The Buzz: Kendall Jenner

Kendall Jenner, Marc Jacobs 2014, NYFW

Photo: Getty Images

For quite awhile I have believed that Kendall Jenner was the lone Kardashian gal with a true, genuine niche. Early on, it seemed that Jenner aspired to create a respectable identity for herself; not taking on random projects, generalizing it as “work,” and I admired that.

Like her Olympian father, the 18-year old has a natural forte — although for her, it’s modeling.

Last week, Jenner sent social media into a sheered frenzy when she made her runway debut, at Marc Jacobs’ 2014 Fall/Winter fashion show.

Jenner, later that night, then surfaced on the Vogue website donning several of New York Fashion Week’s most premier looks, for the 2014 Fall/Winter season.

Modeling Michael Kors, Oscar de la Renta, and Carolina Herrera — to label a few — Jenner was mesmerizing in eleven various ensembles, all from a doorway in her Plaza Hotel suite.

However it was earlier today, when Jenner was spotted front row, at the Topshop Unique fashion show in London, that it all came full circle. Scoring prime seating, Jenner sat next to Anna Wintour — along with Topshop owner Sir Philip Green, and Kate Moss.

Currently ascending, Kendall Jenner is — without question — the buzz.

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Flare: Scott Mescudi

Scott Mescudi, GQ Men of the YearYou may best know him as hip-hop artist Kid Cudi — and rightfully so — but Scott Mescudi, the actor, is pretty cool too.

The Cleveland native first hit the music scene in the 2000’s, releasing his debut album — Man on the Moon: The End of Day — in 2009. From the get go, there was no question that the entertainer was a talented musician; having said that, I don’t believe anyone was aware of just how gifted Kid Cudi was all-around.

Meet Scott Mescudi…

As an actor, the now 30-year old’s first feature role was on HBO’s “How to Make It in America,” as rugged free spirit Domingo Brown. Mescudi portrayed the character from 2010-11 — as long as the show lasted.

 

Since, Mescudi has been featured in a pair of short films — one directed by Shia LaBeouf (Maniac), and the other by Kanye West (Cruel Summer). However, it is 2014 that will undoubtedly serve to be the entertainer’s breakthrough year, on-screen.

First up, Mescudi will co-star in the upcoming action-drama Need for Speed — alongside Breaking Bad star Aaron Paul, and Dominic Cooper. The film hits theaters March 14. Shortly thereafter, Mescudi co-stars in another thrilling drama, entitled Goodbye World. The film also stars Entourage phenom Adrian Grenier, Mark Webber and Gaby Hoffman.

Scott Mescudi, How to Make It in America

Of Mescudi’s several upcoming films, the one SCO is most eager for is Two Night Stand — which is still awaiting an official release date. A romantic comedy, the film also features rising Hollywood star Miles Teller, and Jessica Szohr of Gossip Girl fame.

Although even with all the actor has had on his plate, the musician has been hard at work as well. Mescudi recently confirmed on his Twitter account that he will be releasing his fourth studio album — Satellite Flight — sometime this month.

Bracing for a whirlwind 2014, Scott Mescudi is set to become a household name.

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Opinion: LOVE.. and my two cents on it.

Poet Robert Frost once authored that, “Love is an irresistible desire to be irresistibly desired,” for which I, personally, do not believe to be true.

Hear me out..

heart image

Frost’ claim, I find to be extremely accurate; but attaching that claim to the definition of love is what I disagree with.

I do believe that a majority of individuals possess the desire to be desired, and as a result, that is why they want love. Having said that, that is not what love is. An individual cannot love for the sole purpose of being loved back.

Now, I am not — at all — claiming to be some guru on the matter, because I have experienced my share of failed relationships and heartbreak. But what I do know is that the emotion of love should always be genuine. Never forced. And I believe that when an individual loves another individual for the purpose of being loved back, they’re forcing it.

Love should never be difficult. The only aspect of love that should be hard is mustering the courage to love. But carrying it out, that’s easy. In my own experience, I have loved because I wanted to. Not because I needed to be loved back. That is what legitimates the whole thing. Two individuals feeling, because. Just because. Though what often ruins the experience is our idea of what love is. What we think it’s “supposed to be.”

We all — people, at least most of us — have this idea of what love entails, no matter how farfetched the notions. It was H.L. Mencken who said that, “Love is the triumph of imagination over intelligence.” Often times we let our imaginations run turbulently with thoughts of what our relationships are supposed to be. And that is dangerous.

When one begins to place expectations on a relationship, simultaneously, they insert strain as well. Expectations become unrealistic, though we may not realize — until it’s too late — because intelligence has succumbed to imagination. It’s a fine line, which leads to heartbreak if not strolled appropriately.

heartbreak image

Where I observe this most is with our youth, and the whole I want a relationship like.. phenomenon. A celebrity takes a picture with their beau in a parking lot, and suddenly all of Generation Y wants that relationship because of it. Shut up.

Maybe it’s just me, or maybe I’m old-fashioned, but you can’t look at other relationships and idolize that. Never judge a book by its cover, because you have yet to learn what lies within its pages. Aspiring to emulate your relationship after another, or your love based off others, ties into that whole loving for the wrong reasons thing. And in a sense, it’s lust.

When you lust for love, you love for the wrong reasons. The two emotions are night and day. “Love is a smoke made with the fume of sighs.” Shakespeare said that. And I believe that anytime you confuse love and lust, you will smell that fume.

Happy Valentine’s Day.

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GQ Recap: February 2014

Katy Perry, February 2014 GQ“He called on me a couple of times,” Katy Perry tells GQ — of President Obama. I guess that’s what they meant when they said you learn something new everyday.

As the February issue’s lead feature, Perry details of praying for boobs as a preteen, working (see: singing) for money in Santa Barbara, and being forbidden to eat Lucky Charms as a kid — to magazine correspondent Amy Wallace.

Visually, I don’t believe I have ever truly grasped the concept of perfection until I saw Perry’s feature spread, Super Gurl. God answered her prayers.

In its manual, GQ Endorses black denim. From Harley-Davidson hangouts to Silicon Valley, creative director Jim Moore declares the look suitable for all.

Also apart of the manual is the recently installed 12-Month Body Tune-up series — for the “new year, new me” individuals. The February edition is entitled The Focused Man’s Guide to the Gym.

February, after all, does mark Valentine’s Day, and the issue celebrates the her with editorials Where To Take Her and Love Me Tinder. The latter highlights the matchmaker app; and if you say you’ve never heard of it, you’re lying.

Everything You Ever Wanted to Know About Your [insert nickname for penis] declares that “you will never know the truth about your penis until you ask your ex-girlfriends.”

And with Super Bowl XLVIII tomorrow, the issue highlight’s the Ryan Seacrest of professional football, reporter Jay Glazer. The magazine tabs Glazer as the NFL’s biggest bomb thrower — and if you ever catch Glazer on the Fox NFL Sunday pre-game show, you know why.

Eric Decker Jessie James GQ

Keeping constant with the football theme, The Mile High Club features Denver Broncos wide receiver Eric Decker and his immaculate wife Jessie James. It’s almost unfair how perfect the duo seems to be. And with their first born child on the way, the Deckers may be breeding an American version of the Beckhams. Eric — a fourth year NFL veteran — will start in Super Bowl XLVIII.

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Vogue Recap: February 2014

This issue has seen quite a bit of grumbling over its cover choice — Lena Dunham. Be that as it may, SCO finds the 27-year old to be a prime selection. Webster’s Dictionary defines the term vogue as being “fashionable or popular in a particular time and place.”

Lena Dunham, US Vogue February 2014

As writer-director — and lead actress —  of the HBO series Girls, Dunham seems to be an ideal representation of Vogue at this ‘particular time’.

In the show’s third season, Girls is currently one of — if not the — most trendy television series airing; a direct reflection of it’s architect, Dunham — who Anna Wintour hails as “the voice of her generation.”

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Downtown Abbey actress Laura Carmichael is the February It Girl. Carmichael — who has developed close friendships with the likes of Christopher Kane and Erdem Moralioglu — is quickly emerging as one of television’s most fashionable personalities. Both on and off screen.

Styled by Grace Coddington, in the editorial Kicks Start, Givenchy’s Riccardo Tisci dishes on his collaboration with Nike — and his estimated 125 pairs of Air Force 1’s. Comprised of four pieces, the collection will be released into two separate installments.

The issue also pays homage to the sporting world’s biggest upcoming affairs, in Super Bowl XLVIII and the 2014 Winter Olympics. Leading up to football’s grandest game, Kate Upton tackles New York City — and it’s collections — in We’ve Got Game; whilst Hamish Bowles visits with olympian snowboarder Shaun White, and the pair hit the Keystone slopes of western Colorado.

Sochi 2014 Winter Olympics begin February 7.

Kate Upton, US Vogue Super Bowl

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Signed Sirelle: FEBRUARY 2014 – “The Pacification of American Sports”

We are just days away from the grandest spectacle in American sports, and above all else, the participants in Super Bowl XLVIII will serve as living testaments of hard work, dedication, and camaraderie. However — aside from a conference championship — you don’t get a trophy for just making it. At the conclusion of sixty minutes, there will only be one winner.

Vince Lombardi Trophy

As a society, we have begun to tread a dangerous threshold of celebrating losing; and there is nothing, at all, celebratory about losing.

Vince Lombardi — you know, the man in which the Super Bowl trophy is named after — once stated that, “If you can accept losing, you can’t win.”

Professional sporting leagues set the standard for which their subordinate levels emulate, and we are pacifying them in the worst way. I am all for the advocation of good sportsmanship, and maintaining the integrity of sport; but what are we really teaching our youth with “participant awards,” as a society? Don’t worry about winning, lad. You’ll get a medal either way.

One of the primary issues is that, somewhere along the way, negative connotations have been placed where they don’t belong. Take for instance the mission of professional leagues to extinguish in-game celebrations (“demonstration,” according to some). America’s No Fun League — aka the NFL — has been hellbent on eliminating nearly every touchdown celebration possible, for fear that celebration “shows up” the opponent. I would take the time to list a few of the NFL’s banned end zone celebrations, but my MacBook is allergic to bullshit.

And David’s stern boot camp of an NBA isn’t far behind, as I’m not sure players are even allowed to dribble between their legs anymore. You know, for fear of showing up the opponent. Reiterating, these oppressive rules trickle down to the nonprofessional levels. I was recently watching a college basketball game between Michigan State and Indiana, and an Indiana player — a freshman, I believe — was assessed a technical foul following his slam dunk. With zero affiliation to either program, I was livid.

Peyton Manning celebrates

Athletes put tireless work into their craft, that when it translates into success in their respective sport the natural reaction for most is to exert emotion. Yet we’re labeling this behavior as deviant.

There are coaches at the high school level being fired because their teams are throwing the ball — with a large lead — in the fourth quarter, or beating opposing teams by 100. Now, the latter may sound a bit jarring, I admit, but what message would be sent if a coach said, “Hey, don’t give your all in this one because they’re not that good.” It’s a stalemate for the coach, because if their team takes that message into the following game and loses, the coach — and players, too — will take the heat for the team “not playing hard the whole game.”

Insanity.

Nonetheless, to revisit the Lombardi fountain of knowledge, the gridiron Shakespeare also once proclaimed that, “Winning is not a sometime thing; it’s an all time thing. You don’t win once in a while, you don’t do things right once in a while, you do them right all the time. Winning is habit. Unfortunately, so is losing.”

Do we really want to teach our youth the habit of losing?

Signed,

Sirelle

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The Buzz: Golden Globes 2014 Best Dressed

Cate Blanchett, 2014 Golden GlobesThe 2014 Golden Globe Awards took place last night, in Beverly Hills, California. In what could be described as the homecoming of this awards season, Hollywood welcomed back several major A-listers who’d spent the last few years in hiding. Yes, we’re looking at you, Cate Blanchett and Robert Redford.

Celebrating both film and television, the Golden Globes annually serve as the unofficial kickoff for the entertainment industry’s most glamorous period — as it is followed by the Screen Actors Guild Awards, the Grammy’s, and the Academy Awards.

And while we undoubtedly want to see our favorite entertainers celebrated amongst their peers, there is no question that — above all else — it is the fashion most look forward to.

SCO takes a look last night’s biggest style winners.

2014 Golden Globes Best Dressed

Hollywood newcomers Lupita Nyong’o and Margot Robbie stole the red carpet at first glance. Nyong’o — who was nominated for Best Supporting Actress (12 Years a Slave) — amazed onlookers as she graced the carpet in a scarlet-colored Ralph Lauren gown, with a cape that impeccably draped her body. Robbie — the Australian bombshell who plays Leonardo DiCaprio’s wife in The Wolf of Wall Street — sparkled in a white Gucci gown, taking “simple, but sexy” to a refreshing level.

Masters of Sex actress Caitlin Fitzgerald was mesmerizing, in a powder blue Emilia Wickstead dress — from the 2014 Spring collection. However, it was Reese Witherspoon who shut the carpet down in Calvin Klein.

2014 Golden Globes Best Dressed MenBut not to be outdone, were a few of entertainment’s leading men. For music moguls Usher Raymond and Diddy — who both presented the award for Best Original Score — it was suave as usual. Cut and crisp, Raymond flourished in a plum-colored Calvin Klein suit. Leonardo DiCaprio commanded — and got — attention, in black Armani. DiCaprio earned a Golden Globe for his maniacal performance in Martin Scorsese’s The Wolf of Wall Street.

The 71st Annual Golden Globes aired live on NBC.

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Book: Looking for Alaska

New York Times bestselling author John Green is the present standard of modern young adult fiction. While he arguably may be best known for his most recent book — The Fault In Our Stars — it is his debut novel, Looking for Alaska, that reigns supreme over Green’s paperback empire.

Looking for Alaska by John Green

Looking for Alaska is the fictional narrative of Miles “Pudge” Halter, as told by him. A Floridian schoolboy, the reader is introduced to Halter as he is preparing to transfer to an Alabama boarding school. Leaving behind a monotonous social life, Halter cites his hunger for seeking a “Great Perhaps” as his reasoning for the change. Obsessed with last words — those spoken by famous people before their last breath — it is the final declaration of François Rabelais that leads Halter to Culver Creek, an Alabama preparatory school his father once attended.

It is at Culver Creek where the reader meets several of the novel’s key characters, though none more dynamic than Alaska Young.

Although she is alluring, intrepid, and tragically unpredictable, Halter falls in love with Young at first glance. But so does the reader. Via methodical character development, the author seduces the reader into plunging head over heels for Young — making the reader one with the narrator. Both with their friends, and without, Halter and Young build a bond over time that is seemingly unbreakable.

Seemingly.

Executing one of the most flawless literary climaxes of Generation Y, without warning, Looking for Alaska sucks the life out of the reader. I had to put the book down for three days, as a result. That is the genius of John Green.

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GQ Recap: January 2014

Bradley Cooper, GQ January 2014Making his US debut as the magazine’s cover boy, Bradley Cooper looks back on his rise to A-list stardom, in the cover story written by contributor Zach Baron.

Cooper has evolved quite a bit since his one episode stint as Jake on Sex and the City (he kissed Carrie, but who didn’t?). And prior to The Hangover trilogy, the actor was best known for his role as Rachel McAdams’ fiancé “Sack” — a character he refers to as “a fucking tyrant” — in Wedding Crashers (2004).

In 2012, Cooper starred in David Russell’s Silver Linings Playbook. The 39-year old co-starred with Jennifer Lawrence, in the comedy-drama that garnered them both Academy Award nominations, with Lawrence winning Best Actress. Fast forward to present-day, and Cooper is co-starring in another Russell-directed film, American Hustle, which is receiving outstanding praise. In the film, Cooper plays an overzealous FBI agent who may very well be his own worst enemy.

Among lifestyle features, GQ Endorses — via its monthly manual — Tokyo as the the greatest shopping city on the planet, The Only Six Tools You’ll Ever Need, and educates the reader on piecing together the perfect suit in 2014.

Dylan Penn, January 2014, GQ

The issue also encourages the reader to pick up a book this new year, with titles such as The Painter (Peter Heller) and Shovel Ready (Adam Sternbergh) making their list of suggestions.

Los Angeles, California is christened — although anything but christlike — as America’s next great city, in an editorial that features the renaissance of Downtown Los Angeles.

Model Dylan Penn — yea, Sean’s daughter — is perhaps the issue’s most electric (their word, not mine) feature, and she labels the rumors of her dating Robert Pattinson as being “all bullshit.”

Athletes Fallon Fox, Peyton Manning, and Thierry Henry — who models Parisian suits — are the relative features for this issue.

But no feature has created stir like that of Duck Dynasty patriarch Phil Robertson. In an intriguing Drew Magary editorial, Robertson spoke the God’s honest truth — according to him — which wound up getting him briefly suspended by his network employer. If you haven’t yet read the piece, do so! The issue is currently available on newsstands.

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Vogue Recap: January 2014

Cate Blanchett, US Vogue January 2014In a sentiment consistent with our own January theme, Anna Wintour set the tone in the opening statement of her inaugural 2014 Letter from the Editor. “I have never been a big believer in the idea that we all miraculously change ourselves in January,” Wintour asserts. “Now is always the time to do so.”

When actress Lupita Nyong’o was spotted mingling with Wintour — back in November — at the MoMa Film Benefit, many in the industry speculated that she would soon land in the magazine’s pages. The conjecturing proved to be legitimate, as Nyong’o was tabbed as the January It Girl. Nyong’o delivered a masterful performance in the 2013 film 12 Years a Slave; a role that has earned her a Golden Globe nomination for Best Supporting Actress in a Motion Picture.

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“She ranks with the great actresses in the world,” director Woody Allen stated, of cover subject Cate Blanchett. Allen directed Blanchett in the comedy-drama Blue Jasmine, which released last summer. The actress, herself, described the character as “all smoke and mirrors.”

Although prior to her role in Blue Jasmine — which has also earned her a Golden Globe nomination (Best Actress) — it had been five years (The Curious Case of Benjamin Button) since Blanchett starred in a motion picture. But in addition to headlining Woody Allen’s comedy-drama, Blanchett co-stars in — George Clooney directed — The Monument’s Men, slated for February 2014 release. The lead editorial, Golden Hour, is authored by Jonathan Van Meter.

Idris Elba, US Vogue January 2014

Another issue feature — also preparing for the upcoming award circuit — is British actor Idris Elba. Elba has had an American following for quite some time, with most recognizing him for his role as Stringer Bell on HBO’s The Wire. However, after a dominating portrayal of Nelson Mandela — in Mandela: Long Walk to Freedom — the London native has captured the attention of a much more global audience. Elba’s role of Mandela has earned him several nominations — including Golden Globe Best Actor — and though not yet announced, it is a given that that he will earn an Academy Award nomination, as well.

Trends of the 2014 spring collections, from razzle dazzle to handkerchief hems, are featured in the More is More spread — styled by Grace Coddington. The issue is currently available on newsstands.

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