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Surgeon weighs in on bariatric surgery vs weight loss drugs to beat obesity: Do GLP-1 drugs work better? | Health
Lifestyle

Surgeon weighs in on bariatric surgery vs weight loss drugs to beat obesity: Do GLP-1 drugs work better? | Health

by jummy84 September 1, 2025
written by jummy84

Do you know that worldwide, since 1990, adult obesity has more than doubled and adolescent obesity has quadrupled? These World Health Organization (WHO) figures tell a grim story of a disturbing health pattern. Being overweight can be a long-term problem that makes you more likely to get type 2 diabetes, high blood pressure, heart disease, sleep apnea, and even increase the risk of certain types of cancer. Your general lifestyle gets affected: tiredness, joint pain, and reduced mobility become a way of life. For people dealing with extreme obesity, doctors suggest that treatment needs to do more than just help people lose weight quickly. It also needs to deal with the biological and metabolic factors that cause the problem, says bariatric surgeon Dr Ashish Gautam, Senior Director, Robotic and Laparoscopic Surgery, Max Super Speciality Hospital, New Delhi.

Severe obesity needs medical intervention. (Adobe Stock)

“Bariatric surgery and GLP-1-based medications (weight loss drugs) have become two of the most significant options for treating obesity in recent years, each with its own benefits, drawbacks, and long-term effects,” Dr Gautam tells Health Shots.

How GLP-1 medications work and what you can expect

GLP-1 receptor agonists like Ozempic are injectable and oral drugs that work like glucagon-like peptide-1, a hormone that helps control appetite and blood sugar levels. They make the stomach empty more slowly, make people less hungry, and help them feel full with smaller amounts of food. Many people start to lose weight within weeks, and their blood sugar levels often get better at the same time.

But these drugs do not work all the time. The doctor explains: “They do not change the way the body stores fat or how it changes over time in terms of metabolism. If the medication is stopped, appetite and weight often come back, especially if there are no changes to diet or activity level. In practice, you need to keep using them to keep getting the benefits, which makes them more of a long-term treatment than a one-time fix.”

Side effects of GLP-1 medications

Many people who take this medicine reportedly complaint of nausea, bloating, constipation, and stomach pain as side effects. “While most people can handle them, some stop taking them because they keep having stomach problems. Pancreatitis and gallbladder problems are also rare but serious complications that need to be watched closely. People who have had these kinds of problems in the past may be told not to use these medications,” adds Dr Gautam.

The cost – approximately ₹10,000-20,000 for injectables – every month, may be another factor to consider in case long-term use of weight loss drugs is planned. “People who do not have type 2 diabetes may not always have insurance. The cost can make it hard to stick with it in the long term. Also, losing weight quickly from medication without a structured resistance-training program could cause patients to lose lean muscle, making them feel weaker instead of stronger,” says the expert.

Is bariatric surgery for severe obesity better?

In some severe obesity cases, doctors suggest a bariatric surgery for long-term benefits. Bariatric surgery has two types: sleeve gastrectomy and gastric bypass. These don’t just make your stomach smaller, but also change the hormones in your gut, the signals that tell you you’re hungry, and how your body breaks down food.

“Many patients say they feel less hungry without taking medication. The surgery changes the anatomy and hormonal environment of the gastrointestinal tract, which is why this happens. There are many more benefits than just losing weight. Surgery can help people with type 2 diabetes stay in remission, lower their blood pressure, and fix or improve sleep apnea, polycystic ovarian disease, and metabolic syndrome. The chances of getting cancers linked to being overweight, especially breast and colon cancer, are also lower,” explains Dr Ashish Gautam about the benefits of bariatric surgery.

For obese patients who deal with type 2 diabetes, blood sugar levels go down within days of surgery. The need for insulin drops a lot, and some patients go into remission for years. This is because the surgery changes how sensitive insulin is and how hormones are released in the gut, he adds.

Citing a ARMMS-T2D study, which took place over 12 years at four major US research centers, he points out how bariatric surgery patients kept off an average of 20% of their weight, while those who received medical and lifestyle interventions only lost 8% of their weight. More than half of surgical patients achieved HbA1c levels under 7%, and diabetes remission was significantly more common and persistent. Even people with a BMI of 27 to 34 saw benefits.

What are the side effects of bariatric surgery?

One of the side effects of bariatric surgery is that it may lead to nutritional deficiencies like low iron post-surgery. This can usually be avoided by taking supplements and monitoring health parameters.

“Most bariatric surgeries today are done with small incisions or robotic help, so patients often leave the hospital in two to three days. Recovery is quicker, and there are fewer complications than with older open surgeries. Following the procedure with proper nutrition and strength-focused exercise helps protect muscle, keeping strength and energy levels up while losing weight,” he says.

Bariatric surgery vs GLP-1 drugs

According to the surgeon, bariatric surgery always leads to more weight loss that lasts longer than GLP-1 drugs. Drugs can have big effects in the short term, but stopping them often means gaining weight back.

  • Metabolic effect: Surgery changes hormones right away and for a long time, which helps regulate appetite and glucose metabolism. GLP-1 drugs have similar effects, but they need to be taken all the time and stop working when you stop taking them.
  • Risks and side effects: There are risks involved with surgery, but modern methods have made complications less likely. Medicines don’t have the same risks as surgery, but they can upset the stomach and, in rare cases, cause more serious problems.
  • Cost: The cost of surgery up front can be high, but insurance will often pay for it if certain medical conditions are met. You have to keep paying for GLP-1 drugs, which can add up to more than the cost of surgery over a number of years.
  • Lifestyle commitment: Both methods require changes to your lifestyle. Surgery patients need to change how they eat and keep taking their vitamins, while medication users get the most out of their medications when they are also following a diet and exercise program.

“For those who prefer to avoid surgery, want to lose weight beforehand, or can’t undergo surgery for medical reasons, GLP-1 medications can be an option. They may also suit people who are moderately overweight or want to try appetite suppression before considering surgery,” says Dr Gautam.

He adds that surgery remains the most effective option for people with severe obesity, especially when other health conditions are also present.

“Some patients may do better with a combination of treatments. For example, they could start with GLP-1 medication to lose weight and lower the risk of surgery, and then have surgery to keep the weight off for good. When pharmacologic therapy stops working as well, some people may switch from medication to surgery,” says Dr Gautam.

A word of caution

Before you choose between bariatric surgery and GLP-1 therapy, you need to have a full medical evaluation, talk about your goals, and be honest about how long you plan to stick with it. Both can be useful, but how well they work depends on each person’s health, ability to stick to lifestyle changes, and ability to follow up with care.

September 1, 2025 0 comments
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Boss at work micromanaging you too much? Know how this constant scrutiny affects your health and productivity | Health
Lifestyle

Boss at work micromanaging you too much? Know how this constant scrutiny affects your health and productivity | Health

by jummy84 August 31, 2025
written by jummy84

Managers are supposed to lead and supervise, but incessantly overanalysing and nitpicking every small move can turn even simple tasks into nerve-wracking moments. When management zooms in on every decision, it turns into classic micromanaging. This can make the employees feel like they are walking on eggshells at work, spiking anxiety even over very basic assignments when you have your boss hovering over you.

Micromanagement can plummet employee motivation and productivity.(Shutterstock)

ALSO READ: Tired of toxic offices? Quiet thriving is the new trend that’s transforming workplaces for the better

Micromanaging is common in the workplace, especially when a manager is a stickler for details or a perfectionist. On the manager’s side, they are ensuring that things are in order, from ensuring deadlines are met to maintaining quality standards in work.

But controlling every step, constantly checking in, may put immense stress on employees, as small missteps may be blown out of proportion, causing the employees to second-guess everything. So much stress is bound to affect health in the long run.

HT Lifestyle reached out to experts to understand how micromanaging affects employees adversely, deteriorating their health. Along with this, let’s also see if leaders can guide effectively without constantly hovering.

How does micromanaging hurt mental health?

When employees are subjected to constant nitpicking, they may think that managers don't trust them. This lack of autonomy shows up in work performance. (Shutterstock)
When employees are subjected to constant nitpicking, they may think that managers don’t trust them. This lack of autonomy shows up in work performance. (Shutterstock)

Micromanagement may work in the beginning with the manager ‘supervising’ every last detail, but this constant scrutiny embeds fear among employees. Priyanshi Nautiyal, consultant psychologist at 1to1help, told HT Lifestyle that the atmosphere itself of the workplace changes, becoming one of mistrust.

She said, “Micromanagement doesn’t improve performance, it paralyses it. The relentless criticism can erode the self-esteem of the subordinates, fueling symptoms of anxiety and depression. This fear-based work culture, often disguised as supervision, quickly turns into tyranny, which slows down the cognitive processes of the subordinates as they are constantly stricken with the fear of making the ‘wrong’ choice.”
In addition to this, micromanagement also stifles original thinking. As per the psychologist, it ‘subdues critical thinking,’ making employees feel that putting in effort is pointless since the manager will anyway override it. Then the job starts to feel meaningless. According to Priyanshi, the job becomes ‘robotic.’ Since mental health issues like burnout rise, it eventually also gives way to physical ailments.

How can managers effectively lead and not micromanage?

Right managers help employees be more productive, showing support.(Shutterstock)
Right managers help employees be more productive, showing support.(Shutterstock)

Micromanagement for leaders may feel like the best option to keep things running smoothly, but it can backfire. It decreases trust in the team, leaves no room for creativity and pushes employees towards burnout, getting demotivated.

Samira Gupta, senior executive presence and leadership communication coach, told us that so much micromanagement causes too much dependency as well. She said, “For leaders, the constant oversight steals time and energy from strategic priorities. Over time, it creates dependency, burnout, and attrition.” In other words, employees become too reliant on the manager, which also slows the workflow because of reduced independent thinking.

Here are some of the practical strategies she shared for leaders to reduce tendencies of micromanagement:

1. Lead by the lighthouse principle: Set the direction, clarify the end goal, and let your team chart the course. Clear objectives with measurable outcomes empower people to innovate while staying aligned.

2. Replace hovering with honest check-ins: Agree on milestone-based updates rather than constant interruptions. This creates space for deep work and ensures leaders step in only when needed.

3. Trust as a performance multiplier: Equip your team with the right tools, authority, and support, then step back. Trust accelerates ownership, decision-making, and problem-solving far more than constant supervision ever could.

Better designs for a calmer workplace

Workplace design influences the mood of the team. (Shutterstock)
Workplace design influences the mood of the team. (Shutterstock)

While micromanaging is a leadership style, from a broader perspective, this controlling behaviour can also come from a poorly designed workspace. Sounds surprising? Ill-designed environments make people feel out of sync and act out. And since they can’t fix it, they end up controlling what they can, which is often the people in the team.

Aryaman Vir, founder and CEO of Morpho Dimensions, told us that the right office design, especially the colours, affects mood. He cited research from 2018, where the colour schemes in the workplace influence mood significantly.

Aryaman said, “The right palette can create energy, inspire innovation, and foster focus. The wrong one can do quite the opposite, dulling creativity, draining motivation, or even increasing stress.”

Here are some of the further colour-related design tips he shared for the workplace:

  1. Blues and greens for calming effects: Cool colours, particularly blue and green, have been historically shown to encourage productivity and a state of calm. Blue environments can increase productivity, and generally, green can improve job satisfaction and cognitive clarity, which is beneficial in high-demand jobs.
  2. Vibrant colours for high energy: Vibrant tones like yellow can infuse a space with optimism and are especially effective in environments that thrive on ideas and brainstorming. Red, used with intention, can bring urgency and drive usefulness in high-intensity zones.
  3. Avoid stark white or grey: Stark white or uninspired grey spaces, though once seen as neutral, often leave occupants feeling disengaged and uninspired.

So in conclusion, micromanagement needs to be toned down at the workplace to build trust, foster autonomy, and improve mental health. Productivity comes from supporting people, not controlling them.

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.

August 31, 2025 0 comments
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Producer Alain Goldman on His Venice Film 'At Work' and Next Projects
TV & Streaming

Producer Alain Goldman on His Venice Film ‘At Work’ and Next Projects

by jummy84 August 29, 2025
written by jummy84

Alain Goldman, who produced “La Vie en Rose,” which earned Marion Cotillard an Oscar, and most recently produced ”An Offer and a Spy,” is having a milestone 2025.

After delivering Alain Chabat’s hit Netflix series “Asterix & Obelix: The Big Fight,” Goldman is at the Venice Film Festival with the world premiere of Valerie Donzelli‘s “At Work,” one of the three French movies in competition. He’s also about to kick off filming on two massive projects, Laszlo Nemes‘ (“Son of Saul”) period project “Moulin” and prestige TV series “The Lost Paradise” in Eastern Europe. He’s the doing the latter two with Patrick Wachsberger’s 193 Legendary.

“At Work,” an adaptation of Franck Courtès’s 2023 novel “A Pied d’oeuvre,” marks Goldman’s first collaboration with Donzelli, an acclaimed French filmmaker best known for the Cesar award-winning “Declaration of War” and “Just the Two of Us.” The film tells the true story of a successful photographer (Bastien Bouillon, recently seen in Cannes’ opening movie “Leave One Day”), who gives up everything to devote himself to writing, and ultimately faces financial hardships and poverty.

“I read this book and was recently struck with it because it says something profound about our vulnerability and the violence of capitalism,” said Goldman, adding that the book’s themes are even more palpable now “for artists and authors who are seeing the value of their work downgraded or threatened by technology.”

“Valerie Donzelli was equally moved by this novel and she gave the story an immense sincerity, but also some fantasy and unpredictability,” said Goldman. “The film could have been a depressing drama but that’s not the case; it’s uplifting, intellectual and cinematic because [Donzelli] directed it.”

The film, co-written by Donzelli and Gilles Marchand, received support from France’s National Film Board (CNC) and the Ile de France region, but Goldman said it’s “likely the smallest budget of the Venice competition.” While he’s best known for producing epic, big-sized movies and TV shows such as “La Vie en Rose,” “HHhH” with Jason Clarke, “An Officer and a Spy” with Jean Dujardin, Martin Scorsese’s “Casino” (as a co-producer), “Babylon AD” with Vin Diesel and “The Spy” with Sacha Baron Cohen, Goldman says he’s always been drawn to social themes due to his own upbringing as the son of Jewish immigrants from Poland. “Social justice has always been important to me,” he says.

Goldman pointed out he’s always had the ambition to work with auteurs who have a vision, but is also conscious of audiences. “I’ve never understood filmmakers who make movies only for themselves, like two-million-euros-therapies,” he quipped.

On working with Donzelli, he said he found her understanding of the book compelling and universal because “she didn’t want to focus too much on the pure economic hardship of the story since ‘Souleymane’s Journey’ [Boris Lojkine’s film that won four Cesar awards this year] has just done it, but rather zoom in on the experience of an artist who sacrifices everything for his craft,” Goldman said.

“At Work” is being represented internationally by Kinology, who is on the ground in Venice, alongside Goldman, Donzelli and the film’s cast.

Next up, Goldman’s companies Pitchipoï Productions and Montmartre Films, which are part of Banijay Group, will be filming Nemes’ “Moulin,” starting on Sept. 15. The movie will mark Nemes’ French-language debut and will star Gilles Lellouche as the French Resistance hero who is captured and tortured by Gestapo chief Klaus Barbie (Lars Eidinger).

Penned by Olivier Demangel (“November”), “Moulin” will be distributed in France by Studio TF1 and has been pre-bought by TF1, Disney+ and HBO. Wachsberger’s 193 Legendary is repping global sales. The project will be Nemes’ follow up to “Orphan” which competes at this year’s Venice.

Goldman says he had long wanted to work with Nemes whose Oscar-winning « Son of Saul » is « one of the films about the Holocaust that gets the closest to the hell that it was, » the producer says. 

“Moulin” is an “immense project that resonates strongly today because it will remind everyone what it means to resist,” Goldman argues. After having shed light on Alfred Dreyfus in “A Soldier and a Spy,” Moulin will also celebrate “one of greatest French heroes,” he says, describing the tone of the film as “very intense.” Rather than a biopic of Moulin, the film revolves around the relationship between Barbie and Moulin.

TF1 Studio came on board and brought a “massive support” to the film whose budget is €14 million, the producer points out.

Goldman is also about to start shooting “Lost Paradise,” an ambitious and highly personal eight-part thriller series written by Yehonatan Indursky (“Shtisel,” “Autonomies”). Directed by Alon Zingman (“Shtisel”), the saga, which will shoot in Yiddish, Hebrew and English, starts off in Lithuania in 1860, charting the lives of Ashkenazi Jews. It stars “Shtisel’s” Michael Aloni.

Darren Aronofsky serves as executive producer on the series while Goldman is producing with Wachsberger. The latter is also handling sales via 193 Legendary. “Lost Paradise” is backed by the Simon Wiesenthal Center, Alcon Media Group and the Gesher Film Fund. It has been commissioned by Canal+ in France.

“Lost Paradise” has been in development for five years, says Goldman, who is a co-author on the series which starts shooting in September in Bucarest in Romania. 

“It aims to tell the story of the Ashkenazi people from the mid-19th century to, I hope, the present day. The first season ends in 1880, just before a pogrom that led to the exodus of a large part of the community, but unfortunately not everyone,” Goldman says, adding that “If everyone had left, they would still be alive today, either in America or Israel.” His hope, he explains, is that the series will become the benchmark fictional work in the history of the Ashkenazi people, like “Fiddler on the Roof” has been for more than half a century. 

The title of the series, “Lost Paradise” is “a little ironic,” he says, “because life was so hard where they lived, but they didn’t lose their desire to remain Jewish in almost an esoteric sense.”

Goldman says the series will also hopefully allow audiences to “visualise what these communities were like and how they threatened no one, and that they became the target of all kinds of violence, as they are today, because suddenly, when the world is not doing very well, we become the answer to the world’s problems.”

Reflecting on the difficulties to finance the series, Goldman says the “very fact that this series exists is a miracle, because it goes so much against the current state of mind, which is quite hostile to Jews in general, and I am very, very happy to have succeeded, with everyone’s help, in making this project a reality.” 

Goldman is also about to see his film “The Incredible Shrinking Man” which he produced with Patrick Wachsberger get released in France by Universal Pictures on Oct. 29. The movie, starring Jean Dujardin, the Oscar-winning actor of “The Artist,” is a modern adaption of Richard Matheson’s science fiction novel.

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August 29, 2025 0 comments
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RAPPER IN TROUBLE!" - Drake's Store Vandalized By Woman Claiming He Stole Her Work! | Glamsham.com
Lifestyle

RAPPER IN TROUBLE!” – Drake’s Store Vandalized By Woman Claiming He Stole Her Work! | Glamsham.com

by jummy84 August 28, 2025
written by jummy84

Chaos broke out at Drake’s October’s Very Own (OVO) Manhattan flagship store in the NoHo area on Tuesday afternoon when a woman carrying a hammer smashed the upscale boutique. Police reported the attack happened at about 4:30 p.m., leaving approximately $24,000 in damage.

The suspect, 31-year-old Queens resident Shauna Stoner, was allegedly seen bursting into the store wearing a denim jacket, leather pants, and toting a Telfar bag. Witnesses claimed she tore garments from racks, painted merchandise with paint, and yanked items from hangers before taking the destruction up a notch by shattering windows using a hammer. She allegedly brandished a knife at one point but did not try to steal anything.

Arrest on Great Jones Street
The woman left the store and proceeded north on the Bowery. Staff, exercising restraint, warned authorities. Police caught up with her in minutes on Great Jones Street, where she had shed her jacket and was down to her underwear, according to reports.
Photographers who were present observed her yelling that Drake had “stolen her designs” and that she planned on “cutting up his clothes.” She has since been arrested for criminal mischief and arson. Employees confirmed they had no previous relationship with her.
OVO: A Streetwear Powerhouse

Launched by Drake in 2011, OVO is a global streetwear label with stores in Canada, the U.S., and the U.K., for which it sells high-end merchandise like $150 hoodies and $60 T-shirts. A spokesperson for the rapper would not comment on the incident.

Drake in the Limelight for New Documentary
At the same time, Drake is making headlines for reasons other than his music: upcoming documentary Degrassi: Whatever It Takes, from director Lisa Rideout. It debuts at TIFF on September 13 and looks back at his early success playing Jimmy Brooks in Degrassi. In the trailer, Drake says: “I didn’t have a good time in high school… then I got the part. And man, what a crazy ride that began.”

August 28, 2025 0 comments
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Say WHAT?! Florida Woman Charged After Fatal Hit & Run, Kept Driving So She Wouldn’t Be Late To Work
Celebrity News

Driver Charged After Leaving Crash To Make It To Work

by jummy84 August 27, 2025
written by jummy84

A fatal hit-and-run in Florida has people doing double takes—not just because of what happened, but why it allegedly happened. Now, a young woman is facing major charges after a deadly crash. But it’s what she reportedly told investigators that has folks completely baffled. The suspect? Twenty-four-year-old Aliya Cruz, who deputies say hit a pedestrian… and then allegedly kept it pushing to get to work on time.

RELATED: Prayers Up! Married Ohio Teachers Tragically Killed In Crash While Dropping Son Off At College (VIDEO)

What Prompted The Investigation?

The tragic incident happened just before 4 a.m. on August 18 in Lakeland, Florida. Deputies with the Polk County Sheriff’s Office responded to a 911 call reporting a woman lying in the middle of West Highland Street. When first responders arrived, they found 27-year-old Danielle Stilwell dead at the scene. And, found pieces of a damaged car scattered around her body. However, the driver was nowhere to be found.

And that’s when the investigation picked up speed. Detectives launched a full-scale effort to piece together what happened, starting with a broken fender liner found at the scene. It had a part number that allowed them to narrow down the make and model of the vehicle involved. From there, surveillance footage from a nearby Sunoco gas station showed a car matching that description making a U-turn just blocks from where the victim was found. According to authorities, the driver never stopped to assist. When deputies eventually located the vehicle, it was missing the exact parts left behind at the crash site. This led them directly to Aliya Cruz.

Aliya’s Side Of The Story

When confronted, Cruz allegedly admitted to hitting something in the road but said she wasn’t sure if it was a person. She claimed she was blinded by another vehicle’s high beams and didn’t see Stilwell lying in the road. Additionally, Aliya said she swerved into the grass to avoid hitting anyone, but wasn’t confident she cleared her. Instead of stopping to check, Cruz told police she kept driving because she “didn’t want to be late to work.”

But that’s not where the story ends. Investigators later confirmed Cruz clocked in on time for her 4 a.m. shift at a local warehouse. According to one of her supervisors, Cruz even admitted to him that she “might have killed someone,” and reportedly showed him damage to her car. Despite being urged to report the incident to authorities, she hesitated, allegedly responding, “I don’t really want to say anything” and “I know I swerved.”

What’s Next For Aliya Cruz?

Cruz was arrested days later and hit with a first-degree felony charge for leaving the scene of a crash involving death. She bonded out for $50,000 on August 24 and is now waiting for her day in court. The community has been weighing in heavy—and let’s just say, the streets are not feeling her apparent excuse.

RELATED: Male Suspect Stops For Gas Amid High-Speed Police Chase In Los Angeles (VIDEO)

What Do You Think Roomies?

August 27, 2025 0 comments
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54 Best Work Bags for Women That Are Stylish and Functional
Fashion

54 Best Work Bags for Women That Are Stylish and Functional

by jummy84 August 27, 2025
written by jummy84

All products featured on Vogue are independently selected by our editors. However, we may earn affiliate revenue on this article and commission when you buy something.

The best work bags for women should always meet two criteria: function and style. When searching for your own, ask yourself, is it durable? Will it be sizable enough to fit all of your essentials—laptop, notebooks, planners, wallet, keys, and beauty staples? Is it lightweight and comfortable enough to wear over your shoulders (and coat!), especially during a daily commute? We’ve all learned the hard way—purchasing work bags that are too heavy to start with, and after filling them up, are almost too cumbersome to lug around, is not a smart investment.

However, we’ve done the heavy lifting to bring you the ones that check all these boxes and more. Whether it be a classic, leather tote that is minimalist chic or a lightweight, canvas option to keep you moving all day without shoulder pain, all of these work bags are versatile enough to go from high-powered meetings in the morning to drinks at night. You’ll find timeless, investment buys, such as Bottega Veneta’s Ciao Ciao bag, designed with a boxy silhouette and signature hardware, or The Row’s India top-handle bag, which is an editor-favorite made from the softest, Italian leather. However, don’t sleep on the affordable options either, like L.L.Bean’s iconic Boat & Tote or Cos’s linen tote bag, which you won’t feel too precious about placing on the subway floor during an overpacked morning commute.

Whatever one you choose, we recommend paying close attention to the materials and little extras, such as pockets, zips, and other functional add-ons, that will truly make life a little easier. After all, these are meant to handle any job. Below, shop the best work bags for women that will carry all of your essentials, no matter where you’re headed.

The Suede Carryall

It’s almost the most wonderful time of the year, when the weather is crisp and our favorite textures begin to make their reappearance. One of those coveted textures is soft, sumptuous suede. Get ahead of the season and use a suede bag, from Coach to Toteme, for your 9-to-5 bag.

DeMellier

New York midi suede tote bag

Tom Ford

leather-trimmed suede tote

The Ladylike Must

Think of this as a hybrid between your favorite, functional, carryall tote and a stylish bowling bag. They are roomy enough to pack everything you might need for a day at the office, laptop included, yet have a fashion-forward look with a structured shape and long, top-handles.

The Row

India 15.75 leather shoulder bag

Jacquemus

La Croisière the Turismo bag

The Bucket Tote

We have all heard of the bucket bag, but consider the bucket tote as your go-to for work. Long straps hang perfectly on the shoulder, so comfort is at the foreground, while the slimmer shape is more mainstream than an oversized bag, yet still big enough to fit your laptop and other essentials while on-the-go.

The Structured Tote

If soft styles are too finicky for you, lean into the power of a structured, oversized bag. These make packing a cinch, offering pockets and zips aplenty, and can double as great personal items on a flight for a work trip. Top-handles reign supreme in this category, but many offer crossbody straps, in addition, for extra ways to wear.

Métier

Incognito Cabas large leather tote

Tod’s

medium leather tote shopping bag

The Laptop Go-To

For a simple, everyday option you don’t have to be too precious about schlepping to work, look to softer, unstructured leather options from Everlane and Quince. These are both under-$300 styles and can fit your laptop and more with incredible ease. If your budget has some wiggle room, Mansur Gavriel and DeMellier have stylish takes that ring in under the $1,000 price tag.

Quince

triple compartment shopper tote bag

The Fashion Tote

If you prefer a one-and-done type work bag, consider investing in a timeless style that you will reach for time and again. Bottega Veneta’s Ciao Ciao bag, Loewe’s Puzzle Fold Tote, and Gucci’s Emblem tote, among others, all fit the bill in this category, made from the finest materials and with special details, ensuring they are all worth the splurge.

Métier

Incognito small leather tote

Savette

Tondo large textured-leather tote

The Polished Daybag

If you’re looking for a structured bag that isn’t as big as a tote, consider a more polished shape, such as these top-handle handbags. The Row’s Sofia offers a fold-over design, complete with chic two-tone hardware, while Khaite’s Audrey bag will ace the boardroom-chic look (inspired by Audrey Hepburn, no doubt!).

The Row

Sofia 11.75 leather tote bag

DeMellier

The Hudson small textured-leather tote

The City Backpack

For those who prefer to stay hands-free during your office commute, may we introduce you to a few stylish backpacks, tailor-made for a chic city slicker. Prada’s nylon spin is at the top of our list, while Cuyana’s version was designed to fit a 16-inch laptop and more. Other leather favorites include a sporty take from Quince’s and Mansur Gavriel’s convertible style.

Quince

italian leather convertible backpack

The Traditional Canvas

Searching for a lightweight but durable work bag? Consider a canvas tote. It’s a timeless staple for a reason. L.L.Bean is a durable, budget-friendly pick that is also customizable, while Rue de Verneuil and Aesther Ekme make elevated shapes that blend classic with contemporary. Or, go for something truly luxe from Khaite and Loro Piana, which both make splurge-worthy investments, meant to be cherished for years to come.

St. Agni

Bateau cotton-canvas tote

Loro Piana

Loom 32 canvas top-handle bag

August 27, 2025 0 comments
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Stylish Work Bags That Actually Fit Your Laptop
Celebrity News

Stylish Work Bags That Actually Fit Your Laptop

by jummy84 August 26, 2025
written by jummy84

Stop dragging that backpack into the office. It’s 2025, time to upgrade to a chic work bag!

If your office floor is basically your runway, why not flaunt a bag that’s both functional and fashionable? We’ve rounded up must-have work and laptop bags that’ll fit your 15.6” laptop, your giant wallet, keys, status water bottle, and even a few lip balms.

Think Italian leather, perfectly on-trend fall suede, chic fabrics, and a dupe of a CALPAK bag that won’t break the bank.

Been thinking about treating yourself to a new work bag? Now’s the time! Thanks to Labor Day sales, you can snag these stylish bags for a steal.

Be honest, your current bag is probably a chaotic mix of receipts and random papers. Start fresh with a bag that makes you feel like you’ve got it all together. Shop our favorite work bags below!

August 26, 2025 0 comments
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Shy about short skirts? Try these 8 stylish ways to make them work for you with ease | Fashion Trends
Lifestyle

Shy about short skirts? Try these 8 stylish ways to make them work for you with ease | Fashion Trends

by jummy84 August 26, 2025
written by jummy84

Short skirts have a reputation: bold, flirty, attention-grabbing. And if you’re the kind of person who feels a little shy at the thought of baring too much, they might sit at the back of your wardrobe, waiting for “someday.” But here’s the secret, short skirts don’t have to mean over-the-top or uncomfortable. Styled smartly, they can be just as modest, versatile and chic as your favourite midi.

Shy about short skirts? 8 Ways to make them work for you(Pexels)

There’s always a way to make a short skirt your own. All you need are the right tricks up your sleeve (or hemline!). Here’s how to turn that style hesitation into a confident strut.

1. Tights are your new best friend

Tights instantly make short skirts feel less revealing. Classic sheer black tights are timeless and slimming, patterned tights add personality, and opaque coloured tights can turn your outfit into a street-style moment. In colder months, fleece-lined tights or leggings give warmth and modesty, so you’ll never feel like you’re tugging at your hemline.

2. Balance with oversized layers

The trick to feeling comfortable in a short skirt is balance. Pairing your mini with an oversized sweater, a chunky knit, or a boyfriend blazer shifts the attention away from the hemline and makes your outfit look intentional. The “big on top, short on bottom” styling formula also keeps the look chic instead of overly revealing.

3. Pick the right cut

Not all short skirts are created equal. Bodycon minis might feel too bold, but A-line, pleated, or skater skirts offer movement and a more relaxed vibe. They don’t cling, they flatter most body types, and they look effortlessly stylish. If you’re experimenting for the first time, start with structured silhouettes instead of stretchy ones.

4. Co-ords for built-in confidence

A matching co-ord set takes away the stress of “what do I wear with this skirt?” Pair your short skirt with its matching blazer, crop jacket or tailored top for an instantly polished outfit. This trick works especially well for occasions where you want to wear a short skirt but still look refined.

5. Boots that do the talking

The quickest way to make a short skirt feel less intimidating? Boots. Ankle boots give you casual chic vibes, knee-high boots create balance, and thigh-high boots cover enough leg to make even the tiniest mini feel wearable. Boots also add edge, making your outfit look styled instead of “just short.”

6. Sheer layers for subtle coverage

A clever hack is layering your short skirt under sheer tunics, lace overlays, or even a long, open button-down. This creates the illusion of coverage while still letting the skirt peek through. It’s the perfect middle ground for when you want to try a short skirt but aren’t ready to go all out.

7. Fabric choice makes a difference

If you’re nervous, avoid super-thin or clingy fabrics. Structured materials like tweed, corduroy, and denim stay in place, making you feel more secure. Stiffer fabrics also give your outfit polish, while flowy fabrics might make you fuss over every gust of wind.

8. Accessorise smartly

When in doubt, draw attention upward. Bold earrings, layered necklaces, or a statement handbag balance the look and make the skirt just one part of your outfit instead of the focal point. Belts are another great hack, cinching at the waist creates a structured silhouette that makes minis feel less “out there.”

Short skirts don’t have to feel like a bold fashion risk. With layering tricks, smarter silhouettes, and the right accessories, you can style them in ways that match your comfort level. So go ahead, pull out that skirt you’ve been too shy to wear. With these styling tips, it’s about to become your new wardrobe favourite.

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Disclaimer: At Hindustan Times, we help you stay up-to-date with the latest trends and products. Hindustan Times has an affiliate partnership, so we may get a part of the revenue when you make a purchase. We shall not be liable for any claim under applicable laws, including but not limited to the Consumer Protection Act, 2019, concerning the products. The products listed in this article are in no particular order of priority.

August 26, 2025 0 comments
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Tim Meadows, Harriet Dyer, and Tony Cavalero in
TV & Streaming

Harriet Dyer’s Colette Has Quite a Day at Work in First Look at CBS Comedy

by jummy84 August 26, 2025
written by jummy84

Get ready to dive into an all-new workplace comedy with CBS‘s DMV as the network offers a first look at the fun ahead in several first-look photos from the pilot.

Set to arrive Monday, October 13, the new series follows the employees of the East Hollywood Department of Motor Vehicles, which includes driving examiners Colette (Harriet Dyer), Gregg (Tim Meadows), Vic (Tony Cavalero), clerk Noa (Alex Tarrant), newly-promoted manager Barbara (Molly Kearney), and disillusioned Ceci (Gigi Zumbado).

In the premiere episode, viewers will learn more about this ragtag team as Colette pines after Noa, while enduring teasing from Gregg, Vic, and Ceci. Meanwhile, Barb faces the challenge of saving their branch from a potential government shutdown in the half-hour installment that also features Gerry Dee as Dan and Reshma Shetty as Kshitija.

DMV joins CBS’s already great lineup of comedies among which includes Ghosts, Georgie & Mandy’s First Marriage, and The Neighborhood. You won’t want to miss this single-camera comedy, which is sure to deliver big laughs if the images below are any indication.

Scroll down for a closer look and stay tuned for more on DMV as the series approaches its debut on CBS.

DMV, Series Premiere, Monday, October 13, 8:30/7:30c, CBS

August 26, 2025 0 comments
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When Yash Chopra Was Heartbroken After His Film Starring Sridevi Failed
Bollywood

I Couldn’t Work For Months

by jummy84 August 25, 2025
written by jummy84

When Yash Chopra Was Heartbroken After His Film Starring Sridevi Failed (Photo Credit – Instagram)

Sridevi was an icon and legendary actress who had the potential to take away the limelight from the lead heroes in the movies. She has worked with many renowned filmmakers in the Indian film industry, including the legendary Yash Chopra. He worked with her on films like Lamhe and Chandni. However, the late filmmaker was completely broken after a movie did not work out at the box office. Keep scrolling for the deets.

Chopra and the late actress collaborated for the first time for Chandni. It was released in 1989 and featured Sridevi in the titular role alongside Rishi Kapoor and Vinod Khanna. Besides them, the movie also featured Waheeda Rahman, Anupam Kher, Sushma Seth, Mita Vashisht, and Manohar Singh in supporting roles. Not just the film but its soundtrack was also a massive success. It won the Best Popular Film Providing Wholesome Entertainment at the 37th National Film Awards. In addition to that, it won several accolades and honors. It reportedly marked the actress’ position as the top female star of the era.

Lamhe’s Unexpected Failure and Yash Chopra’s Struggle

Chandni is hailed as one of Yash Chopra’s best films, and following its success, he collaborated with Sridevi for Lamhe. However, it underperformed at the box office. According to News18‘s report, in an interview with Hindustan Times in 2007, Chopra revealed being devastated after Lamhe’s box office failure. He cited the example of another one of his movies, Dharmaputra, which failed financially, but it did not impact him as much as Lamhe’s failure.

He was so broken that he could not work for months. Yash Chopra said, “I was terribly disheartened (by the failure of Dharmputra) but then I was as disheartened by the failure of Lamhe also, which was romantic. I couldn’t work for months.”

Yash Chopra also said, “Perhaps my failures were ahead of their times. Otherwise, how can you explain the fact that the highest sales of my DVDs have been of Dharmputra, Silsila, and Lamhe?”

More about Lamhe-

Sridevi and Anil Kapoor starrer Lamhe was released in 1991, featuring Waheeda Rahman and Anupam Kher in the supporting cast. The film was critically acclaimed, especially Sridevi, who was highly praised for her dual role as mother and daughter. It won several accolades and honors, including being on Outlook’s list of Bollywood’s Best Films. It is one of Yash Chopra’s personal favorites.

For more such stories, check out Bollywood Features

Must Read: When Aishwarya Rai Bachchan Had Rubbished The Rumors Of Her Secret Wedding & Honeymoon With Ex-Beau Salman Khan!

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August 25, 2025 0 comments
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