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Amazon is selling a $100 Craftsman vac for a record-low $59 (and 9 more deals)

Amazon is selling a $100 Craftsman vac for a record-low $59 (and 9 more deals)

Yahoo10-06-2025
I don't know about you, but I have a love-hate relationship with this time of year. On the one hand, I appreciate the sun staying out past 8 p.m., but on the other, I'd be thrilled if I never heard the word "humidity" ever again. And while it's nice that it's warm enough for swimming, the thought of dealing with sand at the beach (and dragging it into my house) makes me a pool person through and through. Of course, there will be humidity, sand and other summer woes this season, and rather than complaining about them, I'm vowing to handle them with as much grace as I can muster. Luckily, some of the best deals I've spotted today will help me out.A hack for combating humidity? Having a cold beverage on hand at all times, and this stylish Stanley cup — a rare 40% off — will keep my drinks chilled for hours. As for sand? Storing a powerful handvac in the car means those specks will be zapped up in a flash, and my beloved Craftsman is a record-low $59 (down from $100). Oh, and speaking of the beach, if I must go, I might as well schlep my shore essentials in this bestselling tote, also an all-time low at $23 off.
Here's to a summer of making lemonade out of lemons. Oh, and now I know what I'll be filling that aforementioned Stanley with...
Adidas: Get up to 40% off sale shoes and apparel.
Anthropologie: Save up to 50% on sale items.
Brooklinen: Score bedding, bath linens and more for up to 75% off.
Coach Outlet: Save up to 70% on sale styles.
Cozy Earth: Get up to 30% off Oprah-approved bedding and pajamas.
Everlane: Snag up to 70% off sale styles.
J.Crew: Save an extra 50% on select sale items with code SHOPSALE.
Kate Spade Outlet: Get up to 70% off everything, plus an extra 20% off select styles.
Loft: Take up to 55% off everything during the Summer Bash.
Nordstrom: Shop new markdowns and get up to 50% off.
Nordstrom Rack: Save up to 65% on summer styles.
Old Navy: Score up to 50% off almost everything.
REI: Get up to 70% off new markdowns on camping supplies, running gear and past-season deals.
Spanx: Score up to 50% off sale items.
Sur La Table: Save up to 50% on brands like Staub, Le Creuset and more during the Warehouse Sale.
Target: Get up to 50% off patio furniture, footwear and bedding.
Walmart: Shop rollbacks and flash deals of up to 80% off.
Wayfair: Stock up on furniture, linens and more for up to 50% off during the Epic Summer Sale.
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Bezos Wedding's Hollywood Dust-Up: Rosie O'Donnell Dings Oprah, Charlize Theron Says Guests ‘Suck' and More
Bezos Wedding's Hollywood Dust-Up: Rosie O'Donnell Dings Oprah, Charlize Theron Says Guests ‘Suck' and More

Yahoo

time2 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Bezos Wedding's Hollywood Dust-Up: Rosie O'Donnell Dings Oprah, Charlize Theron Says Guests ‘Suck' and More

Jeff Bezos and Lauren Sánchez's wedding sure brought out the celebrities, both in attendance – and those criticizing the event. Celebrities like Leonardo DiCaprio, Oprah Winfrey, Tom Brady, Sydney Sweeney and more attended the Venice-based wedding this past weekend. Their choice to show up to the lavish affair was ridiculed by other A-listers online. Many of them did not hold back how they felt. 'I think we might be the only people who did not get an invite to the Bezos wedding, but that's okay because they suck and we're cool,' Charlize Theron said at the fifth annual block party for her charity – Charlize Theron Africa Outreach Project – in L.A. She continued: 'Here in Los Angeles, in the U.S. and across the globe, we're moving backwards fast. Immigration policy has destroyed the lives of families, not criminals; women's rights are becoming less and less every day; queer and trans lives are increasingly being erased; and gender-based violence is on the rise. This isn't just policy, it's personal.' She ended her speech succinctly with a 'yeah, f–k them.' Rosie O'Donnell also took to her Instagram to eviscerate not only the wedding but Oprah specifically for attending. 'The Bezos' wedding. It turned my stomach seeing all these billionaires gathering in the gross excess of it all. The show of it,' O'Donnell wrote. 'Is Oprah friends with Jeff Bezos? Really? How is that possible? He treats his employees with disdain. By any metric he is not a nice man. And his fake fem bot wife who looks like that. Why would he choose her after the salt of the earth Mackenzie [Scott]? Sold his soul is what it looks like from here. The devil is smiling at all his conquests.' Katie Couric went after Sánchez's dress. The former CBS Evening News anchor left a comment critiquing the gown on a now-deleted Jack Schlossberg post, according to TMZ. 'Welcome to the eighties — when big hair and conspicuous consumption ruled,' she wrote. 'Apparently, tacky is back.' Mia Farrow indirectly shaded the whole affair by hyping up Bezos' ex-wife Scott. It was a bit kinder way to go after the wedding than others took. 'How awesome is MacKenzie Scott! (Jeff Bezos's first wife & mother of his 4 children). As of mid-December 2024, she had given a total of $19.3 billion to over 1600 charitable organizations.' The celebrities weren't the only people calling out the reportedly $50 million wedding. The pair reportedly planned to get married in Cannaregio, in the center of the city. But mounting calls against their nuptials threatened to disrupt the wedding, which was moved elsewhere. The group said the wedding was moved to Arsenale, to the east of the original location. The post Bezos Wedding's Hollywood Dust-Up: Rosie O'Donnell Dings Oprah, Charlize Theron Says Guests 'Suck' and More appeared first on TheWrap.

Cult of Chavarria
Cult of Chavarria

Hypebeast

time4 hours ago

  • Hypebeast

Cult of Chavarria

This article originally appeared in Hypebeast Magazine Issue 35: The Wavelength Issue. Willy Chavarria is the reigning sovereign of American men's dressing—he's taken home the CFDA's Menswear Designer of the Year trophy for two consecutive years—but as he sits down for our conversation, he's fresh off the plane from his Paris Fashion Week debut. 'From a business standpoint, Paris is night and day with American fashion,' the 58-year-old Mexican-American designer says bluntly of his transatlantic venture. 'And I want the business to be huge.' No one should be surprised that Chavarria, the provocative style purveyor behind a macho suiting revolution and a politically-charged push for LGBTQ+, Latinx, and immigrant representation in fashion (and a fountain of more starry flexes, like Colman Domingo's flowering Met Gala look and the official collection for Kendrick Lamar's Super Bowl LIX halftime show), has his sights set on global domination. The designer's FW25 Paris show, dubbed 'Tarantula,' celebrated his brand's 10th birthday, and before an audience that included Becky G, NLE Choppa, and Gabbriette, it was the pinnacle of a decade's worth of breakthroughs for the label. Inside Paris' American Cathedral, the spectacle was spiked with Chavarria fixtures: his toying with queerness and masculinity (flamboyant velvet blazers), his fashioning the Chicano experience (Sunday Mass suits with pearl rosary beads), his subversive sportswear (a raunchy adidas collaboration), his flirtations with fame (J Balvin's mid-runway performance), and his romantic eye (rosy broaches). The result was just as tantalizing as its eight-legged title. Chavarria takes his business seriously, but it's abundantly clear that he'll never swap a check for his integrity. 'I'm so honored that I'm able to touch people through my work and that people can enjoy my brand, people can write about my brand, people can feel things through my brand,' he says. 'It's the most beautiful thing I could ever imagine.' One day at a time, Chavarria is expanding his empire in the name of authenticity. Hypebeast: What does a day in the life of Willy Chavarria look like right now? Willy Chavarria: It starts early, it ends late, and it's always a new adventure. I've got a really strong team, and everyone's very dedicated to the work, to outdoing the quality of our last collection, and leveling up every season. It's exciting. From an outsider's perspective, it's clear that your team is especially connected. Being backstage at a Willy Chavarria show is like watching a family welcome a new baby. What does it take for everything to work for you? There are a lot of different factors. One of them is a belief that hard work is valuable and that it pays off. Another is loyalty: loyalty to one another and loyalty to the brand philosophy. We've had people start as interns and then join us full-time for years, or we've had friends work with us on a project basis, and we've seen that blossom into so much more. As we grow, we can bring more people into the fold. Do you have any rituals that keep you and your team focused? Well, we burn a lot of white sage, and we burn a lot of Palo Santo. That's very much a tradition, and it happens daily. It's about cleansing the air and creating good energy in the studio space. It's very important that we manage the climate to make sure it doesn't turn into chaos. There's a level of consideration that all of the employees have. I can only imagine the office fumes on the day you received the call from the Fédération de la Haute Couture et de la Mode [the governing body for the French fashion industry]. How did Paris Fashion Week enter the picture? Well, it's a longer process than one might think because you don't just suddenly go to Paris. It's more that Paris has to become familiar with you, and Paris has to want you. We started visiting Paris a year before the show so we could acclimate to the fashion scene there, make appointments with stylists, and get to know the groundwork of Paris — all so we could be invited to show there. We submitted our application with the Fédération, which is tedious and methodical. You have to show your business numbers and your business growth plan. So when we got the call, not only were we elated that we got invited to Paris, but also that we got the most amazing time slot: 6pm on a Friday. How much notice did they give you? That was about two months before the show. So, after your second consecutive CFDA Menswear Designer of the Year win? Yes. How did that second win feel? It was such a great honor and so encouraging on so many different levels. The fact that I won during the election process really spoke volumes about how we view American fashion. It's the fashion leaders who vote for the CFDA Awards, so it meant that the industry's biggest players saw my portfolio as the strongest, most relevant work in American fashion at the time. It's no secret that all of my work is about promoting human dignity and social justice. It resonated in a way that is quite emotional for me and everybody who sees themselves in my brand. What is it about your brand that makes people feel so deeply? There's an authenticity to my brand that is not always easy for larger brands to capture because being truly authentic often means taking many high risks. As a small brand, I can still take those risks, and I haven't really suffered repercussions from them. There are larger brands that can't take a stance on politics because they're afraid to lose customers, but I've only gained customers by sharing my views. It's wild to hear you call yourself a small brand when you've won American fashion's most-coveted trophy two times over, shown in Paris during one of the most sought-after time slots, and consistently attracted global stars to your front row each season. What do you consider to be a 'large brand,' and is that something that you want your namesake label to become? It is. It's funny. With fashion, so much of it is perception. There's the way the brand impacts people, and then there's the business side. The two develop together, but the business still has so much room to grow. I want it to be another Tommy Hilfiger or another Gucci. I see it as a house that can grow even long after I'm gone. So while the message is very strong and the business is good, I think about it five years from now and how much larger I want it to be. And if we have another conversation five years from now, I'll still talk about it getting bigger. I would assume your ongoing adidas collaboration is helping amp up business. How did you approach working with such a mammoth sportswear label? adidas has always played a role in my life. Whether I saw the kids in my community styling their oversized football jerseys with baggy jeans, or club kids wearing tracksuits for techno parties in my rave culture days, I was always aware of adidas' intense cultural influence. But I hadn't seen adidas really capture the American essence in a while, other than the huge Run-D.M.C. moment in the '80s. I really wanted to tap into that and show this American way of wearing the brand. The collaboration is very much about empowering the people who are wearing these clothes as we go into this next phase of the reality that we're living in. We have to be strong. Masters of our own identities. There is a toughness to your design ethos, and there's also an endearing tenderness. Watching Valentina Ferrer walk your runway while her partner, J. Balvin, stole the show with an intimate solo performance was quite a loving spectacle. What role does romance play in the Willy Chavarria universe? Love is at the core of everything the brand stands for. Being Mexican-American, I have this romantic passion where, honestly, everything is romanticized for me. I love love. And the cast in Paris for FW25 was one of my favorites ever. Like, Indya Moore… She doesn't do stuff right now. So when she reached out and said that she wanted to walk my show, I just melted. I wanted to have a strong trans presence, but I didn't want to make a big deal out of it. I just wanted representation for all types of identities and sexualities. What do you look for in a Willy Chavarria model? It's somebody who knows how to endure struggle and then comes out on top and lives to be stronger and more resilient. That usually comes through in their attitude. In that, there's a really positive lesson for others to learn from. Will we ever see you back on New York's runway? I'm definitely not saying goodbye to New York. New York is my home. My brand is a New York brand. New York has given me so much love. I will show in New York again for sure. Now that you're back in town, can you tell me a little bit about what you're working on next? I'm working on the next season. Well, actually, I have to start working on that. Thanks for reminding me. How do you start building your mood board for a new season? It always starts with a conversation about what we're feeling. I'll sit with my team, and we'll talk about the world, the state of affairs, how we feel right now as people, and what we need to say. How do we want to touch people? I'm giving the team a little bit of time before we discuss Spring 2026. How do you hope your brand evolves? I want the brand to evolve with the times. I know that sounds cliché, but I want the brand to evolve with the way that, culturally, we evolve as a people. What will never change about Willy Chavarria? I want my label to continue to address the changing needs of society, and I will always want to connect with people on a personal and emotional level.

Jordan Brand Banks on the Air Jordan 3 "Pure Money" in This Week's Best Footwear Drops
Jordan Brand Banks on the Air Jordan 3 "Pure Money" in This Week's Best Footwear Drops

Hypebeast

time4 hours ago

  • Hypebeast

Jordan Brand Banks on the Air Jordan 3 "Pure Money" in This Week's Best Footwear Drops

Paris Fashion Week concluded this past weekend after offering an endless stream of news for fashion enthusiasts, as well as ample footwear headlines too. While we continue to recap all of the major moments, another set of 10 sneaker drops has been prepared byNike,PUMA,Salomon,Jordan Brand,ASICS,adidas, andDr. Martens. Per usual, let's start with what news caught our eye this past week before breaking down everything to come. We put together a round-up ofwhat kicks Paris Fashion Week attendees wore, from unreleased collabs to exciting new models. As for the traditional news, Nike made noise by officially revealing both itsLEGO-themedDunk Low and theSB Nyjah 4. It also had another chapter of itsPattacollaboration involving the Air Max 90 'The New Wave' presented. As for Jordan Brand, it introduced theAir Jordan 40while an in-hand look at the wear-away layers of the Air Jordan 1 High OG'Self-Expression'surfaced. New Balance shook things up with another hybrid sneaker, the1890, which is part-Wallabee, part-running shoe. It also saw anotherAURALEEcollaboration previewed, featuring the much anticipated 204L model. The silhouette also appeared inthree Kith colorwayscourtesy of Ronnie Fieg. Meanwhile,Kith Womendropped its take on the new PUMA H-Street. adidas rounded out the week with new collaboration previews from three of its key partners:Song for the Mute,Bad Bunny, andWales Bonner. Now that you're caught up with the latest headlines from the sneaker industry, let's take a look at this week's 10 most important drops, starting with another Kobe Bryant-themed take on the Nike Air Force 1 Low. Once you make your way through the list,don't forget to head over to HBX to shop styles that are available now. Release Date:July 1Release Price:$120 USDWhere to Buy:NikeWhy You Should Cop:Get ready for another Kobe Bryant-themed Air Force 1 Low launch from Nike as the 'Triple White' colorway makes its debut. A snakeskin-inspired texture stretches across the familiar composition while the two silver dubraes read 'Mamba' and 'Forever.' The heel also nods to the late superstar, offering '8' and '24' callouts at the heel tabs and hosting the Sheath logo at the lateral heel. Release Date:July 1Release Price:$120 USDWhere to Buy:PUMAWhy You Should Cop:The Mostro sneaker and its variants have been a dominant force in the footwear space for PUMA since returning last year. Now, the German sportswear brand is looking to expand its prominence by introducing the Mostro Jelly. The women's style is semi-translucent throughout its synthetic and rubber build, making it a go-to for warm summer days. It debuts this week in monochromatic finishes of 'Peaceful Blue' and 'Lemon Sherbert.' Release Date:July 2Release Price:$160 USDWhere to Buy:HBXandSalomonWhy You Should Cop:South Korean label J EONGL I has teamed up with Salomon to rework the XA PRO 3D into two new colorways. The model's typical zig-zag overlay has been removed, resulting in a sleeker look that now sees debossed detailing at the upper. Drawing inspiration from cliffs and fossils, its 'Sierra' and 'Asphalt' compositions present monochromatic finishes of orange and black while technical detailing like the Quicklace system and 3D Advanced Chassis ensure each pair is exploration-ready. Release Date:July 2Release Price:$145 USDWhere to Buy:SNKRSWhy You Should Cop:Nike has kept a constant stream of archival models returning to shelves in recent years, especially ACG silhouettes from the '90s and '00s. Adding to the list this week is the ACG Phassad, which initially arrived as a trail runner in 2003. A tent flap-inspired shroud reaches across the sneaker, concealing the lacing system. The lead looks of 'Cave Stone' and 'Yellow Zest' recreate retro color schemes of blue and brown and yellow and gray respectively. Release Date:July 3Release Price:$205 USDWhere to Buy:SNKRSWhy You Should Cop:18 years later, the Air Jordan 3 'Pure Money' is as clean as ever. It's finally returning to shelves this week with a white leather build that is accented by 'Metallic Silver' detailing and off-white elephant print at the nubuck mudguards. Jumpman branding adorns the heel, which also features a 'PURE $' callout underneath the heel tab. Release Date:July 3Release Price:$220 USDWhere to Buy:HBXandASICSWhy You Should Cop:The headliner of last week's edition of best footwear drops is back for round two as JJJJound and ASICS present their 'White/Marshmallow' rendition of the GEL-QUANTUM 360 I AMP again. It introduced the new model by combining a white synthetic upper with off-white detailing at the GEL-backed sole unit. Callouts to JJJJound are visible at the heel tab and sockliner to complete the pair. Release Date:July 3Release Price:$135 USDWhere to Buy:SNKRSWhy You Should Cop:Ja Morant is back with another thirst-quenching flavor of his Nike Ja 2 made in collaboration with Kool-Aid. Now dropping in 'Tropical Punch,' it features red-to-purple coloring across its upper while sporting an icy outsole as well. Looking closer at the pair, not only is Kool-Aid branding visible at the tongue, but water droplets are recreated and scattered evenly across the upper. Release Date:July 3Release Price:$90 USDWhere to Buy:adidasWhy You Should Cop:Damian Lillard's partnership with adidas hits a milestone this week as the adidas Dame series hits its 10th numbered entry with the adidas Dame X. Revealed during the most recent NBA All-Star Weekend, shortly after Lillard signed a lifetime contract extension with the brand, the Dame X adopts adidas Basketball's contemporary design language with wavy linework present throughout the upper. Priced at a mere $90 USD, it is one of the brand's least expensive signature shoes to date and will begin its rollout in this 'Dame's Light' look that pairs an orange toe with green and blue at the midfoot and black around the collar. Release Date:July 3Release Price:$120 USDWhere to Buy:SNKRSWhy You Should Cop:The classic proverb, 'if it ain't broke, don't fix it,' seems to be the motto at Nike SB as the skate division continues to offer new renditions of the SB Dunk Low as a focal point of its seasonal footwear ranges. This 'Dark Team Red/Olive Flak' concoction is the latest to emerge from the line, pairing a suede upper in green and red with leather maroon Swooshes on each side. Meanwhile, the standard stitched sole sees off-white present at the midsole and blue at the outsole. Release Date:July 3Release Price:TBCWhere to Buy:Dr. MartensWhy You Should Cop:NÒMARHYTHM TEXTILE's artisan craftsmanship meets two of Dr. Martens' beloved silhouettes: the 1461 and Isham. Both feature the brand's signature 'Draw Your Garden' print throughout. The former offers a blend of red, blue, and black floral panels in a patchwork arrangement. As for the Isham, the mule presents white and blue flowers atop a black leather base.

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