An antique roll-top desk decorated with flowers and paintings contrasts with crisp white walls, and is perfectly in keeping with the "south-east Asia meets coastal house" feel of Vicki and Tony Lemarseny's Peregian Beach home. ⁠
⁠
Tap the link in our bio for more home office inspiration.⁠
⁠
Photography: @hannahpuechmarin⁠
Styling: Cheryl Carr @albertandgrace⁠
⁠
#homeoffice #homeofficeideas #desksetup #desk⁠

An antique roll-top desk decorated with flowers and paintings contrasts with crisp white walls, and is perfectly in keeping with the "south-east Asia meets coastal house" feel of Vicki and Tony Lemarseny's Peregian Beach home. ⁠ ⁠ Tap the link in our bio for more home office inspiration.⁠ ⁠ Photography: @hannahpuechmarin⁠ Styling: Cheryl Carr @albertandgrace⁠ ⁠ #homeoffice #homeofficeideas #desksetup #desk⁠

An antique roll-top desk decorated with flowers and paintings contrasts with crisp white walls, and is perfectly in keeping with the "south-east Asia meets coastal house" feel of Vicki and Tony Lemarseny's Peregian Beach home. ⁠ ⁠ Tap the link in our bio for more home office inspiration.⁠ ⁠ Photography: @hannahpuechmarin⁠ Styling: Cheryl Carr @albertandgrace⁠ ⁠ #homeoffice #homeofficeideas #desksetup #desk⁠

And then there were eight. This week, Ru tasked the queens with meta makeovers, pairing them under the advisement of psychic Char Margolis. All eggs were in the maxi challenge basket as contestants learned to sissy their competitors' walks, both in style and substance. Some had an out-of-body experience, while others were merely ghostly interpretations. While our usual "frayed" or "fab" assessment doesn't apply this week, we've decided to rate the looks as "RU-velation" for our favorite doppelgänger queens and "Regret" for those who might want to reconsider stepping into another queen's well-worn heels. Thankfully, Carol Burnett was not in the house this week as Utica crawled into Symone's stylish skin. Initially worried about "appropriating" her teammate, Utica, instead shed some of her own inhibitions, embracing Symone's powerful runway walk and, in turn, discovering another facet of her own style. Verdict: Ru-velation! Wearing a champagne-colored Martha Graham amoeba shawl, flower headdress and painted unitard, Symone fearlessly embraced Utica's quirky drag style. "I feel powerful but in a different way," said Symone of her contorted Utica-inspired runway walk. Verdict: Ru-velation! Let's take a deeper look! Tap link in bio to continue on @EDGEmedianetwork ?️‍???(?: Utica / Instagram / @queenutica / ?: @liamjamesphoto, @philolmstead, @a_kaun, ?️: Matthew Wexler / @wexlerwrites)

And then there were eight. This week, Ru tasked the queens with meta makeovers, pairing them under the advisement of psychic Char Margolis. All eggs were in the maxi challenge basket as contestants learned to sissy their competitors' walks, both in style and substance. Some had an out-of-body experience, while others were merely ghostly interpretations. While our usual "frayed" or "fab" assessment doesn't apply this week, we've decided to rate the looks as "RU-velation" for our favorite doppelgänger queens and "Regret" for those who might want to reconsider stepping into another queen's well-worn heels. Thankfully, Carol Burnett was not in the house this week as Utica crawled into Symone's stylish skin. Initially worried about "appropriating" her teammate, Utica, instead shed some of her own inhibitions, embracing Symone's powerful runway walk and, in turn, discovering another facet of her own style. Verdict: Ru-velation! Wearing a champagne-colored Martha Graham amoeba shawl, flower headdress and painted unitard, Symone fearlessly embraced Utica's quirky drag style. "I feel powerful but in a different way," said Symone of her contorted Utica-inspired runway walk. Verdict: Ru-velation! Let's take a deeper look! Tap link in bio to continue on @EDGEmedianetwork ?️‍???(?: Utica / Instagram / @queenutica / ?: @liamjamesphoto, @philolmstead, @a_kaun, ?️: Matthew Wexler / @wexlerwrites)

And then there were eight. This week, Ru tasked the queens with meta makeovers, pairing them under the advisement of psychic Char Margolis. All eggs were in the maxi challenge basket as contestants learned to sissy their competitors' walks, both in style and substance. Some had an out-of-body experience, while others were merely ghostly interpretations. While our usual "frayed" or "fab" assessment doesn't apply this week, we've decided to rate the looks as "RU-velation" for our favorite doppelgänger queens and "Regret" for those who might want to reconsider stepping into another queen's well-worn heels. Thankfully, Carol Burnett was not in the house this week as Utica crawled into Symone's stylish skin. Initially worried about "appropriating" her teammate, Utica, instead shed some of her own inhibitions, embracing Symone's powerful runway walk and, in turn, discovering another facet of her own style. Verdict: Ru-velation! Wearing a champagne-colored Martha Graham amoeba shawl, flower headdress and painted unitard, Symone fearlessly embraced Utica's quirky drag style. "I feel powerful but in a different way," said Symone of her contorted Utica-inspired runway walk. Verdict: Ru-velation! Let's take a deeper look! Tap link in bio to continue on @EDGEmedianetwork ?️‍???(?: Utica / Instagram / @queenutica / ?: @liamjamesphoto, @philolmstead, @a_kaun, ?️: Matthew Wexler / @wexlerwrites)

After a teacher in Austin, Texas shared a children's book about transgender identity in class, the Eanes Independent School District has clapped back, calling the book out of place and offering counseling to students who heard the reading. The book in question, "Call Me Max" by Stonewall-Award winner Kyle Lukoff, centers on a transgender boy outlining his identity and is meant to help explain this idea to younger children. According to Today, the controversy climbed when local parents wrote to Forest Trail Elementary calling for the teacher in question to be fired. Eanes district's chief learning officer Susan Famborough responded, stating that while the book was listed as diverse reading, it was "not appropriate to be read aloud to an entire elementary-age class." Famborough's response quickly added that "counselors were made available to support students, and the school administration worked with families to provide an explanation and reassurances." The backlash to these responses was swift, with both the book's author and a variety of resident around the district expressing their dismay with the negative precedent these events could set for young transgender children. Jo Iveseter, whose transgender son Jeremy attended school in Eanes from kindgeraten to his senior of high school, had some choice words for the districts decision to ban the book. "It tells them that they must be invisible, that they can't talk about who they are, that they are unworthy," Ivester said of the district's decision. Lukoff reacted similarly, taking to Twitter to express his grievances with the elementary school's interpretation of his book. "Do you believe that a read-aloud about a transgender child is an equivalent trauma?" asked in the Tweet. "How do you think transgender people in your community felt having their identities treated like a disaster?" Tap link in bio to continue on @EDGEmedianetwork ?️‍??(?: Cover / Call Me Max / Reycraft Books / ?️: Brendan Walker / @brendan.m.walker)

After a teacher in Austin, Texas shared a children's book about transgender identity in class, the Eanes Independent School District has clapped back, calling the book out of place and offering counseling to students who heard the reading. The book in question, "Call Me Max" by Stonewall-Award winner Kyle Lukoff, centers on a transgender boy outlining his identity and is meant to help explain this idea to younger children. According to Today, the controversy climbed when local parents wrote to Forest Trail Elementary calling for the teacher in question to be fired. Eanes district's chief learning officer Susan Famborough responded, stating that while the book was listed as diverse reading, it was "not appropriate to be read aloud to an entire elementary-age class." Famborough's response quickly added that "counselors were made available to support students, and the school administration worked with families to provide an explanation and reassurances." The backlash to these responses was swift, with both the book's author and a variety of resident around the district expressing their dismay with the negative precedent these events could set for young transgender children. Jo Iveseter, whose transgender son Jeremy attended school in Eanes from kindgeraten to his senior of high school, had some choice words for the districts decision to ban the book. "It tells them that they must be invisible, that they can't talk about who they are, that they are unworthy," Ivester said of the district's decision. Lukoff reacted similarly, taking to Twitter to express his grievances with the elementary school's interpretation of his book. "Do you believe that a read-aloud about a transgender child is an equivalent trauma?" asked in the Tweet. "How do you think transgender people in your community felt having their identities treated like a disaster?" Tap link in bio to continue on @EDGEmedianetwork ?️‍??(?: Cover / Call Me Max / Reycraft Books / ?️: Brendan Walker / @brendan.m.walker)

After a teacher in Austin, Texas shared a children's book about transgender identity in class, the Eanes Independent School District has clapped back, calling the book out of place and offering counseling to students who heard the reading. The book in question, "Call Me Max" by Stonewall-Award winner Kyle Lukoff, centers on a transgender boy outlining his identity and is meant to help explain this idea to younger children. According to Today, the controversy climbed when local parents wrote to Forest Trail Elementary calling for the teacher in question to be fired. Eanes district's chief learning officer Susan Famborough responded, stating that while the book was listed as diverse reading, it was "not appropriate to be read aloud to an entire elementary-age class." Famborough's response quickly added that "counselors were made available to support students, and the school administration worked with families to provide an explanation and reassurances." The backlash to these responses was swift, with both the book's author and a variety of resident around the district expressing their dismay with the negative precedent these events could set for young transgender children. Jo Iveseter, whose transgender son Jeremy attended school in Eanes from kindgeraten to his senior of high school, had some choice words for the districts decision to ban the book. "It tells them that they must be invisible, that they can't talk about who they are, that they are unworthy," Ivester said of the district's decision. Lukoff reacted similarly, taking to Twitter to express his grievances with the elementary school's interpretation of his book. "Do you believe that a read-aloud about a transgender child is an equivalent trauma?" asked in the Tweet. "How do you think transgender people in your community felt having their identities treated like a disaster?" Tap link in bio to continue on @EDGEmedianetwork ?️‍??(?: Cover / Call Me Max / Reycraft Books / ?️: Brendan Walker / @brendan.m.walker)

A chance meeting at a dinner party by two people reluctant to be at that dinner party has resulted in a cookbook perfect for your next dinner party. Jesse Tyler Ferguson, star of "Modern Family," and food writer Julie Tanous have teamed up for "Food Between Friends," which blends dishes inspired by her native South and his New Mexico influences. "We just started collecting recipes and ideas based on our history and the people that we care about," said Ferguson. "I think the flavor profiles naturally go beautifully together." It's a breezy celebration of both cuisines in sections on brunch, fish, chicken, beef, desserts, starters, drinks and vegetarian dishes. Both regions come through beautifully in their green chili chicken enchilada pot pie, which takes the spirit of the South and brings it into the Southwest. Tanous, who has written food stories, developed recipes for magazines and worked in catering, said most of the recipes are riffs off what both authors grew up eating, the restaurant dishes they adore and the foods their husbands love. She traveled to New Mexico with Ferguson and would bring an extra suitcase to take home things like blue cornmeal and chilies. There's a lightness and a winking humor throughout, as when Ferguson writes about how his family would likely razz him if he called patties by the more upscale name croquette. The authors also peel back the formula to writing introductions to recipes, and argue that crispy-skin salmon — approachable, adaptable, easy to work with and liked by all — is the "Tom Hanks of protein." "We looked for funny, humorous ways to sort of not take ourselves too seriously," said Ferguson. "We're first-time cookbook authors and we didn't want to enter the room being like, 'Well, we know a lot about all of this.' We really were trying to be very respectful of where we sat as first-time authors." While both writers were well versed on items common to the South and Southwest — like beans, corn and chilies — each introduced different ingredients to the other. Tap link in bio to continue on @EDGEmedianetwork ??️? (?: Jesse Tyler Ferguson @jessetyler and Julie Tanous @juliebethtanous / Clarkson Potter via AP)

A chance meeting at a dinner party by two people reluctant to be at that dinner party has resulted in a cookbook perfect for your next dinner party. Jesse Tyler Ferguson, star of "Modern Family," and food writer Julie Tanous have teamed up for "Food Between Friends," which blends dishes inspired by her native South and his New Mexico influences. "We just started collecting recipes and ideas based on our history and the people that we care about," said Ferguson. "I think the flavor profiles naturally go beautifully together." It's a breezy celebration of both cuisines in sections on brunch, fish, chicken, beef, desserts, starters, drinks and vegetarian dishes. Both regions come through beautifully in their green chili chicken enchilada pot pie, which takes the spirit of the South and brings it into the Southwest. Tanous, who has written food stories, developed recipes for magazines and worked in catering, said most of the recipes are riffs off what both authors grew up eating, the restaurant dishes they adore and the foods their husbands love. She traveled to New Mexico with Ferguson and would bring an extra suitcase to take home things like blue cornmeal and chilies. There's a lightness and a winking humor throughout, as when Ferguson writes about how his family would likely razz him if he called patties by the more upscale name croquette. The authors also peel back the formula to writing introductions to recipes, and argue that crispy-skin salmon — approachable, adaptable, easy to work with and liked by all — is the "Tom Hanks of protein." "We looked for funny, humorous ways to sort of not take ourselves too seriously," said Ferguson. "We're first-time cookbook authors and we didn't want to enter the room being like, 'Well, we know a lot about all of this.' We really were trying to be very respectful of where we sat as first-time authors." While both writers were well versed on items common to the South and Southwest — like beans, corn and chilies — each introduced different ingredients to the other. Tap link in bio to continue on @EDGEmedianetwork ??️? (?: Jesse Tyler Ferguson @jessetyler and Julie Tanous @juliebethtanous / Clarkson Potter via AP)

A chance meeting at a dinner party by two people reluctant to be at that dinner party has resulted in a cookbook perfect for your next dinner party. Jesse Tyler Ferguson, star of "Modern Family," and food writer Julie Tanous have teamed up for "Food Between Friends," which blends dishes inspired by her native South and his New Mexico influences. "We just started collecting recipes and ideas based on our history and the people that we care about," said Ferguson. "I think the flavor profiles naturally go beautifully together." It's a breezy celebration of both cuisines in sections on brunch, fish, chicken, beef, desserts, starters, drinks and vegetarian dishes. Both regions come through beautifully in their green chili chicken enchilada pot pie, which takes the spirit of the South and brings it into the Southwest. Tanous, who has written food stories, developed recipes for magazines and worked in catering, said most of the recipes are riffs off what both authors grew up eating, the restaurant dishes they adore and the foods their husbands love. She traveled to New Mexico with Ferguson and would bring an extra suitcase to take home things like blue cornmeal and chilies. There's a lightness and a winking humor throughout, as when Ferguson writes about how his family would likely razz him if he called patties by the more upscale name croquette. The authors also peel back the formula to writing introductions to recipes, and argue that crispy-skin salmon — approachable, adaptable, easy to work with and liked by all — is the "Tom Hanks of protein." "We looked for funny, humorous ways to sort of not take ourselves too seriously," said Ferguson. "We're first-time cookbook authors and we didn't want to enter the room being like, 'Well, we know a lot about all of this.' We really were trying to be very respectful of where we sat as first-time authors." While both writers were well versed on items common to the South and Southwest — like beans, corn and chilies — each introduced different ingredients to the other. Tap link in bio to continue on @EDGEmedianetwork ??️? (?: Jesse Tyler Ferguson @jessetyler and Julie Tanous @juliebethtanous / Clarkson Potter via AP)

⁠
David Gleeson and Leah Atkins built their family home on the NSW South Coast from the ground up. ⁠
⁠
In the kitchen, David hand-poured the concrete benchtops and built the shelving. "This is for all my bits and bobs," says Leah who has amassed as trove of quirky pieces. ⁠
⁠
Tour the serene beach house and see even more handmade pieces, by clicking the link in our profile. ⁠
⁠
Photography: @brigidarnottphotography⁠
Styling: Vanessa Colyer-Tay @miss_ness_tay⁠
⁠
#kitchendesign #concrete #concretecountertops #modernfarmhouse

⁠ David Gleeson and Leah Atkins built their family home on the NSW South Coast from the ground up. ⁠ ⁠ In the kitchen, David hand-poured the concrete benchtops and built the shelving. "This is for all my bits and bobs," says Leah who has amassed as trove of quirky pieces. ⁠ ⁠ Tour the serene beach house and see even more handmade pieces, by clicking the link in our profile. ⁠ ⁠ Photography: @brigidarnottphotography⁠ Styling: Vanessa Colyer-Tay @miss_ness_tay⁠ ⁠ #kitchendesign #concrete #concretecountertops #modernfarmhouse

⁠ David Gleeson and Leah Atkins built their family home on the NSW South Coast from the ground up. ⁠ ⁠ In the kitchen, David hand-poured the concrete benchtops and built the shelving. "This is for all my bits and bobs," says Leah who has amassed as trove of quirky pieces. ⁠ ⁠ Tour the serene beach house and see even more handmade pieces, by clicking the link in our profile. ⁠ ⁠ Photography: @brigidarnottphotography⁠ Styling: Vanessa Colyer-Tay @miss_ness_tay⁠ ⁠ #kitchendesign #concrete #concretecountertops #modernfarmhouse

A Bangladeshi satellite television station has hired the country's first transgender news anchor, saying it hopes the appointment will help change society. Tashnuva Anan Shishir, who previously worked as a rights activist and actress, debuted on Dhaka-based Boishakhi TV on Monday, International Women's Day. She read a three-minute news bulletin, and after finishing cried as her colleagues applauded and cheered. "I was very nervous, I was feeling so much emotional, but I had in my mind that I must overcome this ordeal, this final test," Shishir, 29, said in an interview Tuesday. Born Kamal Hossain Shishir, she said she found in her early teens that she was stuck in a man's body and behaved like a woman. She said family members, relatives and neighbors started teasing her and she was bullied and sexually exploited. She started feeling that it was impossible to continue living and attempted suicide, she said. The worst thing that happened was that her father stopped talking to her, saying she was the reason that her family was losing face, Shishir said. "I left home," she said. She moved from her family's house in a southern coastal district to live a solitary life in the capital, where she underwent hormone therapy, worked for charities and acted with a local theater group. In January, she began studying public health at a Dhaka university, which she is continuing alongside her job at the TV station. Tap link in bio to continue on @EDGEmedianetwork ????️‍? (?: Tashnuva Anan Shishir / AP / Al-emrun Garjon)

A Bangladeshi satellite television station has hired the country's first transgender news anchor, saying it hopes the appointment will help change society. Tashnuva Anan Shishir, who previously worked as a rights activist and actress, debuted on Dhaka-based Boishakhi TV on Monday, International Women's Day. She read a three-minute news bulletin, and after finishing cried as her colleagues applauded and cheered. "I was very nervous, I was feeling so much emotional, but I had in my mind that I must overcome this ordeal, this final test," Shishir, 29, said in an interview Tuesday. Born Kamal Hossain Shishir, she said she found in her early teens that she was stuck in a man's body and behaved like a woman. She said family members, relatives and neighbors started teasing her and she was bullied and sexually exploited. She started feeling that it was impossible to continue living and attempted suicide, she said. The worst thing that happened was that her father stopped talking to her, saying she was the reason that her family was losing face, Shishir said. "I left home," she said. She moved from her family's house in a southern coastal district to live a solitary life in the capital, where she underwent hormone therapy, worked for charities and acted with a local theater group. In January, she began studying public health at a Dhaka university, which she is continuing alongside her job at the TV station. Tap link in bio to continue on @EDGEmedianetwork ????️‍? (?: Tashnuva Anan Shishir / AP / Al-emrun Garjon)

A Bangladeshi satellite television station has hired the country's first transgender news anchor, saying it hopes the appointment will help change society. Tashnuva Anan Shishir, who previously worked as a rights activist and actress, debuted on Dhaka-based Boishakhi TV on Monday, International Women's Day. She read a three-minute news bulletin, and after finishing cried as her colleagues applauded and cheered. "I was very nervous, I was feeling so much emotional, but I had in my mind that I must overcome this ordeal, this final test," Shishir, 29, said in an interview Tuesday. Born Kamal Hossain Shishir, she said she found in her early teens that she was stuck in a man's body and behaved like a woman. She said family members, relatives and neighbors started teasing her and she was bullied and sexually exploited. She started feeling that it was impossible to continue living and attempted suicide, she said. The worst thing that happened was that her father stopped talking to her, saying she was the reason that her family was losing face, Shishir said. "I left home," she said. She moved from her family's house in a southern coastal district to live a solitary life in the capital, where she underwent hormone therapy, worked for charities and acted with a local theater group. In January, she began studying public health at a Dhaka university, which she is continuing alongside her job at the TV station. Tap link in bio to continue on @EDGEmedianetwork ????️‍? (?: Tashnuva Anan Shishir / AP / Al-emrun Garjon)

The European Parliament has overwhelming adopted a resolution declaring the entire 27-member European Union a "freedom zone" for LGBT people, an effort to push back on rising homophobia in Poland and elsewhere. The parliament announced Thursday that there were 492 ballots in favor of the resolution and 141 against in a vote that came after a debate in a session of parliament in Brussels on Wednesday. The resolution came largely in reaction to developments over the past two years in Poland, where many local communities have adopted largely symbolic resolutions declaring themselves free of what conservative authorities have been calling "LGBT ideology." These towns say they are seeking to protect traditional families based on unions of men and women, but LGBT rights activists say the designations are discriminatory and make gays and lesbians feel unwelcome. The areas have come to be colloquially known as "LGBT-free zones." The resolution is the work of a cross-party group in the European Parliament, the LGBTI Intergroup. The Polish government has denounced the resolution. It argues that Poland, as a sovereign nation and a society more conservative than many Western European countries, has the right to defend its traditional family values based on a long attachment to Roman Catholicism. It accuses the EU lawmakers of overstepping their jurisdiction. The government also has argued that the rates of hate crimes are lower in Poland than in many countries in Western Europe. However, LGBT rights activists say this is impossible to measure. Kuba Gawon, who has been documenting local anti-LGBT resolutions with the group Atlas of Hate, said that there is no mention in the Polish penal code specifically about homophobic crimes, so police do not keep statistics of such crimes. Tap link in bio to continue on @EDGEmedianetwork ?️‍?? (?: Bart Staszewski, an LGBT activist, holds up a sign he uses to protest anti-LGBT resolutions, in Warsaw, Poland / AP Photo/Czarek Sokolowski)

The European Parliament has overwhelming adopted a resolution declaring the entire 27-member European Union a "freedom zone" for LGBT people, an effort to push back on rising homophobia in Poland and elsewhere. The parliament announced Thursday that there were 492 ballots in favor of the resolution and 141 against in a vote that came after a debate in a session of parliament in Brussels on Wednesday. The resolution came largely in reaction to developments over the past two years in Poland, where many local communities have adopted largely symbolic resolutions declaring themselves free of what conservative authorities have been calling "LGBT ideology." These towns say they are seeking to protect traditional families based on unions of men and women, but LGBT rights activists say the designations are discriminatory and make gays and lesbians feel unwelcome. The areas have come to be colloquially known as "LGBT-free zones." The resolution is the work of a cross-party group in the European Parliament, the LGBTI Intergroup. The Polish government has denounced the resolution. It argues that Poland, as a sovereign nation and a society more conservative than many Western European countries, has the right to defend its traditional family values based on a long attachment to Roman Catholicism. It accuses the EU lawmakers of overstepping their jurisdiction. The government also has argued that the rates of hate crimes are lower in Poland than in many countries in Western Europe. However, LGBT rights activists say this is impossible to measure. Kuba Gawon, who has been documenting local anti-LGBT resolutions with the group Atlas of Hate, said that there is no mention in the Polish penal code specifically about homophobic crimes, so police do not keep statistics of such crimes. Tap link in bio to continue on @EDGEmedianetwork ?️‍?? (?: Bart Staszewski, an LGBT activist, holds up a sign he uses to protest anti-LGBT resolutions, in Warsaw, Poland / AP Photo/Czarek Sokolowski)

The European Parliament has overwhelming adopted a resolution declaring the entire 27-member European Union a "freedom zone" for LGBT people, an effort to push back on rising homophobia in Poland and elsewhere. The parliament announced Thursday that there were 492 ballots in favor of the resolution and 141 against in a vote that came after a debate in a session of parliament in Brussels on Wednesday. The resolution came largely in reaction to developments over the past two years in Poland, where many local communities have adopted largely symbolic resolutions declaring themselves free of what conservative authorities have been calling "LGBT ideology." These towns say they are seeking to protect traditional families based on unions of men and women, but LGBT rights activists say the designations are discriminatory and make gays and lesbians feel unwelcome. The areas have come to be colloquially known as "LGBT-free zones." The resolution is the work of a cross-party group in the European Parliament, the LGBTI Intergroup. The Polish government has denounced the resolution. It argues that Poland, as a sovereign nation and a society more conservative than many Western European countries, has the right to defend its traditional family values based on a long attachment to Roman Catholicism. It accuses the EU lawmakers of overstepping their jurisdiction. The government also has argued that the rates of hate crimes are lower in Poland than in many countries in Western Europe. However, LGBT rights activists say this is impossible to measure. Kuba Gawon, who has been documenting local anti-LGBT resolutions with the group Atlas of Hate, said that there is no mention in the Polish penal code specifically about homophobic crimes, so police do not keep statistics of such crimes. Tap link in bio to continue on @EDGEmedianetwork ?️‍?? (?: Bart Staszewski, an LGBT activist, holds up a sign he uses to protest anti-LGBT resolutions, in Warsaw, Poland / AP Photo/Czarek Sokolowski)

갑자기 찾아온 봄, 간단히 떠나볼까⛺️
에어비앤비가 소개하는 캠핑 감성 숙소와 체험!
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캠핑 소품을 직접 내 손으로, 춘천 솔바우하우스부터
도심 안에서 즐기는 숲 레몬하우스까지?
봄바람 타고 떠나는 캠핑 숙소 DIVE에서 만나봐요
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?프로필의 링크를 통해 '초보 캠퍼 모여라' 콘텐츠를 확인해 보세요
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?잠깐! 캠핑에 대해 더 알아보고 싶다면?
지금 트래블 라이브러리에서 캠핑 테마를 즐겨 보세요!
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#Airbnb #에어비앤비
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#현대카드DIVE #현대카드다이브
#현대카드 #HyundaiCard

갑자기 찾아온 봄, 간단히 떠나볼까⛺️ 에어비앤비가 소개하는 캠핑 감성 숙소와 체험! - 캠핑 소품을 직접 내 손으로, 춘천 솔바우하우스부터 도심 안에서 즐기는 숲 레몬하우스까지? 봄바람 타고 떠나는 캠핑 숙소 DIVE에서 만나봐요 - ?프로필의 링크를 통해 '초보 캠퍼 모여라' 콘텐츠를 확인해 보세요 - ?잠깐! 캠핑에 대해 더 알아보고 싶다면? 지금 트래블 라이브러리에서 캠핑 테마를 즐겨 보세요! - #Airbnb #에어비앤비 - #현대카드DIVE #현대카드다이브 #현대카드 #HyundaiCard

갑자기 찾아온 봄, 간단히 떠나볼까⛺️ 에어비앤비가 소개하는 캠핑 감성 숙소와 체험! - 캠핑 소품을 직접 내 손으로, 춘천 솔바우하우스부터 도심 안에서 즐기는 숲 레몬하우스까지? 봄바람 타고 떠나는 캠핑 숙소 DIVE에서 만나봐요 - ?프로필의 링크를 통해 '초보 캠퍼 모여라' 콘텐츠를 확인해 보세요 - ?잠깐! 캠핑에 대해 더 알아보고 싶다면? 지금 트래블 라이브러리에서 캠핑 테마를 즐겨 보세요! - #Airbnb #에어비앤비 - #현대카드DIVE #현대카드다이브 #현대카드 #HyundaiCard

Previously occupied by a roofing company, and then an antiques dealer, this cottage required a lot of work when award-winning artist Zoe Young moved in. ⁠
⁠
"I laugh when I think of our first days in the house," reflects Zoe. "We were so happy to just have a space of our own that we were truly blind to all the work that needed to be done."⁠
⁠
Tap the link in our profile to take a tour.⁠
⁠
Photography: @lisacohenphoto⁠
Styling: @becksimonstylist ⁠
⁠
⁠
#deck #cottagestyle #stilllife #garden⁠

Previously occupied by a roofing company, and then an antiques dealer, this cottage required a lot of work when award-winning artist Zoe Young moved in. ⁠ ⁠ "I laugh when I think of our first days in the house," reflects Zoe. "We were so happy to just have a space of our own that we were truly blind to all the work that needed to be done."⁠ ⁠ Tap the link in our profile to take a tour.⁠ ⁠ Photography: @lisacohenphoto⁠ Styling: @becksimonstylist ⁠ ⁠ ⁠ #deck #cottagestyle #stilllife #garden⁠

Previously occupied by a roofing company, and then an antiques dealer, this cottage required a lot of work when award-winning artist Zoe Young moved in. ⁠ ⁠ "I laugh when I think of our first days in the house," reflects Zoe. "We were so happy to just have a space of our own that we were truly blind to all the work that needed to be done."⁠ ⁠ Tap the link in our profile to take a tour.⁠ ⁠ Photography: @lisacohenphoto⁠ Styling: @becksimonstylist ⁠ ⁠ ⁠ #deck #cottagestyle #stilllife #garden⁠

<오버 더 레코드> 역대 최다 조회?
현대카드 CEO 정태영의 Branding Talk!
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보는 것만으로는 아쉬웠던 후배 마케터를 위해 준비한
직접 묻고 듣는 '방과 후 LIVE Q&A'!
궁금했던 질문들 가지고 클럽하우스에서 만나요?
-
?Tip!
<오버 더 레코드> 현대카드 CEO 정태영 편 1~6강 복습하기
?프로필의 링크와 YouTube를 통해 강의 시청 가능!
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<클럽하우스 Branding Talk>
✅1차
• 일시 : 2021. 03. 16(화) 오후 9시 ~ 11시
• 주제 : 브랜딩 에센스 (오버 더 레코드 1~3강)
• 출연 : 정태영 현대카드 CEO, 박지호 영감의 서재 대표

✅2차
• 일시 : 2021. 03. 23(화) 오후 9시 ~ 11시
• 주제 : 디자인과 광고 (오버 더 레코드 4~6강)
• 출연 : 정태영 현대카드 CEO, 전은경 월간디자인 편집장, 배금별 이노션 ECD, 류수진 현대카드 브랜드본부장
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#오버더레코드 #OVERTHERECORD
#정태영 #클럽하우스
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#현대카드DIVE #현대카드다이브
#현대카드 #HyundaiCard

<오버 더 레코드> 역대 최다 조회? 현대카드 CEO 정태영의 Branding Talk! - 보는 것만으로는 아쉬웠던 후배 마케터를 위해 준비한 직접 묻고 듣는 '방과 후 LIVE Q&A'! 궁금했던 질문들 가지고 클럽하우스에서 만나요? - ?Tip! <오버 더 레코드> 현대카드 CEO 정태영 편 1~6강 복습하기 ?프로필의 링크와 YouTube를 통해 강의 시청 가능! - <클럽하우스 Branding Talk> ✅1차 • 일시 : 2021. 03. 16(화) 오후 9시 ~ 11시 • 주제 : 브랜딩 에센스 (오버 더 레코드 1~3강) • 출연 : 정태영 현대카드 CEO, 박지호 영감의 서재 대표 ✅2차 • 일시 : 2021. 03. 23(화) 오후 9시 ~ 11시 • 주제 : 디자인과 광고 (오버 더 레코드 4~6강) • 출연 : 정태영 현대카드 CEO, 전은경 월간디자인 편집장, 배금별 이노션 ECD, 류수진 현대카드 브랜드본부장 - #오버더레코드 #OVERTHERECORD #정태영 #클럽하우스 - #현대카드DIVE #현대카드다이브 #현대카드 #HyundaiCard

<오버 더 레코드> 역대 최다 조회? 현대카드 CEO 정태영의 Branding Talk! - 보는 것만으로는 아쉬웠던 후배 마케터를 위해 준비한 직접 묻고 듣는 '방과 후 LIVE Q&A'! 궁금했던 질문들 가지고 클럽하우스에서 만나요? - ?Tip! <오버 더 레코드> 현대카드 CEO 정태영 편 1~6강 복습하기 ?프로필의 링크와 YouTube를 통해 강의 시청 가능! - <클럽하우스 Branding Talk> ✅1차 • 일시 : 2021. 03. 16(화) 오후 9시 ~ 11시 • 주제 : 브랜딩 에센스 (오버 더 레코드 1~3강) • 출연 : 정태영 현대카드 CEO, 박지호 영감의 서재 대표 ✅2차 • 일시 : 2021. 03. 23(화) 오후 9시 ~ 11시 • 주제 : 디자인과 광고 (오버 더 레코드 4~6강) • 출연 : 정태영 현대카드 CEO, 전은경 월간디자인 편집장, 배금별 이노션 ECD, 류수진 현대카드 브랜드본부장 - #오버더레코드 #OVERTHERECORD #정태영 #클럽하우스 - #현대카드DIVE #현대카드다이브 #현대카드 #HyundaiCard

Single Americans have taken sex into their own hands since the pandemic began. The average single person is masturbating three times per day, according to new research. A poll of 2,005 single Americans found three in 10 are masturbating more than once a day — and just 14% are doing it once a day. Masturbation has seen an uptick since March 2020 as nearly half (48%) are pleasuring themselves more frequently than ever before due to being indoors so much more. These solo sessions have led to some jaw-dropping orgasms — over a third (34%) experienced their best orgasm ever during the pandemic. What's led to this boom of mind-blowing pleasure? Three in 10 say trying a new position or technique has boosted their sex life amid the pandemic — like masturbating. Conducted by OnePoll on behalf of #LubeLife, the survey aimed to see how the pandemic has affected singles' sex lives and discovered over a quarter (26%) say they are watching more porn during the pandemic. Nearly half (47%) of those who are single surveyed say that they used to be embarrassed about masturbating, but since the pandemic began, they have become a lot more open to it. This new embrace of masturbation stems from the fact that 39% of respondents have experienced a dry spell in their sex lives since March 2020. And 59% of those don't plan on breaking their dry spell any time soon, even if the pandemic went away — with one in five saying they want to experiment with masturbation even more. One in 10 of those looking to extend their dry spell in a post-COVID world intend to do so because they PREFER masturbating now. Even so, 57% of those who've experienced a dry spell are worried about having sex for the first time after not recently experiencing it with a partner. Tap link in bio to continue on @EDGEmedianetwork ??? (?: Getty)

Single Americans have taken sex into their own hands since the pandemic began. The average single person is masturbating three times per day, according to new research. A poll of 2,005 single Americans found three in 10 are masturbating more than once a day — and just 14% are doing it once a day. Masturbation has seen an uptick since March 2020 as nearly half (48%) are pleasuring themselves more frequently than ever before due to being indoors so much more. These solo sessions have led to some jaw-dropping orgasms — over a third (34%) experienced their best orgasm ever during the pandemic. What's led to this boom of mind-blowing pleasure? Three in 10 say trying a new position or technique has boosted their sex life amid the pandemic — like masturbating. Conducted by OnePoll on behalf of #LubeLife, the survey aimed to see how the pandemic has affected singles' sex lives and discovered over a quarter (26%) say they are watching more porn during the pandemic. Nearly half (47%) of those who are single surveyed say that they used to be embarrassed about masturbating, but since the pandemic began, they have become a lot more open to it. This new embrace of masturbation stems from the fact that 39% of respondents have experienced a dry spell in their sex lives since March 2020. And 59% of those don't plan on breaking their dry spell any time soon, even if the pandemic went away — with one in five saying they want to experiment with masturbation even more. One in 10 of those looking to extend their dry spell in a post-COVID world intend to do so because they PREFER masturbating now. Even so, 57% of those who've experienced a dry spell are worried about having sex for the first time after not recently experiencing it with a partner. Tap link in bio to continue on @EDGEmedianetwork ??? (?: Getty)

Single Americans have taken sex into their own hands since the pandemic began. The average single person is masturbating three times per day, according to new research. A poll of 2,005 single Americans found three in 10 are masturbating more than once a day — and just 14% are doing it once a day. Masturbation has seen an uptick since March 2020 as nearly half (48%) are pleasuring themselves more frequently than ever before due to being indoors so much more. These solo sessions have led to some jaw-dropping orgasms — over a third (34%) experienced their best orgasm ever during the pandemic. What's led to this boom of mind-blowing pleasure? Three in 10 say trying a new position or technique has boosted their sex life amid the pandemic — like masturbating. Conducted by OnePoll on behalf of #LubeLife, the survey aimed to see how the pandemic has affected singles' sex lives and discovered over a quarter (26%) say they are watching more porn during the pandemic. Nearly half (47%) of those who are single surveyed say that they used to be embarrassed about masturbating, but since the pandemic began, they have become a lot more open to it. This new embrace of masturbation stems from the fact that 39% of respondents have experienced a dry spell in their sex lives since March 2020. And 59% of those don't plan on breaking their dry spell any time soon, even if the pandemic went away — with one in five saying they want to experiment with masturbation even more. One in 10 of those looking to extend their dry spell in a post-COVID world intend to do so because they PREFER masturbating now. Even so, 57% of those who've experienced a dry spell are worried about having sex for the first time after not recently experiencing it with a partner. Tap link in bio to continue on @EDGEmedianetwork ??? (?: Getty)

In the opening sequence in "West Side Story," there is an iconic image of George Chakiris. In a close-up, he stands with one hand pressed against a red brick wall brooding with anger after being harassed by members of a rival teen gang, the Jets. Stepping away, he begins to snap his fingers joined by two other Sharks. Then to surging Leonard Bernstein music, the three break into dance, first on a street than framed against the tenements of New York's West Side that were razed after the filming was completed. In this moment, the smoldering Chakiris establishes a formidable presence in this musical retelling of "Romeo and Juliet" set amongst infighting between juvenile gangs in New York. Hollywood agreed, awarding him (along with co-star Rita Moreno) a supporting performance Oscar. Up to that point, Chakiris had been in numerous films, but largely in small roles, usually as a dancer or chorus member in such films as "The Great Caruso," "Stars and Stripes Forever," "Call Me Madam," and "The 5,000 Fingers of Dr. T." He is famously seen in 1951's "Gentlemen Prefer Blondes" as one of the men with Marilyn Monroe in the "Diamonds are a Girl's Best Friend" number. And in 1953 opposite Rosemary Clooney in "White Christmas" performing "Love, You Didn't Do Right by Me." A publicity photo from that scene generated so much fan mail to Paramount that the studio offered him a contract; but unhappy with his career, he moved to New York City in the late 1950s to pursue a stage career. After being cast as Riff in the London production of "West Side Story," he was flown to Hollywood to audition for either that role or his rival Bernardo for the film version, and worked with the show's creator Jerome Robbins for his audition. This led to him being cast in the film, overnight stardom and an Oscar. Then in November of 2012, he had the honor of placing his hand and footprints in cement at Grauman's Chinese Theatre in honor of the film's 50th anniversary. EDGE spoke to Chakiris about "My West Side Story: A Memoir." Tap link in bio to continue on @EDGEmedianetwork ?? (?️: Steve Duffy, ?: George Chakiris / West Side Story / MGM)

In the opening sequence in "West Side Story," there is an iconic image of George Chakiris. In a close-up, he stands with one hand pressed against a red brick wall brooding with anger after being harassed by members of a rival teen gang, the Jets. Stepping away, he begins to snap his fingers joined by two other Sharks. Then to surging Leonard Bernstein music, the three break into dance, first on a street than framed against the tenements of New York's West Side that were razed after the filming was completed. In this moment, the smoldering Chakiris establishes a formidable presence in this musical retelling of "Romeo and Juliet" set amongst infighting between juvenile gangs in New York. Hollywood agreed, awarding him (along with co-star Rita Moreno) a supporting performance Oscar. Up to that point, Chakiris had been in numerous films, but largely in small roles, usually as a dancer or chorus member in such films as "The Great Caruso," "Stars and Stripes Forever," "Call Me Madam," and "The 5,000 Fingers of Dr. T." He is famously seen in 1951's "Gentlemen Prefer Blondes" as one of the men with Marilyn Monroe in the "Diamonds are a Girl's Best Friend" number. And in 1953 opposite Rosemary Clooney in "White Christmas" performing "Love, You Didn't Do Right by Me." A publicity photo from that scene generated so much fan mail to Paramount that the studio offered him a contract; but unhappy with his career, he moved to New York City in the late 1950s to pursue a stage career. After being cast as Riff in the London production of "West Side Story," he was flown to Hollywood to audition for either that role or his rival Bernardo for the film version, and worked with the show's creator Jerome Robbins for his audition. This led to him being cast in the film, overnight stardom and an Oscar. Then in November of 2012, he had the honor of placing his hand and footprints in cement at Grauman's Chinese Theatre in honor of the film's 50th anniversary. EDGE spoke to Chakiris about "My West Side Story: A Memoir." Tap link in bio to continue on @EDGEmedianetwork ?? (?️: Steve Duffy, ?: George Chakiris / West Side Story / MGM)

In the opening sequence in "West Side Story," there is an iconic image of George Chakiris. In a close-up, he stands with one hand pressed against a red brick wall brooding with anger after being harassed by members of a rival teen gang, the Jets. Stepping away, he begins to snap his fingers joined by two other Sharks. Then to surging Leonard Bernstein music, the three break into dance, first on a street than framed against the tenements of New York's West Side that were razed after the filming was completed. In this moment, the smoldering Chakiris establishes a formidable presence in this musical retelling of "Romeo and Juliet" set amongst infighting between juvenile gangs in New York. Hollywood agreed, awarding him (along with co-star Rita Moreno) a supporting performance Oscar. Up to that point, Chakiris had been in numerous films, but largely in small roles, usually as a dancer or chorus member in such films as "The Great Caruso," "Stars and Stripes Forever," "Call Me Madam," and "The 5,000 Fingers of Dr. T." He is famously seen in 1951's "Gentlemen Prefer Blondes" as one of the men with Marilyn Monroe in the "Diamonds are a Girl's Best Friend" number. And in 1953 opposite Rosemary Clooney in "White Christmas" performing "Love, You Didn't Do Right by Me." A publicity photo from that scene generated so much fan mail to Paramount that the studio offered him a contract; but unhappy with his career, he moved to New York City in the late 1950s to pursue a stage career. After being cast as Riff in the London production of "West Side Story," he was flown to Hollywood to audition for either that role or his rival Bernardo for the film version, and worked with the show's creator Jerome Robbins for his audition. This led to him being cast in the film, overnight stardom and an Oscar. Then in November of 2012, he had the honor of placing his hand and footprints in cement at Grauman's Chinese Theatre in honor of the film's 50th anniversary. EDGE spoke to Chakiris about "My West Side Story: A Memoir." Tap link in bio to continue on @EDGEmedianetwork ?? (?️: Steve Duffy, ?: George Chakiris / West Side Story / MGM)

In Ohio, GOP Rep. Jena Powell has re-introduced the "Save Women's Sports Act" bill in the state legislature, saying that when it was introduced last year, it wasn't afforded a proper hearing, WKYC reports. Powell repeated standard anti-trans tropes — which were reiterated in former President Trump's factually deficient speech at CPAC last month — about unfounded assumptions that genitalia, for all practical purposes, provides an unfair advantage: "What we're seeing nationwide is when we're having biological males compete against females, it robs females of their athletic opportunity." If passed, the bill would take precedence over Ohio High School Athletic Association guidelines that allow transgender athletes to compete. According to Detroit Free Press, Michigan State Senate introduced a bill that would ban transgender athletes from playing with teams that align with their gender identity — transgender boys would not be able to play on boys' teams, and transgender girls could not play with girls' teams. The bill, sponsored by GOP Senator Lana Theis (of Brighton) and twelve other Republicans, states, "If the school designates a team in an interscholastic athletic activity offered to pupils enrolled at the school as a girls', women's, or female team, a requirement that each pupil who competes for a position on that team or who is selected to compete on that team must be female based on biological sex." Enforcement and penalties for violations of the proposed law are not clear. Describing the proposed bill as unconstitutional, Erin Knott, president of Equality Michigan, said "Kids learn a lot of important life lessons in sports: leadership, confidence, self-respect, and what it means to be part of a team. "School officials shouldn't treat a transgender female student as a girl between 8 a.m. - 3 p.m. and then treat her like she's a boy when sports practice starts. It's deeply hurtful to the student and disrupts the school's policy of treating all kids fairly." Tap link in bio to continue on @EDGEmedianetwork ?️‍?? (?: University of Montana cross country runner Juniper Eastwood / AP)

In Ohio, GOP Rep. Jena Powell has re-introduced the "Save Women's Sports Act" bill in the state legislature, saying that when it was introduced last year, it wasn't afforded a proper hearing, WKYC reports. Powell repeated standard anti-trans tropes — which were reiterated in former President Trump's factually deficient speech at CPAC last month — about unfounded assumptions that genitalia, for all practical purposes, provides an unfair advantage: "What we're seeing nationwide is when we're having biological males compete against females, it robs females of their athletic opportunity." If passed, the bill would take precedence over Ohio High School Athletic Association guidelines that allow transgender athletes to compete. According to Detroit Free Press, Michigan State Senate introduced a bill that would ban transgender athletes from playing with teams that align with their gender identity — transgender boys would not be able to play on boys' teams, and transgender girls could not play with girls' teams. The bill, sponsored by GOP Senator Lana Theis (of Brighton) and twelve other Republicans, states, "If the school designates a team in an interscholastic athletic activity offered to pupils enrolled at the school as a girls', women's, or female team, a requirement that each pupil who competes for a position on that team or who is selected to compete on that team must be female based on biological sex." Enforcement and penalties for violations of the proposed law are not clear. Describing the proposed bill as unconstitutional, Erin Knott, president of Equality Michigan, said "Kids learn a lot of important life lessons in sports: leadership, confidence, self-respect, and what it means to be part of a team. "School officials shouldn't treat a transgender female student as a girl between 8 a.m. - 3 p.m. and then treat her like she's a boy when sports practice starts. It's deeply hurtful to the student and disrupts the school's policy of treating all kids fairly." Tap link in bio to continue on @EDGEmedianetwork ?️‍?? (?: University of Montana cross country runner Juniper Eastwood / AP)

In Ohio, GOP Rep. Jena Powell has re-introduced the "Save Women's Sports Act" bill in the state legislature, saying that when it was introduced last year, it wasn't afforded a proper hearing, WKYC reports. Powell repeated standard anti-trans tropes — which were reiterated in former President Trump's factually deficient speech at CPAC last month — about unfounded assumptions that genitalia, for all practical purposes, provides an unfair advantage: "What we're seeing nationwide is when we're having biological males compete against females, it robs females of their athletic opportunity." If passed, the bill would take precedence over Ohio High School Athletic Association guidelines that allow transgender athletes to compete. According to Detroit Free Press, Michigan State Senate introduced a bill that would ban transgender athletes from playing with teams that align with their gender identity — transgender boys would not be able to play on boys' teams, and transgender girls could not play with girls' teams. The bill, sponsored by GOP Senator Lana Theis (of Brighton) and twelve other Republicans, states, "If the school designates a team in an interscholastic athletic activity offered to pupils enrolled at the school as a girls', women's, or female team, a requirement that each pupil who competes for a position on that team or who is selected to compete on that team must be female based on biological sex." Enforcement and penalties for violations of the proposed law are not clear. Describing the proposed bill as unconstitutional, Erin Knott, president of Equality Michigan, said "Kids learn a lot of important life lessons in sports: leadership, confidence, self-respect, and what it means to be part of a team. "School officials shouldn't treat a transgender female student as a girl between 8 a.m. - 3 p.m. and then treat her like she's a boy when sports practice starts. It's deeply hurtful to the student and disrupts the school's policy of treating all kids fairly." Tap link in bio to continue on @EDGEmedianetwork ?️‍?? (?: University of Montana cross country runner Juniper Eastwood / AP)

Italian actor Michele Morrone became an overnight sensation last year for his starring role in Netflix's "365 Days." In the Polish erotic drama the 30-year-old plays Massimo Torricelli, a Mafia don who kidnaps a Warsaw woman he had seen on a beach five years before and intends on keeping her prisoner for 365 days until she falls in love with him. Morrone is also a talented musician, having learned to play the guitar at the age of 25 by watching YouTube videos. This week he released "Beautiful," a single with a new video. Regarding the single, Morrone said in a press release: "Whether it's the right time or not, love always feels right and it will hunt you until you submit to it." With "Beautiful," "acoustic chords underline his larger-than-life vocals. With a syncopated bounce, his dynamic delivery culminates on the immediately chantable refrain, 'Wish I could turn it off, let it go, but she's too fucking beautiful,'" reads a press release. Morrone not only starred in "365 Days," he also sang four songs on its soundtrack: "Feel It", "Watch Me Burn", "Dark Room" and "Hard for Me," all of which can be heard on his debut album "Dark Room." Co-written by Morrone, the songs cumulatively tallied north of 200 million streams with the music video for "Hard For Me" amassing over 32 million views and counting. Following the success of his debut album, Morrone became the worldwide face of Guess Men's Fall/Winter 2020 collection. EDGE reported last month that Morrone was overwhelmed with the immediate success of "365 Days." "You have to understand," he told Esquire in an interview, "the night the film premiered on Netflix, I went to sleep and I had 48k followers [on Instagram]. When I woke up I had 2.1 million." His eyes go wide and wild when he recounts the story, every now and then he shakes his head. Tap link in bio to continue on @EDGEmedianetwork ???️‍??? (?: Michele Morrone / Instagram / @iammichelemorroneofficial)

Italian actor Michele Morrone became an overnight sensation last year for his starring role in Netflix's "365 Days." In the Polish erotic drama the 30-year-old plays Massimo Torricelli, a Mafia don who kidnaps a Warsaw woman he had seen on a beach five years before and intends on keeping her prisoner for 365 days until she falls in love with him. Morrone is also a talented musician, having learned to play the guitar at the age of 25 by watching YouTube videos. This week he released "Beautiful," a single with a new video. Regarding the single, Morrone said in a press release: "Whether it's the right time or not, love always feels right and it will hunt you until you submit to it." With "Beautiful," "acoustic chords underline his larger-than-life vocals. With a syncopated bounce, his dynamic delivery culminates on the immediately chantable refrain, 'Wish I could turn it off, let it go, but she's too fucking beautiful,'" reads a press release. Morrone not only starred in "365 Days," he also sang four songs on its soundtrack: "Feel It", "Watch Me Burn", "Dark Room" and "Hard for Me," all of which can be heard on his debut album "Dark Room." Co-written by Morrone, the songs cumulatively tallied north of 200 million streams with the music video for "Hard For Me" amassing over 32 million views and counting. Following the success of his debut album, Morrone became the worldwide face of Guess Men's Fall/Winter 2020 collection. EDGE reported last month that Morrone was overwhelmed with the immediate success of "365 Days." "You have to understand," he told Esquire in an interview, "the night the film premiered on Netflix, I went to sleep and I had 48k followers [on Instagram]. When I woke up I had 2.1 million." His eyes go wide and wild when he recounts the story, every now and then he shakes his head. Tap link in bio to continue on @EDGEmedianetwork ???️‍??? (?: Michele Morrone / Instagram / @iammichelemorroneofficial)

Italian actor Michele Morrone became an overnight sensation last year for his starring role in Netflix's "365 Days." In the Polish erotic drama the 30-year-old plays Massimo Torricelli, a Mafia don who kidnaps a Warsaw woman he had seen on a beach five years before and intends on keeping her prisoner for 365 days until she falls in love with him. Morrone is also a talented musician, having learned to play the guitar at the age of 25 by watching YouTube videos. This week he released "Beautiful," a single with a new video. Regarding the single, Morrone said in a press release: "Whether it's the right time or not, love always feels right and it will hunt you until you submit to it." With "Beautiful," "acoustic chords underline his larger-than-life vocals. With a syncopated bounce, his dynamic delivery culminates on the immediately chantable refrain, 'Wish I could turn it off, let it go, but she's too fucking beautiful,'" reads a press release. Morrone not only starred in "365 Days," he also sang four songs on its soundtrack: "Feel It", "Watch Me Burn", "Dark Room" and "Hard for Me," all of which can be heard on his debut album "Dark Room." Co-written by Morrone, the songs cumulatively tallied north of 200 million streams with the music video for "Hard For Me" amassing over 32 million views and counting. Following the success of his debut album, Morrone became the worldwide face of Guess Men's Fall/Winter 2020 collection. EDGE reported last month that Morrone was overwhelmed with the immediate success of "365 Days." "You have to understand," he told Esquire in an interview, "the night the film premiered on Netflix, I went to sleep and I had 48k followers [on Instagram]. When I woke up I had 2.1 million." His eyes go wide and wild when he recounts the story, every now and then he shakes his head. Tap link in bio to continue on @EDGEmedianetwork ???️‍??? (?: Michele Morrone / Instagram / @iammichelemorroneofficial)

Come together in Plano, the city that welcomes all. #PlanoWelcomesAll #Sponsored

Come together in Plano, the city that welcomes all. #PlanoWelcomesAll #Sponsored

Come together in Plano, the city that welcomes all. #PlanoWelcomesAll #Sponsored

Transgender documentary filmmaker Tony Zosherafatain has made a short film, "I Am Isak," about a Norwegian trans man, and he's directed an installment of the series "I Am the T," titled "Cedar" about a Canadian trans man escaping family abuse and drug addiction by embracing his authentic self. Zosherafatain also directed, co-wrote, and appears in, the four-episode docuseries "Trans in Trumpland," now streaming at Topic. Zosherafatain travels through some of America's reddest states across the four episodes of the series to get a sense of the challenges transgender people have faced over the last few years, under the previous administration — an administration that seemed determined at every step to push transgender Americans to the side and subject them to exclusion and erasure. But the series focuses less on politics than people. In North Carolina — a state notorious for being ground zero for anti-trans legislation built around the issue of who may use which restroom — he talks with trans teen Ash; in Texas he visits with Rebecca, a trans immigrant from Mexico who has been detained four times by ICE, and been housed each time with male inmates; in Mississippi he hears from Evonne, the founder of a unique non-profit that, the series' press notes say, "provides vital care to Mississippi's violently neglected LGBTQ community"; and in Idaho he interviews Shane, a Two Spirit Native American and military veteran who has spoken out against the trans military ban that Trump imposed via tweet (and which President Joe Biden has rescinded). Zosherafatain and his producing partner, Jamie DiNicola, run TransWave Films. They spoke with EDGE about their partnership, their production company, and what went into putting this one-of-a-kind road trip together. Tap link in bio to continue on @EDGEmedianetwork ?️‍?? (?️: Kilian Melloy / @dragelruairi, ?: Tony Zosherafatain / Instagram / @tonyzfilms)

Transgender documentary filmmaker Tony Zosherafatain has made a short film, "I Am Isak," about a Norwegian trans man, and he's directed an installment of the series "I Am the T," titled "Cedar" about a Canadian trans man escaping family abuse and drug addiction by embracing his authentic self. Zosherafatain also directed, co-wrote, and appears in, the four-episode docuseries "Trans in Trumpland," now streaming at Topic. Zosherafatain travels through some of America's reddest states across the four episodes of the series to get a sense of the challenges transgender people have faced over the last few years, under the previous administration — an administration that seemed determined at every step to push transgender Americans to the side and subject them to exclusion and erasure. But the series focuses less on politics than people. In North Carolina — a state notorious for being ground zero for anti-trans legislation built around the issue of who may use which restroom — he talks with trans teen Ash; in Texas he visits with Rebecca, a trans immigrant from Mexico who has been detained four times by ICE, and been housed each time with male inmates; in Mississippi he hears from Evonne, the founder of a unique non-profit that, the series' press notes say, "provides vital care to Mississippi's violently neglected LGBTQ community"; and in Idaho he interviews Shane, a Two Spirit Native American and military veteran who has spoken out against the trans military ban that Trump imposed via tweet (and which President Joe Biden has rescinded). Zosherafatain and his producing partner, Jamie DiNicola, run TransWave Films. They spoke with EDGE about their partnership, their production company, and what went into putting this one-of-a-kind road trip together. Tap link in bio to continue on @EDGEmedianetwork ?️‍?? (?️: Kilian Melloy / @dragelruairi, ?: Tony Zosherafatain / Instagram / @tonyzfilms)

Transgender documentary filmmaker Tony Zosherafatain has made a short film, "I Am Isak," about a Norwegian trans man, and he's directed an installment of the series "I Am the T," titled "Cedar" about a Canadian trans man escaping family abuse and drug addiction by embracing his authentic self. Zosherafatain also directed, co-wrote, and appears in, the four-episode docuseries "Trans in Trumpland," now streaming at Topic. Zosherafatain travels through some of America's reddest states across the four episodes of the series to get a sense of the challenges transgender people have faced over the last few years, under the previous administration — an administration that seemed determined at every step to push transgender Americans to the side and subject them to exclusion and erasure. But the series focuses less on politics than people. In North Carolina — a state notorious for being ground zero for anti-trans legislation built around the issue of who may use which restroom — he talks with trans teen Ash; in Texas he visits with Rebecca, a trans immigrant from Mexico who has been detained four times by ICE, and been housed each time with male inmates; in Mississippi he hears from Evonne, the founder of a unique non-profit that, the series' press notes say, "provides vital care to Mississippi's violently neglected LGBTQ community"; and in Idaho he interviews Shane, a Two Spirit Native American and military veteran who has spoken out against the trans military ban that Trump imposed via tweet (and which President Joe Biden has rescinded). Zosherafatain and his producing partner, Jamie DiNicola, run TransWave Films. They spoke with EDGE about their partnership, their production company, and what went into putting this one-of-a-kind road trip together. Tap link in bio to continue on @EDGEmedianetwork ?️‍?? (?️: Kilian Melloy / @dragelruairi, ?: Tony Zosherafatain / Instagram / @tonyzfilms)

Lady Gaga shared the first look at "House of Gucci," the new Ridley Scott thriller starring the pop singer and Adam Driver. In the upcoming film, Gaga plays Patrizia Reggiani, Maurizio Gucci's ex-wife. Variety writes it "depicts the true story of the downfall of the Gucci family dynasty. Adam Driver is portraying Maurizio Gucci, the former head of Gucci fashion," going on to say the movie "dramatizes the events around the assassination of Guccio Gucci's grandson, Maurizio. Patrizia Reggiani was tried and convicted of orchestrating Maurizio Gucci's murder in 1995 after he left her for a younger woman. She served in prison for 18 years, where she gained the nickname Black Widow, before being released in 2016." "House of Gucci" was written by Roberto Bentivegna and is based on the novel "The House of Gucci: A Sensational Story of Murder, Madness, Glamour, and Greed" by Sara Gay Forden. Al Pacino, Jared Leto and Jeremy Irons also star. This marks Gaga's first film role since her performance in the blockbuster "A Star is Born," starring and directed by Bradly Cooper. She was nominated for a Best Actress Oscar but went home with the award for Best Original Song for "Shallow." "House of Gucci" is expected to hit theaters on Nov. 24. Tap link in bio to continue on @EDGEmedianetwork ?️? (?: Adam Driver, left, and Lady Gaga, right, for "House of Gucci." / Twitter, Lady Gaga)

Lady Gaga shared the first look at "House of Gucci," the new Ridley Scott thriller starring the pop singer and Adam Driver. In the upcoming film, Gaga plays Patrizia Reggiani, Maurizio Gucci's ex-wife. Variety writes it "depicts the true story of the downfall of the Gucci family dynasty. Adam Driver is portraying Maurizio Gucci, the former head of Gucci fashion," going on to say the movie "dramatizes the events around the assassination of Guccio Gucci's grandson, Maurizio. Patrizia Reggiani was tried and convicted of orchestrating Maurizio Gucci's murder in 1995 after he left her for a younger woman. She served in prison for 18 years, where she gained the nickname Black Widow, before being released in 2016." "House of Gucci" was written by Roberto Bentivegna and is based on the novel "The House of Gucci: A Sensational Story of Murder, Madness, Glamour, and Greed" by Sara Gay Forden. Al Pacino, Jared Leto and Jeremy Irons also star. This marks Gaga's first film role since her performance in the blockbuster "A Star is Born," starring and directed by Bradly Cooper. She was nominated for a Best Actress Oscar but went home with the award for Best Original Song for "Shallow." "House of Gucci" is expected to hit theaters on Nov. 24. Tap link in bio to continue on @EDGEmedianetwork ?️? (?: Adam Driver, left, and Lady Gaga, right, for "House of Gucci." / Twitter, Lady Gaga)

Lady Gaga shared the first look at "House of Gucci," the new Ridley Scott thriller starring the pop singer and Adam Driver. In the upcoming film, Gaga plays Patrizia Reggiani, Maurizio Gucci's ex-wife. Variety writes it "depicts the true story of the downfall of the Gucci family dynasty. Adam Driver is portraying Maurizio Gucci, the former head of Gucci fashion," going on to say the movie "dramatizes the events around the assassination of Guccio Gucci's grandson, Maurizio. Patrizia Reggiani was tried and convicted of orchestrating Maurizio Gucci's murder in 1995 after he left her for a younger woman. She served in prison for 18 years, where she gained the nickname Black Widow, before being released in 2016." "House of Gucci" was written by Roberto Bentivegna and is based on the novel "The House of Gucci: A Sensational Story of Murder, Madness, Glamour, and Greed" by Sara Gay Forden. Al Pacino, Jared Leto and Jeremy Irons also star. This marks Gaga's first film role since her performance in the blockbuster "A Star is Born," starring and directed by Bradly Cooper. She was nominated for a Best Actress Oscar but went home with the award for Best Original Song for "Shallow." "House of Gucci" is expected to hit theaters on Nov. 24. Tap link in bio to continue on @EDGEmedianetwork ?️? (?: Adam Driver, left, and Lady Gaga, right, for "House of Gucci." / Twitter, Lady Gaga)

잊혀져가는 일상, 잊혀져가는 내 모습?
자신과의 거리 좁히기가 필요한 이들을 위한 힐링 도서
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어른이라는 이유로 잊고 살아온 소중했던 기억을
박선아 작가의 라이브 북토크에서 발견 해보세요!
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?프로필의 링크를 통해 '어른이 슬프게 걸을 때도 있는 거지' 콘텐츠를 확인해 보세요.
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• 출연 : 박선아 작가
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라이브 스트리밍 인증 참여 시 저자 친필 사인본 증정 이벤트도 있으니 놓치지 마세요!
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잊혀져가는 일상, 잊혀져가는 내 모습? 자신과의 거리 좁히기가 필요한 이들을 위한 힐링 도서 - 어른이라는 이유로 잊고 살아온 소중했던 기억을 박선아 작가의 라이브 북토크에서 발견 해보세요! - ?프로필의 링크를 통해 '어른이 슬프게 걸을 때도 있는 거지' 콘텐츠를 확인해 보세요. - <현대카드 트래블 라이브러리 LIVE BOOK TALK 어른이 슬프게 걸을 때도 있는 거지(feat. 박선아 X 김연지)> • 일시 : 2021. 03. 17(수) 오후 8시 • 장소 : 현대카드 트래블 라이브러리 • 출연 : 박선아 작가 • 진행 : 김연지 (문학살롱 초고 운영자) • 참여 방법 ☝DIVE 앱 내 예매하기를 통한 현장 참여 > 입장료 1만원, 선착순 마감 ✌️YouTube LIVE 스트리밍으로 온택트 참여 > DIVE 앱에 가입하면 30분 전 알람을 받을 수 있어요! ※상세한 참여 방법 및 유의사항은 DIVE 앱에서 확인 바랍니다. - ?잠깐! 라이브 스트리밍 인증 참여 시 저자 친필 사인본 증정 이벤트도 있으니 놓치지 마세요! - ✅DIVE 앱만 있으면 현대카드 라이브러리 주중 입장 가능! - #현대카드트래블라이브러리 #TravelLibrary #어른이슬프게걸을때도있는거지 #북토크 #박선아 - #현대카드DIVE #현대카드다이브 #현대카드 #HyundaiCard

잊혀져가는 일상, 잊혀져가는 내 모습? 자신과의 거리 좁히기가 필요한 이들을 위한 힐링 도서 - 어른이라는 이유로 잊고 살아온 소중했던 기억을 박선아 작가의 라이브 북토크에서 발견 해보세요! - ?프로필의 링크를 통해 '어른이 슬프게 걸을 때도 있는 거지' 콘텐츠를 확인해 보세요. - <현대카드 트래블 라이브러리 LIVE BOOK TALK 어른이 슬프게 걸을 때도 있는 거지(feat. 박선아 X 김연지)> • 일시 : 2021. 03. 17(수) 오후 8시 • 장소 : 현대카드 트래블 라이브러리 • 출연 : 박선아 작가 • 진행 : 김연지 (문학살롱 초고 운영자) • 참여 방법 ☝DIVE 앱 내 예매하기를 통한 현장 참여 > 입장료 1만원, 선착순 마감 ✌️YouTube LIVE 스트리밍으로 온택트 참여 > DIVE 앱에 가입하면 30분 전 알람을 받을 수 있어요! ※상세한 참여 방법 및 유의사항은 DIVE 앱에서 확인 바랍니다. - ?잠깐! 라이브 스트리밍 인증 참여 시 저자 친필 사인본 증정 이벤트도 있으니 놓치지 마세요! - ✅DIVE 앱만 있으면 현대카드 라이브러리 주중 입장 가능! - #현대카드트래블라이브러리 #TravelLibrary #어른이슬프게걸을때도있는거지 #북토크 #박선아 - #현대카드DIVE #현대카드다이브 #현대카드 #HyundaiCard

V těchto dnech uplynul rok od doby, kdy se poprvé uzavřely dveře všech tanečních sálů v ČR. Jaké je to tancovat doma? Jaký vliv má současná pandemie COVID-19 na juniorské tanečníky, tedy tanečníky ve věku 13-16 let?⁠
⁠
Tyto i další otázky jsme položili tanečnici 331 Dance Studia Olomouc, konkrétně skupiny Flavaz, Kláře Lengalové (@k_lengalova) v rámci naší nové série nazvané Rozhovory o tanci ?⁠
⁠
Rozhovor si můžete buď přečíst na našem tanečním blogu (www.331.cz/blog) nebo si jej můžete poslechnout na YouTube (www.youtube.com/331dancestudio) ?⁠
⁠
Jak zobrazit článek? ⁠
1⃣ Klikněte na odkaz v biografii našeho profilu⁠
2⃣ Klikněte na tento obrázek ⁠
3⃣ Přečtěte si článek na našem tanečním blogu ⁠
⁠
#331dancestudio #olomouc #331interview

V těchto dnech uplynul rok od doby, kdy se poprvé uzavřely dveře všech tanečních sálů v ČR. Jaké je to tancovat doma? Jaký vliv má současná pandemie COVID-19 na juniorské tanečníky, tedy tanečníky ve věku 13-16 let?⁠ ⁠ Tyto i další otázky jsme položili tanečnici 331 Dance Studia Olomouc, konkrétně skupiny Flavaz, Kláře Lengalové (@k_lengalova) v rámci naší nové série nazvané Rozhovory o tanci ?⁠ ⁠ Rozhovor si můžete buď přečíst na našem tanečním blogu (www.331.cz/blog) nebo si jej můžete poslechnout na YouTube (www.youtube.com/331dancestudio) ?⁠ ⁠ Jak zobrazit článek? ⁠ 1⃣ Klikněte na odkaz v biografii našeho profilu⁠ 2⃣ Klikněte na tento obrázek ⁠ 3⃣ Přečtěte si článek na našem tanečním blogu ⁠ ⁠ #331dancestudio #olomouc #331interview

V těchto dnech uplynul rok od doby, kdy se poprvé uzavřely dveře všech tanečních sálů v ČR. Jaké je to tancovat doma? Jaký vliv má současná pandemie COVID-19 na juniorské tanečníky, tedy tanečníky ve věku 13-16 let?⁠ ⁠ Tyto i další otázky jsme položili tanečnici 331 Dance Studia Olomouc, konkrétně skupiny Flavaz, Kláře Lengalové (@k_lengalova) v rámci naší nové série nazvané Rozhovory o tanci ?⁠ ⁠ Rozhovor si můžete buď přečíst na našem tanečním blogu (www.331.cz/blog) nebo si jej můžete poslechnout na YouTube (www.youtube.com/331dancestudio) ?⁠ ⁠ Jak zobrazit článek? ⁠ 1⃣ Klikněte na odkaz v biografii našeho profilu⁠ 2⃣ Klikněte na tento obrázek ⁠ 3⃣ Přečtěte si článek na našem tanečním blogu ⁠ ⁠ #331dancestudio #olomouc #331interview

The home of flower growers Janae and Chris Pacquin-Bowden features a facade of recycled brick enveloped in Colorbond. During the build, the couple made a committment to repurpose as many old materials as possible. ⁠
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Tap the link in our profile to explore their home and the @fleurs_de_lyonville flower farm, which - at various times of the year - is abloom with dahlias, ranunculus, waratahs, kangaroo paws and more.⁠
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Photography: @markroperphotography⁠
Styling: @lynda.gardener + @bellebrightproject⁠
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#flowerfarm #modernhome #sustainableliving #farmhouse

The home of flower growers Janae and Chris Pacquin-Bowden features a facade of recycled brick enveloped in Colorbond. During the build, the couple made a committment to repurpose as many old materials as possible. ⁠ ⁠ Tap the link in our profile to explore their home and the @fleurs_de_lyonville flower farm, which - at various times of the year - is abloom with dahlias, ranunculus, waratahs, kangaroo paws and more.⁠ ⁠ Photography: @markroperphotography⁠ Styling: @lynda.gardener + @bellebrightproject⁠ ⁠ #flowerfarm #modernhome #sustainableliving #farmhouse

The home of flower growers Janae and Chris Pacquin-Bowden features a facade of recycled brick enveloped in Colorbond. During the build, the couple made a committment to repurpose as many old materials as possible. ⁠ ⁠ Tap the link in our profile to explore their home and the @fleurs_de_lyonville flower farm, which - at various times of the year - is abloom with dahlias, ranunculus, waratahs, kangaroo paws and more.⁠ ⁠ Photography: @markroperphotography⁠ Styling: @lynda.gardener + @bellebrightproject⁠ ⁠ #flowerfarm #modernhome #sustainableliving #farmhouse

놀다 보니 어느새 미션 클리어?
시간 순삭 이벤트에 빠져봐!
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지금 DIVE에서는 '놀다 보면 빠져드는 DIVE' 미션 진행 중!
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좋아요, 댓글, 공유하기 등의 미션을 모두 클리어하면
추첨을 통해 20분께 선물을 드려요?
-
?프로필의 링크를 통해 '놀다 보면 빠져드는 DIVE!' 콘텐츠를 확인해 보세요.
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?<놀다보면 빠져드는 DIVE> #EVENT 안내
?방법 : DIVE 앱 '놀다 보면 빠져드는 DIVE'에서 '미션 시작' 버튼을 클릭 후 4가지 서브 미션 모두 완료하면 자동 응모!
※ 4가지 미션의 자세한 내용은 DIVE 앱에서 확인해 보세요.
?기간 : 2021. 03. 08(월) ~ 03. 31(수)
?발표 : 2021. 04. 07(수)
?경품 : MX 부슷템 '비치타올' (20명)
?유의사항 : 이벤트 기간 및 경품은 당사 사정에 따라 변경될 수 있습니다.
-
#미션EVENT
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#현대카드DIVE #현대카드다이브
#현대카드 #HyundaiCard

놀다 보니 어느새 미션 클리어? 시간 순삭 이벤트에 빠져봐! - 지금 DIVE에서는 '놀다 보면 빠져드는 DIVE' 미션 진행 중! - 좋아요, 댓글, 공유하기 등의 미션을 모두 클리어하면 추첨을 통해 20분께 선물을 드려요? - ?프로필의 링크를 통해 '놀다 보면 빠져드는 DIVE!' 콘텐츠를 확인해 보세요. - ?<놀다보면 빠져드는 DIVE> #EVENT 안내 ?방법 : DIVE 앱 '놀다 보면 빠져드는 DIVE'에서 '미션 시작' 버튼을 클릭 후 4가지 서브 미션 모두 완료하면 자동 응모! ※ 4가지 미션의 자세한 내용은 DIVE 앱에서 확인해 보세요. ?기간 : 2021. 03. 08(월) ~ 03. 31(수) ?발표 : 2021. 04. 07(수) ?경품 : MX 부슷템 '비치타올' (20명) ?유의사항 : 이벤트 기간 및 경품은 당사 사정에 따라 변경될 수 있습니다. - #미션EVENT - #현대카드DIVE #현대카드다이브 #현대카드 #HyundaiCard

놀다 보니 어느새 미션 클리어? 시간 순삭 이벤트에 빠져봐! - 지금 DIVE에서는 '놀다 보면 빠져드는 DIVE' 미션 진행 중! - 좋아요, 댓글, 공유하기 등의 미션을 모두 클리어하면 추첨을 통해 20분께 선물을 드려요? - ?프로필의 링크를 통해 '놀다 보면 빠져드는 DIVE!' 콘텐츠를 확인해 보세요. - ?<놀다보면 빠져드는 DIVE> #EVENT 안내 ?방법 : DIVE 앱 '놀다 보면 빠져드는 DIVE'에서 '미션 시작' 버튼을 클릭 후 4가지 서브 미션 모두 완료하면 자동 응모! ※ 4가지 미션의 자세한 내용은 DIVE 앱에서 확인해 보세요. ?기간 : 2021. 03. 08(월) ~ 03. 31(수) ?발표 : 2021. 04. 07(수) ?경품 : MX 부슷템 '비치타올' (20명) ?유의사항 : 이벤트 기간 및 경품은 당사 사정에 따라 변경될 수 있습니다. - #미션EVENT - #현대카드DIVE #현대카드다이브 #현대카드 #HyundaiCard

The season favorite Snatch Game delivered highs and lows on this week's episode of "RuPaul's Drag Race." Gottmik proved that influencers like Paris Hilton are fabulous fodder, while Utica's squirrel-headed interpretation of PBS watercolorist Rob Ross struggled to paint a clear picture. For the mainstage runway, Ru challenged the queens to don their favorite "Fascinating Fascinators." Gottmik, back with her signature kabuki face paint, walked the runway with an oversized safety pin bisecting her head, finished with a Swarovski-studded droplet of blood and patchwork punk mini. Verdict: FAB - Here's a breakdown of who stayed heads above the competition. Tap link in bio to continue on @EDGEmedianetwork ?️‍???(?️: Matthew Wexler / @wexlerwrites, ?: Gottmik, Instagram, @gottmik, Outfit by @strike_oil @natsgetty, Fascinator by @marcosquared, Photo by @magnushastings, Hair by @prestonwada)

The season favorite Snatch Game delivered highs and lows on this week's episode of "RuPaul's Drag Race." Gottmik proved that influencers like Paris Hilton are fabulous fodder, while Utica's squirrel-headed interpretation of PBS watercolorist Rob Ross struggled to paint a clear picture. For the mainstage runway, Ru challenged the queens to don their favorite "Fascinating Fascinators." Gottmik, back with her signature kabuki face paint, walked the runway with an oversized safety pin bisecting her head, finished with a Swarovski-studded droplet of blood and patchwork punk mini. Verdict: FAB - Here's a breakdown of who stayed heads above the competition. Tap link in bio to continue on @EDGEmedianetwork ?️‍???(?️: Matthew Wexler / @wexlerwrites, ?: Gottmik, Instagram, @gottmik, Outfit by @strike_oil @natsgetty, Fascinator by @marcosquared, Photo by @magnushastings, Hair by @prestonwada)

The season favorite Snatch Game delivered highs and lows on this week's episode of "RuPaul's Drag Race." Gottmik proved that influencers like Paris Hilton are fabulous fodder, while Utica's squirrel-headed interpretation of PBS watercolorist Rob Ross struggled to paint a clear picture. For the mainstage runway, Ru challenged the queens to don their favorite "Fascinating Fascinators." Gottmik, back with her signature kabuki face paint, walked the runway with an oversized safety pin bisecting her head, finished with a Swarovski-studded droplet of blood and patchwork punk mini. Verdict: FAB - Here's a breakdown of who stayed heads above the competition. Tap link in bio to continue on @EDGEmedianetwork ?️‍???(?️: Matthew Wexler / @wexlerwrites, ?: Gottmik, Instagram, @gottmik, Outfit by @strike_oil @natsgetty, Fascinator by @marcosquared, Photo by @magnushastings, Hair by @prestonwada)

Locked out of our favorite restaurants for the past year, many of us have turned to meal delivery kits and home cooking as a way of staying healthy — and sane. The pandemic has brought out the home chef in all of us, and we're dabbling in everything from baking bread to juicing. For those looking to elevate their culinary skills or shift careers, a new culinary school is about to make its mark. But you won't find a porterhouse steak on the menu at the Vegan Fusion Culinary Academy. Vegetarian and vegan diets have become so mainstream, in 2019, the total retail market for plant foods was worth nearly $5 billion. Last year, Beyond Meat made inroads into China, and even McDonald's will unwrap its "McPlant" this year. When we are finally allowed to dine in our favorite establishments, it will be interesting to see if the plant based boom will make it into the kitchens and onto the menus as analysts predict. April Stamm, a classically trained chef with more than two decades of cooking experience under her toque, believes our newfound appetite for plants is here to stay. The out urbanite was a longtime instructor at the famed International Culinary Center (formerly the French Culinary Institute) in New York City, which ceased operation due to the pandemic's economic fallout. Stamm represents a growing number of LGBTQ chefs gaining recognition on the culinary landscape. Melissa King won last season's "Top Chef: All-Stars LA" while past contestants like Arnold Myint (aka drag queen Suzy Wong) and Kristen Kish have amassed thousands of social media fans. But Stamm proves you don't have to be a queer culinary influencer to make your mark. Tap link in bio to continue on @EDGEmedianetwork ?️‍???️ (?️: @merryn_johns, ?: April Stamm @aprilstamm, @veganfusionacademy)

Locked out of our favorite restaurants for the past year, many of us have turned to meal delivery kits and home cooking as a way of staying healthy — and sane. The pandemic has brought out the home chef in all of us, and we're dabbling in everything from baking bread to juicing. For those looking to elevate their culinary skills or shift careers, a new culinary school is about to make its mark. But you won't find a porterhouse steak on the menu at the Vegan Fusion Culinary Academy. Vegetarian and vegan diets have become so mainstream, in 2019, the total retail market for plant foods was worth nearly $5 billion. Last year, Beyond Meat made inroads into China, and even McDonald's will unwrap its "McPlant" this year. When we are finally allowed to dine in our favorite establishments, it will be interesting to see if the plant based boom will make it into the kitchens and onto the menus as analysts predict. April Stamm, a classically trained chef with more than two decades of cooking experience under her toque, believes our newfound appetite for plants is here to stay. The out urbanite was a longtime instructor at the famed International Culinary Center (formerly the French Culinary Institute) in New York City, which ceased operation due to the pandemic's economic fallout. Stamm represents a growing number of LGBTQ chefs gaining recognition on the culinary landscape. Melissa King won last season's "Top Chef: All-Stars LA" while past contestants like Arnold Myint (aka drag queen Suzy Wong) and Kristen Kish have amassed thousands of social media fans. But Stamm proves you don't have to be a queer culinary influencer to make your mark. Tap link in bio to continue on @EDGEmedianetwork ?️‍???️ (?️: @merryn_johns, ?: April Stamm @aprilstamm, @veganfusionacademy)

Locked out of our favorite restaurants for the past year, many of us have turned to meal delivery kits and home cooking as a way of staying healthy — and sane. The pandemic has brought out the home chef in all of us, and we're dabbling in everything from baking bread to juicing. For those looking to elevate their culinary skills or shift careers, a new culinary school is about to make its mark. But you won't find a porterhouse steak on the menu at the Vegan Fusion Culinary Academy. Vegetarian and vegan diets have become so mainstream, in 2019, the total retail market for plant foods was worth nearly $5 billion. Last year, Beyond Meat made inroads into China, and even McDonald's will unwrap its "McPlant" this year. When we are finally allowed to dine in our favorite establishments, it will be interesting to see if the plant based boom will make it into the kitchens and onto the menus as analysts predict. April Stamm, a classically trained chef with more than two decades of cooking experience under her toque, believes our newfound appetite for plants is here to stay. The out urbanite was a longtime instructor at the famed International Culinary Center (formerly the French Culinary Institute) in New York City, which ceased operation due to the pandemic's economic fallout. Stamm represents a growing number of LGBTQ chefs gaining recognition on the culinary landscape. Melissa King won last season's "Top Chef: All-Stars LA" while past contestants like Arnold Myint (aka drag queen Suzy Wong) and Kristen Kish have amassed thousands of social media fans. But Stamm proves you don't have to be a queer culinary influencer to make your mark. Tap link in bio to continue on @EDGEmedianetwork ?️‍???️ (?️: @merryn_johns, ?: April Stamm @aprilstamm, @veganfusionacademy)

I remember sitting in the back of my parents' car at age 16, reading the novel that would change my life. First published in 1995, Francesca Lia Block's young adult (YA) fantasy "Baby Be-Bop" featured the first gay protagonist my small-town Catholic self, who wouldn't come out as bisexual for two more decades, had ever encountered. Now, I write YA fiction focusing on LGBTQ characters and experiences, not only for teens on the verge of self-discovery, but for the broader book market that's seen significantly increased sales in the past year. According to books industry analyst NPD Bookscan, more than half of 2020's top 10 books targeted kids or young adults. Studies have shown that more adults read YA books than teens. And for LGBTQ adults, YA books present an opportunity to revisit their own narratives. "I and probably a lot of people, especially queer people, are constantly relitigating our own teenage years because...our teen years can be shaped by the closet," says Adib Khorram, whose second YA novel "Darius the Great Deserves Better" was a 2021 Stonewall Children's and Young Adult Literature Award of the American Library Association (ALA) honoree. "I think it can be very therapeutic to read about outcomes that are maybe different from the ones we experienced." Ari Gofman, chair of this year's Stonewall Children's and Young Adult Literature Award committee, has noticed a strong adult readership of YA. They're not surprised: fresh perspectives invigorate. "I find YA books engage earnestly and sincerely with the world," Gofman says. "For the teenagers who tend to be the main characters in these books, most life experiences are new... and there's a lot of possibility in that." Tap link in bio to continue on @EDGEmedianetwork ?️‍?? (?️: Lauren Emily Whalen, ?: Getty)

I remember sitting in the back of my parents' car at age 16, reading the novel that would change my life. First published in 1995, Francesca Lia Block's young adult (YA) fantasy "Baby Be-Bop" featured the first gay protagonist my small-town Catholic self, who wouldn't come out as bisexual for two more decades, had ever encountered. Now, I write YA fiction focusing on LGBTQ characters and experiences, not only for teens on the verge of self-discovery, but for the broader book market that's seen significantly increased sales in the past year. According to books industry analyst NPD Bookscan, more than half of 2020's top 10 books targeted kids or young adults. Studies have shown that more adults read YA books than teens. And for LGBTQ adults, YA books present an opportunity to revisit their own narratives. "I and probably a lot of people, especially queer people, are constantly relitigating our own teenage years because...our teen years can be shaped by the closet," says Adib Khorram, whose second YA novel "Darius the Great Deserves Better" was a 2021 Stonewall Children's and Young Adult Literature Award of the American Library Association (ALA) honoree. "I think it can be very therapeutic to read about outcomes that are maybe different from the ones we experienced." Ari Gofman, chair of this year's Stonewall Children's and Young Adult Literature Award committee, has noticed a strong adult readership of YA. They're not surprised: fresh perspectives invigorate. "I find YA books engage earnestly and sincerely with the world," Gofman says. "For the teenagers who tend to be the main characters in these books, most life experiences are new... and there's a lot of possibility in that." Tap link in bio to continue on @EDGEmedianetwork ?️‍?? (?️: Lauren Emily Whalen, ?: Getty)

I remember sitting in the back of my parents' car at age 16, reading the novel that would change my life. First published in 1995, Francesca Lia Block's young adult (YA) fantasy "Baby Be-Bop" featured the first gay protagonist my small-town Catholic self, who wouldn't come out as bisexual for two more decades, had ever encountered. Now, I write YA fiction focusing on LGBTQ characters and experiences, not only for teens on the verge of self-discovery, but for the broader book market that's seen significantly increased sales in the past year. According to books industry analyst NPD Bookscan, more than half of 2020's top 10 books targeted kids or young adults. Studies have shown that more adults read YA books than teens. And for LGBTQ adults, YA books present an opportunity to revisit their own narratives. "I and probably a lot of people, especially queer people, are constantly relitigating our own teenage years because...our teen years can be shaped by the closet," says Adib Khorram, whose second YA novel "Darius the Great Deserves Better" was a 2021 Stonewall Children's and Young Adult Literature Award of the American Library Association (ALA) honoree. "I think it can be very therapeutic to read about outcomes that are maybe different from the ones we experienced." Ari Gofman, chair of this year's Stonewall Children's and Young Adult Literature Award committee, has noticed a strong adult readership of YA. They're not surprised: fresh perspectives invigorate. "I find YA books engage earnestly and sincerely with the world," Gofman says. "For the teenagers who tend to be the main characters in these books, most life experiences are new... and there's a lot of possibility in that." Tap link in bio to continue on @EDGEmedianetwork ?️‍?? (?️: Lauren Emily Whalen, ?: Getty)