Latest news with #ClaireLee


South China Morning Post
29-06-2025
- Business
- South China Morning Post
Meet Chloe and Claire Lee, the sisters behind the Selleb app – they share almost everything, including their wardrobe and Instagram account, and they're friendly with Steve Jobs' daughter, Eve
Want to recommend a product? Be sure to show your receipt. Chloe Lee and her sister Claire Lee think receipts offer a deep insight into our habits and lifestyle, and wanted a place where they could see what cool and influential people were buying. This was the main inspiration behind their invite-only app Selleb, a product discovery platform that uses receipts to connect users with similar taste profiles. Chloe Lee, second right, recently joined Eve Jobs, right, for a weekend with friends. Photo: @evejobs/Instagram The app allows users to share their spending – from big purchases to groceries and coffee – and provide real recommendations to fellow consumers. Users can discover candid reviews from others and find options for their next splurge without being bothered by paid ads or fake ratings. Advertisement The Selleb sisters Chloe Lee and Claire Lee have built a successful, invite-only app together. Photo: @claireleeyours/Instagram Already moving in the right circles – Claire was recently spotted on a girls' trip with Steve Jobs' daughter Eve – the pair are obviously on the up and up. So what else do we know about them? They started out selling second-hand items Chloe Lee in a recent Instagram post, wearing a little black dress with an oversized grey coat and a black bag. Photo: @cachetdechloe/Instagram In middle and high school, Chloe and Claire sold second-hand items on Poshmark, an online marketplace for clothes and accessories. According to an interview with Andover, the sisters' secondary school, their first sale was a Victoria's Secret phone case. From there, they expanded their sales to include pieces from their wardrobes and items that they had hand-picked at thrift stores. An important moment for them was when they found a Roberto Cavalli blouse for 69 cents and resold it for US$250. Amassing a following of over 650,000 on Poshmark and gaining attention as successful fashion bloggers, the pair eventually collaborated with brands such as Revolve, Urban Outfitters and Le Labo. Selleb was originally a newsletter


Gulf Today
04-04-2025
- Politics
- Gulf Today
Yoon: from rising star to impeached ex-president
Claire Lee, Agence France-Presse South Korea's Yoon Suk Yeol rose from star prosecutor to the presidency in just a few years, but after a bungled martial law decree last year, on Friday he became the country's second president to be booted from office. The lurch back to South Korea's dark days of military rule on December 3 only lasted a few hours, and after a night of protests and high drama, Yoon was forced into a U-turn by lawmakers. He was swiftly impeached by parliament, and after weeks of hearings and deliberations, the country's Constitutional Court on Friday unanimously upheld his impeachment, stripping him of all presidential powers and privileges. Yoon had remained defiant throughout. He was detained in January in a dawn raid after holding out against police and prosecutors for weeks, becoming the first sitting South Korean president to be arrested -- although he was later released on procedural grounds. Yoon's 'dismissal reaffirms South Korea's resilience as a democracy powered by the citizens, but also serves as a sobering reminder of the fragility of democracy,' Minseon Ku, a postdoctoral fellow at the Global Research Institute William and Mary, said. The country's democracy 'faces constant threats from multiple processes, including misinformation, despite the institutional checks and balances on power,' she added. Born in Seoul in 1960, months before a military coup, Yoon studied law and went on to become a public prosecutor and anti-corruption crusader. He played an instrumental role in Park Geun-hye, South Korea's first female president, being impeached in 2016 and later convicted for abuse of power and imprisoned. As the country's top prosecutor in 2019, he also indicted a senior aide of Park's successor, Moon Jae-in, in a fraud and bribery case. The conservative People Power Party (PPP), in opposition at the time, liked what they saw and convinced Yoon to become their presidential candidate. He won in March 2022, beating Lee Jae-myung of the Democratic Party, but by the narrowest margin in South Korean history. Yoon was never much loved by the public, especially by women — he vowed on the campaign trail to abolish the ministry of gender equality — and scandals have come thick and fast. They include his administration's handling of a 2022 crowd crush during Halloween festivities that killed more than 150 people. Voters have also blamed Yoon's administration for inflation, a lagging economy, and increasing constraints on freedom of speech. He was accused of abusing presidential vetoes, notably to strike down a bill paving the way for a special investigation into alleged stock manipulation by his wife, Kim Keon Hee. Yoon's reputation was further hit in 2023 when his wife was secretly filmed accepting a designer handbag worth $2,000 as a gift. Yoon insisted it would have been rude to refuse. His mother-in-law, Choi Eun-soon, was sentenced to one year in prison for forging financial documents in a real estate deal. She was released in May 2024. As president, Yoon maintained a tough stance against nuclear-armed North Korea and bolstered ties with Seoul's traditional ally, the United States. In 2023, he sang Don McLean's 'American Pie' at the White House, prompting US President Joe Biden to respond: 'I had no damn idea you could sing.' But his efforts to restore ties with South Korea's former colonial ruler, Japan, did not sit well with many at home. Yoon had been a lame duck president since the opposition Democratic Party won a majority in parliamentary elections in April last year. In his televised address declaring martial law, Yoon railed against 'anti-state elements plundering people's freedom and happiness', and his office subsequently cast the move as a bid to break legislative gridlock. Since then, he had garnered support from extreme relgious figures and right-wing YouTubers. Pro-Yoon rallies turned violent in January when extremist supporters, angered by the court's approval of Yoon's formal arrest warrant, stormed a Seoul courthouse -- injuring at least 50 police officers and vandalising the building by smashing windows and doors. Yoon's extreme political base 'was not built around personal loyalty to Yoon -- it is more structural and ideological. That is very concerning,' Ji Yeon Hong, a political science professor at University of Michigan, told AFP. 'As we've seen in other democracies, such groups often outlast the leaders who brought them together. 'In that sense, Yoon's legacy may endure not through his achievements, but through the political forces he helped awaken — forces that could continue to shape, and challenge, Korean democracy in the years to come,' she added.