Latest news with #DWTS


Sunday World
a day ago
- Entertainment
- Sunday World
Ellen Keane reaches new heights in quest to put accessible fashion on the map
Championing Penneys' new adaptive clothing line, Irish Paralympic swimmer Ellen Keane says it's a full circle moment for her. Flourishing a baby pink lace bra with delight, Ellen Keane never imagined a day that lingerie would elicit such joy. 'When I was a kid, the scariest thing for me was the thought of wearing a bra, because I was like, 'how am I going to put that on with one hand?'' says the Irish Paralympic champion candidly, before sinking into a plush cream sofa at Penneys HQ. It's a memory that lingers for the celebrated athlete, whose glittering swimming career began in Beijing in 2008 — when she was just 13 – Ireland's youngest ever athlete. 'The only reason I learned was from seeing people at the pool with one arm do it. They'd close it at the front and then turn it around,' she explains. Her face lights up as she recalls the launch of Penneys' magnetic front-closing bras — part of the brand's new adaptive range which features over 40 affordable, stylish wardrobe staples, thoughtfully adapted to meet a variety of needs. 'It's so clever and so simple. It just means teenagers don't have to worry about that now — and adults don't have to worry either. Which is huge.' Ellen with dance partner Stephen Vincent on DWTS It's a full-circle moment for the 30-year-old Dubliner, who was born with dysmelia, a condition where her left arm did not fully develop below the elbow. 'It can get quite emotional and overwhelming when you see moments like this,' she says. 'Because I never thought I'd see this happen. Which is quite sad. But finally people are now actually starting to recognise that people with disabilities deserve more.' She grins. 'It's kind of like a proud parent moment for me — the fact that you can say 'Thanks hun, Penneys,' while wearing the adaptive wear range.' Wearing denim jeans with side splits for accessibility and a white t-shirt with popper fastenings and tube access openings, Ellen is fresh faced and impossibly put together. Knowing her story strikes a chord — especially with younger girls with disabilities, the sports star is determined to impact real change now. Adaptive Drawstring Joggers, €18; Adaptive zipped sweatshirt €22 Penneys News in 90 Seconds - June 22nd 'I would've been sent pictures of little girls with one arm who were posing by the side of the Penneys posters, and it was so sweet. But it shouldn't be — it should just be so normal that it isn't a big deal.' That change in attitude can't come soon enough. Penneys recently launched the findings of its Pulse of the Nation Index, conducted by Amárach Research. The report revealed that 40 per cent of the Irish public believe disabled people are treated unfairly, highlighting a significant knowledge gap in how society understands the challenges disabled people face daily. For Ellen, this lack of awareness underscores why visibility and representation matter. Still, the role model status can weigh heavily. 'It's so tiring,' she admits with a sigh. 'And it's probably even more tiring when it's other people with disabilities reaching out to you, desperate for advice. Because you want to help them, but all I know is my disability.' Ellen in action at the 2024 Paralympic Games in Paris It's one of the reasons she wrote her biography, Perfectly Imperfect. But her advocacy isn't just about practical solutions — it's about honesty, humour, and showing up as she is. 'I love being someone that young people can look up to — but I'm also, at the same time, quite shy about it. And then I can get quite angry. Why is it always me? Why can't anyone else do it?' Thankfully, she sees the next generation demanding more. 'Irish kids are so open to diversity. They recognise what's right or wrong and are more willing to learn and ask for more.' Even during her competitive years, she saw a shift in perception. 'When I started swimming, no one really cared about my achievements. But the longer I stayed in the sport and the more it grew, able-bodied kids were just seeing me as Ellen, the swimmer. Not Ellen, the Paralympic swimmer.' That desire to be seen beyond her disability was also why she said yes to Dancing with the Stars. 'I am not just Ellen, the one-armed girl,' she says with a smile. 'That's why I did Dancing with the Stars. I wanted to show people I was just Ellen.' The star who took on 'Death Road' whilst filming Uncharted with Ray Goggins now wants to open up conversations that often go unspoken — especially around sexuality, relationships and attraction. 'Disabled people have sex. Oh my God. Who would've thought?' she says, grinning. 'And that's the thing about the lingerie range with Penneys — the lingerie is really sexy.' That desire for openness extended to dating too. 'I tried online for a little bit,' says the social media personality, who is now happily loved up with her boyfriend of two years, Max Doyle. 'But there was the weird sick fantasy thing as well — 'Oh my God, you're so inspirational.' And you're like... I'm on a dating app to meet someone, not to inspire you.' She sighs. 'It's the fear of rejection. It's the fear of being judged for something you can't change.' 'When you have a disability, it's almost like you have to come out of the disabled closet. You have to own it. You have to be proud of it. You have to love yourself more than you care about the opinion of other people. That's a lot to ask.' While diversity is increasingly celebrated, she notes that disability often still lags behind. 'People are so quick to celebrate Pride — which is amazing — but we don't see the same for disabled people. We don't see disabled love on screens. And even if there is a disabled character, they're either the villain or in the background.' The Clontarf native retired from competitive swimming last year, and admits she's still adjusting to life outside the pool. 'It's so funny,' she says. 'When I came home from travelling, my February was so quiet. It was kind of the first time I really noticed — oh, I'm retired now.' 'There were moments where you have to grieve a part of you. Because it is who you are. It's what you've done every day. But I knew I needed to retire. I knew my identity was more than swimming.' Ellen winning the gold medal in Tokyo at the 2020 Paralympic Games She pauses. 'I did struggle with how to make decisions, because I've had people making decisions for me my whole life.' That structure had been in place since childhood. 'I joined the senior team when I was 11. I got drug tested for the first time at 10. I lived with not questioning what I put into my body for 20 years.' After retirement, that discipline disappeared overnight. 'I struggled a lot with finding purpose in my day. I didn't have anywhere to be. I didn't have anything to do.' Food, once strictly fuel, became confusing. 'My whole life, I was eating to fuel my sport. I wasn't doing sport anymore, so I just didn't eat. I didn't know how to.' That's when she leaned on the psychological supports offered through Sport Ireland. 'My clinical psych was saying that as much as she wants to help me, she can't. The only thing she could tell me was: eat three meals a day, try to exercise, and do something I enjoy every day.' 'Because she's like, 'if I tell you what to do, then I'm just being one of those people telling you what to do.'' 'It was an adjustment phase — thankfully I've come out the other side.' Now, post-30, she's finding her own rhythm. 'I went to Disneyland with my boyfriend. I didn't want a big party. Especially when you're an athlete involved in sport, you get so much support all the time that sometimes you're like... I just want it to be quiet.' These days, it's the mic — not the pool — where Ellen feels most at ease. Hoping for a career in sports broadcasting, Ellen explains: 'I'm so comfortable in front of the camera and the mic. It's a weird thing — in radio studios, there's silence, but it's quite similar to being in water. So I always just feel really comfortable in those studios.' And when it's live? Even better. 'Pre-records are the worst. It gives you room to make a mistake. I like live. Red light's on. I'm ready to go.'


Perth Now
7 days ago
- Entertainment
- Perth Now
AFL legend's daughter on TV show debut and single life
Mia Fevola has been busy polishing up her dance moves for her Dancing With The Stars debut, returning to university and tackling single life once again. The 25-year-old model and social media influencer is upholding her family's legacy on the popular Channel 7 show, following in the footsteps of her beauty mogul mother, Alex Fevola, who placed third in 2010, and her stepfather, former AFL player Brendan Fevola, who placed fourth in 2012. Fevola's turn to wrangle her nerves and show Australia her ballroom dancing skills is fast approaching after the 22nd season of DWTS premiered on Sunday night. The makeup artist said it was amazing to go from growing up watching the show to actually performing on it and following in her parents' footsteps. 'My mum and I were both very, very nervous going into the show, and so I confided in her a lot,' she said. 'But also, when you're stepping onto the stage, it's not me, I leave Mia behind. You're stepping into your character. And that really helped me.' Winning the coveted mirror ball would mean she would have bragging rights for days in her household. 'It's quite a competitive house with my dad being a sportsman, so it would be good just to sort of have that on him,' she said. Fevola has never been a dancer and said that being critiqued harshly by judges Sharna Burgess, Helen Richey, Mark Wilson, and Craig Revel Horwood was intimidating. 'So going in to do something that you're not good at and you don't have any experience in, and you're going to be judged on it, and you're in front of a live crowd, and you're on TV, and you're competing against other people, it's overwhelming, it was all new to me,' she said. 'But to be able to let go of that fear and know that, I'm leaving myself behind, I'm stepping into my character, really helped me mentally.' Fevola's dance partner, Gustavo Viglio, really challenged the first-time competitive dancer during intense training sessions leading up to the show, with her favourite dances being the upbeat cha cha and elegant Venus waltz. She said she was surprised at how fit she got and how well her body coped because, admittedly, she wasn't a very active person. 'I had the best dance partner ever. Gustavo was amazing and super supportive and patient with me, even though I got the same step wrong a million times,' she said. 'He made every training session really fun. So we spent most of the time laughing our heads off. And it didn't really hit me until right before the episode started that I was like, 'Oh my God, this has just been like, all fun and games until now'. 'Reality hit for you to have to go onto the stage and perform.' Taking part in the series saw the lifestyle content creator at one of the most vulnerable times in her life. 'I cried every episode. I was surprised by how emotional I was, to be honest, I guess you're in a very vulnerable position going out to do something you're not good at,' she said. 'Gustavo was good at figuring out how to calm my nerves up before we went on stage, and it would just basically be me laughing at these bad jokes.' Outside of all things dancing, Fevola is back at university studying psychology after completing a degree in business and marketing. Entering her fourth year of study meant she had to press the pause button on her street and loungewear brand Mallt Collective. Fevola also recently confirmed she is embracing the single life after a two-year romance with boyfriend Bass Miller. The couple made headlines last year when Miller called her his 'New Mrs' on Instagram, prompting speculation he had proposed. However, Fevola told Daily Mail Australia at Flemington Racecourse she wasn't engaged and the post referred to the new hair style she had at the time. With her first TV show under her belt, Fevola hasn't ruled out future opportunities that might come her way. 'I'm definitely open to it. 'It was such a cool experience from the creative side of it, because I'm a makeup artist myself and so I loved seeing all of the back end of it and the production and all that definitely would be something I would be interested in looking at different TV shows, but I'm not sure what the future holds.'
Yahoo
15-06-2025
- Entertainment
- Yahoo
DWTS' Maksim Chmerkovskiy Doesn't Hold Back About One Finalist Who Did Not Deserve It
DWTS' Maksim Chmerkovskiy Doesn't Hold Back About One Finalist Who Did Not Deserve It originally appeared on Parade. On an August 2024 episode of retired Dancing With the Stars pro podcast Sex, Lies and Spray Tans, former DWTS contestant Bristol Palin stated that pro , who wasn't even her partner on the show, "hated [her] so much" during her time on Dancing With the Stars. Chmerkovskiy was recently asked about those comments in an interview he did for Page Six Radio, and he said he absolutely didn't hate Palin, who is the daughter of former Alaska governor and vice presidential candidate Sarah Palin — but he did issue a rather scathing response as to why he viewed her run on Dancing With the Stars in such a negative light. Palin and partner made it to the finale of season 11, finishing in third place behind Jennifer Grey and in first place and Kyle Massey and Lacey Schwimmer in second place."Bristol knows I didn't hate her," said Chmerkovskiy. "My background is athletic in nature, not artistic...I came from competitive ballroom dancing. So for me, it was all about winning, and you win when you are in a certain position. So I treat dance competitively the same way people treat, I don't know, me it was that it was an evaluation of dance. "Sorry, Bristol was not a very good dancer. She was not good. She was not good at all. And so under that evaluation, there is no way that you are the frontrunner who ends up in the finale." Chmerkovskiy said he was "probably the loudest voice" against Palin continually advancing in the competition, but "somebody had to be." The pro dancer also acknowledged that "that's the nature" of a show like Dancing With the Stars, it is up to the voting public. 🪩 SIGN UP for our Dancing with the Stars newsletter to get access to exclusive news, interviews, songs, recaps & more 🪩 "The deserving part when it comes to votes is wasn't really, 'Oh my God, she did an amazing cha cha and it's the best cha cha on the show. I'm gonna vote for that.' So it wasn't about that," said Chmerkovskiy. "But that's the nature of Dancing With the Stars. You know, the power is in the people's hands." Dancing With the Stars returns for its 34th season in the fall of 2025. If the pattern holds, it will premiere Tuesday, September 23 at 8 p.m. ET on ABC and Hulu. DWTS' Maksim Chmerkovskiy Doesn't Hold Back About One Finalist Who Did Not Deserve It first appeared on Parade on Jun 4, 2025 This story was originally reported by Parade on Jun 4, 2025, where it first appeared.

News.com.au
14-06-2025
- Entertainment
- News.com.au
Channel 10's major unravel exposed
Once a ratings juggernaut and star-maker, DWTS had its heyday in the 2000s with memorable performances by stars like Bec Hewitt and Ada Nicodemou. Photo: Channel 7 When it returned in 2021, Seven leaned heavily into nostalgia, reviving hosts Sonia Kruger and Daryl Somers. But audiences had moved on, and despite some high-profile casting, including Courtney Act and Grant Denyer, viewership declined year-on-year. Production costs were high, and by 2025, it was quietly confirmed this season would be its last. Photo: Channel 7 This once-revered tribute show This Is Your Life made a comeback in 2022 with Melissa Doyle as host. It featured emotional episodes spotlighting the likes of Ian Thorpe and Shane Warne (posthumously). However, the format felt dated, struggling to connect with younger audiences. Ratings were inconsistent, and after a subdued 2023 run, it was shelved again. Photo: Channel 7 Balloon artistry competition Blow Up tried to emulate the feel-good magic of Lego Masters. Despite bright visuals and charming contestants, the show failed to land. Host Stephen Curry and judge Balloon artist Chris Adamo couldn't elevate it past its niche appeal. It vanished after its debut season. Photo: Channel 7 Marketed as a blockbuster survival epic, big-budget gamble The Million Dollar Island featured 100 contestants competing in a remote location for a million-dollar prize was riddled with logistic issues. Critics called the format chaotic, and the lack of clear storytelling hurt audience investment. The show failed to rate and was canned despite heavy promotion. Photo: Channel 7 Holey Moley was an ambitious minigolf meets Wipeout hybrid that hoped to be a family favourite. While Rob Riggle and Matt Shirvington brought energy to hosting duties, the concept wore thin quickly. Despite a flashy launch and US branding, ratings tanked after a few weeks. Photo: Channel 7 Ultimate Tag was a high-energy sport-meets-game-show format where contestants tried to outrun elite 'taggers'. The production was impressive, but the gameplay lacked tension. Even the presence of Olympian Liz Clay couldn't save it from cancellation. Photo: Channel 7 Wife Swap Australia 's 2021 reboot aimed for controversy but ultimately fell short, being more awkward than insightful. Families clashed over parenting and values, but the drama felt manufactured. Critics said the format hadn't evolved, and audiences didn't bite. Photo: Channel 7 Channel 7's House Rules was a strong contender to The Block, especially with memorable seasons like the 2017 showdown between Aaron and Daniella and Andrew and Jono. But fatigue set in by the later years, and ratings steadily declined. Seven pulled the plug in 2020 and struggled to replace it with a successful renovation show. Photo: Channel 7 Touted as 'the Olympics of food', this multicultural cooking contest Plate of Origin, brought together teams from various backgrounds. Despite heavy-hitter hosts Manu Feildel, Gary Mehigan, and Matt Preston, the show lacked cohesion. The pandemic-affected production didn't help, and viewership never took off. Photo: Channel 7 Pooch Perfect was a dog grooming competition hosted by Rebel Wilson charmed some viewers but confused others. Critics couldn't decide if it was a kids' show or adult reality TV. It gained some attention in the US but was never renewed in Australia. Photo: Channel 7 Launched with a bang, Ninja Warrior became a prime-time powerhouse thanks to its jaw-dropping stunts and everyday Aussie heroes like Ashlin Herbert and Ben Polson. The first few seasons drew millions, but interest began to wane as the format became predictable. Photo: Nine Network By 2022, key contestants had either moved on or lost their novelty, and new competitors struggled to match early fan favourites. Nine chose not to renew the show amid declining ratings and rising production costs. Photo: Nine Network Hosted by Scott Pickett and Poh Ling Yeow, Snackmasters was a unique culinary competition had chefs reverse-engineering iconic supermarket snacks. It was playful and different but didn't have the hook to retain long-term viewers. Although the early novelty worked, the second season suffered from repetition and audience fatigue. Nine quietly shelved it after two seasons. Photo: Nine Network Fronted by respected journalist Liz Hayes, investigative current affairs series Under Investigation aimed to dig deep into cold cases and social mysteries. While it was praised for its depth, it lacked the urgency of other news programs. Viewer numbers remained modest, and when Hayes departed Nine in 2023 to join Seven, the show was formally retired. Photo: Nine Network A daytime fixture for over a decade, Millionaire Hotseat was a rapid-fire quiz show hosted by Eddie McGuire kept Nine's afternoons humming along for years. But by the 2020s, its format felt tired and viewership dropped. The show quietly wrapped in 2023 as Nine refreshed its schedule with newer content aimed at younger demographics. Photo: Nine Network Marketed as a heartfelt alternative to fast-paced dating shows, My Mum Your Dad 's format saw adult children nominate their single parents to find love. It earned praise for its authenticity and warmth, but ratings never matched critical goodwill. Despite likeable cast members and emotional moments, Nine didn't renew it after two seasons. Photo: Nine Network Rush was a travel-adventure competition that tried to mimic The Amazing Race energy with a high-stakes format. Hosted by David Genat, the show placed contestants in remote destinations with limited resources. While visually engaging, the show lacked compelling contestants and storytelling, and Nine opted not to bring it back. Photo: Nine Network A cult hit in its first run, Beauty and the Geek paired shy, nerdy men with confident women for a reality makeover experience. In the 2021 reboot, Nine gave it a more emotional and wholesome tone, bringing in Sophie Monk as host. Photo: Nine Network However, long-time fans missed the chaos of earlier seasons, and the new format struggled to attract new viewers. It ended after two revival seasons. Photo: Nine Network Australia's version of Celebrity Apprentice Revived had four seasons with Mark Bouris at the helm before ending in 2016. However it was revived with Lord Alan Sugar as the headline act in 2021. The reboot pulled in influencers and entrepreneurs like Martha Kalifatidis and Scherri-Lee Biggs. While it delivered drama, critics called it hollow and repetitive. Despite some explosive boardroom clashes, it failed to capture the magic of the original and was axed after two seasons. Photo: Nine Network Hosted by Karl Stefanovic, This Time Next Year profiled Australians working towards life-changing personal goals. The time-jump format was novel, showing before and after moments within one episode. While emotional and well-meaning, it struggled to maintain ratings past the second season and was not renewed. Photo: Nine Network


The Irish Sun
14-06-2025
- Entertainment
- The Irish Sun
I'm celeb stylist on Dancing With The Stars – here's how choose swimwear, dress on a budget and the looks to avoid
AN Irish celebrity stylist revealed her top tips for rocking swimwear, trends to avoid and how to dress on a budget. Fiona Fagan told how she went from being a dancer to dressing DWTS hosts 5 Fiona Fagan revealed her top tips for dressing to impress this summer Credit: 5 Fiona works tirelessly to come up with new ways to impress DWTS viewers Credit: Instagram @fionafaganstylist 5 The Dublin native styled chat show host Graham Norton Credit: Instagram @fionafaganstylist She told The Irish Sun: 'I'm from Finglas but I moved to London. I lived there for 21 years where I was a dancer. 'Then I was a fitting model for lots of fashion brands which led me then into styling. 'So I used to be a fit model for Victoria Beckham, 'It was through that I got into styling because I worked very closely with the designers.' The Dubliner told how Fiona said: 'It was before her brand became really big. Her clothes are really good quality. They really are, they're cut so well.' While working in London for five years, Fiona built up a star studded client list. She gushed: 'I 'I also styled Randy Jackson, a judge on American Idol. We got on like a house on fire. 'He's so cool and he's so into fashion for a musician. We would go shopping in Brown Thomas every time he comes over. I would pick out a load of things for him. Jennifer Zamparelli shows off DWTS look 'He will ask for my opinion. It's like he's a fashion designer. So we have so much in common. I love working with him because he's so into fashion. 'I love working with Laura Whitmore as well, I work with her quite a bit. She always looks fabulous.' After making the big move home, Fiona became a stylist on RTE's Fiona said: 'That was so cool. It was just like going back to when I was a dancer and being on set. Recording live, all the costumes, all the lighting. 'It was just so familiar to me. It was like it was in my DNA. 'I loved it, it was so much fun and there were some great people on it. It was nice to come back to Ireland and do something like that. 'It's a really good show, it's done really well. And it's really nice to see that being done in Ireland. 'It's just fun. It's hard work now but it's a great team effort as well.' While everything looks cool and easy on screen each Sunday, there's a number of factors that come into play before style. Fiona explained: 'I will pick something I think that suits them. But it's generally the producers [who decide]. We have to camera test it to see if it looks good in the lighting. 'Then I'm also trying to pick stuff that's in stores now so people can go and buy it. 'But you don't always get to put what you want to put on them [the hosts]. 'Options, options, options, that's the key word. You always have to have loads of options.' CAMERA CAPTURES ALL A main struggle in dressing for TV is lighting and how items appear on the camera. Fiona said: 'Lighting can make things look funny. On camera things do look different than they do in real life. So a lot of shape and structure is really good for TV and the camera.' The stylist suggested influencers and vloggers choose what they wear in their videos wisely. She said: 'Horizontal stripes generally do make you look wider for sure. 'Sometimes a really fine polka dot is fuzzy on your eyes. So sometimes it doesn't look so good.' Fiona told how DWTS glitter and sparkle is not just for Christmas as it has already hit the high streets this summer. She said: 'Sequins is a trend that seems to be adapting from Dancing With The Stars. I have seen quite a few bits in Zara for summer. 'A little skirt with sequins can look really good with flip flops or even a trainer. You see Joanne McNally often rock something like that and it looks really cool.' STAPLES FOR EVERY WARDROBE Whether dressing for online, TV or daily life, Fiona insisted 'classic' and 'timeless' staples are key. She said: "I always say style tips for your wardrobe always have really core basics. 'Whether it's a good pair of jeans, a nice relaxed fit, high rise. Always look super clean and super classic and stylish. 'And you don't even need to go overboard with buying,spending lots of money. It's just about finding stuff that fit you really well and that's the key. It's trying and trying and trying things on. 'Wearing things that suit your body shape I think is really important. Don't follow fads and trends so much.' BUDGET STYLING The fashion lover insisted looking stylish can be done on a budget. She said: 'Buying key core pieces like a good fitted blazer, have that on your wardrobe. A nice pair of black trousers. 'I go into a load of vintage shops and charity shops as well. They have amazing stuff at the moment, especially NCBI. You can find lots of designer stuff in there.' Fiona stressed the importance of dressing for your body shape and size. She said: 'If you're really short, don't cut yourself off with a pair of boots, a long skirt and a top - then you cut yourself off in three ways. You're just going to look shorter. 'If you are tall, you can wear things that cut you in half a bit, if they make you look in proportion.' As the temperatures rise, Fiona urged shoppers to spend time finding swimwear that flatters your shape. CHOOSING SWIMWEAR Triangle bikinis, microkinis, tankinis, crossover, bandeau, cut-out swimsuits - the choice can be overwhelming. The former dancer said: 'I think the triangle bikini just really looks good on young people, in their 20s, that don't have big boobs. 'I love a really nice fitted swimsuit, a really nice black fitted swimsuit. 'A one shoulder swimsuit always looks really stylish on people who have busts. Also on older people, people more in their 30s or 40s. 'A high waisted bikini bottom looks great with a bandeau top, on all sizes of women. They suck your tummy in.' The DWTS stylist told how Marks and Spencer is her go-to place for swimwear at the moment. She said: 'Marks and Spencer are just brilliant at the minute. They've had a load of new designers in. The quality is really good. 'I know it's a bit more expensive. Their swimwear collection is so good. They've got lots of nice cover-ups, really cute cover-ups for swimwear.' STYLE NO-NO When it comes to fashion-faux-pas this summer, it's long denim skirts that are top of Fiona's no list. She said: 'They are not flattering. I know they had a bit of a comeback last year but I thought 'oh god no'. 'I just don't think they are flattering on anyone - whether you are slim, tall or curvy. I don't think they look good and they cut you off. I think they're an absolute no-no.' Sparkly or glitter trainers are also another fashion fail for Fiona. The number one thing for shoppers to remember this summer before hitting stores is to plan ahead. Fiona said: 'You are wasting your time if you go into the high street shops thinking 'It's summer, I just want to buy a lot of stuff'. 'Think clearly about what you're missing in your wardrobe. Think clearly on what you will wear that might carry you over into the winter. 'I would think 'buy more cleverly'. Buy your timeless pieces that will stay in your wardrobe and you think you will wear again.' 5 Fiona told how American Idol's Randy Jackson is very into fashion Credit: Getty Images for Fox 5 Fiona explained key factors that go into dressing Jennifer Zamparelli and Doireann Garrihy Credit: Instagram @fionafaganstylist