Bradshaw

EXCLUSIVE The REAL damage you are doing if you walk around your home with shoes on like Carrie Bradshaw

Daily Mail​12-07-2025
In a recent episode of And Just Like That, Carrie Bradshaw found herself at the center of a hotly debated controversy: do shoes belong indoors?
Carrie's introduction to the issue came when the downstairs neighbor at her Gramercy Park apartment in New York complained about the noise of her infamous Manolo Blahniks on the hardwood floor.
But courtesy for neighbors aside, a large subsect of people would criticize Carrie's shoes in the home for an entirely different reason.
It's a germaphobe's nightmare.
Even Carrie's friend Charlotte York pointed out that going barefoot in the home, or at least wearing house slippers, is far more sanitary.
But there's no reason to take a fictional character's word for it, doctors and cleaning experts agree that a no-shoe household is the best way to go.
According to Brandon Pleshek, an internet personality, janitor, and self-proclaimed 'clean freak', Carrie's neighbor might just be right, for all of the wrong reasons.
He told Daily Mail: 'Wearing shoes inside your home can track in a surprising amount of dirt, bacteria, and outdoor grime.
'Everything from pesticides to E. coli has been found on the soles of shoes.'
Especially if you're walking on the streets of Manhattan like Carrie Bradshaw herself, dirt and germ build up can settle on your floors and expose you to all manner of illnesses.
According to Cleveland Clinic, most shoes have millions of bacteria on them. If they are worn inside, that bacteria can live on your floors for days.
Common shoe germs can cause diarrhea, colitis, and even life-threatening infections.
Pleshek recommended that guests take their shoes off too. In another famous episode of Sex and the City, Carrie was forced to take her shoes off at a friend's house where someone else then walked away with her $500 footwear.
But, that may just be a risk worth taking from a cleanliness standpoint.
'Asking guests to remove their shoes helps keep floors cleaner, especially carpets and rugs that trap dirt and allergens,' Pleshek said.
'Most people are understanding once they know it's about keeping your space clean.'
Experts say that dirty shoes track in more than just bacteria. Lead is commonly found on the soles. The heavy metal can affect the brain, nerves, and vital organs, especially in babies and young children. Lead can be found in old buildings with lead based paint. The paint slowly chips off overtime and becomes dust.
Dr. Daniel Sullivan, an internal medicine physician, said: 'You can walk through this dust without knowing it and bring it into your house on your shoes.
'The dust can easily make its way into a child's mouth if they're playing on the floor.'
Seasonal allergens like grass and pollen can be tracked in on shoes as well. If you notice your allergy symptoms are especially bad despite tactics to fight them, that could be why.
If you, like Carrie Bradshaw, must take shoes into your home, Pleshek said that a doormat is a great 'first line of defense'.
'Having one outside and another inside can help cut down on how much dirt and debris makes it through the door,' he said.
'Just make sure they're large enough to actually wipe your feet on and clean them regularly so they don't end up doing more harm than good.'
Having a designated pair of house slippers or shoes is also a good option for maintaining cleanliness indoors. Pleshek said they prevent wear and tear on hardwood floors and protect your feet.
While keeping outdoor shoes off outside is the best way to maintain a clean environment, unfortunately for Carrie's neighbor there is an argument to be made for sporting footwear in the house.
According to Time, going barefoot on hard floors can be bad for your feet. Unlike carpet, they don't allow for any padding or shock absorption. That kind of repetitive pressure on the soles can lead to serious health issues.
Metatarsalgia, for example, is inflammation that causes pain on the bottom of the foot, and can even migrate to the hips, knees, and back.
There's also an increased risk of stubbing, scraping, or tripping in your home while barefoot which if done repeatedly can take a toll.
According to podiatric surgeon Dr. Nicole Brouyette, not just any Manolos, Jimmy Choos, or Louboutins will do for indoor footwear.
Not only that, but stilettoes like Carrie's can cause severe damage to hardwood floors. It can create dents, scuffs, and scratches and even cause damage to the heels themselves.
Unlike Carrie's famous high heels, shoes worn in the house should be sturdy and supportive with a spacious fit. Designating house shoes and outdoor shoes can be a simple way to get the best of both worlds.
Unfortunately, Carrie didn't see it that way when her neighbor passive-aggressively gifted her a pair of slippers, but she did agree to put down some rugs.
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Chris Pratt dragged into Katy Perry's bitter legal row after he rented $15m home she forced bedridden veteran, 85, from
Chris Pratt dragged into Katy Perry's bitter legal row after he rented $15m home she forced bedridden veteran, 85, from

The Sun

time29 minutes ago

  • The Sun

Chris Pratt dragged into Katy Perry's bitter legal row after he rented $15m home she forced bedridden veteran, 85, from

CHRIS Pratt could be dragged into Katy Perry's ugly legal battle to prise $6 million from an 85-year-old disabled veteran she evicted from his home. The Guardians of the Galaxy star and his wife Katherine Schwarzenegger are renting the $15 million house previously owned by Carl Westcott who is bedridden in a hospice. 8 8 8 8 Westcott's family is outraged the popstar is suing the ailing man - who receives 24/7 care - for $6 million to cover back rent and alleged damages. Entrepreneur Westcott, a US Army veteran and founder of 1-800 Flowers - sold his Montecito mansion to Perry for $15 million in July 2020. Westcott had signed the property deal with Perry and Orlando Bloom's business manager, Bernie Gudvi, after initially agreeing to sell his 8.9-acre estate to the Firework singer. Gudvi accepted Westcott's counteroffer to increase the price from $13.5 million to $15 million, according to court documents. But just one month later, Westcott filed a lawsuit against Gudvi, alleging he was heavily medicated and not of sound mind when he contracted with Perry for the sale. He maintained that the contract was thus "void" on the grounds of his mental incapacity when he signed it. Westcott has been bedridden for nearly two years as he suffers from Huntington's disease, a brutal condition that stops parts of the brain working properly over time. However, the pop star's legal team successfully countered his challenge in court, and keys were exchanged in 2024, meaning that Westcott had to move out. The judge said Westcott presented no persuasive evidence that he lacked capacity to enter into a real estate contract between June 10, 2020, and June 18, 2020, the days during which he negotiated and signed the contract. His angry son, Chart, told The U.S. Sun in February that Perry was "a rich pop star who can buy any other house in the world... she has no empathy... it's unforgivable." Katy Perry and Justin Trudeau Spark Romance Rumors with Surprise Dinner in Montreal After her successful verdict, Perry then lodged a damages claim for $6 million against the elderly man - phase two of the legal action. According to court documents, the star's team is seeking compensation for alleged lost rental value, deferred maintenance, repairs for water damage and a fallen tree. Perry has paid $9 million so far for the $15 million property, which dates back to the 1920s/'30s, and is comprised of a large main house, three-bedroom guest house, one-bedroom pool house, gym building, and equipment building, per court filings. The Perry V Westcott case is heading back to court this month for the penalty phase, with his lawyers claiming in filings that her "16 witnesses have failed to produce any construction or repair contracts between Perry and any general contractor." The U.S. Sun understands that recovery of such costs is normal in civil litigation. RENTED OUT A source has told The U.S. Sun that the luxury house is currently being rented by Jurassic World star Chris Pratt, 46, and Katherine Schwarzenegger, 35. She is an American author and the eldest daughter of legendary Terminator star Arnold Schwarzenegger and NBC broadcast journalist Maria Shriver, who is also a member of the famous Kennedy family. The source added that, ironically, "Shriver initially put in a bid for the same house in 2020." Westcott's attorney returned to court last Tuesday ahead of a "likely attempt to subpoena Pratt because he is a material witness," she said. "For example, to establish when he started renting? He is living in a property that is wrapped up in a legal battle." The star is likely to be asked to testify - "Katy has already been mandated to do so," the source said. She added that Westcott's team "want to know how much Pratt is renting the house for. "Perry has claimed millions of dollars in damages, and claimed that it's not liveable - it's clearly liveable because an A-list actor is renting it." PRATT TESTIMONY Pratt's name was mentioned several times in court filings by Westcott's legal team last Friday in documents submitted to the Superior Court of the State of California. Before Perry's damages claim goes to trial, Westcott's attorneys have asked Judge Lipner to consider a "status report of issues to be resolved." Their August 1 document claimed: "Now, just before the Phase 2 trial, there is new, never-before disclosed evidence that Perry has rented out the Westcott property to the actor Chris Pratt and his wife. "Per a recent Daily Mail online newspaper article... 'sources close to Perry' say she rented the house to actor Chris Pratt." In their filings, the judge was asked to issue a pre-trial order to "allow Westcott's repair expert Steve Norris to do a short three-hour house re-inspection of the property... so he can see what repairs were done and opine as to their reasonable value." His attorneys also asked the judge to "allow Westcott to take several re-depositions limited to 3 hours each of the following persons: Perry and Gudvi... Chris Pratt (the tenant at the property, concerning its condition or problems and the terms of his lease agreement with Perry), and Orlando Bloom, Perry's boyfriend and father of her child, whose deposition testimony showed would personally be in charge of repairs." They alleged, "Now that we know Perry just rented out the house to a famous actor, conducting a trial on the real merits... means that this court's discretion should be exercised to allow the few and very short depositions requested and to allow Mr. Norris to spend 3 hours re-inspecting the property. "Another reason for allowing the short and few depositions is to allow Westcott and this court to know who owns the house after the recent split between Perry and her boyfriend Orlando Bloom." Their filings also alleged, "The current issues were caused by Perry/Gudvi waiting until after the September 2024 discovery cutoff to perform repairs, unless they did no repairs yet were still able to rent out the house as-is to Chris Pratt, which would tend to show the alleged repairs were exaggerated to drum up damages. "Either way, Perry's conduct is unfair and without the requested house inspection and short depositions requested by Westcott deprives him of a trial on the real merits." PERRY TO TESTIFY The source told The U.S. Sun today, "Judge Lipner confirmed that Katy will have to testify for at least an hour or more to the damages claim." Timeline of Katy Perry's mansion battle against veteran Carl Westcott July 2020: Entrepreneur Carl Westcott, US Army veteran and founder of 1-800 Flowers - sold his Montecito mansion to Katy Perry and Orlando Bloom for $15 million. Westcott had bought it only two months earlier for about $11.25 million. August 2020: Westcott filed a lawsuit against Perry and Bloom's business manager, Bernie Gudvi, alleging he was heavily medicated and not of sound mind when he contracted with Perry for the sale. The pop star's legal team countered and alleged that Westcott, who has Huntington's disease, had changed his mind on the sale, and the contract should be upheld. December 2023: A judge ruled in favor of Perry, and upheld the original sales contract. A Los Angeles judge ruled that Westcott failed to prove incapacity, finding him of sound mind during the sale negotiations. March 2024: The keys were exchanged. On May 17, 2024, Perry officially took legal ownership after the deed was recorded. 2024-2025: Phase two of the legal action - after the successful verdict, Perry lodged a damages claim for $6 million against Westcott, who is bedridden and currently receiving 24/7 care. This claim has yet to go before court. August 2025: Damage claims and ongoing litigation - Perry has paid $9 million so far for the luxury property and is now seeking $6 million in damages, citing structural defects, deferred maintenance, and lost rental income. TRIAL IN AUGUST The latest legal request follows filings submitted by Westcott's legal team, lodged in the Superior Court early July, and which outlined a further motion in the case. The July documents show that Westcott asked the court to "exclude any and all evidence, references to evidence, exhibits, testimony or argument relating to claims for alleged damages concerning repairs allegedly needed at Mr. Westcott's former home located at... Santa Barbara, California, as of May 17, 2024." Westcott's legal team explained in these earlier filings that escrow closed on May 17, 2024, and that Perry "must testify" in the penalty phase. "Since Gudvi had signed the contract in his capacity as the agent of the singer Katy Perry, the court ruled that Perry is the real-party-in-interest as to the damages being sought in the Phase 2 trial and that she must testify during the trial." Who is Carl Westcott? Katy Perry is suing the bedridden and ailing veteran, 85, who has a neurological disorder Carl Westcott was born in 1939 at the charity hospital in Vicksburg, Mississippi. Westcott and his five sisters lived in a house without indoor plumbing. When Westcott was six, his father - who drove a logging truck - left and never returned. His mother became a nurse's aide, earning just $5 per eight-hour shift. When he was five, Westcott sold papers in front of the Vicksburg Hotel, as well as chewing gum - he also shined shoes. "By the time I was eight, I was making more money than my mother." The judge ruled that the boy should go to Columbia Training School, a state institution, until the situation improved at home. When Westcott was 16, he asked his mother to change his birth date in the family Bible to prove he was old enough to join the U.S. Army. He became a paratrooper and was honorably discharged as a corporal After becoming a successful car salesman, he joined Sopp Chevrolet as the dealership's general manager. In 1983, Westcott bought the NBC television affiliate in Tyler, Texas. His firm, Westcott Communications, became a pioneer in producing training programs in 18 fields such as automobile dealership management, certified public accountants, and law enforcement personnel. The company went public in 1989, and Westcott sold it in 1996. He said that, throughout his lengthy life, he has treated others with respect and dignity. Source: Horatio Algar Association of Distinguished Americans - Westcott was an award recipient in 2003 The documents also said that the property title, "was vested in the name of an entity supposedly owned by Perry called DDoveB LLC, a California limited liability company, formed on April 9, 2024. "The name of the LLC closely resembles the name Perry's daughter, Daisy Dove Bloom, the child of Perry and her long-time actor boyfriend, Mr. Orlando Bloom. "Westcott's counsel has repeatedly asked Perry's counsel who owns the LLC that owns the house? "This court has always been told that Gudvi is Perry's manager and agent, and at her deposition before Phase 1 Perry testified the house was to be owned by her and she was buying it to live in, and not to rent." QUESTIONS OVER REPAIRS Westcott's legal team claimed in the July court document that under the terms of the house sale contract, it stated the home was being sold "in its present physical condition" and that the singer "had the right to perform inspections" prior to escrow being closed. They alleged that "Perry's lawyers did not even produce a written schedule showing each alleged item of repair and the cost Perry is seeking for each allegedly defective condition." His lawyers also claimed in the documents that "newspapers reported that Perry had just rented the house to the actor Chris Pratt, whose wife is the daughter of Maria Shriver, whom the court will recall from the Phase 1 testimony was bidding against Perry to buy the property in 2020." This revelation prompted Westcott's team to "immediately contact Perry's counsel" and ask for further details about her current rental agreement with Pratt, per the document. His lawyers also requested an "expert" to visit the property to "visualize any repairs." 8 8 The document added, "Given that many of her prior 'estimates' totaling $2.29 million pertained to habitability items, it defies logic and common sense that she was able to rent the house to a famous actor. "Perry's counsel flatly refused in a series of approximately half a dozen meet and confer emails to even disclose if repairs had been done." FAMILY HOME The Daily Mail reported in June that the singer had rented out the property to Pratt. A source told the paper, "The arrangement suits Chris, but it's a bit of a surprise given how Katy fought tooth and nail to get her hands on the house. "She previously suggested it was the ideal place for her and Orlando to raise a family. "After all that time, energy, and money, it seems unthinkable that they are not going to live in it." The U.S. Sun has contacted representatives for Pratt, Perry and Bloom for comment on the latest developments in the bitter case. STRUGGLE Westcott had intended to live in his home for the remainder of his life, according to his angry family. His son, Chart, ranted on X last November, 'My family has been in a struggle against… Katy Perry and now Orlando Bloom to defend the honor of my father, Carl Westcott, who is dying from Huntington's Disease. 'He is a US Army Veteran and winner of the Horatio Alger US award (an honor he shares with Clarence Thomas, Buzz Aldrin, and Donald Trump's father Fred Trump). 'Celebrity privilege, much like political lawfare, must end. We cannot afford any two tier justice in America.' The Horatio Alger Award is given to exceptional leaders who 'personify the American Dream' and have triumphed over adversity to achieve greatness. The latest revelations come as photos showed Justin Trudeau and Perry enjoying a night out in Canada after the singer split with Bloom earlier this year. 8 8

A super-friendly 1950s-style diner, empty because of Covid: Leah Frances's best photograph
A super-friendly 1950s-style diner, empty because of Covid: Leah Frances's best photograph

The Guardian

timean hour ago

  • The Guardian

A super-friendly 1950s-style diner, empty because of Covid: Leah Frances's best photograph

When I moved to Brooklyn in 2005, I noticed people building restaurants and bars that looked like 1950s diner-style restaurants, with soda fountains and lunch counters. I'm from Canada and I don't think there's a period that Canadians look back on with such nostalgia. I grew up on Vancouver Island watching old US movies and thinking, as I looked across the water towards America, that they showed what the country must look like. But our idea of those times is not firsthand, and I got really curious about that, and the fact that those days were not better for most people, only a few. That false, nostalgic feeling has become dangerous, with Trump's 'make America great again' rhetoric. In 2013, I started to drive around smaller towns in Pennsylvania to look at places that remain from the 50s. There are towns where maybe the mine closed, or the highway moved, and so – unlike the diners in New York, which keep getting renovated and extended – these places stayed as they were. It feels like the past and the present are somehow taking place at the same time. It's really beautiful. In 2015, I started an Instagram account called American Squares, which is more about nostalgia than it is nostalgic. When I look at these prefabricated diners that rolled off assembly lines, so beautiful in their details, I think about how the people who invented them would be shocked that we're looking back now in this way. They were trying to get to the moon: they were future-oriented people. I first came across this particular hot dog joint in Pottstown, Pennsylvania, called the Very Best, in around 2016. I noticed that it had a lovely Vitrolite storefront and a great typographic sign. It had closed the year before, having originally opened in 1921. But then a local took it on, restored it beautifully and reopened it in September 2019. When I passed by again in 2021, the owner was following social distancing guidelines, which is why it was so quiet. I'm often looking to give a sense of time and place to my photos, and one clue is the image of Hall and Oates on the jukebox. Daryl Hall is from Pottstown and John Oates grew up in the same county. The vintage arcade game Centipede was developed by Atari and co-designed by Dona Bailey – one of only a few female game programmers in the industry at the time. It was one of the first arcade games with a significant female player base. I was working on a series that eventually became my book Lunch Poems, in which this image appears. I focused on communal settings, or 'third spaces' outside of home and work. We lost those spaces for a period during the pandemic and we all suffered for it in ways we maybe haven't fully acknowledged yet. The Very Best was a beloved third space in this town, where you could stop and chat, where everyone was super-friendly. There was at one time a waitress who had worked there for 44 years. But I chose to photograph this business empty. What photographers leave out of the frame often influences the final meaning as much as what we include. There is a conspicuous absence of people in the pictures in this series and that's a construct, a metaphor for having been kept apart by the pandemic, driven to despair and divided by politics. I wanted to show the separateness and the emptiness. When we look at these pictures we might ask, 'What happened here?' or 'What will happen next?' The Lunch Poems photographs paint an almost postapocalyptic scene. Not all the pictures in the book were made during the pandemic, but that was the prism through which I began to look at the finished images, and it shaped the editing process. I frame my photographs carefully to explore what I want to communicate. For this series, if a space was crowded, I waited for people to leave. Or I arrived just as it was opening or closing. I do wonder whether that was always responsible, as I'm guessing the business owner doesn't want their restaurant to be captured as melancholic and empty. But rather than an actual place as it is in reality, I'm photographing an idea I'm thinking about, and that I hope others may understand and reflect upon. Born: Alert Bay, British Columbia, Self-taught; then an MFA from the Tyler School of Art & Architecture, 'For this series, Bruce Wrighton, Birney Imes, William Eggleston. For colour, Wim Wenders. For poetry, Gerald Stern.'High point: 'The first time the New York Times Magazine published my work.'Low point: 'Maybe now. I've gone deep down a rabbit hole, spending years on a new project which, at this point, seems like it's not coming together.'Top tip: 'Put down your phone and look at the world. Look closely, then look again.'

‘Weapons' spins small town into chaos that mirrors real life, humor and all
‘Weapons' spins small town into chaos that mirrors real life, humor and all

The Independent

timean hour ago

  • The Independent

‘Weapons' spins small town into chaos that mirrors real life, humor and all

If there's one thing Zach Cregger learned while writing and directing his upcoming horror movie 'Weapons,' it's that the best laughs won't come from the jokes he writes. The film follows Cregger's 2022 solo directorial debut ' Barbarians,' the widely celebrated genre-bending horror. This time, the young director bends even more, spinning a town into chaos when all children but one from the same classroom mysteriously vanish, leaving a trail of questions in their place. The Warner Bros. release hits theaters Friday and is as creepy as it is hilarious — a delicate balance that required Cregger to strip any intentionality behind his humor, he told The Associated Press. 'If the humor is coming from an authentic reaction that a character's having, then it works,' Cregger said. 'There's a lot of jokes that didn't make it into the movie that I thought were going to be so funny. And then we did a test screening, and nobody laughed and I'm like, OK, it's gotta go.' Paranoia runs deep in the film. The town's heartbroken parents are represented by Josh Brolin's character, Archer, whose son was among the missing. The students' teacher, played by Julia Garner, is determined to solve the mystery, despite parents blaming her for the disappearances. The humor here comes naturally, Cregger said, as characters navigate the absurd events happening around them. 'You're not playing for the laugh, otherwise you lose the laugh,' said Brolin, whose character stumbles through his grief, a state ripe for what he called genuine and 'embarrassingly funny' moments. Maybrook's unrest puts a mirror up to society If 17 kids up and ran out of their homes at 2:17 a.m. one morning with no trace, what would a community do? That question drove 'Weapons,' painting a picture of a town left reeling by the mystery. The film setting — the fictional small town of Maybrook, Illinois — is just as integral to the plot as any of its main characters. The town feels hyper realistic, a core tenet to the movie's ability to blend humor and horror, two genres that Garner said are 'opposite side of the same coin.' 'It's funny because this isn't even like a proper horror film,' Garner said. 'It has comedic elements and has horror elements, but it's kind of its own genre, in a way.' The town's reactions to tragedy and shock was intentionally meant to feel oddly realistic, Cregger said. Parents are outraged, storming into town halls and angrily demanding answers from the police, the school and, most pointedly, the students' teacher. Yet, when Garner's character is attacked in broad daylight, bystanders and store owners hardly bat an eye, a level of indifference that Cregger said is just as realistic as the parental outrage. 'We definitely have a, 'Whoa, not my problem,' kind of a thing when chaos is occurring, because we see it so much on TV that I think we're able to just kind of tune it out, even when it's happening in front of us,' Cregger said. 'Living in America, I've seen crazy things happen with my own eyes right in front of me, and I've just kept walking for better or worse, so I don't know, it feels real.' 'Weapons' relies on imperfect characters Brolin — who's found wide-reaching success across Hollywood, from the 1985 classic, 'The Goonies,' to the Marvel universe — initially hesitated when approached for the film. As a father of four, facing his worst nightmare — losing his children — was 'not something I want to show up to work for,' he said. But 'Weapons' lends the characters a layer of depth that allowed horror, a genre he said is typically treated as cosmetic, to suddenly have 'depth, and humor and absurdity,' which, coupled with his own adult daughter's love of 'Barbarian,' was enough to convince him to sign on. The movie subtly mocks suburban life, as goriness and horror occur under the sights of nosy neighbors, corrupt police departments and struggling relationships. Each character that drives the plot forward is just as flawed as they are victims of tragedy. Gandy, the schoolteacher, is harassed by parents for her missing students, but is secretly battling alcoholism. Archer, the heartbroken father, is failing in his job and his marriage as he navigates his son's absence. Paul Morgan, played by Alden Ehrenreich, is a local beat police officer with secrets of his own. 'Every character is perceived in a certain way and then every character breaks,' Brolin said. 'It all comes down to this very base thing: What if you lost the thing that you value the most? How do you deal?' For Ehrenreich, who's found success in dramas, notably as a young Han Solo, 'Weapons' offered a different pace, but its horror wasn't what drew him in. Rather, he was captivated by the film's depth and weirdness. 'The weird resonance, the weird opening voice-over, the way it was written and the kind of emotional brokenness of these characters and the depth that I felt was in the writing, that was as deep as any drama I've read in years,' Ehrenreich said.

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