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Search resuls for: "Grace Lee"


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The Labubu and Pop Mart phenomenonLabubu dolls at the opening of a Pop Mart store in Bangkok. AdvertisementIn a statement to BI, a representative from Pop Mart said that Labubu has gained a strong global fan base. Advertisement"There's a bit of a 'FOMO' feeling," said Sim, 31, who owns around six Labubu toys. She has around 17 Labubu toys and said she spent over $10,000 on them. Once, she even camped outside a Pop Mart store for the latest drop.
Persons: , Grace Lee, Lee, , Joey Khong, Khong, Bangkok . Sun Weitong, Lung, it's restocked, Tony Lee, Mart doesn't, Taobao, Erin Liam, Lisa, Juda, Kanaprach, Gen Zers, They're, Labubu, It's, Sim Pei Yi, Sim, Ana Gonzales, she's, Gonzales, Tracy Hsu, Lisa —, Hsu Organizations: Service, Getty, Business, Pop, Pop Mart, Daxue Consulting, Southeast, Insight, Singapore, Mart Locations: Asia, Bangkok . Sun, Xinhua, Hong Kong, Beijing, Singapore, Pop, Southeast Asia, Japan, South Korea, China, Philippines, New Jersey, California, Canada
At the age of 58, Grace Lee began strength training with her daughter, Sohee Carpenter, a personal trainer. With the help of her daughter Sohee Carpenter, a personal trainer based in Orange County, she started lifting weights at age 58. In fact, Lee doesn't want to know how much she's lifting, Carpenter simply hands her the weights. "Everyone should be lifting weights," Carpenter said. "There's no one right way to be lifting weights.
Persons: Grace Lee, Sohee Carpenter, Carpenter, , Lee, She's, she's, Lee doesn't, overcorrect, she'll, Sohee Carpenter Carpenter, she'd Organizations: Service, Sports, Fitness Industry Association, Navy Locations: Orange County
The one thing spookier than a bad first date is seeing your phone light up with a text asking for a second. The "easy way out" of delivering the uncomfortable news that you don't want to meet up again is to not respond, also known as ghosting, says Grace Lee, a New York City-based dating coach and founder of A Good First Date. But if the person took the time to see you in person, they probably deserve an actual response. "If someone outright asks you if you want to go on a second date and you don't want to I think ghosting is the worst way to respond because the other person has really put themselves out there," she says. Here's what to say if you aren't interested in continuing a courtship.
Persons: Grace Lee Locations: New York City
Dim lighting and flowing libations make a bar feel like the perfect, low-pressure environment to meet a potential partner. Rarely, though, is this the optimal venue at which to form lasting connections, Grace Lee, a New York City-based dating coach and founder of A Good First Date, told CNBC Make It. Here are four more tips from Lee and other dating coaches on how to foster meaningful connections. And it's actually smart to discuss values early on, Kelsey Wonderlin, a dating coach based in Nashville, Tennessee, told CNBC Make It. "On a first date that would be a socially unacceptable question to ask," Wonderlin says.
Persons: Grace Lee, You'll, Lee, Blaine Anderson, Blaine, Anderson, I'd, Kelsey Wonderlin, Wonderlin Organizations: CNBC Locations: New York City, Austin , Texas, Nashville , Tennessee
"The only category of questions I'd advise singles to avoid outright on early dates is around dating history," she says. "Be playful, and ask questions that will make your date smile," Anderson says. "Planning for the second date is a form of courtship, a form of testing that mutual interest," she says. Grace Lee Dating CoachPlus, she says, putting someone on the spot rarely encourages an honest answer. If you want to make it clear that you would like a second date, bring the conversation back to a restaurant or experience you both discussed.
Persons: Blaine Anderson, Blaine, Anderson, I'd, Grace Lee, Lee Locations: Austin , Texas, New York City
CORONADO, Calif. — Standing on their lawn, members of the Dong family waited to meet the great-grandkids of a Black couple who rented a home to them a generation ago, when laws favored white residents. In 1939, Gus and Emma Thompson, a Black entrepreneurial couple, agreed to rent and eventually sell the house they owned to the Dongs, a Chinese American family. Alan Nakkash for NBC NewsThe Dong family is donating the proceeds of the house sale to support the Black community. Alan Nakkash for NBC NewsThe Dong family wanted the Thompson family descendants to tour the storied home before selling. Nearby, Kemp leaned in to repeat words he first said at their meeting at the Coronado house.
Persons: , Dong, Gus, Emma Thompson, Ron Dong, Emma, , Janice Dong, Ron’s, Ballinger Gardner Kemp, Lauren Kemp Few, Alan Nakkash, , Thompsons, Lloyd Dong Jr, Dong Jr, Lloyd Jr, Lloyd Sr, Jackie, Margaret, Jeanette Dong, Lloyd Dong Sr, Ron Dong’s, Margaret ., Gus Thompson, Kemp, Thompson, Kevin Ashley, Ashley, Christopher Manning, Grace Lee Bogg’s, Manning Organizations: San, Black Resource, NBC, NBC News, Historical, Coronado, SDSU, Coronado Historic Resources Commission, Central California —, Del Locations: CORONADO, Calif, San Diego State, Kentucky, California, Central California, Coronado, Del Coronado
Instead, we spend the next few weeks hopping from bar to bar, in an attempt to manifest the sort of meet-cute you only see on the CW. This is exactly what you shouldn't be doing, says Blaine Anderson, an Austin, Texas-based dating coach and founder of Dating by Blaine. Other dating and relationship experts agree that bars tend to be the go-to venue for singles, but often don't net meaningful connections. "If you're showing up in bars but don't want to build a life around substance use, you're not going to meet someone you like," Bobby says. Grace Lee Dating Coach
Persons: Blaine Anderson, Blaine, Grace Lee, Lisa Marie Bobby, Bobby, Lee Locations: Austin , Texas, New York City, Denver,
As attractive as today's yields may look on certain dividend-paying stocks, they only tell part of the story when you're choosing names for income. Lower interest rates make other income-generating assets, including dividend-paying stocks, more attractive compared to the risk-free yields on Treasurys. Dividend stocks took their lumps during 2022 as the Fed embarked on its rate hikes – consider that the Vanguard Dividend Appreciation ETF (VIG) posted a total return of negative 9% in 2022 – and rate-sensitive income stocks in the utilities and real estate sector suffered. Check with your brokerage to make sure you have dividends reinvested as your preference for individual stocks and ETFs. Picking the right names Dividend investors are seeing 2024 as a potential rebound year for these stocks, anticipating a broadening rally.
Persons: Michael Arone, Dow, VIG, would've, Grace Lee, , Dow Jones, Arone, Chris Hayes Organizations: SPDR, State, Federal, Dow Jones, Fed, Vanguard, CNBC Pro, IBM, Columbia, Opportunity, Walgreens, Alliance
NEW YORK (AP) — U.S. health officials on Friday recommended RSV vaccinations for moms-to-be, a second new option to protect newborns from serious lung infections. The shots should be given late in pregnancy but only during RSV season, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said. The RSV vaccine, made by Pfizer, should only be given between 32 weeks and 36 weeks of pregnancy. Some CDC panel members who ultimately supported the recommendation expressed reservations. Several also balked at the $295-a-dose price Pfizer has been charging for the same RSV vaccine for seniors, called Abrysvo.
Persons: , Mandy Cohen, Cohen, Grace Lee Organizations: , Centers for Disease Control, Prevention, Pfizer, CDC, Associated Press Health, Science Department, Howard Hughes Medical Institute’s Science, Educational Media Group, AP Locations: — U.S, U.S
The wedding industry is beginning to see the fallout of this shift away from tradition. That meant "wedding TikTok" — with its dancing groomsmen and videographers turned influencers — was the next best thing. "So it is time for us in the wedding industry to expand the definition of what a perfect day means." Adrienna McDermott spent nine years in the wedding industry before starting a marketing agency for wedding professionals called Ava and the Bee. "It really opened up my eyes for the power of TikTok," Lee said.
Persons: Ashley Klimper, wasn't, videographers, influencers —, who's, Klimper, Jimmy Choo, , Vishal Joshi, Melanie Breault, She's, Stephanie Kirk, they're, fiancé, they've, Grace Lee, Birdy, Birdy Grey, Lee, Joshi, Joy, Adrienna McDermott, Ava, millennials, Zers Organizations: Service, Signet, expos, Facebook, swatch Locations: Wall, Silicon
The experience of on-the-go coffee may be reshaped if Starbucks achieves its reusable cup goal. Reusable coffee cup initiatives around the worldStarbucks has been experimenting with reusable cup concepts in markets around the world. Customers can then return their reusable cup at a participating store or by using the Starbucks app at a cup return kiosk. Even though a reusable cup option has been in place at Starbucks for over 30 years, many consumers, and Starbucks employees, remain oblivious to its existence. The future of the Starbucks' cup has broad implications.
Persons: , Amelia Landers, Matt Prindiville, hasn't, Conrad MacKerron, MacKerron, Prindiville, IGD, Prindville, Kelly McBee, McBee, They're, Landers, Grace Lee Organizations: Starbucks, Business, CNBC, Arizona State University, Consulting, Clean Locations: Colorado, Hawaii, Taiwan, South Korea, Tokyo, Singapore, London, Geneva, Paris, Europe, Middle East, Africa, U.S, Seattle
The wedding industry is beginning to see the fallout of this shift away from tradition. That meant "wedding TikTok" — with its dancing groomsmen and videographers turned influencers — was the next best thing. "So it is time for us in the wedding industry to expand the definition of what a perfect day means." Adrienna McDermott spent nine years in the wedding industry before starting a marketing agency for wedding professionals called Ava and the Bee. "It really opened up my eyes for the power of TikTok," Lee said.
Comedy Is in Their (Identical) DNA
  + stars: | 2023-05-08 | by ( Anna Grace Lee | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +1 min
For middle and high school, the twins attended magnet arts schools. “We had no sports teams, but we did have drugs!” Annabel said, with a jazzy emphasis. “But we were theater majors,” Sabina chimed in, walking the story back a bit. They have differing accounts of high school: Sabina says Annabel was “Miss Popular.” Annabel denies this. Sabina was a Tumblr girl who wore creepers and big T-shirts from the men’s section of Urban Outfitters.
There was drama this week in the olive oil business — and it unfolded on LinkedIn, the online haven of start-up feuds, oversharing and self-mythologizing odes to #founder culture. An angry post by the olive oil entrepreneur Andrew Benin caused a stir in a small corner of the internet food world, in part because it raised a slippery question: Who owns the squeeze bottle? Mr. Benin is the chief executive and co-founder of Graza, a direct-to-consumer start-up launched in 2022 that sells olive oil in squeezable, forest-green plastic bottles designed for optimal drizzling and Instagramming. Whole Foods sells it, Bon Appétit gave it a rave, and Food & Wine magazine called it a “cool kid olive oil.” As The Wall Street Journal noted this year, Graza struck a “sweet spot” in the market with its two extra-virgin olive oil bottles, the Drizzle ($20) and the Sizzle ($15). That gesture, along with posts on Graza’s blog (the “Glog,” as the company calls it), painted a picture of an enthusiastic founder.
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