
Fox News Entertainment Newsletter: ‘The Cosby Show' star dead at 54, Christie Brinkley's devastating moment
TOP 3:
- 'The Cosby Show' star Malcolm-Jamal Warner dead at 54
- Christie Brinkley recounts the devastating personal moment that 'nearly broke her'
- Coldplay's Chris Martin has warning for concertgoers during first performance after Kiss Cam controversy
EMOTIONAL TOLL - Queen Elizabeth's final years were marred by 'unforgivable' heartbreak from Harry, expert says.
SENIOR STANDARDS - Gerry Turner warns the new 'Golden Bachelor' he's making a serious mistake with the controversial age cutoff.
SECOND ACT - Ellen DeGeneres 'would love' to host another talk show years after toxic workplace allegations.
'I'M OKAY' - Billy Joel speaks out on 'scary' brain disorder, doesn't want fans to worry.
MARRIAGE MAVERICK - Clint Eastwood struggled with monogamy in Hollywood, viewed marriage as a 'form of confinement': author.
MAKING A SPLASH - Reese Witherspoon flaunts a summer romance with her man during a sun-soaked getaway.
DAD KNOWS BEST - 'Happy Gilmore 2' star Adam Sandler's one crucial rule for his daughters navigating Hollywood.
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Yahoo
20 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Who's speaking at Fancy Farm 2025? See the list of who will and won't be there
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Fast Company
22 minutes ago
- Fast Company
What legacy brands can learn from the hype cycle
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Meanwhile the legacy brands languish on the sidelines, wondering what to make of it all as a chunk of their audience is tempted away. There's a lot to learn in creating fresh news for these classic heroes, but they shouldn't feel threatened by the dopamine gang; rather, they should see an opportunity in it. If you've got iconic assets and built emotional trust over decades, you're more than halfway there. The nudge is to deliberately disrupt yourself by bringing ideas in from the outside, while finding ways to retain what it is people love about you at the core. Packaging is a powerful touchpoint to do it. It's your shop window, your sensorial hook, your cultural signal. When you get it right, it should create not just fleeting excitement, but a deep connection that creates a lasting memory. Here's how to do dopamine design, without right. Inject hype at the edges, don't break the system Limited editions are an obvious, and often fruitful, place to start, but legacy brands can sometimes get overexcited here. Often there is a temptation to create disruption by sidelining the rule book and going crazy with the new news. When limited editions aren't rooted in what people already love about the brand, they land as lazy, insincere. They often fall flat with consumers, who see straight through it. Smart design evolves from what's already there; celebrate the core brand essence by coming from a place of authenticity, then create the disruptive newness. So, when Jaffa Cakes was developing a limited-edition flavor, they began by acknowledging the product truth: the joy is in the jammy center. To make it feel more special than the established orange, an unexpected idea came about in cola-bottle flavor. This delivered an exciting dose of 'I'm not sure that'll work' intrigue mixed with reassuring nostalgia for the consumer. 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Here it's bringing popular culture in to give its audience exactly what they never knew they needed. While the launch design felt dopamine, the core pack design confidently fused both brands' assets together with mutual respect and consideration. It was a wisely thought through approach and showed us that the brand can deliver both quality whisky and moments of playful humor simultaneously. The total effect of such one-offs is that the entire brand benefits from them. Collaboration should amplify, not dilute The Heinz x Absolut collaboration was a good example of how good design can multiply brand value. Its success lay in both brands celebrating their distinctive assets in tandem in the launch collateral (Heinz's silhouette and red tones, Absolut's bottle shape and stripped-back typography). 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New York Times
23 minutes ago
- New York Times
An Era of Authenticity (or Something Like It)
When Kylie Jenner and her mother, Kris, admitted last month that they had gotten plastic surgery, it was hailed by many as the start of a new era in celebrity transparency around beauty. '445 cc, moderate profile, half under the muscle!!!!! silicone!!! garth fisher!!! hope this helps lol,' Kylie Jenner had responded to a fan asking for the exact specifications of her breast augmentation. The moment — casual, off the cuff, peppered with internet speak and made in the comments of a TikTok — immediately became a hot topic on social media, just as her mother's discussion of her face lift a few weeks earlier had. Other celebrities, naturally, jumped on the bandwagon. Kristin Cavallari, a former star of 'The Hills,' shared her own breast implant specifications on Instagram, while the real estate tycoon and 'Shark Tank' star Barbara Corcoran revealed a whole host of procedures she's had done, including three face lifts, a neck lift and a 'lower eyelid skin pinch.' Last week, Khloé Kardashian admitted that she used to 'heavily Photoshop' her photos until she looked like a 'cartoon character.' 'There was a time that I was around some people that would make me feel like I needed to,' Ms. Kardashian said on her podcast, 'Khloé in Wonderland.' 'I also think it was the era, too. I felt like a lot of people were Photoshopping or heavily Photoshopping more than they do now. I do feel like there was a time that we all just got consumed in this filter lifestyle and we couldn't see ourselves without a filter.' The beauty standards themselves are inauthentic — that is, unnatural and impossible to attain without surgical or technological intervention — but the open discussion around how to achieve them has been praised as a form of authenticity by fans, many of whom felt they had previously been gaslit by celebrities claiming their perfect forms were the result of diet and exercise. According to Dr. Kelly Killeen, a plastic surgeon based in Beverly Hills, Calif., the open discussion of plastic surgery has resulted in an uptick in patients asking for the exact same procedures their favorite celebrities have gotten. 'I'm seeing so many patients coming in with, like, a Burger King order,' Dr. Killeen said in an interview. 'They're like, 'I want the Kylie Jenner.'' The plastic surgery admissions, oddly enough, have come from stars who have seemingly built their careers on omissions and obfuscations. Between lavish birthday parties, multimillion-dollar mansions and unattainable bodies, there has been nothing less relatable and authentic in recent years than celebrities like the Kardashians. This is not the first time people have sought escapism in being a voyeur of luxurious lifestyles — think Paris Hilton in the early aughts, as Wall Street crashed — and as economic anxiety rises yet again, Dr. Killeen said the trend offers a chance to change the discussion around the celebrities. 'The Kardashians love to rage against the machine they created,' she said. In this case it seems to be working, possibly because the act of being open about their plastic surgeries and proclivities for Photoshop appeals to Gen Z — a generation that values, according to a 2023 report from the consulting firm EY, 'being authentic and true to oneself' more than anything else. 'More than 90 percent rated authenticity as very or extremely important,' the report said. 'This is driving a backlash against 'perfectionism,' or trying to conform to be like, look like and sound like the idealized versions of oneself shared through filtered selfies and retouched photos. Gen Z, instead, is increasingly embracing their authentic, unedited view of themselves and the world around them — and expecting others to respect them for the same.' 'We've left the Instagram era of perfectly crafted and edited photos into the era of TikTok, where people just pick their phone up and look the way they look and act the way they act, and share their experiences,' Dr. Killeen said. 'And I think especially Gen Z has transitioned into this era of, 'I'm not trying to be perfect. I'm just being myself.'' There is, however, some nuance to Gen Z's approach to authenticity. Despite an expressed desire to be true to themselves, members of the generation have said they care less and less about authenticity from influencers — perhaps because the efforts to appear relatable have fallen flat. Naming the aesthetic helpers, whether the celebrity in question is using plastic surgery or semaglutide drugs, may also demystify them, and make the celebrity's quest for perfection less interesting and, in turn, less relevant. But for now, the trend seems to have hit the pause button on celebrities pretending they 'woke up like this.' 'I think that young women understanding that these things aren't achievable without surgery is really important,' Dr. Killeen said. 'I hope that we don't go so far as young women starting to think you need these things, which is always a fear, but at least now people know, and it's not like the J. Lo, 'I look like this because I use olive oil on my skin.'' 'I mean, come on,' she added.