Latest news with #AnnaDelvey


Daily Mail
a day ago
- Entertainment
- Daily Mail
Chappell Roan's 'actually normal' bikini body revealed: see what the star looks like stripped down
Chappell Roan took to Instagram on Sunday night to share scantily clad photos with her 7.1 million followers. The 27-year-old pop star — who was recently mistaken for Anna Delvey — posed in a black bikini, showing off her stunning figure. One snapshot showed The Giver hitmaker giving fans an eyeful as she posed with her plump bottom on display in high-cut tie-string bikini bottoms. She captioned the carousel post, 'I am actually normal.' But Roan, born Kayleigh Rose Amstutz, looked anything but ordinary as she showed off her striking beauty. Chappell looked typically gorgeous with her flaming-red curly locks falling around her. The images have so far collected 1.3 million likes from the singer's devoted online audience. It comes after earlier this year the entertainer ignited a generational divide when she said in an interview: 'I don't know a single person who is happy and has children at this age.' Recognized for her drag aesthetic and punchy feminist lyrics, Chappell identifies as a lesbian. While appearing on Alex Cooper's Call Her Daddy podcast, she was asked by the host if she would ever have children. She answered unequivocally: 'All of my friends who have kids are in hell. I don't know anyone who's happy and has children at this age.' The star reiterated, 'I have not met anyone who is happy, anyone who has light in their eyes, anyone who has slept [who has a child under five].' The remarks prompted a fiery debate online. Some moms insisted it 'was not an accurate or healthy message to peddle, particularly when the birth rate is down.' One person wrote: 'Chappell Roan going on Call Her Daddy saying none of her friends with kids are happy, is a prime example of why you cannot just vent to anyone.' Someone else wished, 'May the friendship of narcissistic childless women with no sense of loyalty ever find me.' Meanwhile, others related to Chappell's statements, with one person weighing in: 'The people who have made me most scared to become a mother are mothers. 'What Chappell said is all I see because lots of mothers I see are like, "This is miserable" and mothers can also be the most competitive, nasty and judgmental people.'


Daily Mail
17-05-2025
- Entertainment
- Daily Mail
Grammy-winning singer mistaken by fans for fraudster Anna Delvey in wild wig
Chappell Roan was unrecognizable to fans on Friday as she appeared online with a new look. The 27-year-old music artist wore an orange wig in two Instagram snapshots, drawing comparisons to Anna Delvey and Lady Gaga. One image showed the Pink Pony Club singer in an elevator with sunglasses on and the disheveled wig anchored on her head. She was wrapped in a houndstooth-patterned shawl and held a coffee in her hand. Chappell wrote in the caption, 'Will the girl who I just met at the perfume store please comment the perfume you recommended I wrote it down and just deleted it on accident. The world 'girl' was in the brand name & you said it smelled like lipstick. Thank you.' Delvey is a convicted fraudster whose life as a swindler was depicted in a TV show starring Julia Garner; pictured in 2019 'Anna Delvey?' one person asked while various others echoed the thought, including one who simply said, 'Ok anna delvey.' Delvey is a convicted fraudster whose life as a scammer was depicted in the Netflix miniseries Inventing Anna starring Julia Garner. Someone else wrote, 'Girl I thought this was Sophie Turner,' while another compared, 'The first image kind of looks like Lady Gaga.' Another agreed about , 'the way I thot you were gaga.' Chappell, real name Kayleigh Rose Amstutz, is typically recognized for her head of long, flowing, red curls. It appears that she was in disguise while out shopping earlier in the day, but gave up her persona in hopes of finding the perfume someone recommended while she was out and about. She doubled down on her call to action in her Instagram Stories as she reposted the pictures and reiterated, 'To the girl who I met at the perfume store, please comment.' In a second Stories post she said, 'Girls, I redownloaded ig to find this perfume. That's how bad I want it.' Someone else wrote, 'Girl I thought this was Sophie Turner' Chappell's previous Instagram post was a recap about her night at the Met Gala last week. A reel showed behind-the-scenes footage of the Missouri native getting ready for the huge annual event, where she wore a cranberry-colored suit by Paul Tazewell. She wrote in a caption to her 7.1 million followers, 'such an honor to wear a custom suit created by @paultazewell upcycling vintage pieces from @ebay.' The singer-songwriter added, 'wow i am so so grateful for this opportunity thank you !!' Concluding the note, she said, 'Also thank you to @voguemagazine for bringing me as a guest to fashion's biggest night xoxoxoxo shop my curated collection on


CNN
04-04-2025
- Entertainment
- CNN
How fake heiress Anna Delvey is carefully crafting her second act
What is it about Anna Delvey that fascinates so many people? Including your humble crew at United States of Scandal? Why has she captured so many column inches in newspapers and pages in magazines, filled so many hours of footage in podcasts, Netflix dramatizations, and news broadcasts? From her false identity as a German heiress to financial deception, grand larceny, serving time at Rikers, competing on Dancing with the Stars, and now pursuing a career in fashion, Anna's journey has been nothing short of fascinating. Having met and interviewed her in 2022, I still can't quite figure her out or provide a simple answer as to why so many found her story so captivating. That 2022 interview made it clear how she embodies both an aspirational glamour and deception, acting as a mirror that reflects some ugly truths about American society. Flash forward to this new interview: Anna and I are drinking coffee, sitting across from one another. She sits poised, composed, and carefully calculated. But as the interview wears on, I realize that beneath that facade was a woman entirely focused on crafting her second act. Her carefully chosen words reveal an intense focus on her future, without, it seems to me, confronting the full weight of her actions. Instead of publicly acknowledging the damage she caused, Delvey frames her criminal past as a mere setback, as if it were part of her personal narrative to overcome. She still doesn't see herself as someone who intentionally did wrong, but rather as a young and naïve social climber who had all intention of paying everyone back whom she stole from. Is it an act? Regardless of what you may think of her, the key point is that so many of you do think of her. Whether on instagram or Netflix, podcasts or CNN, she is in the limelight. Is she a reflection of the quintessentially American system that allows us all to write our own narratives? Perhaps the real question is not who Anna Delvey is, but what her story reveals about us.


CNN
04-04-2025
- Entertainment
- CNN
How fake heiress Anna Delvey is carefully crafting her second act
What is it about Anna Delvey that fascinates so many people? Including your humble crew at United States of Scandal? Why has she captured so many column inches in newspapers and pages in magazines, filled so many hours of footage in podcasts, Netflix dramatizations, and news broadcasts? From her false identity as a German heiress to financial deception, grand larceny, serving time at Rikers, competing on Dancing with the Stars, and now pursuing a career in fashion, Anna's journey has been nothing short of fascinating. Having met and interviewed her in 2022, I still can't quite figure her out or provide a simple answer as to why so many found her story so captivating. That 2022 interview made it clear how she embodies both an aspirational glamour and deception, acting as a mirror that reflects some ugly truths about American society. Flash forward to this new interview: Anna and I are drinking coffee, sitting across from one another. She sits poised, composed, and carefully calculated. But as the interview wears on, I realize that beneath that facade was a woman entirely focused on crafting her second act. Her carefully chosen words reveal an intense focus on her future, without, it seems to me, confronting the full weight of her actions. Instead of publicly acknowledging the damage she caused, Delvey frames her criminal past as a mere setback, as if it were part of her personal narrative to overcome. She still doesn't see herself as someone who intentionally did wrong, but rather as a young and naïve social climber who had all intention of paying everyone back whom she stole from. Is it an act? Regardless of what you may think of her, the key point is that so many of you do think of her. Whether on instagram or Netflix, podcasts or CNN, she is in the limelight. Is she a reflection of the quintessentially American system that allows us all to write our own narratives? Perhaps the real question is not who Anna Delvey is, but what her story reveals about us.


CNN
04-04-2025
- Entertainment
- CNN
How fake heiress Anna Delvey is carefully crafting her second act
What is it about Anna Delvey that fascinates so many people? Including your humble crew at United States of Scandal? Why has she captured so many column inches in newspapers and pages in magazines, filled so many hours of footage in podcasts, Netflix dramatizations, and news broadcasts? From her false identity as a German heiress to financial deception, grand larceny, serving time at Rikers, competing on Dancing with the Stars, and now pursuing a career in fashion, Anna's journey has been nothing short of fascinating. Having met and interviewed her in 2022, I still can't quite figure her out or provide a simple answer as to why so many found her story so captivating. That 2022 interview made it clear how she embodies both an aspirational glamour and deception, acting as a mirror that reflects some ugly truths about American society. Flash forward to this new interview: Anna and I are drinking coffee, sitting across from one another. She sits poised, composed, and carefully calculated. But as the interview wears on, I realize that beneath that facade was a woman entirely focused on crafting her second act. Her carefully chosen words reveal an intense focus on her future, without, it seems to me, confronting the full weight of her actions. Instead of publicly acknowledging the damage she caused, Delvey frames her criminal past as a mere setback, as if it were part of her personal narrative to overcome. She still doesn't see herself as someone who intentionally did wrong, but rather as a young and naïve social climber who had all intention of paying everyone back whom she stole from. Is it an act? Regardless of what you may think of her, the key point is that so many of you do think of her. Whether on instagram or Netflix, podcasts or CNN, she is in the limelight. Is she a reflection of the quintessentially American system that allows us all to write our own narratives? Perhaps the real question is not who Anna Delvey is, but what her story reveals about us.