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Shania Twain, 57, says she is ‘having some fun’ as she shows off her new platinum-blonde locks

February 5, 2023 by www.dailymail.co.uk Leave a Comment

Shania Twain showed off her newly dyed platinum-blonde locks as she appeared on The Late Late Show with James Corden on Thursday.

As the superstar was introduced she said, ‘Shania couldn’t make it,’ before turning her head around to display her platinum locks.

Commenting on what inspired her new look, Shania said, ‘I’m just having fun.’ She added ‘I just like change. It’s my prerogative.’

This comes with the release of her latest album, Queen of Me, which she wrote during the Pandemic to improve her mood with cheerful, uplifting songs.

The 57-year-old country crooner from Canada explained, ‘This is my celebration album. I am celebrating happiness and joy and taking control of your own mood and your own spirit.’

Platinum artist: Shania Twain showed off her newly dyed platinum-blonde locks as she appeared on The Late Late Show with James Corden on Thursday

What a change! When asked why the 57-year-old Canadian beauty changed her hair color she replied ‘I’m just having fun’

Twain said, ‘I wrote the album during Covid and it was just such a heavy time for all of us, but I said [to myself] “Write some songs right now that change your frame of mind. Write Happy songs. Write songs that make you want to dance and make you happy and want to celebrate.”‘

Her outfit was an orange silk top with matching skirt and a tie around her trim waist. The chart-topping star added pearl white platform shoes with a buckle on top.

She also wore a large green ring on her wedding finger with pale white nail polish.

She has been in the news lately for her comeback album which she posed nude for.

This comes after Twain said she was ‘inspired’ by her COVID-19 battle to write her new song, ‘Inhale/Exhale Air’.

The ‘That Don’t Impress Me Much’ hitmaker labelled her new track an ode of ‘gratitude and appreciation’ for making it through the virus alive after needing to be rushed to the hospital via air ambulance.

The 58-year-old singer told the Daily Mirror newspaper: ‘It’s a song of gratitude and appreciation. I was inspired that I still had air in my lungs.’

‘It was progressively getting worse. My vital signs were getting worse… and in the end I had to be air evacuated.’

Uplifting new album: The superstar explained, ‘This is my celebration album. I am celebrating happiness and joy and taking control of your own mood and your own spirit’

The difference is intense: Left, with her white hair, and right with her brown hair

It’s her prerogative: The veteran hit-maker debuted her new look at a pre-Grammy party in Los Angeles on Wednesday evening

Her natural look: Here Shania is topless as she poses for her album cover

Shania compared her experience to ‘science fiction’ as she reflected on how out of this world it all felt.

She said: ‘It was like science fiction. I felt like I was going to another planet or something. It all kind of happened in slow motion.’

The ‘You’re Still The One’ hitmaker praised her husband Frederic Thiebaud and his work getting ‘a bed lined up’ despite his fear for her.

Another hue: She went pink in NYC for the Today show on January 5 in NYC

Fun change: And she had longer highlighted hair for The Late Show With Stephen Colbert

The Grammy Award winner gushed about being in a ‘celebratory state of mind’ now amid other health issues she has dealt with like Lyme disease.

‘It’s great to be singing again, on a tour with my new voice after my surgery… I’m in a very celebratory state of mind.

She added that her vocal performance has ‘more rasp’ than it did pre-op.

With her one true love: Twain and triathlete Frederic Thiebaud pose backstage at the 2011 CMT Music Awards at the Bridgestone Arena in Nashville, Tennessee

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Oscars nominations 2023 | Four reasons why ‘All That Breathes’ should win Best Documentary award

January 24, 2023 by www.moneycontrol.com Leave a Comment

Shaunak Sen's 'All that Breathes' wins nomination for the Best Documentary film at the 95th Academy Awards. (Photo courtesy: Rise Films/Kiterabbit Films/HBO/Shaunak Sen)

Shaunak Sen’s ‘All that Breathes’ wins nomination for the Best Documentary film at the 95th Academy Awards. (Photo courtesy: Rise Films/Kiterabbit Films/HBO/Shaunak Sen)

After I had finished watching Shaunak Sen’s All That Breathes in January last year, shortly after it was premiered at the Sundance Film Festival, I felt like picking up a camera, rushing out, and shooting something.

It is the kind of film that will inspire someone to make films, which is possibly the highest compliment you can give to a film or a filmmaker. Sen’s documentary, which had won the Grand Jury Prize in World Cinema Documentary in Sundance Film Festival last year — winning the top award, a first for India — has, on January 24, won a nomination at the 95th Academy Awards, and this is the second time in a row that India has been nominated in the said category at the Oscars. Last year, Rintu Thomas and Sushmit Ghosh’s Writing with Fire was the first to pave the way. It is yet another year of excellence for the Indian documentary film.

The brothers Nadeem Shehzad (left) and Mohammad Saud in a still from Shaunak Sen's Oscars-nominated documentary 'All that Breathes'. (Photo courtesy Rise Films/Kiterabbit Films/HBO/Shaunak Sen) The brothers Nadeem Shehzad (left) and Mohammad Saud in a still from Shaunak Sen’s Oscars-nominated documentary ‘All that Breathes’. (Photo courtesy Rise Films/Kiterabbit Films/HBO/Shaunak Sen)

All That Breathes follows the brothers, Nadeem Shehzad and Mohammad Saud, who rescue injured black kites and treat them out of a basement in their house in Wazirabad in north Delhi. Sen’s film juxtaposes the claustrophobic but intimate world of this basement with the vast expanse of Delhi’s sky and cityscape, which has turned noxious and inhospitable for the city’s human and non-human living beings.

But as the brothers say in the documentary, “evolution favours experimentation”, these creatures, starting from the rats who populate the opening scenes in a close-up shot, to the snails, millipedes, pigs and kites, who feature in the 91-minute film, live on and thrive amid the chaos and dystopia of the contemporary Indian metropolis.

Since its Sundance win, All That Breathes has snagged a series of top documentary awards which include the Golden Eye award for documentaries at the 2022 Cannes Film Festival. HBO has picked up its worldwide television rights. Its recent nominations include a Directors Guild of America award for Sen and the prestigious American Society of Cinematographers award for Ben Bernhard and Riju Das, who shot majority of the film shortly after cinematographer Saumyananda Sahi had to leave the project.

All That Breathes , I feel, has a strong chance to bring home the Oscar for Best Documentary. Here are four reasons why:

Almost like creative non-fiction

The biggest asset of All That Breathes is its deliberate aesthetic form, which is unlike what you would associate with the average documentary: “verité, handheld, sudden cuts,” as Sen puts it.

Sen and his team introduce styles associated with fictional filmmaking into the documentary, wherein several passages in All That Breathes comprise slow, languid shots of the city’s vista, and positioning mosquitoes, rats, snails, and so on, as part of the same ecosystem as humans, a central philosophy which gives the film its title. In between are interspersed moments from the brothers’ lives as they soldier on from day to day, rescuing kites, facing infrastructural problems and lack of funds.

“While the verité documentary unfolds as if the makers are in fly-on-the-wall mode, life unfolds, and we witness, and the film is made on the edit table, here, we wanted curated actuality that is tripoded and controlled,” Sen explains. “You don’t see sliders and tripod pans in documentary. The verité form of this very film would just be nice people doing nice things, but that wasn’t the film I wanted to make. I don’t agree with the understanding that documentaries capture pristine and untainted reality. Here, I am working with the substance of reality and giving it aesthetic shape and the aspiration was to be visually compelling.”

Are there other films like this? Among Sen’s inspirations was Russian filmmaker Viktor Kossakovsky’s 2020 documentary Gunda , which looks at the daily lives of a pig, a one-legged chicken and two cows.

The brothers themselves — and the lovable Salik

The brothers' helping hand Salik Rehman in a still from Shaunak Sen's Oscars-nominated 'All That Breathes'. (Photo courtesy Rise Films/Kiterabbit Films/HBO/Shaunak Sen) The brothers’ helping hand Salik Rehman in a still from Shaunak Sen’s Oscars-nominated ‘All That Breathes’. (Photo courtesy Rise Films/Kiterabbit Films/HBO/Shaunak Sen)

All That Breathes is as much a look at how Delhi’s non-human living creatures co-exist cheek by jowl, making do in an increasingly polluted wasteland, as it is a story of two brothers’ love for the non-human and the lengths, they go to be, ultimately, kind in a world that desperately needs more kindness. (The film was shot during the Delhi protests against the Citizenship Amendment Bill, and the violence it led to, snatches of which leak into the narrative).

While the brothers go about their duties with a sincerity and seriousness that is “almost stoic and deceptively uninteresting”, as Sen describes, they are also “philosophers of the urban” who have been observing the ever-changing city and the greying skies for years. Their banter aside, their views on the city, which often work as voiceover as the camera slowly tracks the kites in all their glory, could easily be slipped into a book of philosophical quotes and no one would know the difference.

By contrast, their friend and helper, Salik, a bespectacled and unassuming young man, offers a colour to the documentary bordering on comic relief. An early scene has a kite snatching his glasses away. In other scenes, Salik comes across as “almost innocent and unvarnished”, Sen says. Among the reactions Sen witnessed after the film’s premiere at Sundance, he says, was “people were saying they felt like hugging Salik”.

The otherworldly cinematography

The spectacular cinematography of Shaunak Sen's Oscars-nominated 'All That Breathes'. (Photo courtesy Rise Films/Kiterabbit Films/HBO/Shaunak Sen) The spectacular cinematography of Shaunak Sen’s Oscars-nominated ‘All That Breathes’. (Photo courtesy Rise Films/Kiterabbit Films/HBO/Shaunak Sen)

The cinematography by Sahi, Bernard and Das flows in tandem with the quietude and grace with which Shehzad and Saud conduct their daily business. In sync is Roger Goula’s hypnotic and dissonant music where beautiful strings are buried underneath layers of electronic synth suggesting something that was once beautiful (in Delhi, or, the world) has gone awry.

Meanwhile, the film is packed with graceful shots of little creatures that make you scratch your head about how they were conceptualised and executed.

For example, one shot tracks a snail slowly moving in the foreground against a burning pyre for the Holika festival. “We are making the human not the centre of the documentary but the non-human,” Sen explains. “We are following the snail’s time, non-human time, as a way to regard the world as experienced by those who are not us.”

Sen’s assistant directors figured out which locations in Delhi were frequented by animals and the crew kept visiting them daily to shoot. Among these was Delhi’s Hamdard Chowk where a certain area would be infested with rats after sundown. The ambitious four-minute opening of the film tracks down from the city’s traffic lights and enters deep into this world of rats, which squeal and squirm audibly transporting the viewer into a non-human space, and instantly the scene cuts to the open sky where a magisterial kite flies far, far away.

Another crazy shot has a millipede crawling over a leaf on the ground and a puddle of water near it reflects the airplane in the sky: all part of the film’s philosophy that constantly connects sky and the several layers of earth in poetic, interesting ways. “That shot came after 10 tilt-downs of the camera, and the moment we had it, I knew it, we are coming to Sundance,” Sen quips.

Empathy for but also Curiosity towards the Other

The black kites in Shaunak Sen's Oscars-nominated documentary 'All That Breathes' (Photo courtesy Rise Films/Kiterabbit Films/HBO/Shaunak Sen) The black kites in Shaunak Sen’s Oscars-nominated documentary ‘All That Breathes’ (Photo courtesy Rise Films/Kiterabbit Films/HBO/Shaunak Sen)

Behind the style and cinematic finesse of All That Breathes is a throbbing heart that persuades you to look closely at the world around you and understand that everyone, not just humans across boundaries of class, caste or gender, but all kinds of animals are here and now in the same planet, experiencing the same world, perhaps, a little differently, but in that difference lies the truth of all that is life and living: we are all we have and there is nothing else.

“I wanted to do something that connects the human and the non-human,” Sen says about the film’s origins in his mind. “I want to show the simultaneity and coexistence of life, writ large.”

Among his intentions with the film which he kept repeating through the conversation was “to render the natural world poetic”. And just as poetic are his hopes with a viewer’s experience after having watched All That Breathes : “The idea was to reenchant the sky, to hope the audience, after seeing this film, looks up at the sky immediately. I wanted the film to have elements of a fairytale gone dystopic, the nostalgia of childhood when the brothers fell in love with the kites at an early age.”

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How to watch Upload online: stream the new Greg Daniels comedy from anywhere

May 7, 2020 by www.techradar.com Leave a Comment

Audio player loading…

Given his background, it’s obvious why people have gotten excited about Greg Daniels’s latest project, Upload. The setting is decidedly less suburban than that of, say, The Simpsons – one of the big names on his CV – but the results are nevertheless impressive. Follow our guide as we explain how to watch Upload online and stream every episode from anywhere in the world.

Upload cheat sheet

Release date: Friday, May 1

Number of episodes: 10

Available on: Amazon Prime Video (globally)

Cast: Robbie Amell, Andy Allo, Chris Williams, Kevin Bigley

Daniels was also heavily involved in other hit sit-coms, including The Office and King of the Hill – and if you’ve put some time aside recently to watch Parks and Rec , you’ll also likely have seen his name in the credits. All of which is to say, Upload is as sure-fire an investment of your time as these things can be.

The Amazon Original is set in the near future of 2033, where “humans are able to ‘upload’ themselves into their preferred choice of afterlife.” Having been involved in a near-fatal car accident, app developer Nathan (played by The Flash star Robbie Amell) has to make the decision between major surgery and dying normally later in life – or having his consciousness “uploaded” into a virtual afterlife.

He opts for the latter and is greeted by customer support representative Nora (Andy Also) in his digital version of heaven. The series follows the two as Nathan grows accustomed to life away from his loved ones, and the fact that his virtual-reality afterlife isn’t the utopia he had hoped for.

Offering up a satirical view of the future, it looks set be a hit with tech heads and fans of Black Mirror – read on and we’ll show you how to watch Upload online and stream every episode of the show from anywhere right now.

  • Here’s how to watch Normal People online

How to watch Upload for FREE on Amazon Prime Video

$12.99 per month or $119 for the year (opens in new tab)

Upload is an Amazon Original production, with all 10 episodes of the new series dropping on Amazon Prime Video on Friday, May 1 – so it’s available now.

This means that the popular streaming service is the only place you’ll be able to watch the new comedy.

Amazon’s video streaming service comes standard with an Amazon Prime membership alongside Amazon Music and premium delivery services, and costs:

  • US: $12.99 per month or $119 for the year (opens in new tab)
  • UK: £7.99 per month or £79 for the year (opens in new tab)
  • Canada: $7.99 per month or $79 for the year (opens in new tab)
  • Australia: $6.99 per month or $59 for the year (opens in new tab)

You can also subscribe to Prime Video without an Amazon Prime membership for a monthly cost of $8.99 (opens in new tab) .

But most importantly, don’t forget that a FREE Amazon Prime trial (opens in new tab) is on offer, so you can watch Upload for free and see if the service is right for you .

Whether you subscribe in full or just take advantage of this deal, you can access Prime Video via your web browser, on smart TVs, iOS and Android smartphones/tablets, games consoles like the PlayStation 4 and Xbox One X, streaming boxes and dongles like the Roku Premiere+, Amazon’s Fire TV devices, Apple TV, as well as a number of compatible Blu-ray players.

How to watch Upload from outside your country

Upload is set to be released at a time when people are desperate for something new to watch. If you’re looking to get stuck in but find yourself stuck abroad in the lockdown in a country where Amazon Prime Video isn’t available, you might worry that you’ll be unable to watch show using your normal streaming service, due to frustrating geo-blocking restrictions.

Fortunately, there’s an easy solution. Downloading a VPN will allow you to watch Upload online no matter where you are, by changing your IP address to one in another location.

we always recommend ExpressVPN (opens in new tab)

While there are hundreds of VPNs to choose from, we always recommend ExpressVPN (opens in new tab) . As well as being fast, simple, and straightforward to install, it’s also compatible with a whole host of devices – Amazon Fire TV Stick, Apple TV, Xbox, PlayStation, iOS and Android to name some of the main ones.

Plus, ExpressVPN’s flexible 30-day money back guarantee is difficult to argue with. Even better, you can purchase an annual plan for a 49% discount and 3 months extra FREE (opens in new tab) – a brilliant offer for an essential bit of software.

Once installed, select the location of your home country and simply click connect. You’ll then be able to easily watch Upload from pretty much anywhere in the world.

Can I watch Upload for free?

Yes and no.

In the truest sense, it’s a negative, as you need an Amazon Prime subscription to watch Upload which costs money.

However, if you want to see the glass as half-full, one of the best things about Amazon Prime is that your subscription covers absolutely everything the streaming platform has to offer, plus all of Prime’s other benefits such as premium delivery services and Amazon Music – all for $12.99 per month or $119 for the year (opens in new tab) in the US and £7.99 per month or £79 for the year (opens in new tab) in the UK.

And as we’ve said, you can take advantage of a FREE Amazon Prime trial (opens in new tab) to see if its extensive entertainment catalogue and other benefits pack enough of a punch to merit your hard earned money in the long run.

  • Can’t miss TV: here’s how to watch The Last Dance

5 more shows every Upload fan should check out – and where to watch them

Black Mirror: With its satirical look at how how technology manipulates our behaviour, Charlie Brooker’s modern, dark satirical take on the Twilight Zone anthology style series appears to have been a major influence on Upload.

  • Watch in the US: Stream seasons 1-5 on Netflix (opens in new tab)
  • Watch in the UK: Stream seasons 1-5 on Netflix (opens in new tab)

Mr Robot: One of the best techy dramas of recent years, the four season show put Rami Malek on the map before his Oscar-winning portrayal of Freddie Mercury in Bohemian Rhapsody. The show follows Elliot, a young programmer who works as a cyber-security engineer by day and as a vigilante hacker by night,.

  • Watch In the US: Stream seasons 1-3 on Amazon Prime Video – FREE trial available (opens in new tab)
  • Watch in the UK: Buy seasons 1-4 on Amazon Prime Video (opens in new tab)

Better Call Saul: If Ozark is the spiritual successor to Breaking Bad, then chances are you’ll love its prequel, Better Call Saul. Charting the early career of crooked lawyer Saul Goodman (née Jimmy McGill) , it’s also the work of Vince Gilligan and has no less than five seasons to it’s name, so there’s plenty of binge-watching potential here.

  • Watch in the US: Buy seasons 1-5 on Fadango Now (opens in new tab) , stream seasons 1-4 on Netflix (opens in new tab) , or stream new episodes for free via AMC (opens in new tab)
  • Watch in the UK: Stream all seasons on Netflix or buy from Amazon Prime Video (opens in new tab)

Devs: Created by The Beach writer Alex Garland, this science fiction thriller focuses on a young software engineer who works for a cutting-edge Silicon Valley tech company who suspects foul play after her boyfriend Sergei’s apparent suicide.

  • Watch In the US: Stream seasons 1 on Hulu – FREE trial available (opens in new tab)
  • Watch in the UK: Stream via BBC iPlayer

Fargo: Noah Hawley’s riff on the Coen brothers’ classic 1996 movie features more tales of Minnesotans gone bad and features a superb cast across all three of its self-contained seasons: Billy Bob Thornton, Martin Freeman, Kirsten Dunst, Ewan McGregor, Colin Hanks and Ted Danson are just some of the stars to feature.

  • Watch In the US: Stream seasons 1-3 on Hulu – FREE trial available (opens in new tab)
  • Watch in the UK: Buy seasons 1-3 from Amazon Prime Video (opens in new tab) or stream on Netflix (opens in new tab)

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Is New York Turning Into Los Angeles?

January 5, 2023 by www.nytimes.com Leave a Comment

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It’s a balmy January afternoon. You buy an avocado and pickled turnip sandwich from Gjelina and some legal weed at a high-end smoke shop. After popping by a Fred Segal boutique, you meet friends for early mocktails under the trees at San Vicente Bungalows .

It’s an ideal Los Angeles day. And soon you won’t have to leave Manhattan for it.

New York City may think of itself as singular, but it’s increasingly possible to live the Los Angeles lifestyle here without the inconvenience of a cross-country flight. New Yorkers drive more and ride the subway less . They’re eating earlier , dressing sloppier and doing ketamine . The mayor parties at a Kardashian hangout , and there’s an organic mattress store on Fifth Avenue.

Is this the Los Ang-ularity?

Cultural exchange between the two cities dates back decades, and innovations like juice bars, fad diets and luxe leisure wear long ago brought a California feel to the gilded Manhattan of Carrie Bradshaw and Blair Waldorf.

But these days, in the bicoastal vibe wars, New York is giving L.A.

New York’s first legal recreational pot store opened last month, bringing a staple of Los Angeles living to Lower Broadway. New car registrations spiked 28 percent in Manhattan between 2019 and 2021. A beach is being built off the West Side Highway, beneath the Whitney Museum.

Eleven Madison Park, Manhattan’s pinnacle of four-star dining, went vegan . Midtown is chockablock with Los Angeles culinary favorites like Katsuya , Dave’s Hot Chicken and Sugarfish . Keith McNally, the ultimate New York restaurateur, has a son who just married a Spielberg . Netflix bought the Paris Theater — the city’s last single-screen movie house — and built a 170,000-square-foot soundstage in Bushwick.

Even the clearest distinction between the two cities — climate — has been smoggier of late. On Wednesday, Los Angeles reached a high of 61 degrees; in New York, the mercury hit 66.

OK, so Manhattan will never have palm trees. (Soon, Los Angeles may not either !) But a convergence of forces — social, economic, epidemiological — seem to be bringing the cultures of the two cities closer together.

First, the pandemic: the time of Peloton, suburban fantasies and acute health consciousness. Deprived of their usual energies and social delights, New Yorkers lusted for wide open spaces and spiritual awakenings, innovative exercise regimens and controlled environments.

“The entire pandemic was the L.A. lifestyle,” said the Bravo host and longtime New Yorker Andy Cohen. “We stayed at home and did nothing!”

Sue Chan, a food industry event specialist who splits her time between the Echo Park neighborhood of Los Angeles and the Lower East Side of Manhattan, said that New Yorkers’ isolation during Covid fueled an obsession with “self-improvement, self-care and self-love: a.k.a., the epitome of Californian living, where one can go for days without seeing a single human.”

Enter the wave of woo-woo.

Credit… Photo Illustrations by Adam Powell for The New York Times

Luxe wellness spots have proliferated. At Sage + Sound on the Upper East Side, the owners blessed black tourmaline crystals and buried them under the floor before opening the 5,000-square-foot store in October.

Remedy Place , the Los Angeles health club that opened in the Flatiron neighborhood of Manhattan in September, offers lymphatic drainage suits and hyperbaric chambers to members who pay fees of several thousand dollars a year; one sound healing class features “harmonic frequencies of multiple Himalayan singing bowls.” The club’s motto — “When we remedy together, we amplify the shared experience” — promises togetherness, the kind of Los Angeles thing that New Yorkers once loved to avoid.

“There was always a cynical New York nostril flare about horoscopes and anything considered more Southern California, and that’s been completely normalized,” said Jill Kargman, the actress, writer and native New Yorker, citing acquaintances who now dabble in ayahuasca and kambo , an Amazonian frog toxin used for purging. “People microdose to get through a P.T.A. meeting.”

Even Mayor Eric Adams — a self-described vegan who secretly eats fish — recently told New Yorkers: “ I deserve good work-life balance .”

New Yorkers have also adopted another habit of Los Angeles living: early dining.

Lauren Young, a spokeswoman for Resy, the reservation app owned by American Express, said that New Yorkers have “shifted a little toward earlier times, whereas L.A. historically already did dine earlier.” From 2019 to 2022, 5 p.m. reservations in New York City increased by 1.9 percent. “This might not seem like a big shift, but it amounts to thousands of reservations,” Ms. Young said.

“New York used to love to pretend it had a European-style, 9 or 10 p.m. dinner culture,” said Chris Black, a New York fashion consultant and a host of the “How Long Gone” podcast who now lives in West Hollywood. A recent return visit was less Marais, more Marina del Rey: Mercer Kitchen and Il Buco “wouldn’t seat me for dinner at 7 p.m., because it was so busy,” he said.

Manhattan’s next big Los Angeles moment will be the opening of San Vicente Bungalows, the West Hollywood private clubhouse that is a favorite of Hollywood’s apex predators . Its owner, Jeff Klein, is opening a branch at the Jane Hotel , whose rooftop will be adorned with soil and trees to better replicate the verdant original. Gabé Doppelt, a former Condé Nast editor and gatekeeper of Tower Bar on Sunset Boulevard, another Klein property, is set to move to Manhattan to ensure the social caliber of the new establishment.

Avocado Green Mattress sells California-made “vegan mattresses” at its Fifth Avenue “experience center.” Detox Market, an Abbot Kinney favorite, has become part of the East Houston Street landscape. Nushama, a psychedelic wellness center featuring $4,500 ketamine treatments, opened in Midtown in 2021 and plans to expand to the Bay Ridge neighborhood of Brooklyn.

Steven Phillips-Horst, a host of the podcast “ Celebrity Book Club with Steven & Lily ,” said the collision of West Coast wellness culture with New York decadence has resulted in something he calls “responsible hedonism.”

“People definitely want their green juice and their matcha negronis ,” he said. “There’s an element of indulgence to both cities that fuses a more traditional ’90s L.A. idea of green juice and health food and the New York, old-school brasserie vibe, putting that together in this incomprehensible TikTok slop.”

A useful case study is NoHo, the downtown Manhattan neighborhood once home to Jean-Michel Basquiat and Robert Mapplethorpe that has recently turned into LiLA: Little L.A.

Gjelina, the vaunted organic food destination on Abbot Kinney Boulevard in Venice, opened its New York outpost on New Year’s Eve on Bond Street, a few doors down from fellow Los Angeles imports Reformation and Goop. Hillsong, the megachurch once favored by Angeleno A-listers like Justin Bieber and Vanessa Hudgens (at least until its pastor’s scandalous downfall ), is opening a new headquarters off Great Jones Street. There’s an Edie Parker Boutique that sells $795 luxury bongs and a Bowery “wellness dispensary” with affirming neon signs like “Goodies Vibes Only.”

That first legal recreational pot shop ? It’s around the corner just off Astor Place.

The trend extends south to SoHo, where Fred Segal, the longtime West Hollywood fashion mecca, opened its first Manhattan location in November. Inside, shoppers can browse brightly colored cotton basics named for Los Angeles neighborhoods ( “Pico” tee , $180) and a $48 baseball cap embroidered with the word “Free.” The shop, a pop-up that will be open at least through April, abuts a parking lot, “so it sort of felt like home,” said the owner, Jeff Lotman.

The new Fred Segal is near a new Staud, the highly Instagrammable West Coast fashion brand whose founder, Sarah Staudinger, recently married the Hollywood superagent Ari Emanuel. Irene Neuwirth, the popular Los Angeles jewelry designer, debuted her first Manhattan store in December; Jennifer Fisher, another jewelry designer, whose clients include Selena Gomez and Lisa Rinna, just opened a new SoHo flagship .

Kate Berlant , the Angeleno actress and comedian, attended New York University. But she discovered a different East Village after returning in the fall for her current one-woman show, “ Kate .” “There’s this matcha hellscape — and I love matcha!” she said. “It really depresses me, all that athleisure and wellness. There’s that eerie feeling of an aesthetic taking over the culture entirely.”

The L.A.-ward tilt is also evident in New York’s culinary scene, where nonalcoholic, or NA, cocktails are now de rigueur. “Juices and tonics are California clichés, but now it’s nearly impossible to see a beverage menu in New York City without a NA section,” Ms. Chan said.

Corner Bar , the scene-y Dimes Square spot, features three spirit-free spirits on its cocktail menu , including an $18 “amaretti sour” that mixes nonalcoholic bourbon, almond, lemon and honey; the newly reopened Monkey Bar in Midtown offers a $19 “phony Negroni.” Compare that to old-school haunts like Sparks Steak House, whose “beverage and cigar” list includes a single virgin drink: nonalcoholic St. Pauli Girl beer.

Even the latest booze served in Manhattan is supposedly better for you: Body , a low-proof vodka that touts “non-GMO Indiana corn” as an ingredient — and was founded by Jilly Hendrix, a close friend of the “Hills” star Lauren Conrad — is stocked at the Rockefeller Center cocktail emporium Pebble Bar and the new Aman New York on Fifth Avenue.

Maer Roshan, the editor of Los Angeles magazine, said he was not surprised that New York, his former home, was taking cues from its West Coast rival. “Everyone I know here had a shaman five years ago,” he said. “And now I’m hearing from my friends in New York, ‘We found this great shaman in Long Island!’”

Ms. Kargman pledged to do her part to beat back that trend.

“I dress up, hate vegan, loathe pot and don’t work out,” she said. “I was just asked if I wanted to do a mommy mushroom journey. Kill me now!”

Still, the true Los Ang-ularity may not occur until New York gains its very own branch of the ultimate Los Angeles symbol of health and wealth: the upscale organic grocery store Erewhon .

“That’s the final frontier,” Mr. Black said, echoing other commentators who wondered why it hadn’t happened already.

On that front, there may be some hope.

“It’s a big and exciting question, huh?!” an Erewhon executive, Demi Marie Alhaik, said when asked about the prospect. She added that while Erewhon has no current plans for a New York opening, “it is certainly on our radar.”

“It will happen,” Ms. Alhaik said. “It’s just a matter of when.”

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Filed Under: Uncategorized Los Angeles..., NYC;New York City, audio-neutral-immersive, internal-sub-only, Social Trends, Shelter-in-Place (Lifestyle);Pandemic Life, Retail, Style, 137a east 25th street new york ny 10010, saks on fifth avenue new york, showpo new york nights maxi dress, rag house los angeles, new york auto show new cars, new york auto show resumes with new products ev test track, shanell williams los angeles, klac am 570 los angeles - flagship station, fcti los angeles, 6835 la tijera blvd los angeles

Samsung’s latest flagships are officially out. Pre –book them today!

February 6, 2023 by www.news18.com Leave a Comment

As with any eagerly anticipated phone launch, the internet has been rife with rumours about the features of Samsung’s upcoming Galaxy S series smartphones. Samsung laid all of those rumours to rest when they announced their updated Galaxy S Series, and they’re just as impressive as the rumours led us on to believe, and then some!

Packed with the latest and greatest in camera tech and mobile computing hardware, not to mention svelte design, the Samsung Galaxy S23 and S23+ are the phones to beat in 2023.

The Samsung Galaxy S23 and S23+ can be pre-booked today, and we’d recommend you do that for the best deals on these phones. Pricing for the Galaxy S23 starts at Rs 74,999 for the 8 GB RAM + 128 GB variant, inclusive of free storage upgrade offer worth Rs. 5000. Buy the 8 GB RAM + 256 GB variant at the price of its 8 GB RAM + 128GB variant !

The S23+ is priced at Rs 94,999 for the 8GB+ 256 GB variant, and pre-booking it gets you a Galaxy Watch 4 Bluetooth at just Rs 2,999. Isn’t that Epic?

Additionally, Samsung has also launched Galaxy S23 Ultra. The Galaxy S23 Ultra is available with 12GB of RAM and 256GB, 512GB, and 1TB of built-in storage to take care of all your content. The 12 GB + 256GB variant comes at an epic price of Rs. 124,999 and you can also own Galaxy Watch4 Classic LTE along with Galaxy Buds2 at just Rs. 4999.

On top of this, you could get an additional Rs 8,000 off thanks to a Samsung Upgrade offer or Rs. 8000 Bank Cashback. These offers are valid across all variants of the new phones.

Head here to pre-book your phone today! Oh, and don’t forget to share these epic offers with your friends.

50 MP primary, 12 MP PDAF selfies, Fastest Processor & much more

Judging by the specs that Samsung has confirmed for launch, the Samsung Galaxy S23 and S23 + smartphones are packing a seriously impressive punch. The tech Giant has packed a lot of powerful hardware into these slick phone bodies, and they’re sure to set the bar for the flagship smartphone experience of 2023, and perhaps a new standard for image quality as well.

Flagship performance: As befitting a flagship, the S23 and S23+ are powered by an exclusive variant of the Qualcomm Snapdragon 8 Gen 2.

Samsung has confirmed that this custom processor is more efficient than the one on the Galaxy S22, while featuring a 41% faster GPU and 34% faster CPU. This is indeed impressive, and Samsung is ensuring that you enjoy this performance to the full by including up to 2.7x larger cooling system with a vapour chamber – to ensure peak, sustained performance when gaming.

This combination of powerful hardware and effective cooling virtually guarantees top-class performance. When gaming, it won’t be the hardware that will hold you back. With these phones by your side, you’re sure to end up at the top of those leaderboards thanks to stutter-free & lag free performance . Share those epic moments with your friends and you’ll end up the envy of your clan!

Flagship battery life: The phones are to feature 3,900 mAh and 4,700 mAh batteries in the S23 and S23 Plus respectively. Compared to the previous phones, these phones are expected to last 22% longer. Coupled with the performance efficiencies of the new Snapdragon 8 Gen2, you’ll be able to share the epic images you capture and those special gaming moments with your friends without ever worrying about running out of juice!

Flagship cameras: The cameras on these upcoming flagships appear to be no less impressive. The rear gets a 50 MP primary and the front a 12 MP unit, and both units get support for Dual PDAF sensors for ultra-precise, high-speed autofocus.

Samsung has of course been teasing enhanced night photography modes for a few weeks now, promising cleaner, less noisy images when compared to the previous gen Galaxy S series phones. Images promise to be incredibly sharp and colourful, even in the dim, near-darkness of moonlight. With capabilities like this in your pocket, it won’t be long before you end up the unofficial photographer for friends and family on any kind of special event! Your friends will be begging you to share your epic shots with them.

Samsung has taken it a step further with the advanced Expert RAW that aims to make astrophotography your new hobby. The Expert RAW mode comes with Astrophoto mode and Multiexposure mode. You can now capture the moon, Mars, and even the Milky Way. We’re in for a real treat!

Flagship display: All this power will be fed to you via a new display called Dynamic AMOLED 2x, which Samsung says refers to the fact that these phones’ displays will be much brighter than on previous models. These are all, of course, high-refresh rate panels. If you’re not sharing that epic panel around when binging on that new show, you’re doing it wrong.

Flagship build quality: We’ve seen the phones and they are indeed pretty. They’re also very sturdy, with Samsung confirming that these phones are protected by toughest glass – Corning Gorilla Glass Victus 2 on the front and rear. Its Armor Aluminium frame gives it a premium look that commands attention and will attract eyeballs easily .

Epic design and epic build quality? Now that’s what we call a flagship device!

Productivity and ecosystem: To ensure a seamless, cross-platform productivity experience, these phones will support features like Phone/PC continuity for browsing, audio streaming, and Instant Hotspot.

Speaking of pairing, Samsung’s device ecosystem is only growing and getting better integrated with each passing year. You should be able to seamlessly pair, control, and switch between the phones, Galaxy Smartwatch, Galaxy Buds, Galaxy Book, Samsung Smart TVs, and even Samsung Smart Things appliances! Samsung is also promising unmatched connectivity and a simple and easy file-sharing protocol within its own ecosystem.

A shared, Samsung-enhanced productivity and home life experience will be truly epic.

Security and sustainability: On the sustainability front, Samsung is using recycled aluminium and ocean-bound plastic along with natural dyes. The various components also involve several recycled materials, and the entire lifecycle of the product is designed with sustainability in mind.

For security, Samsung does, of course, incorporate its Knox Vault as part of the design. It’s a dedicated, tamper-proof storage system designed to securely hold your most private data and keep it safe from prying eyes. Everything from biometrics to security keys are safely locked away in here, and only you can access them.

The Samsung Galaxy S23 and S23 Plus are available for pre-booking here . Don’t forget to place your orders early to ensure timely delivery!

This is a Partnered Post.

Read all the Latest News here

first published: February 06, 2023, 21:03 IST
last updated: February 06, 2023, 21:03 IST

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Filed Under: Uncategorized Samsung’s latest flagships are officially out. Pre –book them today!, samsung latest mobiles, pre order today, samsung note 8 official site, where is pres trump today, where is pres obama today, latest flagship phones, latest flagship smartphones, lg latest flagship phone, nokia latest flagship phone, sony latest flagship phone

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