Latest news with #GoodAmerican
Yahoo
20 hours ago
- Entertainment
- Yahoo
Khloe Kardashian Says She Doesn't Photoshop Her Pictures Anymore — But Fans Aren't Convinced
Khloé Kardashian claims she has pulled back on editing her photos, prompting mixed reactions from fans. On the Wednesday, July 16 episode of her Khloé in Wonderland podcast, the reality TV star, 41, addressed the speculation that she 'photoshops every picture' she posts. 'I don't, but there was a time that I definitely did,' she admitted. 'There was a time that I was around some people that would make me feel like I needed to. 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,' she recalled. 'And there's definitely days that I'm like, 'Ugh, I need a filter, I don't feel good about myself.' But I'm on video. And I do like myself better in video than stills.' The Good American co-founder confessed that she doesn't consider herself very 'photogenic' and often takes hundreds of photos to find one that she likes. 'But I will say there was a time that I heavily photoshopped,' she confessed. 'I just remember being so consumed in the filter world and having my face look a way that it just wasn't, but currently now, no.' Hollywood Unlocked shared the clip from the podcast on its official Instagram account — and fans took to the comment section to weigh in. 'Not her saying this with a whole filter on this video 😦,' one fan commented. 'In the pasttttttt? Now babe 😂,' another posted. A third fan wrote, 'Khloe commeeeee on!!! You have this big platform! Tell the truth!' However, some came to the Keeping Up With the Kardashians alum's defense, noting editing is all relative. 'Y'all she didn't say she don't use filters at all she saying she doesn't heavily over use filters as much as she use to,' one fan noted. 'It might be a difference to her.' Another wrote, 'Khloe do whatever you want to. It's your life, you owe us NOTHING!' 'I don't see why she needs to explain herself, most of us use filters someway or another,' one person added. During the podcast, the Kardashians star also said she looked like a 'cartoon character' in her old pictures, and that 'it's humiliating that I thought that was even a version of myself.' Khloé added that she wouldn't even see the raw photos of herself in the past because people in her circle would retouch them before showing them to her. 'If they took my photo, they would make me look that way before giving it to me. And then I would think that's how I looked,' she recounted. 'And if I got paparazzied, I'd be like, 'I don't look like that. I look like this photo.'' 'I really had to reprogram my mind to think, 'Okay, we have to lay off the filters. This isn't real,'' the Strong Looks Better Naked author added. ''That's not how I look. And I don't want to look like that.'' Solve the daily Crossword
Yahoo
20 hours ago
- Entertainment
- Yahoo
Khloe Kardashian ‘Feels Pressure' to Match ‘Filtered' Image, Spends ‘Hours' Setting Up Perfect Photos: Source
Khloé Kardashian is a perfectionist when it comes to her social media appearance, according to a source. While the Good American co-founder, 41, claimed on the July 16 episode of her Khloé in Wonder Land podcast that she doesn't photoshop her pictures anymore, a source tells Star, she still 'feels this pressure to live up to this filtered version of herself.' 'She spends hours setting up the perfect shot, between the lighting and the glam session, it's a full production every single time just to take a selfie,' the source reveals. 'And she won't stop at one. She'll take hundreds of nearly identical photos, then obsess over which one to post.' The source explains that after The Kardashians star gets opinions from her team, she 'still goes back and forth over which one to post.' 'It's never just snap and go,' the source shares. 'It takes hours to get something she feels is worthy of posting.' The source adds that the reality TV personality has her phone on her at all times, 'because she's built this image that's so curated.' On the July 16 podcast episode, the Keeping up with the Kardashians alum admitted that she doesn't consider herself very 'photogenic' and copped to taking hundreds of photos to find one that she likes. However, Kardashian also said her Photoshopping days were behind her — a claim that fans didn't buy. 'I don't [Photoshop photos], but there was a time that I definitely did,' she told listeners. 'There was a time that I was around some people that would make me feel like I needed to. 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,' Kardashian recounted. 'And there's definitely days that I'm like, 'Ugh, I need a filter, I don't feel good about myself.' But I'm on video. And I do like myself better in video than stills.' The media personality noted that she didn't even know what she looked like in real life because people in her circle would retouch her photos before showing them to her. 'If they took my photo, they would make me look that way before giving it to me. And then I would think that's how I looked,' she admitted. 'And if I got paparazzied, I'd be like, 'I don't look like that. I look like this photo.'' 'I really had to reprogram my mind to think, 'Okay, we have to lay off the filters. This isn't real,'' she shared. ''That's not how I look. And I don't want to look like that.'' Solve the daily Crossword


Fast Company
a day ago
- Entertainment
- Fast Company
Angel Reese's style secret is versatility
As a forward on the Chicago Sky, Angel Reese is one of the most dominant players in the WNBA, and when she joined us to speak about being named to our Best Dressed in Business, she'd just broken league records by closing her fourth consecutive game with 15+ rebounds. (When critics panned her for 'mebounding,' she trademarked it.) It all embodies how Reese's draft class did more than add fresh competition to the league when it arrived with a splash in 2024. It awakened the spectacle of the sport, celebrating the uniqueness of players who broke free from their uniforms with expressive, pregame tunnel walks—a critical piece in increasing sponsors 19% that year and viewership by 170%. 'A lot of the women already had the fashion, and I think the platform really helped them,' says Reese. 'I think coming to the league with all the eyes that we had, it really shined a light on them and gave them the flowers that they deserve.' Long before she joined the Met Gala host committee or had partnerships with Good American and Reebok (her signature Reese 1, inspired by diamonds, was announced this month), Reese earned the nickname Bayou Barbie for her glam perspective, even on the court, which was part of her game as long as she remembers. 'I always had my hair done, and my nails were painted,' she recalls. 'My grandma used to put mascara on my lashes, and she brushed my hair up nicely. It was always 'dress to impress.'' Reese's passion for fashion was spurred on through her mother's closet, from which she'd steal bags and heels, the latter of which felt tricky for her 6' 3' frame. 'I think it took me a while to feel confident in heels, going out, because I was already so tall,' she says. 'But once I got older and seeing how much I stood out, it made me feel, like, super confident and bold.' That boldness is a throughline of her 'fits—and perhaps the only one she cares much about. When I mention her silhouettes tend to embrace high waists and crop tops, she shrugs off any trends you might see, and insists she wants to have the opposite of any signature look. 'Sometimes I'll go streetwear. Sometimes I'll go super girly,' she says. 'I don't really identify myself as dressing one type of way. [Though] I am into high fashion for sure. So you probably see me with a nice bag, nice pair of glasses.' Describe your style in a sentence. I am versatile. What's the one piece in your closet you'll never get rid of? I think my bags. I've created a collection of bags, when I see it, I need it, I have it. I'm in collector mode, in my vintage era. I just got this double flap Chanel bag, it's orange, and I love it. How long does it take you to get dressed in the morning? If I'm only going to practice, it doesn't take me long. But when I'm getting ready for a game? An hour, for sure. What do you wear to a big meeting? I don't really have meetings [laughs]. Most of these things are on Zoom these days. I don't want to meet people or go to their office. What's the best piece of fashion advice you've ever gotten? Be confident in your skin. Law Roach kind of told me before, don't care what anybody else has to say. Like, as long as you're confident in it and you feel good in it. It's aura. You have to have aura.
Yahoo
2 days ago
- Entertainment
- Yahoo
Khloé Kardashian sparks debate about nannies—and why moms still feel so judged
The Kardashian family is one of the wealthiest on the planet. Love them or roll your eyes and scroll, it's nearly impossible to escape them. So when Khloé Kardashian started talking about 'nanny shame' on her podcast, I listened. And honestly? I found myself nodding. Because even though I'm not a billionaire —uh, not even close—I've heard the same passive-aggressive remarks about having 'privileged' childcare. Here's what I know as a mom of five raising kids far from family: I buy every single minute of help I can afford. Because we were not made to raise kids alone, and these days, the reality is that many of us need to buy the village back. To be clear, I love being with my kids—and I work hard to support our family and be able to afford childcare and house help. Thirteen years ago, when I first became a mom, I truly couldn't afford the help I needed. I worked full-time with part-time childcare, beginning my day at 6 am and finishing late at night. I made work happen when my kids were sleeping, but it wasn't easy. But now that I can afford more help, that's what I invest in–more than a car upgrade or even vacations. Related: Postpartum depression left me isolated—here's how I built a village for moms 'We all have help': Khloé Kardashian says the quiet part out loud In a recent episode of her podcast Khloé in Wonder Land, the Good American co-founder got candid: 'People that talk s— about nannies, we all have help in some capacity,' said Khloé, who shares daughter True and son Tatum with ex Tristan Thompson. 'You can call it daycare, you can call it a school, you can call it in-laws, your mother, sister, whoever. A babysitter.' 'There is no shame in that,' she continued. 'We're all blessed, and it takes a village to raise a family.' Why 'paid help' gets side-eye even as we praise the village There's a disconnect: society values the idea that parenting is a communal effort—but only when that effort is unpaid and invisible. Let a nanny have a role—and suddenly the mom is perceived as indulgent or neglecting her family. This tension—celebrating caregiving as a collective ideal, while penalizing paid help—reflects how American parenting norms lag behind reality. Many moms are forced to choose between exhaustion and judgment. That contradiction is a key reason many mothers feel guilty getting the support they need. We celebrate 'supermoms,' but judge women for getting help. Celebrity moms speaking openly about real constraints and real help Khloé may have launched the conversation, but she's far from alone. For other celebrities, the critique about nannies is a family one. On The Jamie Kern Lima Show, Meghan Markle talked about how overwhelmed she was juggling work and motherhood—and revealed she's relied on a nanny for around five years to handle school drop‑offs and other daily routines. Her candidness highlights how even with help, moms still carry the emotional weight of parenting. Mandy Moore honored her postpartum doula, Brandi Jordan, publicly. She credited Jordan for guiding her and husband Taylor Goldsmith through 'all aspects of postpartum life'—from diapering and breastfeeding logistics to managing sleep routines and emotional recovery. Mandy described Jordan as a 'friend for life' and acknowledged it truly 'takes a village' to transition into motherhood. Jordan, a longtime postpartum expert, has helped countless families through those critical early months. For everyday moms who rely on childcare to make their lives work, hearing other prominent moms explain how they 'do it all' is a relief. But for many families, even basic childcare support feels financially out of reach. According to our 2024 State of Motherhood survey, 82% of moms say they've scaled back or left the workforce entirely due to the cost of childcare. Even with high-profile moms talking openly about needing help, the reality for many parents is that affordable care is simply out of reach. According to Child Care Aware of America, in 45 states plus the District of Columbia, the average annual cost of center-based care for two children now exceeds what families pay for a mortgage in those states. Nationally, the average annual cost of care for a single infant hit around $13,128 in 2024, consuming approximately 10% of a married couple's median income—and up to 35% for a single parent. Those numbers are well above the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services' recommended cap of 7% of income for childcare. This is reality: when daycare rivals your rent or mortgage, 'having the village' feels like a luxury. Related: To the mama without a village: I see you A clearer narrative: needing help isn't a personal failure It's time to shift how we talk about help. Hiring support is one way moms meet the demands of real life. It's practical, responsible, and often essential. Getting help doesn't take anything away from the love parents give. It simply makes that love more sustainable. We don't need to defend or minimize the fact that we sometimes ask for relief. We need to normalize it. Solve the daily Crossword


Scottish Sun
2 days ago
- Entertainment
- Scottish Sun
Kris Jenner ‘storms off' after tense exchange with boyfriend Corey in front of daughter Khloe Kardashian at Beyonce gig
Beyonce reunited with her Destiny's Child bandmates at the special gig KAN'T KEEP UP Kris Jenner 'storms off' after tense exchange with boyfriend Corey in front of daughter Khloe Kardashian at Beyonce gig Click to share on X/Twitter (Opens in new window) Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) KRIS Jenner was spotted appearing to "storm off" from boyfriend Corey Gamble at Beyonce's latest gig in Las Vegas. The Kardashians momager, 69 - clad in black sunglasses - was seen walking in the opposite direction from her toyboy lover as daughter Khloe Kardashian, 41, attempted to smooth things over. Sign up for the Entertainment newsletter Sign up 8 Kris Jenner was seen walking away from Corey Gamble at Beyonce's final Cowboy Carter concert in Las Vegas Credit: Splash 8 Kris, 69, clad in an all-black outfit and sunglasses, was seen with her back to her toyboy lover Credit: Splash 8 Kris's daughter Khloe was seen trying to smooth things over with Corey Credit: Splash 8 Kris and Corey have been dating since 2014 Credit: Reuters Kris looked typically chic in a plunging black blazer and matching trousers, styling her dark locks into loose waves. She was spotted in the VIP area of the Cowboy Carter tour along with Khloe, who was decked out in matching all-black. Donning a lanyard around her neck and holding a plastic cup in one hand, she was seen walking away from her man. Corey, 44, meanwhile donned a dark jacket and taupe-coloured bucket hat Eyewitnesses to their dialogue told how the pair looked "visibly tense." They then told Page Six how Corey appeared "frustrated" and Good American founder Khloe was trying to "reassure" him. Yet Kris, who has been dating Corey since 2014, appeared cheery as she uploaded her social media content from the night. She gave a nod to Beyonce's reunion with her Destiny's Child bandmates on-stage and said: "WOW! Such an incredible night in Vegas at the final night of @beyonce's spectacular Cowboy Carter tour!! "And such magic to see Destiny's Child @destinyschild and of course the iconic @jayz!!" The smash-hit singer reunited with her former bandmates Kelly Rowland and Michelle Williams. Kris Jenner's fans catch embarrassing photoshop error that shows 69-year-old's 'true age' in Khloe Kardashian's new pic After performing 31 shows across Europe and the states, Beyonce took to the stage for her final show of the worldwide Cowboy Carter Tour. But as she wrapped up her performances to a sold-out crowd in Vegas, Queen Bey sent her fans into a frenzy with a special surprise performance. The trio took to the stage together for the first time since their Coachella reunion in 2018. LOVE STORY Back in 2023, Corey and Kris fuelled engagement rumors as she was spotted with a brand new ring. All About Kris Jenner Kris Jenner is the matriarch of the Kardashian-Jenner family, who rose to fame with her six children after starring on the E! reality series Keeping Up With the Kardashians. Here's what Kris has been up to: Kris was first married to the late Robert Kardashian, famously known as O.J. Simpson's defense attorney in his 1995 murder trial. They shared four children: daughters, Kourtney, Kim, and Khloe, and a son, Robert The former couple were married from 1978 until 1991. Following their divorce, Kris tied the knot with former Olympian, Bruce Jenner, who also appeared on KUWTK. The pair shared two daughters, Kendall and Kylie. They split in 2015, around the time that Bruce transitioned and changed her name to Caitlyn. Kris met her current boyfriend, Corey Gamble, in August 2014, and they have been together ever since. Kris manages her daughters' widely-successful careers and they've continued their reality TV run with The Kardashians on Hulu, shortly after KUWTK ended. After her high-profile divorce from Caitlyn Jenner, the Kardashian family matriarch found love with longtime boyfriend Corey. The Hulu star and business executive started dating in August 2014 after meeting in Ibiza, Spain. Fans have watched their relationship play out on Keeping Up With the Kardashians and their currently airing series, The Kardashians. Yet he was slammed about an "uncomfortable" comment on their sex life. Recently, there was speculation the pair had a tiff at Jeff Bezos' star-studded wedding in Venice. Yet overall she has gushed over their partnership. Previously, she told People: "Corey is my forever date and we have the best time together. "We've been together over a decade — never thought I'd say that again — and we just have a lot of fun together." NEW LOOK Kris had fans in a frenzy when she stepped out with a new face in June, looking decades younger. The reality star's rep confirmed to Page Six she underwent aesthetic enhancements from New York plastic surgeon Dr. Steven Levine ahead of her 70th birthday. Although it has not been revealed exactly what she had done, many critics have suggested she underwent a deep plane facelift as opposed to a regular SMAS procedure. Yet she was then accused of editing her images for an even more snatched jawline despite having "work done." She first showed off her amazing new look when she supported her daughter Kim Kardashian, 44, in French capital Paris during her court appearance following a traumatic burglary back in 2016. She continued to wow the public as the Kardashians stars attended Lauren Sanchez's bachelorette party in the city. After landing back in the US, momager Kris then supported her youngest Kylie Jenner at the launch of Khy X Dilara, Kylie's new collaboration. The Kardashian matriarch began her journey with plastic surgery when she got breast implants in the 1980s after giving birth to her first four children: Kourtney, Kim, Khloé, and Rob Kardashian. She has continued her cosmetic upkeep and revealed that she's gotten Botox and fillers over the years. 8 Those around the couple said it was a 'tense exchange' Credit: Splash 8 The Kardashians momager took the time to wave to fans Credit: Splash 8 Beyonce brought her Destiny's Child bandmates out at the final gig date of her Cowboy Carter tour Credit: Shutterstock Editorial