logo
#

Latest news with #Curtis

‘Genius' lip liner hack guarantees a long-lasting look — but experts say it's iffy: ‘Get that off your face'
‘Genius' lip liner hack guarantees a long-lasting look — but experts say it's iffy: ‘Get that off your face'

New York Post

time8 hours ago

  • Entertainment
  • New York Post

‘Genius' lip liner hack guarantees a long-lasting look — but experts say it's iffy: ‘Get that off your face'

Beauty buffs are ditching lip liner for permanent marker in a jaw-dropping new TikTok trend that's got the internet doing a double-take. Makeup influencers across the globe are lining their lips with Sharpies — yes, the same ones you'd find in a school supply drawer — leaving viewers both mesmerized and mortified. The bizarre beauty hack started making the rounds this month, with TikTokkers swiping on the bold, inked-up look (rather than lip liner like the rest of us) and sparking a viral frenzy. Advertisement One gutsy glam gal, Rachel Carlisle (@rachelmadisoncarlisle), took to TikTok and casually traced her pout with a pink Sharpie from the brand's 'precious gemstones' collection — like it was just another drugstore lip liner. 'Sharpies are non-toxic — at least, this one is,' she said in the clip and added that her pout looked 'super, super pretty' afterwards. Advertisement Many users in her comments section agreed. 'It looks so good!!' one wrote beneath the video that showed Carlisle blending in the Sharpie marks and adding a similarly colored lip gloss over it to top it all off. Another added that the hack was 'honestly genius' as someone else commented, 'looks stunning on u babe.' Other detractors weighed in as one advised, 'Get that offf your face girl' and someone else urged, due to a Sharpie's permanent nature, 'just don't make a mistake.' Another TikTokter, Kaitlyn Curtis (@ gave the off-the-wall trick a whirl — claiming she reached for the Sharpie because she was considering getting her lips 'blushed.' Advertisement Her recent video shows Curtis coloring in her pout with the marker as a DIY test run for lip blushing — a semi-permanent tattooing procedure that adds a tinted flush using pigment and a cosmetic tattoo gun. Before going under the needle, Curtis wanted to see if the marker method could do the trick. Just like Carlisle, she smudged the marker like a lip liner, slicked on some gloss to seal the deal — and shockingly, she was 'actually impressed' with the results, according to her caption. Advertisement Others in the comments weren't as dazzled. 'Abbbbbbbsolutely naht. With a damn Sharpie?!?' one asked as another replied, 'I fear that is dangerous.' One other inquired, 'Is this rage bait?' as someone else wrote, 'omg. So bad.' 4 The wacky beauty hack blew up this month, with TikTokkers ditching lip liner and grabbing Sharpies instead — setting off a viral frenzy of inked-up pouts. @ lebaneseangel22, / TikTok 4 Makeup mavens around the world are lining their lips with Sharpies — yep, the same markers from your pencil case. @makeupwithlaetitia / TikTok Regarding the trend's popularity, one wrote, '@Sharpie this is like the 5th video I've seen of people using your markers as a lip liner…. I think this might be your moment to move on over to beauty.' So, is scribbling on your smoocher with a Sharpie actually safe? Skincare pros have some thoughts. Jamie Alan, PhD — a pharmacology and toxicology pro at Michigan State — told Well+Good the appeal is simple: Sharpies don't smudge and they stick around. Advertisement However, the expert warned that doctors 'have no idea' what happens when you regularly use Sharpie on your skin — and anything on your lips can easily end up in your mouth. 4 Docs say they 'have no idea' what repeated Sharpie use does to your skin — and remind beauty daredevils that what goes on your lips can end up in your mouth. azrisuratmin – 'We have no idea what can happen if you constantly ingest small amounts of this daily,' she explained. And don't be fooled by the 'non-toxic' label — Dr. Ife J. Rodney, a derm and founder of Eternal Dermatology + Aesthetics, told the outlet that claim doesn't hold up when you're using a Sharpie as lip liner. Advertisement It's only 'non-toxic' when used 'correctly, like on paper, not on your skin,' the doctor said. Dr. Joshua Zeichner, head of Cosmetic & Clinical Research at Mount Sinai, told the publication a Sharpie probably won't kill you — but that doesn't mean it's a great idea. He stressed that the ink from Sharpie markers is 'generally considered to be safe if it comes in contact with the skin and relatively non-toxic if ingested.' Experts are pretty clear: stick to actual lip liner — not your office Sharpies — if you want a flawless pout. Advertisement 4 Experts say to leave the Sharpies at your desk and line your lips with real makeup if you want your pout to pop — safely. starush – Looking for a legit hack? As previously reported by The Post, celebrity makeup artist Kathie Janes Hughes revealed that the secret to a perfect line is using the lipstick bullet backward for 'more control.' She explained in a viral TikTok clip that the flat part of the applicator makes for a messier, 'cumbersome' swipe, while the backward method keeps things neat with 'reduced visibility.' Because when it comes to beauty hacks, it's better to draw the line — not with a Sharpie.

Green energy credits phaseout divides Senate Republicans
Green energy credits phaseout divides Senate Republicans

The Hill

time8 hours ago

  • Business
  • The Hill

Green energy credits phaseout divides Senate Republicans

How to phase out Biden-era green energy tax credits is emerging as a key flashpoint among Senate Republicans as they seek to advance their version of the 'big, beautiful bill.' The Senate is taking an approach to the credits for climate-friendly energy that is less aggressive than the House but still represents a major rollback of these incentives. Members who have opposed a full repeal of the credits have signaled that the upper chamber's approach still goes too far. But Sen. Josh Hawley (R-Mo.) has emerged as a leading voice calling for the subsidies to be phased out more quickly. Hawley told reporters this week that solar tax credits cost 'a gob of money.' 'Funding the Green New Deal is like the least conservative thing I could think of to do,' he said. The dynamic sets up a difficult task for leadership, as President Trump has said he hopes to sign the legislation by July 4. The discord also comes amid similar policy differences on Medicaid and federal tax deductions in areas with high state and local taxes. While Hawley, who opposes Medicaid cuts pressed by the right, says the green subsidies should be reduced, lawmakers who have called for leniency said they generally approve of the current approach — but they'd like to see further changes. 'I think that Senator [Mike] Crapo did a really good job, but there's more work to be done,' Sen. John Curtis (R-Utah) told The Hill, referring to the Idaho Republican chair of the Senate Finance Committee. Curtis declined to elaborate. Sen. Thom Tillis (R-N.C.), who, like Curtis, has called for a 'targeted, pragmatic approach' toward the tax credits and not a 'full repeal,' told reporters he was generally pleased with what Senate leaders came up with. 'They've moved substantially in the right direction,' Tillis, who faces a closely watched reelection race next year, said on Wednesday. He added that he expected to see 'a few more adjustments,' particularly in terms of restrictions on energy projects' reliance on China. Meanwhile, West Virginia Sen. Shelley Moore Capito (R) said she's pushing for more flexibility for tax credits for hydrogen energy. Capito, whose state is home to one of several 'hydrogen hubs' set up under the Biden administration, told The Hill Wednesday that she's wants to 'push the dates back' since the bill would require projects to be under construction by the end of this year to qualify for the credit. 'That's a pretty tight timeline,' she said. 'I'm trying to get the date pushed back. I don't know if I'll be successful.' However, she also said that she's not willing to torpedo the entire bill over the issue. 'It's not a hard line for me, but I'm not the only one who has an interest in this,' she said. The disagreements emerging within the Senate GOP come on top of an impending clash with the House, where the conservative Freedom Caucus says it will not accept changes that water down the House-passed cuts to the tax credits. The House version included provisions that were expected to knee-cap access to some credits, particularly for wind and solar, such as language saying projects could only be eligible if they began construction within 60 days of the bill's enactment. The Senate version removed this provision and some others passed by the House, generating pushback among some hardline conservatives. 'They either fix it or they don't have my vote,' Rep. Chip Roy (R-Texas) told reporters this week. 'The president rightly campaigned on terminating the Green New Scam subsidies. It's destroying our grid. It's subsidizing China.' In the House, a contingent of moderate members were also pushing for leniency on the tax credits, but most of them still lined up to vote for the bill's more dramatic cuts. It's not clear which faction will win out in the Senate. The 2022 Inflation Reduction Act passed by Democrats included hundreds of billions of dollars' worth of tax incentives for climate friendly energy sources including wind, solar and nuclear energy, as well as emerging technologies such as hydrogen and carbon capture. Republicans have set out the goal to repeal these credits — partly as a pay-for for tax cuts and partly due to ideological opposition to them. Democrats have warned that axing the credits would undermine the fight against climate change, contributing more greenhouse gases to a dangerously warming planet. And they argue that fewer renewables on the grid means higher energy prices.

Jamie Lee Curtis explains the bold career pivot she took, even though she had a thriving acting career
Jamie Lee Curtis explains the bold career pivot she took, even though she had a thriving acting career

Business Insider

time14 hours ago

  • Entertainment
  • Business Insider

Jamie Lee Curtis explains the bold career pivot she took, even though she had a thriving acting career

Jamie Lee Curtis shifted to starring in commercials to spend more time with her children. Curtis faced skepticism from her team but proved them wrong as her career still thrived afterward. This article is part of " CMO Insider," a series on marketing leadership and innovation. When Jamie Lee Curtis became a mom, she knew her acting career had to change. After having a storied career as an actor, Curtis decided to transition to selling stuff in commercials — from Hertz rental cars, her first advertising gig, to becoming the spokesperson for Activia in the 2010s. "My agents and lawyers and many friends questioned why I would do such a thing when I was still acting in things and pretending to be other people," she told an engaged crowd Monday at the Amazon Port during the Cannes Lions International Festival of Creativity. "I was trying to stay home with my kid," she explained. Curtis and her husband, Christopher Guest, adopted two children after dealing with infertility issues. Doing advertisements for brands such as L'eggs pantyhose, Hitachi, and a regional phone carrier, Voice Stream Wireless, which eventually became T-Mobile, meant Curtis spent less time on movie sets and more time raising her girls, Annie and Ruby, who are now adults. The actor noted that despite hesitations from her team about what starring in commercials would do to her film career, she'd still go on to star in blockbuster films such as 2018's " Halloween," 2019's " Knives Out," and 2022's " Everything Everywhere All at Once," for which she earned a supporting actress Oscar award for playing IRS auditor, Deirdre Beaubeirdre. "I sold yogurt that makes you shit for six years and I won an Oscar," she told moderator, Sue Kroll, the head of global marketing at Amazon MGM Studios. "I believe that that crossover has now happened. We can advertise and pretend simultaneously. There has been a paradigm shift in the way we as consumers take on our content, and there is no stigma anymore." Curtis's next project is an adaptation of Patricia Cornwell's novels for a Prime Video series titled "Scarpetta." The show stars Nicole Kidman as a medical examiner. Both Curtis and Kidman are executive producers.

Arabian Travel Market underscores the vital role of Asia Pacific in the future of tourism as international travel is set to reach US$2.5 trillion by 2029
Arabian Travel Market underscores the vital role of Asia Pacific in the future of tourism as international travel is set to reach US$2.5 trillion by 2029

Tourism Breaking News

time21 hours ago

  • Business
  • Tourism Breaking News

Arabian Travel Market underscores the vital role of Asia Pacific in the future of tourism as international travel is set to reach US$2.5 trillion by 2029

Post Views: 28 According to a recent report compiled by Tourism Economics on behalf of ATM, tourism nights from Asia Pacific and Africa are on track to more than double between 2025 and 2030. The number of tourism nights, specifically from China to the Middle East, is expected to grow by 189% through 2030, and APAC source markets are set to account for the largest share of business nights in the region, with India, in particular, gaining importance. Danielle Curtis, Exhibition Director ME, Arabian Travel Market, said: 'More than 60% of travellers are booking trips around concerts and sporting events, while over 40% are influenced by digital platforms such as TikTok. Interestingly, film and television are also playing a significant role, evidenced by a rise in bookings to Thailand following the popularity of The White Lotus.' The Asia-Pacific (APAC) region is poised for significant tourism growth, with spending on international travel forecast to hit US$2.5 trillion and domestic travel to reach US$4.3 trillion by 2029, according to the latest data from Euromonitor International. Outbound travel from APAC is projected to grow at a CAGR of 7%, with intra-regional journeys expected to account for 61% of all trips by the end of 2025. By 2029, one in three trips is anticipated to be outside the APAC region, with 75% of bookings set to be made online. The Dubai Economic Agenda, D33, is key to ensuring the emirate's strategic success in APAC markets, with a focus on market segmentation and storytelling. By tailoring messaging for platforms such as the video-sharing website Bilibili and the social networking and e-commerce platform Red Note, and leveraging strong air links through carriers like Emirates and flydubai, Dubai's tourism authorities continue to position the city as a relevant, accessible, and aspirational destination for travellers across Asia. As a newcomer to APAC tourism markets, Saudi Arabia has adopted a highly localised approach, as outlined during the discussion. Recognising the diversity of the region, which comprises 49 distinct countries, tourism authorities in the Kingdom study each source market closely, from dietary preferences to cultural nuances, tailoring travel experiences accordingly. This strategy is supported by partnerships with media, trade, and research bodies to ensure that Saudi Arabia's offerings resonate authentically with travellers across the region. Curtis added: 'Technology is playing an increasingly pivotal role in travel decision-making across the APAC region, with consumers relying heavily on digital tools, social media, and AI. Mobile-first planning is transforming how travellers research and book trips, although the digital landscape varies significantly from country to country. One constant across the region is the importance of trust, particularly in peer-generated content, which continues to influence traveller choices at every stage of the journey.'

General Hospital Recap, June 18 Episode: Curtis Pushes Portia Away, Drew Finally Pops the Question to Willow
General Hospital Recap, June 18 Episode: Curtis Pushes Portia Away, Drew Finally Pops the Question to Willow

Pink Villa

timea day ago

  • Entertainment
  • Pink Villa

General Hospital Recap, June 18 Episode: Curtis Pushes Portia Away, Drew Finally Pops the Question to Willow

The June 18 episode of General Hospital brought emotional moments and major shifts for several Port Charles residents. Curtis struggled with his marriage, Kai received life-changing news, and Kristina faced the consequences of her actions. Here's everything that happened in Tuesday's episode. Curtis pulls back from Portia In Curtis' office, Portia expressed regret for not being honest about Drew and told Curtis how much she loves him. They shared a moment, but Curtis wasn't ready to fully reconnect and said he needed more time to trust her again. Jordan walked in, realizing she was interrupting, but Curtis asked her to stay after Portia left. Curtis then told Jordan about Drew wanting Aurora to publish a hit piece on Michael. Curtis offered Michael his resignation, but Michael declined and instead told him to let Drew believe he's won. At the hospital, Kai was followed by Josh, the documentarian, as he awaited medical news. Trina supported him, hoping for a good outcome. Unfortunately, the doctor revealed the titanium in Kai's spine hadn't fused properly, meaning he could never play contact sports again. Kai was devastated. He told Trina he had believed he would fully recover and wasn't ready to let go of football. He asked to be alone to process the news and left to confront Drew. Kristina comes clean to Liz about the accident Ric visited the hospital and found out Liz had taken the day off. At home, Liz spoke to Kristina, who confessed to causing the car accident and said she was ready to face the consequences. Liz said she was angry but would stay silent for Lucky's sake. However, she warned Kristina never to do something like this again. Ric later showed up and noticed Kristina leaving, but Liz told him it was a personal matter. Drew proposes marriage to Willow At Drew's place, Willow told him the house felt empty without love. Drew apologized and shared Martin's advice: they should get married to strengthen their custody case. Willow was shocked and said it might look bad in court. Drew understood and told her to think about it. He reassured her that he loved her regardless of her decision. At the Quartermaine mansion, Michael asked to be part of Daisy's life. Sasha agreed but said she wanted to raise Daisy on her own and have only her name on the birth certificate. Michael accepted her terms but requested legal guardianship if anything ever happened to her. Sasha agreed. At the pool, Cody flirted with Ava and talked about their love of Vegas. Molly observed them and shared with Alexis that she felt uneasy seeing Ava with Cody. Ava and Cody ended their chat warmly, and Molly and Cody exchanged smiles.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store