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Search resuls for: "Nasty Gal"


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Newer entrants like "Girl math" and "Girl dinner" have joined those that have been around for years, like "Girlboss." But, the snail girl trend has gotten pushback online — with many people commenting that they're over all the "girl" trends. The girl math hashtag has more than one billion views and tons of videos of young women explaining how they use girl math to feel better about their finances. "The online trends are kind of like an inside joke and an abbreviation for much larger context," Lintz told Insider. Snail girl: Snail girls are the antithesis of girlbosses.
Persons: Gen Zers, they've, , TikTokers, I've, Claire Wallace, Jenifer Gatewood, Gen, Linda Le, Le, Gen Z, Megan Thee, Trinity Cartier, Cartier, Chloe Liem, Luke Lintz, Lintz, girlboss, Sophia Amoruso, Nasty Gal Organizations: Service, LinkedIn, Nasty Locations: TikTok
Glossier, a direct-to-consumer cosmetics company launched in 2014 by US businesswoman Emily Weiss, pioneered this new aesthetic. At Glossier, beauty marks were celebrated, freckles were lionized and makeup application became as free form as finger painting. Beyoncé, Serena Williams, Michelle Obama and Reese Witherspoon have all been pictured wearing the makeup brand to red carpet events like the Oscars and The Grammys. For Meltzer, the brand fell victim to something that often trips up companies leading the zeitgeist: an evolving landscape. But “Glossy” isn’t just a beauty brand biography — it’s a forensic cross-examination of an era-defining company and how it embodied a moment in wider culture.
Persons: , Emily Weiss, freckles, Paloma Elsesser, Glossier, Serena Williams, Michelle Obama, Reese Witherspoon, Lila Moss, Sydney Sweeny, Gigi Hadid, Marisa Meltzer, , ” Meltzer, Richard Levine, Weiss ’, Meltzer, ” Glossier, Sophia Amoruso, John Sciulli, Weiss, Leandra Medine, Audrey Gelman, Nasty Gal, Manrepeller’s Leandra Medine, ” Audrey Gelman, John Phillips, Selena, Hailey Bieber’s, ” Marisa Meltzer's, Simon, Simon & Schuster, Schuster, Meltzer didn’t, It’s Organizations: CNN, The, Teen Vogue, Getty, Rhode, Simon & Locations: overhiring, New York, Glossier, SoHo , New York
Unlike most tech conferences where tickets cost thousands, Tech Week is mostly free and open to anyone. If last year's hastily arranged LA Tech Week served as venture firm Andreessen Horowitz's LA coming out party, this year's version – taking place just 10 months later – served as the more polished but lower energy summer sequel. Unlike most tech conferences where tickets cost thousands of dollars, Tech Week, which concludes Sunday, is mostly free and open for anyone to attend or even host their own event. The LA Tech Week kickoff party in Pacific Palisades hosted by Crosscut and 75 & Sunny. Mostly gone unsaid was the dismal state of the tech market, which has worsened considerably since last year's Tech Week; Down rounds and layoffs do not make for great cocktail conversation.
Persons: Andreessen, , Drew Glover, Glover, Ben Bergman, we'll, Gabe Greenbaum, unsaid, Jeremy Milken, Sophia Amoruso, Nasty, Amoruso Organizations: Tech, LA Tech, Santa, Fiat Ventures, Crosscut, B, Watertower Ventures, Trust Fund, Trust Locations: Santa Monica, marveling, St, LA, Hollywood, Venice, Pacific Palisades, Venice Mexican
UK retail giant Boohoo has agreed to pay $197 million to settle a California class-action lawsuit. The retailer was accused of falsely listing items as marked down even though they were never sold for the original price. The money will be distributed to over 9 million plaintiffs living in California. Boohoo announced it would settle the case for $197 million in April, but without admission of guilt, according to the claims administrator, KCC Class Action Services. Those eligible to receive some of the settlement include California residents who purchased products from the Boohoo brands between April 2016 and June 2022.
TikTokers are complaining about high prices in secondhand stores like Goodwill and Salvation Army. The US thrift market has grown substantially in recent years and thrifting has become a popular pursuit of Gen Z shoppers, who have been credited with championing a more sustainable way to shop. But Gen Z shoppers aren't only buying secondhand items for themselves. That is a dubious delineation when it comes to major secondhand clothing corporations," Jennifer Le Zotte, an assistant professor at the University of North Carolina Wilmington told Vox. 23-year-old Stefani Colvin, who has been thrifting since 2016, told Insider that prices have been gradually on the rise in thrift stores.
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