Joe Locke & Dylan Mulvaney spark more dating rumors by getting cozy at a Sabrina Carpenter show
Last week, fans were divided over whether a cheeky Instagram post of the pair posing together with the caption, 'First couples shoot thank you for having us at camp koko,' and Locke commenting, 'Hard launch' was in fact the besties hard launching their relationship.
While some people were skeptical and assumed it was a joke among friends, on July 5, Locke and Mulvaney got fans gossiping again when they were caught on camera cuddling up close, dancing together, and holding hands at Carpenter's concert in London, England at BST Hyde Park, Just Jared reports.
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This PDA heavy outing adds more fuel to the fire that there may be something more than just friendship going on between the two LGBTQ+ stars.
Not only did they playfully 'hard launch' their relationship on Instagram, but they were also spotted together at Glastonbury, where they danced and sang along to Brandi Carlile and RAYE.
The pair has been friends for a while now. In February, they were photographed together at the Human Rights Campaign Greater New York Dinner and again at the 2025 Vanities Party, Locke appeared on Mulvaney's The Dylan Hour podcast in March, and last year Mulvaney supported him at the Agatha All Along premiere.
Whether they're dating or just friends, we love seeing two queer stars supporting each other!
This article originally appeared on Pride: Joe Locke & Dylan Mulvaney spark more dating rumors by getting cozy at a Sabrina Carpenter show
Did Dylan Mulvaney & Joe Locke really just hard launch? Their cozy IG post leaves fans divided
Joe Locke warns that his twink death is imminent
Heartstopper Star Joe Locke Shares His Struggles With Body Dysmorphia
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Washington Post
16 minutes ago
- Washington Post
Flip flops are the shoe of the summer. Duh!
Stylish Americans are making a bold fashion choice this summer: flip-flops. Wait. Flip-flops, for summer? Isn't that like saying winter is a great time to wear snow boots? To quote Miranda Priestly in 'The Devil Wears Prada': 'Groundbreaking.' And yet the fashion press and social media users alike have anointed the humble flip-flop 'the shoe of the summer.' Substackers such as Max Berlinger, Jalil Johnson and Liv Perez have written paeans to their rubbery, snappy charms. On Instagram, menswear fanatics are having a meltdown over whether to wear pricey designer versions or their dupes. At Men's Fashion Week and Couture Week in Europe earlier this summer, flip flops were seen on show attendees, styled with drapey tailoring and cocktail dresses. Pop star Sabrina Carpenter was celebrated for wearing $4 Old Navy flip flops instead of The Row's trendy $690 (yes, you read that right) version. 'The big difference, for me — I have been seeing more people wearing flip-flops in the city,' said Lawrence Schlossman, the co-host of the menswear podcast 'Throwing Fits.' 'That is different.' Obviously people have always worn flip-flops by the pool or at the beach, but now they have become a more everyday shoe option. 'People wearing them with jeans to get beers with the homies at Fanelli — that definitely is a new development.' In late July, the Venice Beach-based designer Eli Russell Linnetz released his brand ERL's own take on the high-end flip-flop, in 'Low' ($185), a five-inch platform 'Big' ($375) and an outrageous eight-inch-sole 'Huge' ($1250, available by request only). Within minutes, he said, the flip-flops sold out. He accompanied their release with some of his signature imagery, which is often highly sexualized to the point of hilarious discomfort or lascivious escapism or both. 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While Havaianas, which sell for about $30, have been embraced as an affordable fashion it-item in the vein of Adidas Stan Smiths or Birkenstocks, it is the Row's $690 Dune that has been the point of controversy. Is it ridiculous to spend that much on a rubber and grosgrain sandal when there is no label or special design to let the world know what you forked over for it? 'One side of the argument is like, flip flops are gross, stupid, childish, immature, not sophisticated. You know, who wants to see a man's feet in the street?' said Schlossman, who has a $50 dupe of the Row's style. 'Then I think you have the other side, which is the more consumerist approach to menswear, where it's like, F--- it, we ball. There's a sprinkling of that joie de vivre: it's summer, it's fun.' 'The Row exists as this monolithic tasteful thing. You might disagree with the price point,' he continued, but that makes it almost like armor for men. 'The guy who wears the Row, knows that it's the Row, and he's like, I'm good. I know I'm leaving the house feeling good because I have on the Row.' Linnetz's work, while materially similar to The Row in its almost anthropological plundering of California sartorial archetypes, is much more subversive, and therefore more revealing of the psychological underpinnings of flip-flop mania. Perhaps the high school bully — lacrosse captain, homecoming king — is now fashion's muse. 'When I started ERL,' Linnetz said, 'I always was like, I don't care if it's ugly, I want to do something uncomfortable. I want to do stuff even that I hate. Just to challenge myself and expand my way of thinking. It was odd to me that people would say, 'Why don't you just make things you like?' My process was: I just want to make things that are uncomfortable for myself.' Or comfortable for your feet.
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Nelly Korda, Charley Hull enjoyed filming Happy Gilmore 2 but Hull 'couldn't be an actress'
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an hour ago
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Original lead singer of iconic metal band dies at 69
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