In the mood to party like it is the 1970s? | Dazed and Confused
Return to the ‘70s with Richard Linklater’s American classic Dazed and Confused. On the last day of classes, the students of Lee High School—played by an extraordinary cast that includes Milla Jovovich, Adam Goldberg, Parker Posey, Renée Zellweger, Cole Hauser, Ben Affleck, and Matthew McConaughey—throw a blow-out party to say good-bye to the year that was. From embarrassing initiation rites to thoughtful meditations on the meaning of life, the film depicts the joys and sorrows of high school in hilarious detail. Entertainment Weekly wrote, “Once every decade or so, a movie captures the hormone-drenched, fashion-crazed, pop-song-driven rituals of American youth culture with such loving authenticity that it comes to seem a kind of anthem, as innocently giddy and spirited as the teenagers it’s about.”
Over the last few weeks, Nicky Zimmermann has been spending time in Mykonos, where from June 16 to 17 she celebrated the opening of her namesake brand’s boutique and days later captured her Twisted Romance cruise collection in the Greek island’s picturesque laneways.
“It was nice to have the connection between the store opening party and the collection, and there’s always a pirate bar in Greece somewhere,” she said, hinting at her collection’s overarching inspiration of melding nostalgia and fantasy into a lineup filled with romantic femininity, dramatic silhouettes and maritime nods.
“I remember those pirate films that I would watch when I was a kid. They had incredible posters, the handsome pirate and the beautiful, gorgeous, sexy woman who would somehow become tangled in the story,” she said of her classic pirate movie and “Treasure Island” novel inspirations. “It was wanting to create that feeling of nostalgia, while bringing in an element that I could really relate to, which is the New Romantics.”
The inspirations served Zimmermann well, as seen through her balance of playful, diaphanous gowns in hand-done watercolor “treasure map” print or white figure-hugging frocks with billowing sleeves. Despite the fantastical inspirations, nothing was too literal, further seen through breezy nautical striped or night shirt dresses; sharp “Rebellion Pirate” military jackets, and ruched corset tops atop frayed flutter blouses. Resort proved to be a strong play between the brand’s highly romantic codes with the grounded, such as structured, button-adorned jeans and wrapped balloon tops in denim, utilitarian drawstring layers and slouchy buckled boots.
“There’s been very much a collaboration between my Paris atelier and the Sydney atelier, so I’ve got the two teams really working together. A lot of the denim, outerwear, suiting and drill pieces in this collection we’re working with the Paris team on and building it together with our very romantic, classic Zimmermann feel. It’s a nice combination, and is personally how I like to dress,” Zimmermann said.
The designer said she travels to her new Paris headquarters every seven or so weeks and has been working with her teams there to continue building out Zimmermann’s jewelry, handbags and footwear. As seen throughout the cruise collection, her accessories continued to amplify the adventurous spirit while pushing forward reality-driven modernity.
The season 3 finale of “Squid Game,” the dystopian Korean series on Netflix, delivers a grim ending. … More Viewership fell from season 2.
Netflix
The premiere of Squid Game season 3 has drawn quite a bit of online buzz, as the hugely popular dystopian Korean drama returned for what’s billed as its final season. But it appears people weren’t quite as excited about it as they were about the previous season.
Viewership for Squid Game’s third-season premiere on Netflix Friday was down compared to the season 2 debut. It averaged 1.6 million U.S. households, according to live-plus-three-day viewing data crunched by Samba TV, which provides TV technology for audience data and omniscreen measurement.
That is a good number for Netflix, but it’s not as good as season 2’s debut. That drew just over 1.9 million households, giving season 3 a 17% decline from the previous season’s tune-in.
Who Watched Squid Game Season 3?
Notably, Samba found that Hispanic and Asian households were much more likely to tune into the program than the average house. It says Asian household viewership overindexed by 48%, whole Hispanic household viewership overindexed by 55% when compared to the national average.
There’s good reason for that. While Netflix has tons of content, offerings featuring Asians in a leading role are in shorter supply—and it has more than other streamers.
The reason for the popularity among Hispanics is less clear, though the original has a Mexican contestant and there was a very popular TikTok about how Mexicans would play the Squid Game.
How Does Squid Game Season 3 Compare To Other Netflix Premieres?
The 1.6 million for Squid Game is a solid number for the streamer. But it is not the best this year. Barely a week earlier, the series debut of The Waterfront, the soapy new family drama from the producer of Dawson’s Creek (Kevin Williamson), drew slightly better numbers. Waterfront drew 1.7 million households, according to Samba data.
Another recent debut, Ransom Canyon, posted similar numbers. The western drama, starring Josh Duhamel and Minka Kelly, posted 1.5 million households in its debut. Netflix was clearly pleased, as it just renewed the program for a second season.
Why Is Squid Game Season 3 Viewership Down?
Viewership for Squid Game season 3 could have dipped for many reasons. As Samba points out, season 2 debuted on Netflix in the United States on December 26 last year—the day after Christmas, when many Americans have off work. They could just binge the show without distractions, whereas last Friday wasn’t a holiday and could have seen lower engagement simply because of that.
Or, on the other hand, fans may have been waiting for the upcoming July 4 holiday to binge the show, taking advantage of the downtime.
And others may have seen critical online buzz about the Squid Game season 3 ending that turned them off from watching the program.
Glen Powell will do anything to save his sick child in The Running Man, including joining the most twisted reality show known to man.
Paramount Pictures dropped the first trailer for the dystopian black comedy based on Stephen King’s novel of the same name, which got turned into a film in 1987 starring Arnold Schwarzenegger.
The film follows working-class Ben Richards (Powell), who becomes a contestant in the world’s most popular reality TV show, where the winner could walk home with a life-changing cash prize.
The only catch? To win, each participant, referred to as “Runners,” must escape death for 30 days, while being hunted down by a group of professional killers—with their every move broadcast to billions of viewers.
“I’m still here,” Ben says to a drone in the trailer, before flipping off the camera and screaming, “You s**t eaters.”
Directed by Edgar Wright, known for his work on Shaun of the Dead and Baby Driver, the film features a stacked list of stars, including Josh Brolin, Michael Cera, Lee Pace, Colman Domingo, Katy O’Brien, and William H. Macy. Wright also co-wrote the script with Michael Bacall, who previously worked together on Scott Pilgrim vs. The World.
In an interview with Empire, Wright shared that he purposefully looked for an actor with a “normal body,” as he didn’t want to cast someone with a Schwarzenegger physique—although he admits that Powell isn’t exactly the norm either.
“He’s in better shape than you and I ever will be,” Wright said. “That was important, because this is not a remake. Ben is an out of work dad. He’s worked in construction.”
Unfortunately, Ben isn’t getting the same well-paying gigs as before, which is a problem when you have to pay for your sick kid’s medical treatment while living under the hellscape that is American healthcare.
The trailer is already turning out to be a hit, with fans of the book and 1987 film expressing their approval on social media.
“I thought ‘oh no’ then it went nuts, and I was hyped,” one person commented on Reddit.
An X user shared a similar sentiment, posting a gif of Elmo raising his hands in excitement with a wall of fire behind him, writing the caption: “This looks really fun!”
Jenny Packham looked at nature’s bounty and thought, “How can I compete with this?” which is why she chose flowers — wild and cultivated — as her muse this season.
She also liked the idea of confident, spontaneous — and sometimes wild — women such as Courtney Love, Winona Ryder, Debbie Harry and Jane Birkin, and wanted to channel their “liberated glamour and unapologetic opulence.”
Flowers blossomed across the collection, as silvery embroidered slipper orchids down the front of a cream gown and damask-like blooms picked out in sequins on a cocktail dress.
A gold and lilac ombre gown had a fitted bodice and Art Deco flair, while another strapless tulle gown took its peachy pink color from a bouquet of peonies.
Packham looked at nature from all angles, adding sparkling starburst embroidery to the neckline of a long black dress with embroidered bracelet sleeves, and vines and firefly embellishment to the bodice of a long peach gown.
There were lots of metallic embellishments, too, such as gowns awash in silver and lilac sequins and a long dress with strong, sculptural shoulders that looked as if it had been dipped in gold.
Packham said business is thriving and she’s preparing to launch a “beaded and shimmery” bridal party range (for the before and after parties) and relaunch her line of cocktail dresses, which has been growing steadily.
She also has a strong bespoke business and recently created custom dresses for Sarah Jessica Parker for the Paris premiere of “And Just Like That,” for Dita Von Teese, for the press call of her new West End show “Diamonds and Dust,” and for Paris Hilton for the Breakthrough Prize in Los Angeles in April.
Justin Alexander was not only the designer of both of Tiler’s wedding dresses—he was also in attendance, celebrating the full-circle moment he inadvertently helped create.
For the ceremony, Tiler wore a dramatic ivory gown with off-the-shoulder swags and a sweeping train adorned in three-dimensional rosettes and vines. Pearl beading glinted from the centers of rosebuds and traced the curves of appliquéd leaves. Her hair, parted deep to the side, evoked the silver screen sirens of the 1940s. Completing the look: pearl-encrusted Jimmy Choo sandals with serpentine straps that shimmered as she moved with the control and elegance of a true principal. Roman wore a black Dolce & Gabbana tuxedo for the ceremony, then changed into a white jacket for the reception.
Her second dress, also by Alexander, traded structure for movement: a lace strapless gown with a sweetheart neckline over a soft beige slip. The sheer ivory overlay was embroidered with delicate florals and leafy vines—romantic, ethereal, and, as she put it, “built to dance in.”
The ceremony was deeply personal. Tiler carried a locket with a photo of her late father fastened to her bouquet, and walked down the aisle to his favorite song, played live by their dear friend and violinist Hilary Hahn. “I felt him strongly as I walked,” she says. “I will never forget the way Roman looked at me.” Roman’s vows included memories of the many cross-country trips he took with Tiler to visit her father in his final year—acts of quiet devotion that, in hindsight, revealed the depth of his love. “Even though I feel his love every day,” she says, “I had never heard it articulated like that before.”
Officiated by Reverend Timothy Weisman, the ceremony ended with cheers and kisses, and the couple stepped out into the sunshine. “It was a hot summer day,” Tiler recalls. “Quintessentially New York.”
Planned by longtime friend Claudia Hanlin of The Wedding Library—whom Tiler called “the MVP of our wedding”—the celebration was filled with thoughtful details and warm textures. Claudia sourced everything from hand-painted candles from Ukraine to custom block-printed cushions from India, and collaborated with Marcella Floral Studio on lush, painterly florals. “She knows my taste so well,” Tiler says. “I trusted her completely.”
The tented garden party behind Tavern on the Green struck the right note: elegant, unfussy, and anchored by a sense of place. Tables were layered in printed linens, softly glowing taper candles, and overflowing florals in blush, cream, and green. Escort cards, ceremony programs, and menu cards were all custom-designed by The Wedding Library in collaboration with Bella Figura.
And the best-performing local original production, or LOP, for Warner Bros. Discovery‘s Max, soon-to-be-rebranded as HBO Max, globally is … drum roll, please … Turkish satire series The Prince (Prens).
On Friday, the final episode of the third season of the hit series became available and seems to have helped seal the deal, according to company data.
Starring Giray Altınok as the Prince, the show is “set in the imaginary kingdom of Bongomia and follows the comedic adventures of the prince, a very unpopular member of the kingdom whose own family didn’t even bother to give him a name,” according to a synopsis.
Over the past month, the Turkish Max original achieved “the highest level of engagement of any Max local original production globally,” with 74 percent of subscribers in the country tuning in to it, according to WBD.
Over the same period, The Prince proved to be a key driver for new subscribers, becoming “the first show that almost three in four (73 percent) of new Max users watched — the highest nominal acquisition volume for a local original production” in a country in the Europe, Middle East and Africa (EMEA) region, company data shows.
During its finale week, season three of The Prince accounted for 72 percent of all viewing on Max in Türkiye, WBD said, adding: “The final episode (season three episode eight), released just three days ago, became the most viewed episode of the week with 54 percent of total viewers already having watched the finale.”
Deniz Şaşmaz Oflaz
Courtesy of Warner Bros. Discovery
WBD’s transition of its streaming service BluTV to Max in Turkey became official in mid-April as the Hollywood giant underlined its “commitment to increasing its investment in local content” and “bringing a compelling slate of new local stories” to its streamer in the country.
“The response to Prens just shows how strong the demand for high-quality, locally produced originals is and highlights Max as the home of this type of content,” Deniz Şaşmaz Oflaz, vp of local original productions, local channels and streaming operations lead for Türkiye, tells THR. “As one of our first original series since launching the platform direct-to-consumer in Türkiye earlier this year, it’s exciting to see Prens playing a key role in attracting new viewers to the platform.”
In a recent THR interview, she described the series this way: “It looks like a comedy, but it’s more of a dramedy. … The lead character is the prince, who doesn’t want to be on the throne and is not really that smart. And then we see all these typical things happening in this kingdom that we’ve been seeing in such series as Game of Thrones. So it’s a satire.”
Ava Rapson-Woods met Emily Eavis a year after her first visit to the festival
A 12-year-old girl has spoken of her joy after a chance meeting with Emily Eavis, months after exchanging letters with the Glastonbury Festival organiser.
Ava Rapson-Woods, who lives in Faversham, Kent, wrote to the festival boss expressing her love for the event after visiting Somerset’s Worthy Farm for the first time in 2024.
She received a handwritten letter from Ms Eavis in response and could “not believe it” when she and her father bumped into her at this year’s event.
Ava said she was struck by Ms Eavis’ kindness during the “really cool” encounter and was shocked when the Glastonbury boss said she remembered Ava’s letter.
Ava decided to write to Ms Eavis after it was announced that Olivia Rodrigo – her favourite artist – would headline the festival.
When she received a response weeks later, Ava said she “immediately started crying”.
Along with her dad, she was exploring the site on the Thursday, when she noticed the festival boss.
Ava said she “couldn’t believe” how kind Ms Eavis was.
She said the “really cool” encounter was made all the better when Ms Eavis suggested they take a picture together.
Family handout
Ava was “so excited” when she received a handwritten card from Emily Eavis
Ava’s dad Mike said she “had the time of her life” at the festival and has been “slightly obsessed” since her first visit in 2024.
They will “100%” be trying for tickets when the festival happens again in 2027, Ava said.
“It’s paradise. You don’t have to worry about a thing and everyone is so friendly,” she added.
Family handout
Ava and her dad Mike waited 12 hours at the Pyramid Stage for Olivia Rodrigo’s headline set
The K-pop supergroup BTS have announced their comeback in the spring of 2026 with an album and world tour.
South Korea’s most lucrative musical act has been on a break since 2022 as its members undertook the mandatory service required of all South Korean men under 30 due to tensions with the nuclear-armed North.
With five members discharged from military service in June, many in the industry have been anticipating their comeback.
“Starting in July … we’re planning to make something massive, so from then (this month), we’ll probably gather together and stay focused on making music,” band leader RM said on their superfan platform Weverse.
“Our group album is officially set to be released next spring,” RM said during a live chat.
“Starting next spring, we’ll of course be going on tour, so please look forward to seeing us all around the globe,” he added.
The band also revealed their plans to head this month to the US, where all seven members will gradually regroup to begin music production and prepare for upcoming performances.
If released in the spring of 2026, their comeback album would be their first in four years since Proof, which was the best-selling album of 2022 in South Korea, with nearly 3.5m copies sold.
Before their mandatory military service, the boy band generated more than 5.5tn won ($4bn) in yearly economic impact, according to the Korea Culture and Tourism Institute.
That accounts for roughly 0.2% of South Korea’s total GDP, according to official data.
BTS holds the record as the most-streamed group on Spotify, and became the first K-pop act to top both the Billboard 200 and the Billboard Artist 100 charts in the US.
The first of July marks the anniversary of Ms magazine’s official inaugural issue, which hit newsstands in 1972 and featured Wonder Woman on its cover, towering high above a city. Truthfully, Ms debuted months earlier, on 20 December 1971, as a forty-page insert in New York magazine, where founding editor Gloria Steinem was a staff writer. Suspecting this might be their only shot, its founders packed the issue with stories like The Black Family and Feminism, De-Sexing the English Language, and We Have Had Abortions, a list of 53 well-known American women’s signatures, including Anaïs Nin, Susan Sontag, and Steinem herself. The 300,000 available copies sold out in eight days. The first US magazine founded and operated entirely by women was, naysayers be damned, a success.
The groundbreaking magazine’s history, and its impact on the discourse around second-wave feminism and women’s liberation, is detailed in HBO documentary Dear Ms: A Revolution in Print, which premiered at this year’s Tribeca film festival. Packed with archival footage and interviews with original staff, contributors, and other cultural icons, Dear Ms unfolds across three episodes, each directed by a different film-maker. Salima Koroma, Alice Gu, and Cecilia Aldarondo deftly approach key topics explored by the magazine – domestic violence, workplace harassment, race, sexuality – with care, highlighting the challenges and criticisms that made Ms. a polarizing but galvanizing voice of the women’s movement.
Before Ms launched, the terms “domestic violence” and “sexual harassment” hadn’t yet entered the lexicon. Women’s legal rights were few, and female journalists were often limited to covering fashion and domesticity. But feminist organizations like Redstockings, the National Organization for Women, and New York Radical Women were forming; Steinem, by then an established writer, was reporting on the women’s liberation movement, of which she was a fundamental part. In Part I of the documentary, Koroma’s A Magazine for all Women, Steinem recalls attending a women’s liberation meeting for New York magazine. Archival footage discloses what was shared there, and other meetings like it: “I had to be subservient to some men,” says one woman, “… and I had to forget, very much, what I might have wanted to be if I had any other choice.”
The response to Ms was unsurprising, its perspective so collectively needed. “A lot of these articles could still be relevant,” Steinem muses in Part I. But, says the publication’s first editor, Suzanne Braun Levine, “I don’t think we all were prepared for the response. Letters, letters, letters – floods of letters.” Koroma unveils excerpts of those first letters to the editor, vulnerable and intimate: “How bolstering to find that I am not alone with my dissatisfaction that society had dictated roles for me to graduate from and into.” By the time Ms was in operation, the staff was publishing cover stories on Shirley Chisholm, unpaid domestic labor, and workplace sexual harassment. “Who is it you’re trying to reach?” a journalist asks Steinem in an interview back then. She replies: “Everybody.”
“They tried to be a magazine for all women,” explained Koroma in a recent interview, “and what happens then? You make mistakes, because of the importance of intersectionality.” In an archival audio clip, the writer and activist (and close friend of Steinem’s) Dorothy Pitman Hughes says: “White women have to understand … that sisterhood is almost impossible between us until you’ve understood how you also contribute to my oppression as a Black woman.” Marcia Ann Gillespie, the former editor in chief of Essence and later Ms’s editor in chief, confides to Koroma: “Some of the white women had a one-size-fits-all understanding of what feminism is, that our experiences are all the same. Well, no, they’re not.” Alice Walker, who became an associate editor, shared her own writing and championed others’, like Michele Wallace’s, in the publication’s pages before quitting in 1986, writing about the “swift alienation” she felt due to a lack of diversity.
Wallace recounts her experience as a Ms cover girl, her braids removed, her face caked in make-up. She adds: “I want to critique [Ms], but they were very supportive of me. I don’t know what would’ve become of me if there hadn’t been a Ms magazine.” She left, too. “I was not comfortable with white women speaking for me.” Levine admits, “We made a mistake,” featuring Black writers but having few Black cover stars and no Black founding staff.
“The work still needs to be done; we’re always going to have to rethink things,” Koroma says. It’s a running thread in Dear Ms, one that creates a rich and ultimately loving picture of the magazine. “Ms. is a complex and rich protagonist,” Aldarondo reflected. “If you only talk about the good things and not the shadow, that’s a very one-dimensional portrait. One of the things that makes Ms so interesting and admirable is that they wrestled with things in the pages of the magazine.” For Part III, No Comment (named for Ms’s column that called out misogynistic advertising), Aldarondo chronicles its contentious coverage of pornography, which the staff primarily differentiated from erotica as inherently misogynistic, many of them aligning with the Women Against Pornography movement.
In an episode that opens with unfurling flowers and the words of the delightful porn star, educator, and artist Annie Sprinkle, Aldarondo depicts the violence of the era’s advertising and pornography, and the women who were making – or enjoying – pornography and sex work, proudly and on their own terms. In a response to the 1978 cover story Erotica and Pornography: Do You Know the Difference? Sprinkle and her colleagues, the writers and adult film actors Veronica Vera and Gloria Leonard, led a protest outside the Ms office. The staff hadn’t “invited anyone from our community to come to the table”, says Sprinkle, despite adult film stars’ expertise about an exploitative industry they were choosing to reclaim. “To see these women as fallen women,” says Aldarondo, “completely misses the mark.”
Behind the scenes, the staff themselves were at odds. Former staff writer Lindsy Van Gelder states: “I knew perfectly good feminists who liked porn. Deal with it.” Contending with the marginalization faced by sex workers, Ms ran Mary Kay Blakely’s cover story, Is One Woman’s Sexuality Another Woman’s Pornography? in 1985. The entire issue was a response to activists Andrea Dworkin and Catharine MacKinnon’s Model Antipornography Law, which framed pornography as a civil rights violation and which Carole S. Vance, the co-founder of the Feminist Anti-Censorship Task Force, describes in Dear Ms as “a toolkit for the rightwing” that ultimately endangered sex workers. Dworkin, says Vance, refused a dialogue; instead, the magazine printed numerous materials, the words of opposing voices, and the law itself to “reflect, not shape” readers’ views, says founding editor Letty Cottin Pogrebin. The hate mail was swift – including Dworkin’s, once a staff colleague: “I don’t want anything more to do with Ms – ever.”
Gu reveals something far more frightening than hate mail, a horror that didn’t make its way into the film: death threats and bomb threats, which the staff received in response to their most controversial stories. “There was actionable change that happened because of what these women did,” says Gu. “The danger they put themselves in is not to be discounted. I get emotional every time I talk about it … I have benefited largely from the work of these women, and I’m very grateful.”
That actionable change refers to the legislative reforms prompted by Ms’s coverage of domestic violence and workplace harassment. In A Portable Friend, Gu examines the 1975 Men’s Issue, the 1976 Battered Wives Issue, and the 1977 issue on workplace sexual assault. “Back then, there was no terminology if a woman was being hit by her partner at the time,” says Gu. She spotlights heartbreaking archival footage of women sharing their experiences with abuse: “If it’d been a stranger, I would have run away.” Van Gelder herself reflects on the former partner who hit her. “Did you tell anyone?” Gu asks. “Not really.”
In an archival clip, Barbara Mikulski, former Maryland senator and congresswoman, says: “The first legislation I introduced as a congresswoman was to help battered women. I got that idea listening to the problems of battered women and reading about it in Ms” Adds Levine: “We brought it into the daylight. Then there was the opening for battered women’s shelters, for legislation, for a community that reassured and supported women.” The same idea applied to workplace sexual harassment: “If something doesn’t have a name, you can’t build a response,” Levine exclaims. “The minute it had a name, things took off and changed.”
Gloria Steinem and staff. Photograph: Jill Freedman/HBO
Gu shared that while “there’s a little bit of questioning as to whether it was Ms who coined the term [domestic violence], they were certainly the first to bring the term into the public sphere and allow for a discussion”. The Working Women United Institute eventually collaborated with Ms on a speak-out on sexual harassment.
Despite obstacles, the scholar Dr Lisa Coleman, featured in Part I, describes the publication as one “that was learning”.
“It’s easy to be critical at first,” says Koroma, “but after talking to the founders, you realize that these women come from a time when you couldn’t have a bank account. It’s so humbling to talk to the women who were there and who are a large part of the reason why I have what I have now.” Gu noted that the lens of the present day can be a foggy one through which to understand Ms — which, in truth, was “completely radical,” she says. “You weren’t going to read about abortion in Good Housekeeping. You have to plant yourself in the shoes of these women at that time.”
Our elders endured different but no less tumultuous battles than the ones we face now, many of which feel like accelerated, intensified iterations of earlier struggles. “Talk to your moms, to your aunts and grandmas,” Koroma added. Aldarondo agreed: “One of the great pleasures of this project, for all of us, was this intergenerational encounter and getting to hear from our elders. It’s very easy for younger people to simply dismiss what elders are saying. That’s a mistake. I felt like I already understood the issues, and then I learned so much from these women.”