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If You Spot These "Floating Shell" Glasses at Marshalls, Grab 6 (They're So Gorgeous!)

If You Spot These "Floating Shell" Glasses at Marshalls, Grab 6 (They're So Gorgeous!)

Yahoo3 days ago

This article may contain affiliate links that Yahoo and/or the publisher may receive a commission from if you buy a product or service through those links.
Chances are the first thing on all of our to-do lists this summer is a trip to the beach. After all, what is better than the feeling of warm sand beneath your toes or cool water lapping at your ankles? But it's impossible to spend every day at the beach, no matter how much we wish we could. Fortunately, an adorable champagne flute spotted at Marshalls allows you to bring a little bit of the beach home with you.
In a photo series of incredibly chic Marshalls finds recently posted to TikTok, Samantha, the user behind the account @sammsbousquet, shared a pic of a supercute champagne flute with a floating shell in the middle. Subtly two-toned with clear and pale pink glass, the champagne flute is so cute you'll want to drink out of it all day long. Plus, it's giving all of the cool, coastal grandmother vibes any summer tablescape most definitely needs.
If you happen to live in or around Lincoln, Rhode Island, you might want to head to Marshalls, because that's where these under-the-sea-themed champagne flutes were originally spotted. They're also likely to turn up at other locations around the country, too. However, if you don't find it, Amazon sells beautiful crystal champagne flutes that are sure to work in your kitchen.
Amazon
$29 (was $36)
Buy Now
The beauty of Marshalls is that you never know what you're going to find, but that can also be the hard part about shopping at Marshalls. It's a treasure trove at times, and if your local Marshalls happens to have these coastal champagne flutes in stock, it's your lucky day! But, if not, there are still plenty of adorable sets you can order online, including pieces made from gorgeous handblown glass.
Once you bring home your beautiful new champagne flutes, it's time to put them to work! Consider making homemade mimosas or try your hand at making a classic French 75. You can try out new recipes in your coastal flutes all summer long.Buy: , $28.65
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Sabrina Carpenter Hitchhikes Through Hell in Her 'Manchild' Music Video and Somehow Looks Flawless Doing It
Sabrina Carpenter Hitchhikes Through Hell in Her 'Manchild' Music Video and Somehow Looks Flawless Doing It

Yahoo

time35 minutes ago

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Sabrina Carpenter Hitchhikes Through Hell in Her 'Manchild' Music Video and Somehow Looks Flawless Doing It

Sabrina Carpenter has officially had it with the walking red flags disguised as potential boyfriends. If her chart-crushing hit 'Espresso' was a wink and a giggle, her latest release 'Manchild' is a full-blown eye-roll with a raised martini glass and a flaming middle finger. The pop princess is back, bitter, brilliant, and just a little bit bored. Following the single's release on June 5, Carpenter gifted the world with the official 'Manchild' music video Friday morning. Let's just say, it's giving Thelma & Louise meets TikTok satire with a sprinkle of Hot Girl Rapture. Directed by pop visual savants Vania Heymann and Gal Muggia, the video sees the 'Feather' singer hitchhiking her way through the Wild West, relying on a parade of tragically inadequate men to get her to wherever the hell she's going. A metaphor so sharp you could cut your ex off with it. There's the guy with the motorized recliner, the one with the motorcycle-sidecar-shopping-cart situation, and, of course, the legend who somehow convinced her to ride jet ski-style on the highway. Each moment is a slow-motion disaster of male incompetence as Carpenter lounges, struts, and sighs her way across America's most absurd forms of transport. Not unlike the emotional vehicles most women are forced to endure in the name of romance. 'Stupid, or is it slow, maybe it's useless, but there's a cuter word for it, I know,' she sings with deadly sweetness. 'Manchild.' And then the kicker: 'F–k my life, won't you let an innocent woman be?' 'Manchild' isn't just a song. It's a state of mind. Carpenter crafted the track with hitmaker Amy Allen and producer Jack Antonoff (yes, he's still everywhere) shortly after wrapping up the recording of her Short n' Sweet deluxe album. 'It ended up being the best random Tuesday of my life,' she confessed on Instagram. Honestly? Same. This song is giving emotional detox. It's giving therapy but make it pop. It's giving don't call me unless you've unlearned your mother's gender roles and fixed your relationship with accountability. Carpenter said it herself. The track scores the 'mental montage' of her confusing but iconic young adult years. And if that doesn't resonate with every woman who's had to explain empathy to a man in a backwards cap, nothing will. The 'Girl Meets World' alum summed up the 'Manchild' video with the most delicious Instagram caption of 2025 so far: 'No animals were harmed in the making but some men were.' Poetry. Literature. Feminist canon. She didn't just write a breakup anthem. She wrote a thesis. And this isn't some random side B. 'Manchild' follows Carpenter's massively successful Short n' Sweet album, which spent four straight weeks dominating the Billboard 200 last year, becoming her first-ever No. 1 project. The deluxe edition only added fuel to her rise, blessing fans with additional tracks like '15 Minutes' and 'Bad Reviews' songs that were already dragging the male species, but with a little more subtlety. Not anymore. Subtlety has left the chat. Carpenter's 'Short n' Sweet' era has been nothing short of a pop masterclass, and she's far from done. After wrapping her European tour leg, the singer is gearing up to conquer London's Hyde Park in July before returning to North America for another run of shows. By now, her live performances are less concerts and more cultural reset events. Complete with crowd sing-alongs, rhinestone corsets, and probably a few more digs at whatever man inspired 'Manchild.' Let's be honest. If you've ever dated a man who called himself a 'feminist' and still thought folding laundry was 'helping,' this track is your new anthem. Sabrina Carpenter saw the problem, named it, and then rode away from it on the back of a damn couch with wheels. Sabrina Carpenter has entered her 'eat, mock, leave' era. 'Manchild' is the logical progression from the caffeine-slick cheek of 'Espresso,' a song that didn't just flirt with world domination, it practically ordered it on Uber Eats. But now, she's done being cute. She's sharpening her lyrics like claws and aiming straight at the egos of men who think 'emotional intelligence' is a podcast they heard once. So to all the manchildren still trying to understand why she didn't text back, don't worry baby. She left you a roadmap. It's called 'Manchild,' and it slaps. The post Sabrina Carpenter Hitchhikes Through Hell in Her 'Manchild' Music Video and Somehow Looks Flawless Doing It appeared first on Where Is The Buzz | Breaking News, Entertainment, Exclusive Interviews & More.

Addison Rae just released her debut studio album, solidifying her status as pop music's latest ‘it' girl
Addison Rae just released her debut studio album, solidifying her status as pop music's latest ‘it' girl

Yahoo

time35 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Addison Rae just released her debut studio album, solidifying her status as pop music's latest ‘it' girl

Addison Rae is ready to reintroduce herself. Since amassing more than 88 million followers on TikTok, the 24-year-old has effectively pivoted her career from social media influencer to full-blown pop girl — and her self-titled, debut studio album, Addison, released on June 6, is proof of that. Rae, a former cheerleader from Louisiana, is living out her nostalgic "noughties" dream — and she's making music that captures that feeling. On Addison, Rae serves up her now signature trip-hop meets synth-pop sound. 'Diet Pepsi,' Rae's first release since 2021's 'Obsessed,' marked a turning point in the young star's career: It showcased Rae's artistry at its most sophisticated. Addison's 12-song tracklist, through its exploration of fantasy, fearlessness and doing what feels good and right for you, solidifies Rae as both a student of pop divas past and the genre's latest 'it' girl. ''Addison' is out now and alive everywhere in the universe for you to receiveeeeeee!!! This is my most personal and intimate possession,' she captioned an Instagram post. 'Making music is vulnerable, energetically sensitive, electric, gratifying, challenging…… pure magic. I am unbelievably proud.' At midnight on album release day, Rae debuted her sixth single along with the song's accompanying music video. Showcasing Rae at her most vulnerable, 'Times Like These,' which delves into her past and current tribulations, sounds like something you'd hear in a Josh Schwartz teen drama from the 2000s. Hours before Addison hit streamers, Rae performed a private show at the Box in New York City, where she played the album's singles and previewed some previously unreleased tracks. She then stopped by a Matchaful to unveil her limited edition 'Summer Forever' drink with the café. Early listeners have spoken: The album is filled with bangers. 'The very fact that addison rae just released a skipless debut album and managed to carve out a signature sound and artistic niche for herself in the oversaturated climate of today's music market,' one fan named Vidya wrote on X. 'Imagine I just told you that there was a female pop album that just dropped, that talks about familial love, the general angst and confusion you feel in your twenties and radical acceptance, and did it in a way that was really artistically intelligent,' a TikTok user named Sam said. 'Now, imagine I just told you that was Addison Rae.' Another X user raved about Rae's song 'New York,' writing, 'obsessed with everything about this track. her starting her debut album with the phrase 'take a bite of the big apple,' not only referencing new york but also adam and eve and the beginning of human civilization.. like there's LAYERSSS. addison rae you are a genius.' In an interview with Zane Lowe for Apple Music 1, Rae discussed how precious Addison is to her, and how she wants to give the album its moment. 'I think I'm in the space right now where I'm just really anticipating it coming out, and I'm like, trying to hit all the stops,' she said ahead of its debut. 'And even with posting and feeling like, 'Okay, well, I really want to make sure I give this the credit and the energy that it deserves.' I think sometimes I shy away from that because I'll be like … 'Is it going to be too much if I'm just like, 'Alright, everybody! The album's this many days away' … Sometimes I get onto myself about that and I'll be like, 'No, it deserves that.'' Focusing on her passions was more of a risk than a given. 'I just had this really strong intuition and gut feeling that, as unrealistic as it seemed, I needed to do it — there's no time like now to try and chase those dreams,' she told Elle earlier this year of her decision to pursue music. The pursuit of those dreams seems to have paid off. Long before she was lauded as a pop princess, Rae was a mainstay on the video-sharing platform, TikTok. The Louisiana native first joined the app in July 2019, where she posted a slew of content that ranged from TikTok challenges to dancing and lip-synching videos. She racked up a million followers within a matter of months and made the decision to leave Louisiana State University shortly after. The rest, as they say, is history. Rae made her film debut with 2021's He's All That, the same year she released 'Obsessed.' She starred in the horror flick Thanksgiving in 2023, three months after dropping her EP AR, which features the Charli XCX-assisted track '2 Die 4.' The release of Addison comes a year after Rae famously collaborated with Charli on the 'Von Dutch' remix. From there, she went on to garner widespread acclaim with the debut of her first major single 'Diet Pepsi,' a hypnotic, synth-pop track about young lust, in August 2024. The song's release was accompanied by a black-and-white video conceptualized by Rae herself. 'I think even going [and] watching old movies, and appreciating them for what they are, and how strongly you had to communicate through a black-and-white video, for people to take their time and watch it,' Rae told Lowe of making the video. 'And I think the song deserves that treatment of like, 'I get it. You're gonna have to focus really hard on it,' but I want you to have to focus really hard on it to get it.' Suddenly, after 'Diet Pepsi,' it felt as though Rae was inescapable. She joined Charli onstage during her 'Sweat Tour' stop at New York City's Madison Square Garden that September before dropping 'Aquamarine,' her single about transformation and rebirth, in October, followed by its remix 'Aquamarine/Arcamarine' in November. Rae ushered in the new year with the release of her third single off the album 'High Fashion' in February 2025. On the track, Rae sees no appeal in embarking on a drug-fueled bender and instead opts for the finer things in life: a closet full of couture. She sings, with her soft, atmospheric vocals atop a darker, synthier sound, 'I don't need your drugs/I'd rather get high fashion.' After gracing the cover of Vogue France, the singer dropped her fourth single in April 2025. With 'Headphones On,' Rae gives listeners a peek into how she relies on music as an escape from crisis and reality. The 24-year-old singer then reunited with Charli XCX at Coachella, where she performed the 'Von Dutch' remix. 'Fame Is a Gun,' Rae's fifth and final single — and music video — ahead of album release day, hit streaming platforms in May 2025. The track's artwork is a photo of a young Rae posing with sunglasses indoors, likely a nod to the fact that Rae has always been drawn to living a glamorous life. Rae's album, more than anything, is about arrival. 'It's arrival to who I feel like I've become,' she told Lowe. 'I've experienced all these trials and ups and downs, and great high moments to land here.' Whether you're a fan of Rae or a fan of music in general, Addison reflects an undeniable truth: We're watching an artist come into her own before our eyes.

Dawn French ‘dismisses' Oct 7 Hamas attacks
Dawn French ‘dismisses' Oct 7 Hamas attacks

Yahoo

time39 minutes ago

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Dawn French ‘dismisses' Oct 7 Hamas attacks

Credit: X/@Dawn_French Dawn French has been accused of dismissing the Oct 7 Hamas attacks in Israel in a new social media video. The British comedian and actress, 67, posted a video of herself to X in which she appears to mimic Israel's supporters amid the military campaign in Gaza. In the video, published by French on the social media platform on Thursday, she says about the conflict in the Middle East: 'Complicated, no, but nuanced. But [the] bottom line is no.' She then goes on to mimic apparent defences of Israel's military campaign in neighbouring Gaza since the Hamas-led massacre in 2023, saying: ''Yeah but you know they did a bad thing to us'... Yeah, but no. ''But we want that land and there's a lot of history…'. No. 'These people are not even people, are they really?' No.' In response to the viral tweet, which has been viewed more than half a million times in the 24 hours since it was published, Tracy-Ann Oberman, the West End star and playwright, branded French's tone as 'mocking'. The Jewish actress, 58, reposted French's video and said: 'I am so saddened by this post. 'This mocking voice 'bad thing' of October 7 that Dawn (who I revere by the way) appears to be mocking involved the most horrific terrorist attack involving rape, sexual violence, burning alive child, mutilation and the taking of civilian hostages.' She added: 'Why would Dawn seem to deny that which has affected so many of us personally in the most painful way possible. 'I can mourn the horrors of the war in Gaza whilst also remembering the horrors of what started it. Is this how most of our industry feels now – Oct 7 was a 'little thing'? NO!' Israel launched a military campaign in Gaza in response to Hamas's massacre on Oct 7 2023, in which about 1,200 people were killed by the terror group and 251 others were taken hostage. There are now 56 hostages still held by Hamas in Gaza, at least 20 of whom are believed to be alive. Israel said its expanded offensive in the Strip, named Operation Gideon's Chariot, will increase the chances of returning the missing. The Hamas-run health ministry that operates in Gaza has said that at least 54,000 people have been killed in the territory during the war. Hamas has rejected proposed ceasefire and hostage release deals that do not guarantee a full Israel withdrawal from the Strip and an end to the war. Other responses to French's post include the financier Ben Goldsmith, who has been a strong defender of Israel's response to the Hamas terrorist attacks. He remarked: 'Wow, this is really bad. Who knew.' Elsewhere, comedy writer and self-described 'champion of Jewish rights' Lee Kern wrote: 'What you sneeringly mock as a 'bad thing' included the grieving children I met in hospital whose friends and family had been murdered, kidnapped and raped and who themselves were coming to terms with their own life-altering injuries. 'It also includes the 1,200 people murdered and tortured on October 7th… you proactively broadcast – with misplaced pride – a wicked glee in your mockery and dismissal of Jewish suffering, pain and death.' In a subsequent post following the criticism by Oberman, French clarified that she did not mean to 'support the atrocities of Oct 7th'. Writing on X, she said: 'I do not say 'a little thing'. In NO WAY do I support the atrocities of Oct 7th. Of course not. Appalling. Horrific. 'But starving innocent children is not the answer. NO is the answer to ALL of it, Tracy.' French has been approached for comment. Broaden your horizons with award-winning British journalism. Try The Telegraph free for 1 month with unlimited access to our award-winning website, exclusive app, money-saving offers and more.

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