
Elon Musk made every celebrity more relatable by cancelling their blue ticks
A tick-free feed could be the favour that the in-crisis A-lister needed.
A tick-free feed could be the favour that the in-crisis A-lister needed.
You’re a big time pop star, a bonafide Marvel superhero, one of the highest paid models in the world. Still feeling the pinch? Time to diversify your portfolio.
From Harry Styles in Don't Worry Darling to Kim Kardashian's upcoming turn in American Horror Story, it's now nearly impossible to watch a TV show or film that doesn't have a random celeb in it for no reason. Wait, is that Billie Eilish playing a cult leader in Swarm?
From Marlon Brando and Leonardo DiCaprio to Timothée Chalamet and Pedro Pascal, the objects of our collective infatuation can often reflect our shifting culture and sexuality right back at us.
Malia and Sasha are mysterious, effortlessly stylish and can pull off a chain-smoking pap shot that makes you want to chuck the vapes. Mary-Kate and Ashley, we’ve found your successors.
Three days ago, the Dalai Lama released a social media statement apologising for his inappropriate behaviour with a young boy. But how did the Notes App go from a celeb get-out-of-jail-free card to a legitimate crisis control tool?