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Oprah's Trendy, Flowy Pants Are Perfect for Travel—Shop Looks Under $50 at Amazon
Amazon's fashion store has similar styles to help you channel the star's look during your next trip. Below, discover our nine top picks, including traditional baggy cargo pants, satin pants, and wide-leg pants that'll let you channel your inner Oprah—all for less than $50.
These satin cargo pants closely resemble the pair worn by Winfrey. They have a soft, silk-like feel, and reviewers say the fabric is stretchy. They can be dressed up for a nice dinner when paired with the right shoes and accessories, or worn casually for travel days or sightseeing.
With their wide-leg fit, these cargo pants are the definition of flowy. The soft, satin material and elastic waistband are a recipe for comfort on long flights and car rides. Plus, you can take advantage of the four pockets to store your phone, headphones, wallet, and other small essentials you want to have easily accessible.
You can bring a more elevated vibe to your travel outfits when you throw on these satin cargo pants from Prettygarden. They come with a drawstring at the waistband and at the legs, so you can cinch and adjust them accordingly. One traveler said they look cute with 'heels or [sneakers].'
Besides offering lots of pocket storage, these cargos can transform from wide-leg pants to baggy joggers just by tying the built-in drawstrings at the hem. One Amazon shopper wore them in beige on three different flights and said the pants didn't get dirty.
You don't have to ditch looking stylish just to be comfortable while you explore new destinations in these cargo pants. They have wide, parachute legs and soft, lightweight fabric. The ankles are tapered and drawn by elastic to keep them from hitting the floor, and the pants are also water-resistant and quick-drying, making them perfect for hiking.
This pair of cargo pants has no shortage of pockets: Four front pockets can hold earbuds, small travel snacks, and other essentials, while two back pockets can hold your phone, passport, and wallet. One Amazon shopper said the soft fabric didn't wrinkle much either, and they were a good choice for travel.
These satin trousers have a polished look that's dressy enough to wear to the office or straight from the plane to a nice dinner. They come in 11 colors, including neutral shades like beige, and vibrant options like hot pink, for when you want to make a statement.
If you're headed to a work trip, these satin joggers will dress you up just like a pair of traditional tailored trousers, but with extra coziness. They have a loose baggy fit that becomes tapered around the ankle, and have a stretchy waistband. One reviewer said they're so 'comfortable, classy, and easy to care [for]' that they could replace jeans.
One Amazon shopper said these satin pants look 'expensive'—it's no wonder they have them in several colors. And, the adjustable waistband can help you get a more cinched look.
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The season closes in romantic-comedy fashion, with its main couple, despite the road bumps, choosing each other and getting married. But Dunham has more to say. "We don't always have control of how much we get to make," Dunham says. "I thought about this with the first season of 'Girls' — if this show never comes back, then I want to end with Hannah eating cake on the beach after her boyfriend got hit by a truck. That's what needs to happen. And we know how we wanted this to end. But as in life, a happy ending is just the beginning of a different life with someone. And so — " "Twenty more seasons!" Stalter cheerily interjects. "It's going to run for seasons upon seasons," Dunham continues. "But I do think about marriage comedies. I'm really obsessed with 'Mr. Mom,' with Michael Keaton. And I love 'Mad About You.' I love a comedy that lets us see what's behind keeping a marriage going. I would love the chance to see them being parents." "Having triplets," Stalter adds. "I'd love to film Meg getting a C-section for the triplets," Dunham says. Stalter quips: "A whole episode is the whole C-section." While "Too Much" puts Dunham fully in her romantic comedy era, it wasn't originally intended to be a show about love. Before she met Felber, Dunham was mulling tapping into her experience of spending extended periods in England for work and the culture clash of a brassy American coming to the U.K. Then she met Felber, and "it was the first time I ever felt like I was living in a romantic comedy," she says. "I always felt like I was living in a sad, gritty romantic drama where they don't end up together in the end, and someone falls asleep in a puddle." "Too Much" features episode titles that pay homage to romance films like "Notting Hill," "Pretty Woman" and "Love Actually." Dunham says the rom-com genre was the first she ever loved, but developed internalized snobbery around it as she got older. "I felt like I was having this innocent romantic forced out of me," she says. "By the time I was in my 20s, I felt embarrassed to be that romantic person. I felt as though to even feel that way was sort of naive and silly. I didn't feel like I was allowed to want the things that I wanted or ask for the things that I really needed." As she got older and started dating again after a period of being single in her early 30s, that began to change. "When I met my husband, I was kind of back in that place in my 20s, where I thought, 'This is not something that's going to happen for me,'" she says. "And as a result, I was very honest and I was very blunt, and I think it ended up having a really interesting effect, which is that it actually made it possible for us to get to know each other, and in turn, created something that was more romantic than anything I'd experienced before." Enough to approach him with a proposal about a month into their relationship: Will you make this show with me? He said yes. In the time since, they've collaborated on other projects — she worked on two of Felber's music videos and he helped score her 2022 film "Sharp Stick." Working on a TV show, though, was a big commitment early into their relationship. But it turns out it wasn't too much. "I remember thinking we could make something really cool if all the universe and all the Tetris pieces of life fall into place," he says in a separate video call. "When you're at the beginning of a relationship and you feel like someone's taste matches yours, improves yours — that was Lena. I didn't understand what it meant — 'Hey, do you want to make a TV show with me?' I was like, 'What does that entail? Do I walk up and down the room just cracking jokes and you write them down?' She's like, 'Basically.' I was like, 'I could do that.'" It's not their story directly, but the show was a way for them to put their experiences together. "Our love was the germ of this, or the nucleus of it; we always wanted to make something joyful. But when you're going on set every day with your partner, you learn a lot about them quickly," he says. "Most couples get home from work and are like, 'How was your day, my love?' We had that down. I think it was a catalyst to our relationship, in a way. To be able to see Lena direct, act and write was like, 'Wow.' It was so inspiring to be around someone like that." Dunham's mark on the rom-com genre is still in progress. She's currently in production on the upcoming film "Good Sex," also for Netflix, about a 40-something couples therapist who reenters the dating scene: "The film is very much an examination of what it is to exit your 30s and wonder if your exploration decades have come to a close," Dunham says. "It's a question we are always asking ourselves because the 30s were the new 20s, but what are the 40s, especially if you haven't chosen to, or been able to be, a parent?" The film boasts Natalie Portman, Rashida Jones, Mark Ruffalo and '90s rom-com queen Meg Ryan. There isn't an Instagram backstory involved with the casting of that Meg. Dunham says she approached Ryan while at Taylor Swift's Eras tour stop in London. "I tend to let icons have their space, but she and I shared Nora Ephron as a guiding force in our lives, and so I really just wanted to talk about Nora because remembering her makes me happy," Dunham shared in a follow-up email. "It led to a lovely, nonwork lunch and burgeoning friendship and I wrote with her in mind. But I was still stunned and honored when she said yes. Watching her at the table read, Natalie and Rashida and I were just pinching ourselves. Afterwards, we all texted 'Meg f—ing Ryan!' What can I say — I may be long sober, but I'm addicted to Megs." Sign up for Screen Gab, a free newsletter about the TV and movies everyone's talking about from the L.A. Times. This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.