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Fashion

Here’s What Model Taylor Hill Is Buying Now

by jummy84 April 2, 2026
written by jummy84

Her daily jewelry

“My favorite, favorite, favorite, favorite piece of jewelry that I think I will probably wear every single day is our Bolo necklace,” Hill says, and it’s finally available to buy. “This was actually the first thing [Mackinley and I] ever designed, but it took us a long time to source the right stones, and get the design right, and do it exactly how we wanted.” The design takes inspiration from a bolo tie and hearkens back to Hill’s Colorado wedding, when the napkins were fastened with the neckwear.

Another everyday favorite—and one of the brand’s absolute bestsellers—is the Core ring. “This ring goes with everything because it has both silver and gold, and it’s a statement.” She’s firmly pro–mixed metals and loves “the idea of something more masculine, silver, and rough with something more sleek, elegant, and gold being paired together on the ear, the neck, the wrist. I think it’s best to have one piece that has the mix built in. It ties it in, grounds it.”

Stone Fruit Bolo Pendant Necklace

Her skin care grails

Hill cites two products as her absolute must-haves. The first is Skin Pharm’s Youth Serum: “When I don’t use it, I notice, and then when I start using it again, makeup artists all go, ‘Oh my God, your skin is so amazing. What are you doing?’ It’s the perfect blend of all the things you need for deep hydration, I think, and it’s one of my favorite products that has helped change my skin.” The second is a readily available moisturizer from Avène. “I’ve been using this for, like, 10 years. It’s a zinc barrier-restorative cream, and it’s amazing,” she says.

April 2, 2026 0 comments
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Events

Hyve strengthens year-round engagement model through acquisition of HGAN

by jummy84 November 12, 2025
written by jummy84

  • Events, meetings, roundtables, insights, dinners, and now deeper, advisory-led connections – demonstrating the continued expansion of Hyve’s product suite
  • Offers Hyve’s healthcare customers even more value, with clear potential to replicate this model across other sectors
  • Third healthcare acquisition, sixth overall since launching the GO27 growth and optimisation plan

Hyve, the global leader behind the world’s fastest growing and most forward-thinking B2B events, today announces an agreement to acquire HGAN (Health Grown Advisory Network), a leading platform accelerating the growth of innovative healthcare companies through curated connections and tailored commercial support.

At its core, HGAN is a business of connections.

A trusted partner that goes beyond introductions to guide and support partnerships between health innovators and organisations evaluating new healthcare solutions from first meetings to successful outcomes. The team facilitates curated engagements between innovative healthcare companies and verified partners, such as employers seeking to improve benefit plans or health plans focused on population health.

HGAN has rapidly become the choice commercial accelerator for digital health solutions. Its two-sided marketplace meets the needs of both buyers and sellers in the healthcare ecosystem, while its extensive advisory network provides expert counsel on critical growth factors including positioning, marketing, health plan navigation, and product–market fit. Its customers include healthcare leaders such as Spring Health, Virta, Rightway and Maven, with many of its partners already attending Hyve’s healthcare events: HLTH, ViVE and Behavioral Health Tech.

Strengthening Hyve’s year-round engagement model.

Hyve has been steadily expanding its year-round engagement capabilities across its global portfolio, creating products and services that deliver value to customers beyond the event cycle. In healthcare specifically, this includes HLTH Community, a subscription platform offering white papers, resources and online events, and Entrée, a curated dinner series bringing leaders together in bespoke networking settings.

Deepening Hyve’s connection ecosystem, with a scalable model for other sectors.

The acquisition of HGAN adds depth to Hyve’s connection model, introducing a new advisory-led matchmaking service, and is a natural extension of Hyve’s existing meetings product which saw 75,000 one-on-one, double-opt-in meetings take place at the latest Shoptalk Spring.

There is clear potential to replicate this model across the other sectors where Hyve organises events in order to deliver value and results for more customers beyond the show floor.

Mark Shashoua, CEO of Hyve, commented: “This acquisition marks an exciting new chapter in Hyve’s growth story. HGAN’s model goes beyond creating connections, through guiding relationships from first introduction to meaningful partnership. By integrating this deeper, high-touch approach with the HLTH product suite, we’re building a stronger, more diversified offering that delivers value all year round. Healthcare is where we’re proving the model, but its potential extends far beyond. I’m delighted to welcome Josh and the HGAN team as we bring this vision to life.”

Josh Riff, Founder of HGAN who will stay on to lead the business, commented: “This partnership delivers exactly what we’ve been building toward – a platform that transcends traditional conference boundaries to provide year-round value. Instead of a few touch points a year we want to create meaningful continuous dialogue amongst healthcare innovators and potential partners so that in the end the health consumer benefits. By joining Hyve, we expand our impact and fortify our network. Having spent time getting to know Hyve and its leaders, it’s abundantly clear to me that this is the right step for HGAN and healthcare innovation.”

This is Hyve’s third investment into the rapidly growing healthcare sector, following recent acquisitions of HLTH and Behavioral Health Tech, and its sixth deal since launching the GO27 growth and optimisation plan last year.

November 12, 2025 0 comments
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Inside Square Peg Social's New Model for Indie Filmmakers
TV & Streaming

Inside Square Peg Social’s New Model for Indie Filmmakers

by jummy84 November 12, 2025
written by jummy84

This was initially published as part of the In Development newsletter. Click here to subscribe.

There’s a fine line between passion and desperation, “Bugonia” and “Eddington” producer Lars Knudsen told 35 filmmakers at Square Peg Social in Austin in late October. Desperation is driven by fear. Passion is driven by confidence. And throughout a filmmaker’s career, there will be people who try to capitalize on that desperation to get a film made. 

I keep thinking about that distinction because desperation is often the low-octane fuel of independent film. Filmmakers need substantial money to support singular ideas that don’t correspond to mainstream concepts of what will sell. Being an indie filmmaker requires real nerve. 

Ekin Koç appears in 'The Things You Kill' by Alireza Khatami, an official selection of the 2025 Sundance Film Festival. Courtesy of Sundance Institute | photo by Bartosz Świniarski

Desperation produces flop sweat. But under the right circumstances, that energy can be channeled as passion that moves the dream forward. Real-world stories give filmmakers the chance to lead from strength rather than need. 

That reframing was central to Square Peg Social, the four-day gathering co-hosted by Knudsen, his Square Peg partner Ari Aster, and Amy Knudsen. By bringing 26 writer-directors and 9 producers together with 27 industry mentors, they created something filmmakers desperately need but rarely make space for: unguarded honesty about what it takes to sustain a filmmaking career. 

Why It Matters (Even If You Weren’t There) 

Only 35 filmmakers experienced this firsthand, but the conversations illuminate what the broader independent film community needs to reckon with: the terror of being bullied by agents, mistakes made under pressure, the “very bad experiences” even successful filmmakers endure. These aren’t aberrations. They’re common struggles being navigated in isolation when they shouldn’t be. 

Independent film is in an incredibly challenging moment. As distribution models fracture and budgets contract, losing hope becomes not just understandable but almost practical. As assumptions that once structured the industry no longer hold, we have to try new ways to see what might work. 

What made Square Peg Social notable was its rejection of conventional outcomes. There were no script developmentsessions, no pitch meetings, no financing goals. Instead, the event operated on a different theory: that bringing together excellent mentors and genuinely impressive filmmakers to share the unvarnished good and bad of their experiences would produce its own value. 

Evidence suggests it did. 

“When [Lars] invited me, he said something like, ‘You guys will get up there, some casting directors, the financiers, it’s a little bit loose, but at the end of the day, if nothing else will be a great opportunity to catch up with everybody,’” said Sara Murphy, producer of “One Battle After Another.” 

“It was a very casual approach that ended up being warm and welcoming,” she said. “And more productive than any of the conferences I’ve been to. So yeah, I loved it. I was like, how do I get invited every year?” 

Intentional Opacity 

This summer, I announced the call for entries for Square Peg Social, with slim details: a gathering in Austin for filmmakers and mentors, hosted by Aster and Lars and Amy Knudsen. They would provide writer-directors and producers with mentors, programming, private dinners, and intimate gatherings designed to help them make movies. 

Nearly 1800 applications arrived. In a sharp departure from similar programs, neither the selected filmmakers nor the invited mentors were announced. The application was vague, asking only for a body of work and a cover letter explaining what applicants hoped to gain. 

Unconventional but intentional. The result was an event that felt unbuttoned but was crafted with the care usually reserved for state dinners. 

“You didn’t have to listen to pitches, you didn’t have to team up with anybody,” Murphy said. “It was a meticulously curated guest list of people that were exciting to meet. Everybody I sat down with, filmmakers and fellow industry professionals, were everybody I wanted to talk to, which is rare at these things.” 

A Room That Wouldn’t Stop Talking 

I was the only journalist, and only attended the final day to ensure everyone felt comfortable; the rest was kept confidential. My first impression was Austin being Austin: The start pushed to 10am instead of 9am after a long Saturday night. But then the room started to fill and it became like a lively, coffee-powered party that toggled between intimate sit-downs and groups standing and talking. 

And it never stopped. 

Until 6pm, when everyone headed out for a final dinner, the conversations in the Soho House salon never let up. Even at lunch, everyone grabbed sandwiches and kept talking. By the end, Square Peg Social spoke with one voice: hoarse. 

This wasn’t about developing screenplays, shooting scenes, or seeking financing. Pitching was specifically discouraged. While there were some panels and curated conversations, the real point was creating multiple opportunities for everyone to be honest about what sustaining a filmmaking career actually requires. 

The Currency of Candor 

“Many of [the filmmakers] mentioned that they appreciated our candor,” Aster wrote me the day after the event. “It was important to us that we not give calculated answers or pat advice, but that we be as unvarnished and unguarded as possible. Otherwise, what’s the point? Lars and I have also had a couple very bad experiences in this industry, especially in one distressing and endlessly prolonged instance, and I think it was useful to talk about what we learned there. There are certain things I won’t ever let happen again, and I wish someone would have warned me about those things before I went through the gauntlet.” 

The willingness to discuss failure and missteps—not as cautionary tales, but as evidence of survival—ran throughout the event. Alex Orlovsky, who recently produced “Roofman” and executive produced “Sorry Baby,” identified this as “the beauty of what [Square Pegs] did. I think mistakes are the things that you can be like, ‘No, that happened to me and I’m still here.’ Just that messaging is really important for young filmmakers to hear.” 

While many conversations covered familiar territory for emerging filmmakers—festival circuits, sales processes—Orlovsky valued discussing “mistakes that I’ve made that they should not make if they don’t have to. Or just, ‘Don’t get bullied by agents. It’s okay. They say they’re never going to talk to [you] again and that’s a lie.’ To speak from experience about things that, if you’re a young producer, can feel quite intense and terrifying.” 

The specificity matters. Knowing that agent threats are performative, that certain mistakes are common and survivable, that even successful filmmakers have endured “distressing and endlessly prolonged” experiences—it’s all ballast against desperation. 

A Deliberately Curated Community 

The 27 mentors (full list below) also included Matthew Greenfield, president of Searchlight Pictures; WME partner Roger Green; and Harrison Huffman, executive producer of “Christy,” “Eddington,” and “The Iron Claw.” 

The guest list emerged from friendships and network connections, but the filmmakers were “curated”—a word that came up repeatedly in conversations with mentors. This curation meant the exchanges could transcend simple mentorship into something more mutual. 

“I was like, ‘Oh yeah, that’s going to happen. They’re going to do it,’” Orlovsky said of the participating filmmakers. “There are a couple that I’m even interested in figuring out if there’s ways for us to be involved. I think there’s almost too many people I want to stay in touch with.” 

The Shared Condition 

Tomorrow, I’ll share what the filmmakers themselves took away from Square Peg Social. But I want to close with Knudsen’s opening words to the group because they frame why building community around vulnerability rather than mere opportunity matters: 

“What everyone here has in common is that “There was never anything else I wanted to do” — and we thought it could be empowering to bring like-minded filmmakers together and help create a sense of community around that statement — to share experiences and help each other. 

“There was never anything else I wanted to do.” It’s both a blessing and a curse. It’s not accurate to say we do it because we love it. There are plenty of times where I hate being a producer. But since it’s all I know how to do I’ve had to find a way to take the good with the bad — and luckily for me, I’ve learned the most from the bad. 

“I produced my first film over 20 years ago and as I prepared for this weekend I realized that there are so many things that I take for granted today that I would have benefited from knowing back then — for example, one thing that I have learned the hard way is that there is a fine line between being passionate and desperate. Desperation is driven by fear, passion is driven by confidence, confidence creates momentum and momentum makes films — so a big hope of mine is that you leave here with confidence in what is to come and let your passion drive you, not your desperation. 

“Throughout our careers we are surrounded by people who — sometimes — will try to capitalize on our desperation to get a film made. We want to equip you with the tools to take those people on and allow you to be more firmly in the driver’s seat on the films that you direct or produce. Nothing is off limits. 

“There was never anything else I wanted to do” describes not ambition but condition. It was the shared ground beneath every conversation at Square Peg Social — the reason why honest talk about fear, mistakes, and survival mattered more than networking strategies or pitch practice. When there’s no alternative path, the question isn’t whether to continue but how to continue well. That’s the conversation worth having, and the one this event made space for.” 

MENTORS 

Ari Aster Writer-director and co-founder (with Lars Knudsen) of Square Peg, home to “Hereditary,” “Midsommar,” “Beau Is Afraid,” and “Dream Scenario.” 

Alejandro De Leon Executive producer of “Eddington” and “Night Moves.” 

Ellen Chenoweth Casting director. Credits include “Diner,” “Broadcast News,” “Michael Clayton,” and 13 films with the Coen Bros.

Henry Dunham Writer-director of “The Standoff at Sparrow Creek” and the upcoming “Enemies” starring Austin Butler and Jeremy Allen White. 

Jacob Epstein Manager, Lighthouse Media.

Roger Green Partner, WME. 

Matthew Greenfield Searchlight Pictures president, overseeing award-winning films including “The Favourite,” “Nomadland,” “Poor Things,” and “The Shape of Water.”  

Toby Halbrooks Sailor Bear partner with producing credits including “A Ghost Story,” “The Green Knight,” “Pete’s Dragon,” “Ain’t Them Bodies Saints,” “The Old Man & the Gun,” and the upcoming “Mother Mary.” 

Sam Hanson Executive, A24.

Emily Hildner Producer, Square Peg.

Elliott Hostetter Production designer of “Eddington,” “The Neon Demon,” “Night Moves,” and “Bones and All.” 

Harrison Huffman Executive producer of “Christy,” “Eddington,” and “The Iron Claw.” 

Lars Knudsen Co-founder (with Ari Aster) of Square Peg, behind “Hereditary,” “Midsommar,” “Beau Is Afraid,” and “Dream Scenario.” Other credits include “The Witch” and “American Honey.” 

Sara Murphy Producer of “One Battle After Another,” “If I Had Legs I’d Kick You,” “Licorice Pizza” and “If Beale Street Could Talk.” 

Brennan O’Donnell Literary and talent manager, Grandview Entertainment. 

Alex Orlovsky Producer of “Roofman,” “Blue Valentine,” and “Half Nelson” and executive producer of “Sorry Baby” and “The Last Showgirl.” 

Janet Pierson Former director of SXSW Film, known for championing breakthrough work like “Short Term 12,” “Tiny Furniture,” “Thunder Road,” “Sorry to Bother You,” and “Everything Everywhere All at Once.” 

Ann Raurk Executive producer on “Beau Is Afraid” and “Caught Stealing”; producing credits include “Eddington” and “Wildlife.” 

Noah Sacco A24 film executive. 

Michael Sarnoski Writer-director of “Pig,” “A Quiet Place: Day One” and the upcoming “The Death of Robin Hood” starring Hugh Jackman. 

Anish Savjani Founder of Film Science. Producer of “Rebel Ridge”; longtime Kelly Reichardt collaborator on “Old Joy,” “Wendy and Lucy,” “Meek’s Cutoff,” “Night Moves,” “CertainWomen,” “First Cow,” and “Showing Up.” 

Alex Scharfman Writer, producer, director of “Death of a Unicorn.” 

Tim Smith Writer-producer of “The First Omen.”

Arkasha Stevenson Director credits include “The First Omen.”

Anita Surendran Entertainment attorney, partner, and co-chair of Granderson Des Rochers’ Film and Television Practice. 

Pete Thorell First AD on “Eddington,” “Ozark,” “Ripley,” and “Is This Thing On?” 

Jennifer Venditti Casting director of “Marty Supreme,” “The Smashing Machine,” “Bugonia,” “Euphoria,” “Uncut Gems,” and “Good Time.” 

Ross Wiggins Agent, UTA.

November 12, 2025 0 comments
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Fitness trainer reveals how to train like a Victoria's Secret model to look 'strong and sculpted'
Lifestyle

Fitness trainer reveals how to train like a Victoria’s Secret model to look ‘strong and sculpted’

by jummy84 November 10, 2025
written by jummy84

Victoria’s Secret Angels, including supermodels such as Adriana Lima, Alessandra Ambrosio, Candice Swanepoel, Bella Hadid, and others, are renowned for their sculpted and athletic physiques. Every year, they look stronger and more sculpted as they step back on the runway. But is there a secret to them looking incredible every single time they get on the ramp?

Candice Swanepoel walks the runway during the 2025 Victoria’s Secret Fashion Show in New York City. (REUTERS)

Also Read | Diabetologist with 24 years of experience shares 1 tip to reduce heart attack risk by 40%: ‘After eating food…’

In an Instagram video shared on October 29, Kelsey Rose, a fitness trainer, revealed how to train like a Victoria’s Secret model to look ‘strong and sculpted’. She shared that their physique is a result of dedicated and intense fitness routines, which include strength training and a nutritious diet.

The real secret behind the Victoria’s Secret angel body

According to the fitness trainer, almost every OG Victoria’s Secret Angel swears by strength training. Not to bulk up, but to sculpt lean, defined, and feminine muscle that gives them that strong, confident runway look. She claimed that the foundation of that body isn’t restriction or genetics, it’s consistency, strength, and fuelling it right.

In the video, she stitched together several clips of supermodels, including Adriana Lima, Candice Swanepoel, Irina Shayk, and Alessandra Ambrosio. While Candice in the video claimed that she doesn’t do a lot of cardio, rather she builds ‘a lot of muscle because she is naturally very skinny,’ Adriana said, “You have to work out every day…You have to maintain the muscles.”

As for Irina Shayk, the secret to her figure is, “Working out and food. Working out five times a week when in New York [for the VS show].” Lastly, Alessandra shared that she achieved her physique by working out at the gym and putting in a lot of effort to improve her body.

How to train like a Victoria’s Secret model?

Strength training, as per the VS models and the fitness trainer, is the non-negotiable part of every angel’s routine. Kelsey added that while everyone has been talking about Pilates lately, many have been missing out on the foundation that gives a strong, defined, and confident body: strength training.

She clarified that, although Pilates and low-impact workouts are important, it is also essential to understand the importance of strength training. Why? Because, as per the trainer, you can’t tone what you don’t build.

Moreover, nutrition should also be a big part of this routine. Because you cannot build muscle if you are undereating. “A lot of you are working out but not fuelling properly. You heard it from the angels. They are dialling in on their nutrition. You need to eat enough to gain lean muscle and to rev up your metabolism,” she added.

Note to readers: This article is for informational purposes only and not a substitute for professional medical advice. Always seek the advice of your doctor with any questions about a medical condition.

This report is based on user-generated content from social media. HT.com has not independently verified the claims and does not endorse them.

November 10, 2025 0 comments
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Must Read: Anok Yai Named 2025 Model of the Year, H&M Spotlights Black Designers in Latest Collaboration
Fashion

Must Read: Anok Yai Named 2025 Model of the Year, H&M Spotlights Black Designers in Latest Collaboration

by jummy84 November 5, 2025
written by jummy84


These are the stories making headlines in fashion on Wednesday. The British Fashion Council has announced Anok Yai as its 2025 Model of the Year. The award honors the global impact of a model who has dominated the industry over the last 12 months. “Being named Model of the Year is such an …

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November 5, 2025 0 comments
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The Lions' Ali Kavoussi Reveals How to Make It as a Model — From Staying Confident to Finding the Right Agent
Hollywood

The Lions Founder Ali Kavoussi Reveals How to Make It as a Model and Why Confidence Is Key

by jummy84 October 30, 2025
written by jummy84

The world is your runway! And few people know better than Ali Kavoussi, founder of The Lions Management, the agency behind famous faces like Alessandra Ambrosio, Candice Swanepoel, Coco Rocha, Kate Upton, Stella Maxwell, Behati Prinsloo, and Amelia Gray Hamlin.

Now, the managing partner, known for discovering and nurturing rising stars, is telling ET exactly what it takes to land covers, book shows, and break into one of fashion’s most competitive industries.

While your walk and poses might already be strong, Kavoussi believes true success begins before you step in front of the camera.

Getty Images

“We start with personality, story, and style and build everything from there. … Every person we represent has a point of view and we make sure the world sees it. … It’s not just about beauty. It’s presence, authenticity, and curiosity.”

From there, dedication to the craft is everything.

“One of the most surprising things about modeling is how much hard work, discipline, and self-awareness it requires. … It’s about showing up on time, being professional, understanding your brand, and building real relationships.”

And through it all, believing in yourself is key.

“Watching a model that everyone once overlooked walk the biggest runway in the world never gets old,” the businessman notes.

“I always tell the girls to fake it till you make it. Even if you’re nervous, walk in like you belong in the room, because you do,” he adds.

Just as essential: Having the right team behind you.

BFA.com

“It’s all about alignment. … Modeling can be overwhelming. You’re traveling constantly and signing major deals. An agent becomes your anchor. They fight for you and help you make the right long-term choices,” he shares.

This includes finding ways to make supermodels triple threats through his innovative approach with clients, whether it’s at the 2025 Victoria’s Secret Fashion Show in Brooklyn, New York, or in ALO’s Luxe Bag campaign. 

“As we grow, my vision is to keep building a powerhouse that blends legacy names with the next generation of icons. … Seeing Amelia evolve into a creative force and Candice launch her brand are full circle moments,” Kavoussi says.

“My job is to protect individuality and make sure it translates from the runway, to a brand deal, to a single Instagram post. … We believe that a model can be an entrepreneur, a storyteller, and a brand,” he continues.

Of course, knowing your angles never hurts either.

“It’s an art form. The more you shoot, the better you get. … Study light and be patient with yourself. It’s a lot of trial and error. And never underestimate the value of a great photographer,” he spills.

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October 30, 2025 0 comments
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The Lions' Ali Kavoussi Reveals How to Make It as a Model — From Staying Confident to Finding the Right Agent
Hollywood

The Lions’ Ali Kavoussi Reveals How to Make It as a Model — From Staying Confident to Finding the Right Agent

by jummy84 October 30, 2025
written by jummy84

The world is your runway! And few people know better than Ali Kavoussi, founder of The Lions Management, the agency behind icons like Alessandra Ambrosio, Candice Swanepoel, Irina Shayk, Coco Rocha, Kate Upton, Stella Maxwell, Behati Prinsloo, Amelia Gray Hamlin, and more famous faces.

Now, the managing partner, known for discovering and nurturing rising stars, is telling ET exactly what it takes to land covers, book shows, and break into one of fashion’s most competitive industries.

While your walk and poses might already be strong, Kavoussi says true success begins before you step in front of the camera.

Getty Images

“We start with personality, story, and style and build everything from there. … Every person we represent has a point of view and we make sure the world sees it. … It’s not just about beauty. It’s presence, authenticity, and curiosity.”

From there, dedication to the craft is everything.

“One of the most surprising things about modeling is how much hard work, discipline, and self-awareness it requires. … It’s about showing up on time, being professional, understanding your brand, and building real relationships.”

And through it all, believing in yourself is key.

“Watching a model that everyone once overlooked walk the biggest runway in the world never gets old,” the businessman notes.

“I always tell the girls to fake it till you make it. Even if you’re nervous, walk in like you belong in the room, because you do,” he adds.

Just as essential: Having the right team behind you.

BFA.com

“It’s all about alignment. … Modeling can be overwhelming. You’re traveling constantly and signing major deals. An agent becomes your anchor. They fight for you and help you make the right long-term choices,” he shares.

This includes finding ways to make supermodels triple threats.

“Seeing Amelia evolve into a creative force, Candice launch her brand, and Irina step into high fashion are full circle moments. … My job is to protect individuality and make sure it translates from the runway, to a brand deal, to a single Instagram post. … We believe that a model can be an entrepreneur, a storyteller, and a brand,” Kavoussi explains.

Of course, knowing your angles never hurts either.

“It’s an art form. The more you shoot, the better you get. … Study light and be patient with yourself. It’s a lot of trial and error. And never underestimate the value of a great photographer,” he spills.

RELATED CONTENT:

October 30, 2025 0 comments
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How Skin-Care Brand Fitish is Making Prescription GLP-1 Meds Part of Its Business Model
Fashion

How Skin-Care Brand Fitish is Making Prescription GLP-1 Meds Part of Its Business Model

by jummy84 October 29, 2025
written by jummy84


Despite the growing ubiquity of GLP-1 (glucagon-like peptide-1) medication use, there is still quite a bit of confusion, stigma and misinformation surrounding injections like Ozempic. There’s also a major lack of access for many patients who stand to benefit from the meds; Fitish founder Jenna …

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October 29, 2025 0 comments
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Charli XCX Makes Surprise SNL Appearance During Role Model Song
TV & Streaming

Charli XCX Makes Surprise SNL Appearance During Role Model Song

by jummy84 October 12, 2025
written by jummy84

Charli XCX wasn’t supposed to be Saturday Night Live‘s musical guest, but that didn’t stop her from making a surprise appearance on the late night show Saturday night.

Role Model, who served as the official musical guest of the second episode of season 51, hit the stage where he performed a rendition of his track, “Sally, When The Wine Runs Out.” When performing the song at his live shows, the artist typically brings out a special guest of his own, known better to fans as the “Sally girl.”

In the past, Role Model has chosen artists like Conan Gray and Charli XCX’s dear friend and Sweat Tour co-headliner Troye Sivan to serve the role. The two have taken joking jabs at one another on social media due to faux “Sally girl” drama, which included Role Model featuring the “Rush” singer during one of his shows.

However, it appeared Charli XCX and Role Model officially worked it out on the remix (or SNL stage) as she delivered a surprise cameo during his performance of the beloved song. Eagle-eyed fans also pointed out that the “360” singer wore the same shirt Role Model had on during promo shots that were released earlier this week for the episode. The shirt read, “max’s kansas city.”

The “Look At That Woman” singer made his SNL debut on Saturday night, where he was joined by host Amy Poehler. The second episode of season 51 proved to be a star-studded night in terms of appearances, as former cast members Tina Fey and Seth Meyers also made unanticipated cameos.

Charli XCX hosted SNL for the first time last year, where she also doubled as musical guest. The Grammy winner is known to spotlight fans and (sometimes) surprise celebrities during special segments of her concerts. Set to her track “Apple,” Charli XCX regularly picks a concertgoer or public figure to be platformed on the big screen of her shows, where they often recite the popular TikTok dance to the tune of her song.

Her SNL appearance comes amid speculation of an alleged feud with Taylor Swift. The latter singer’s latest album, The Life of a Showgirl, featured a track entitled “Actually Romantic,” which some fans believe is a response to Charli XCX’s 2024 track “Sympathy is a knife.”

October 12, 2025 0 comments
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NBC/SNL
Music

Watch Role Model Bring Out Charli XCX for ‘Sally, When the Wine Runs Out’

by jummy84 October 12, 2025
written by jummy84

Role Model debuts on the late night show performing his viral hit with help from the British pop star, plus another song from his latest album

Singer-songwriter Role Model debuted as Saturday Night Live musical guest with two songs from the deluxe edition of Kansas Anymore, his second studio album, which he released in February.

After an introduction from SNL host Amy Poehler, the 28-year-old Maine native opened with “Sally, When the Wine Runs Out.” In live performances of the indie pop hit, Role Model has often invited a fan, another musician, or some other special guest to play the part of Sally. Here, it was Charli XCX.

The British pop singer—SNL‘s musical guest last November—received wild screams of approval from the audience. After dancing and swirling her hair to the song’s bridge, she slid her sunglasses onto Role Model’s face, blew him a kiss, then strutted away.

Role Model’s second performance was of the more mellow “Some Protector.”

The artist, whose real name is Tucker Pillsbury, has said his latest album, which follows 2022’s Rx, is a big step forward.

“I think the one thing I wanted to prove when I first put it out was my growth — my songwriting and my taste in music had matured, and I had also matured as a person,” he told Rolling Stone in a revealing April interview. “It felt like a big shift in the way I would talk about things and write about them, and a big part of that was just me getting to a place on guitar where I could play well enough that I could write songs by myself on it.”

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Role Model, who opened for Gracie Abrams last year and then headlined his No Place Like Tour this spring, will be one of the four artists at Rolling Stone‘s Musicians on Musicians live event Oct. 23 at New York’s Beacon Theatre. He will be paired with María Zardoya of the Marias, while Jack Antonoff will join Hayley Williams with Bleachers, for conversations and collaborative performances on stage. SNL‘s James Austin Johnson will host.

Role Model begins a stretch of European shows next month.

October 12, 2025 0 comments
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