
Stars & Strikes: Leon Thomas, Ty Dolla $ign, DDG & More Link At Kingpin Bowling's BET Awards After Party
Source: Matthew Payne
BET Awards weekend is always a spectacle. Black excellence in music, film, sports and culture is highlighted throughout and this year was no different. The 2025 BET Awards marked the 25th anniversary of the legendary event. Considering how massive of a milestone it was, the parties thrown in support had to match the energy.
Kingpin Bowling Group is an event series shaking up nightlife with curated, multi-city bowling experiences. It's only right that after 'Culture's Biggest Night' on Monday (June 9th), the collective founded by Jermaine Bush and Brian 'Brees' Torres held a star-studded, late-night party at Lucky Strike DTLA to celebrate the occasion.
A who's who of hip-hop and R&B took to the lanes, exchanging strikes and tips in equal measure as they showed off their bowling skills. With a strong turnout and undeniable energy, the night reaffirmed Kingpin Bowling's status as the definitive celebrity nightlife destination.The room was filled to the brim with notable faces, including the night's host DDG, Ty Dolla $ign, DJ Drama, Bizzy Crook, and Leon Thomas, who celebrated his win for Best New Artist and Male R&B/Pop Artist at the BET Awards, and many more.
Kingpin Bowling's non-traditional late night bowling parties continue to flip the script on what nightlife has become synonymous with: overpriced drinks, holding the wall and being preoccupied with your phone. In an exclusive partnership with Lucky Strike Entertainment, the platform has hosted events in LA, New York, Miami, and San Francisco for NBA All-Star Weekend, as well as expanding its reach to Paris Fashion Week. Between past partnerships with brands like Hennessy, Rolling Loud, Homme + Femme, and upcoming events during Black Yacht Weekend in Chicago and Paris Fashion Week, Kingpin Bowling is bringing the party to the bowling alley and creating a fun, conversational environment for celebrities to unwind.
Check out some photos from Kingpin Bowling's lit BET Awards after party below!
Stars & Strikes: Leon Thomas, Ty Dolla $ign, DDG & More Link At Kingpin Bowling's BET Awards After Party was originally published on globalgrind.com Source:Matthew Payne Source:Matthew Payne Source:Matthew Payne Source:Matthew Payne Source:Matthew Payne Source:Matthew Payne Source:Matthew Payne Source:Matthew Payne Source:Matthew Payne Source:Matthew Payne Source:Matthew Payne Source:Matthew Payne Source:Matthew Payne Source:Matthew Payne Source:Matthew Payne Source:Matthew Payne Source:Matthew Payne Source:Matthew Payne Source:Matthew Payne
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Hamilton Spectator
an hour ago
- Hamilton Spectator
Stories about the end of the world feel like a relief to me. Here's why
Spiking confrontation in the Middle East is leading some spectators to contemplate the end of the world. In one chapter of his new book 'In Crisis, On Crisis,' writer and Wilfrid Laurier University professor explores the apocalypse's cultural appeal. We go to end-of-the-world fiction for two obvious reasons. First, we want distraction. Explosions onscreen can block out explosions in our lives. I'd rather worry about storms in the movie 'The Day After Tomorrow' than the tasks I said I'd finish before actual tomorrow. Second, perhaps incongruously, we want to feel hopeful. In Octavia Butler's 'Parable of the Sower,' civilization is collapsing, yet Lauren Olamina never wavers from her commitment to survival and rebirth. At the end of Waubgeshig Rice's 'Moon of the Crusted Snow,' the Anishinaabe community leaves its apocalypse-ravaged reservation for a new beginning in the woods. Even Cormac McCarthy's 'emotionally shattering' 'The Road' ends with the adoption of the newly orphaned boy in the wake of his dead father's command to go on. The moral of the stories: We, humanity, shall overcome. Rumaan Alam's apocalyptic novel 'Leave the World Behind' enchants for a different reason. By painting a picture of total human annihilation — no plucky survivors, no one spared by design or by chance — the book offers the relief of surrender. Alam's novel begins with a white, middle-class family arriving at a bucolic vacation home east of New York City. The family splashes in the pool and fantasizes about owning marble countertops , solid oak floors, ample space. The mom, Amanda, can't resist checking her work email. Clay, the dad, sneaks cigarettes in the driveway. The kids — Rose, 10, and Archie, 13 — look at their phones. The centrality of technology is true to life and crucial to the plot. Cell signals, the internet and cable television stop working shortly after the family lands in the countryside. Probably, they think, their remote vacation spot is beyond reach of satellite networks. That night, though, when the owners of the house, the Washingtons , a kind, elderly Black couple, show up and ask to stay, Clay and Amanda learn that the loss of service is widespread. Drama unfolds on two tracks. There is tension between the families. Clay and Amanda are suspicious of the Washingtons , which has as much to do with the white couple's latent racism as with the unexpected appearance of the homeowners. Who has the right to call the shots: the white renters or the Black deed-holders? At what point does valid speculation about the crisis slide into harmful paranoia? On a second narrative track, the world is ending. The reader understands this early in the book more clearly than the characters ever do. There's plenty of evidence on Long Island that something is wrong. The blackout, communication breakdown, a deafening noise overhead, terrified neighbours, flamingos in the pool. A few days after the vacation begins, Archie's teeth fall out. The families know there is trouble, they are in trouble, but they never understand the extent of it. Not knowing is part of their terror. Around the novel's midpoint, a horrifying noise erupts from the sky. The noise divides the families' lives in two: 'the period before they'd heard the noise and the period after.' Inside the novel, no one discovers the source of the sound. However, readers learn from the Voice of God narrator ( VOG ) that top-secret fighter jets are scrambling toward a new era of battle over the eastern seaboard. If there were no VOG interruptions, no recurring omniscient assurances anchoring the contingencies of the interpersonal plot to the certainty of global apocalypse, 'Leave the World Behind' would be an anxiety novel. Is Armageddon nigh or not? Some of my favourite books are anxiety novels. Arguably, the end-of-the-world anxiety novel is scarier than speculative end-of-the-world fiction. Anxiety is torturous, paralyzing. It's a truism of the horror genre that anticipating the arrival of the monster can be more terrifying than the beast's appearance. But the uncertainty driving the anxiety novel, the book's ultimate source of terror, can't help but leave open the possibility that things might not be as bad as they seem. Nothing left to do but camp: Prince Amponsah, left, and Mackenzie Davis in the HBO Max television adaptation of the post-apocalyptic novel 'Station Eleven.' In 'Leave the World Behind,' there is no uncertainty. Because if the bombs are already in the air, the electrical grid is already down for the final time, the life-destroying echoes of the noise are already in your body, there is no future that isn't mass slaughter. As if to put a fine point on the guarantee of imminent death, the futility of resistance, Alam bores an unnoticed tick into Archie's ankle long before the boy is dying from noise-sickness. Why does Alam's crushing story captivate me? Why am I thrilled by the promise that we're on the edge of extinction? I think the book delights by allowing us to revel in the pleasures of giving up. Quit your job, break dinner plans, stop exercising, leave the relationship. What joy there is in not having to do the thing we thought we had to do. The world is ending and there's absolutely nothing you can do about it . In his essay 'On Giving Up,' the psychoanalyst Adam Phillips writes: 'We tend to think of giving up, in the ordinary way, as a lack of courage, as an improper or embarrassing orientation toward what is shameful and fearful.' However, Phillips argues, there is such a thing as 'a tyranny of completion, of finishing things, which can narrow our minds unduly.' The refusal to give up can be harmful, murderous. Phillips interprets 'Macbeth,' 'Lear,' and 'Othello' as tragic dramatizations of the tyranny of completion. My earliest memory of the desire to give up ends with my mother rejecting it. I was nine or 10 years old and wanted to quit the school choir. Mom and I stood in the kitchen before breakfast. I don't remember why it felt so important to quit, but I was crying, shaking, desperate for the relief of not having to sing that afternoon. Mom's response was sympathetic but stern: No. We don't quit things partway through. No negotiation. I felt like puking. I have quit things, though. And I've loved it. Oh, the joy of leaving that troubled 10-year relationship! I imagine it's what Scrooge felt waking on Christmas morning, learning that he has another chance. I instantly recall the butterflies, the excitement of quitting what seemed like a life destined for permanent frustration. The breakup was terrible. I hated hurting her. The logistics of moving were complicated, and she trashed the house when she left the final time. But I don't feel the pain of those hurtful memories as intensely as I feel the pleasure of the memory of giving up. Essayist, author and Wilfrid Laurier University professor James Cairns. The incredible thing is that most of the time, people don't give up. They struggle, they overcome, they get by, they make do. Why don't people kill themselves, asks Camus at the start of 'The Myth of Sisyphus.' Life is absurd; what's the point of living? Notwithstanding its obviousness, Camus's conclusion is profound: the nature of the human condition is to keep going, to not give up. That doesn't mean we don't fantasize about quitting, maybe even about leaving the world behind. It's the pleasure in the dream of quitting, not the politics of mass death, that I desire. In imagining the end of the world, I experience the release of countless other pressures. My own anxieties get transferred to the novel, where they disappear, if only for a fraction of a moment, in the blackout, the sound, the carnage of the plot. Research shows that watching horror movies can relieve psychological tension. There are better apocalyptic novels than 'Leave the World Behind.' For portraying social collapse as gradual and incomplete, Butler's 'Parable of the Sower' and Emily St. John Mandel's 'Station Eleven' are doubtless more realistic depictions of how modern society falls apart. The spirit of those books reminds me of Andreas Malm's admonition to fight climate change no matter the chances of victory. In 'How to Blow Up a Pipeline,' Malm argues that even if we know for certain that the climate crisis cannot be stopped there remains a moral imperative — a species-defining need — to fight until our last breath. 'Better to die blowing up a pipeline than to burn impassively,' writes Malm . The words could've come from Lauren Olamina's mouth. In Rice's 'Moon of the Crusted Snow,' once it's clear that widespread disaster has struck in 'the south' (the heartland of Canada, and, presumably, the world), Aileen, a community elder, says to her neighbour, Evan: 'In Crisis, on Crisis: Essays in Troubled Times' James Cairns 226 pages Wolsak and Wynn $22.00 ' What a silly word (apocalypse). I can tell you there's no word like that in Ojibwe. Well, I never heard a word like that from my elders anyway ... Our world isn't ending. It already ended. It ended when the Zhaagnaash (white man) came into our original home down south on that bay and took it from us. That was our world. When the Zhaagnaash cut down all the trees and fished all the fish and forced us out of there, that's when our world ended. They made us come all the way up here. This is not our homeland! But we had to adapt and luckily we already knew how to hunt and live on the land. We learned to live here ... But then they followed us up here and started taking our children away from us! That's when our world ended again. And that wasn't the last time.' Aileen is very likely right in assuming that the world will not end all at once. In 'Station Eleven,' 20 years after the pandemic killed 99.99 per cent of the human species, characters refer to themselves as living in the world after the end of the world. In the final pages of 'Prophet Song,' Paul Lynch writes that 'the world is always ending over and over again in one place but not another and that the end of the world is always a local event.' Viewed in one light, the world will not end even if it does. Of course, in a different light, one capable of simultaneously illuminating past, present, and future, the world will end, is ending . It's just a matter of time. In an essay about art's ability to alter experiences of time, Karl Ove Knausgård writes: 'We see the changes in the clouds but not the changes in the mountains,' because the 'now' of human perception excludes geologic time. In reality, mountains are moving, just more slowly than rivers and rabbits. It's anyone's guess how life on Earth is eventually snuffed out for good. Fire? Ice? Alien invasion? In any case, the party won't last forever. Butler and Mandel's realistic depictions of the gradual, uneven nature of collapse can make Alam's Big Bang version of the final crisis look foolish by comparison. But Alam is not wrong that one day it will all end in the passage of one second to the next. The light will be on, as it has been for millennia, and then, the light will go out. Alam's innovation is drawing that uniquely decisive moment from the (hopefully far-off) future and placing it in the now. Lights out tomorrow or next week. Whereas Butler, Mandel and Rice's main characters brim with insights about societal change and social justice, Alam's self-absorbed middle-class cast lusts over money and searches for Coca-Cola. Yet while stories of reproducing lives and communities in the aftermath of civilizational collapse are inspiring, admirable and satisfying, they're also exhausting, and not only because there are fires to build, continents to trudge across and gangs of murderous thieves to avoid. There's also the intense, inescapable fear on every page that survival won't work out. Nothing is guaranteed. By contrast, Alam's book guarantees the sudden and utter end of it all. There's catharsis in the swiftness and totality of such destruction. Amid today's overlapping political, economic and ecological crises, art's cathartic power is needed more urgently than ever. Show us the world vanishing on the page, and we may more clearly see sustainable paths ahead. Release in us the pleasure of giving up, and we may find new strength to struggle on. From 'In Crisis, On Crisis: Essays in Troubled Times' by James Cairns. ©2025. Reproduced with the permission of Wolsak & Wynn, 2025.


USA Today
10 hours ago
- USA Today
Lynn Hamilton, 'Sanford and Son\
Lynn Hamilton, an actress known for her roles on "Sanford and Son" and "The Waltons," has died. She was 95. Hamilton's death was confirmed in a statement on Facebook and Instagram from her former manager and publicist, Rev. Calvin Carson, who said that the actress died on June 19 "surrounded by her grandchildren, loved ones and caregivers." "With profound gratitude and admiration, we celebrate the extraordinary life of iconic actress Alzenia 'Lynn' Hamilton-Jenkins, whose remarkable legacy continues to uplift and inspire," Carson said. "Her illustrious career, spanning over five decades, has left an indelible mark on the world of entertainment, motivating audiences across the globe through her work as a model, stage, film, and television actress." Hamilton starred as nurse Donna Harris, girlfriend of Fred Sanford (Redd Foxx), on the classic sitcom "Sanford and Son" beginning in 1972. The influential show, which aired on NBC, also starred Demond Wilson and LaWanda Page. Hamilton also portrayed Verdie on the CBS drama "The Waltons," beginning in 1973. She reprised the role in the television movies "A Walton Thanksgiving Reunion" and "A Walton Easter." 'Sanford and Son': Looking back at the 'double-edged' Black sitcom pioneer 50 years later The actress made her on-screen debut in the 1958 John Cassavetes film "Shadows," and throughout her career, she appeared on shows like "Dangerous Women," "Room 222," "Mannix," "Gunsmoke," "Hawaii Five-O," "Good Times," "Starsky and Hutch," "The Rockford Files" and "Roots: The Next Generation." She also starred on the NBC soap opera "Generations." On the film side, Hamilton had roles in movies like "Lady Sings the Blues," starring Diana Ross and Billy Dee Williams, and "Buck and the Preacher," starring Sidney Poitier. Hamilton continued to act into the 2000s with roles on "NYPD Blue," "The Practice" and "Curb Your Enthusiasm." Nathaniel Taylor, best known as Rollo on 'Sanford and Son,' dies at 80 Hamilton was married to writer Frank Jenkins until his death in 2014. They worked together on theater productions such as "Nobody" and "The Bert Williams Story," according to Carson, who said that their "partnership was a shining example of creativity, love, and dedication."


Buzz Feed
21 hours ago
- Buzz Feed
27 Torrid Items To Reinvent Your Style This Summer
A denim trucker jacket because every season deserves a tried and true staple that goes with literally everything. But, don't get it twisted. Every denim jacket isn't just a replica of another. This one features a trucker jacket silhouette and a distressed hem to set it apart from the others. Promising review: "I received this jacket in the mail yesterday and I like it. I feel like to could be styled with dresses, jeans and trousers depending on the look you are trying to achieve. IMO, the fit is true to size. Also, in my opinion, there is not a lot of stretch. I ordered a 2 and that's what i normally order in shirts, jackets and blazers. The sleeves hit right at the wrist. My favorite part of the jacket is the raw hem at the bottom. I will probably also purchase the darker denim. I would recommend." —Lovin All Things DenimPrice: $41.94 (originally $69.90; available in sizes M–6X and two colors) A sleeveless mini dress featuring pockets that reviewers can't stop raving about. They love the knit fabric and the smoothing effect the dress gives. They say it's great for every occasion because it can be dressed up or down. Bonus: It comes in many colors. Promising reviews: "Love the new colors! I can't help but buy these dresses! These dresses always fit and look good. Can't go wrong." —CJS8082"Comfortable Fit! Love how the flare lays around my belly area. I bought several more colors in this because I'm in love with these! Used this Black one with my Western Torrid Boots for a Mexican Festival 🥳 and got so many compliments 🥰🙌🏻❤️ All I had to do was accessorize it. The stretch and length were a blessing all night long 😍. Love Love Love This Style! Thank you, My Fabulous Torrid!!!!! ❤️🙌🏻" —LaPalomaDelValle95601Price: $20+ (originally $55.90; available in sizes M–6X and six colors) A corset tank with a knit fabric that holds you close for a somewhat bodycon effect. Did I mention the tie straps? If you've got an occasion on the books and are rummaging for something to wear, this corset tank combo will always stop the show. And that matching skirt you're eyeing, you can get it right here. Promising review: "Bought this in a two and I'm so happy I did! It's snug on the fit as you'd expect for a corset tank. It's stupid cute! I paired it with a skirt bought from Torrid years ago, and it looks amazing with it. This shirt looks amazing with everything I've tried it with so far, may end up buying it in more colors, I love it that much, the color I did buy was black." —I_love_milk_dudsPrice: $21.54 (originally $35.90; available in sizes M–6X and three colors) A triangle swim top, that's wire-free for your comfort, with matching high-waisted cheeky bottom, ready to ensure you stay photo-ready at the next pool party, even if you never take a dip. Promising reviews: "I bought this bikini top a month ago to help build my confidence in my physical. The color and the shape of the product work really well, and I'm so happy that I found the design pattern I absolutely love. I would totally recommend this product." —Anonymous"Big girl, big fun! Great fit for the summer sun. The waist and cup sizes are just the right fit. Gives support. Looks good wet or dry." —AnonymousPrice: $35.94 for the top (originally $59.90; available in sizes L–6X and three styles) and 20+ for the bottoms (originally $44.90; available in sizes M–6X and nine styles) A leopard sarong ideal for weekend getaways when multipurpose clothing reigns supreme. You can wear it as a skirt or a dress for a barely-there garment on the hottest of days. Promising review: "So, I purchased this in leopard print. And thought it was cute. I have never found a sarong that fits well. I got this and omg! It fits so well in both styles, the dress style and the sarong style. this will be my go-to this summer, I am so glad I bought it!" —theedarkcrystalPrice: $14.95 (originally $29.90; also available in two other colors) A button front overall set on upgrading your usual farmhouse chic attire. These overalls aren't rough like other denim; they're softer for added comfort. And, the haltered top adds a little sauciness that you don't get from traditional overalls. Promising reviews: "These are so dang cute and comfortable! I've never had a pair of overalls that weren't too short in the rise. These are terrific!" —QueenKarin"Total score. I love a good pair of bibs. The ties are awesome and the back is not like farmer bibs. I did get an 18 for more room. I get so many compliments every time I wear them. I am thinking about another pair for some patches." —Kris10starrPrice: $59.94 (originally $99.90; available in sizes 16–22) A drop cherry earring so ~sweet~ for your go-to summer 'fit... whether that's a dress and sandals, or a basic tank, high-rise shorts, and your fave slides. Price: $11.94 (originally $19.90) A V-neck tee in an assortment of 21 colors to be used at your discretion, all summer long. Perhaps you just want to lounge around in an ultra-soft tee. Or, maybe you want to twist it up into a crop top for more stylish flair. And if you want to wear one every day of the week, that's your business. Promising reviews: "Absolutely love the cowhide color! I got so many compliments. And the fit and feel of the shirt is awesome!" —angelmir"Finally, a t-shirt that fits well and looks great on. I actually went back to order another color!!!" —Smiling76Price: $10+ (originally $27.90; available in sizes M–6X and 21 colors) A sheer button-up shirt for those who need a few pieces to add to their workplace-appropriate collection. It can also serve as a thin jacket when the summer nights get cool and you want a little something on your arms. Price: $33.54 (originally $54.90; available in sizes M–6X) A ghosty summer earring, or shall we say *summerweenie* earring, for the spooky at heart who still love to play in the sun. Once you pop out these puppies, you'll know it's only a matter of months until you get to Halloween. Price: $11.94 (originally $19.90) A pair of cork-sole heels because the natural wood look makes it the perfect shoe to pair with your maxi dress, denim shorts, and skinny jeans. Yes! We've found our summer heel. Price: $39.54 (originally $65.90; available in sizes 6.5–13) A mesh maxi skirt with flowers galore that'll look great with your favorite combat boots (because yes, you're edgy year round). Price: $35.94 (originally $59.90; available in sizes M–6X) A smocked crop top and skirt set so you don't have to worry about matching pieces together. The halter top and skirt, complete with leg slit, would like to be your plus one for the beach bonfire this weeend. Promising review: "Get this! I stepped out my comfort zone and with full intention to return it once it came in from it on and LOVED it! Top and bottom is stretchy. Theres 1 slit. Could've added another one ot the one could've been higher. Going to add some wedges, accessories and maybe a Jean jacket if the weather isnt warm enough. I got a 1 bc I'm top heavy. It was perfect!" —TorriddivaJPrice: $20 (originally $99.90; available in sizes 2X–6X) A platform sandal in case you've been on the hunt for a shoe that can withstand hours on your feet with no problem. Promising review: "I bought these in green a month ago and loved them so much I ordered the other colors. They fit well, are not too bulky and are very comfortable. I bought my usual Torrid size and I had no problems." —AngelB05Price: $33.54 (originally $55.90; available in sizes 6–13 and three colors) A pair of high-rise pull-on shorts so your denim jorts can take the day off on warm days when you'd prefer to wear a lighter material. Price: $10 (originally $29.90; available in sizes M–6X and two colors) And! a matching collared top to turn those garments into a travel-friendly ensemble. Plus, if you think about it, you can never have enough loungewear. Promising review: "So soft and feels amazing. I bought this in blue and may *need* to get every color. I love how this feels and how I look in it. It's casual, yet could be worn to work. GREAT TOP!" —AH251Price: $59.90 (available in sizes M–6X and three colors) A halter midi dress in a ~hot~ pink color that's practically screaming at you to usher in the island vibes. Sure, we may not be able to go to the island, but we can always bring the island to us. The first step? Throwing on this dress! Promising review: "This dress is summer-ready fun. Love the neckline, and the fit across the bust is great because the smocking is so perfect. It's a sweet color!" —AzcynPrice: $35.99+ (originally $75.90; available in sizes M–6X and two colors) A pair of biker shorts because truthfully, you can never have enough, especially when they come in so many colors. Come summer festivities, you'll appreciate the stretchy material that'll give you the freedom to move when you attend your local free concert in the park. Promising review: "These bike shorts are the perfect length to wear with a T-shirt around the house! They are super soft and super stretchy, perfect for lounging in. And they have pockets!! I bought my usual size 2 and they are a perfect fit, but could possibly even go a size smaller since they have a great stretch." —MandyLue77Price: $15.54 (originally $25.90; available in sizes M–6X and nine colors) A cotton maxidress for a refreshing and breezy dress to wear when you have to ride your bike from the family country house down the road to the bus station so you can stop your childhood crush from leaving town because you haven't had the chance to tell them, "I've always loved you, too." Promising review: "Love love love this dress! It is flowy and not too cool or too warm for summer wear, even in air conditioning or high heat. Looks adorable and I could see wearing it out to honestly, I got it to be comfortable around home or on live calls for work and feel beautiful." —Angel KatPrice: $99.90 (available in sizes M–6X) A tie-front blouse pretty much the definition of work and play. Throw a cami or shell underneath for a 9-to-5 appropriate top, but once you clock out, ditch the cami and tube top for a gorgeous night-out look. Promising review: "I bought this with the matching wide-leg pants and it looks amazing together? I wear it with a tube top under it for more professional settings and without the tube top and with a purple bra for a [gorgeous] look! Go for it!" —CShampPrice: $27.54 (originally $45.90; available in sizes L–6X and two colors) A smoky pair of cat-eye sunglasses because your peepers are craving a retro pair of shades to dim some of the sun's shine this season. Price: $10.14 (originally $16.90; available in four colors) A crochet maxi cover-up made of a lightweight fabric that will gracefully drape over your body. It would be perfect to use as a cover-up for beach days, but it can also be worn over your bodycon dress or tank and jean combo for some added pizzazz. Promising review: "So freaking gorgeous! Even better in person. I wish it were a dress so I could wear it all the time, lol." —MandaMandaPrice: $20+ (originally $69.90; available sizes M–4X and two colors) A pair of high-rise relaxed denim trousers if you're ready to morph into a '90s R&B *it girl* at a time when baggy jeans and crop tops ruled the world. "Alexa, play 'I Wanna Be Down' by Brandy." Price: $79.90 (available in sizes 10–30 and three lengths) A pair of high-rise shorts in a gritty black because you're not going to turn down your all-black aesthetic simply because the sun decided to turn the heat up. Some reviewers suggest sizing up for a looser fit. Promising review: "These are comfy and fit perfectly. Love the coloring and the look. These will be my go-to shorts for all summer long." —Mandi2025Price: $33.54 (originally $55.90; available in sizes 10–16 and two colors) A casual skater dress when you're unsure what the day will hold and want to throw on something that won't be too dressy if the vibes are casual, but won't make you stand out if the vibes are more polished. We call this an anything dress. Promising review: "Can't wait for warm weather!!! These dresses are so cute and comfortable. It will be cute with little slip-on sneakers for a super casual dressed up a bit with sandals and some jewelry." —MELD68Price: $20+ (originally $55.90; available in sizes M–5X and five colors) A vibrant skort in a 'poppin yellow hue that'll have passerbys yelling, "MUSTAAAAAARD." And if you're wondering if this wonderful piece of athletic wear has a matching top: voila! Promising review: "I love this skort! It is comfortable, has nice flow (doesn't stick to you) and the shorts underneath mean I don't have to worry about flashing anyone." —JemjemjemPrice: $35.94 (originally $59.90; available sizes M–6X and two colors) A pair of white crochet sneakers reviewers love because they're super cozy but also super cute. When you can find a shoe that can do both, never let it go. Promising review: "This white lace is so cute! They match everything and are easy to pull on or off when on the go! Thank you, My Torrid! ❤️ I never have to sacrifice cuteness for comfort. 👍🏻" —LaPalomaDelValle2025Price: $23.94 (originally $39.90; available in sizes 6–13 and two widths)