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Here's What A Facebook TV Advert Would Have Looked Like In 1995

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“I’ve just got the Facebook!” From Brent Weinbach.

Remember those TV adverts from internet service providers? Here's a spoof advert of what a Facebook TV ad would have looked like circa 1995.

The video is from comedian Brent Weinbach and it's a perfect spoof of how internet companies used infomercial-style ads to explain how the internet works – in fact a specific AOL ad from 1995.

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It's easy to forget that "communicating with your friends on your computer?" actually WAS a weird concept 20 years ago.

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The video is also a subtly effective satire of Facebook: "Just clicking on your mom's profile and saying happy birthday – it's the same as sending a package!"

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This is a 90s reimagining of what Facebook would have looked like back then.

This is a 90s reimagining of what Facebook would have looked like back then.

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21 GIFs That Will Calm You The F*ck Down

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BREAAAAAATHE.

Good lord, life can be overwhelming.

Good lord, life can be overwhelming.

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It's basically a tapestry of work stress, family drama, heartbreak, bad traffic, too little money, too much belly fat...

It's basically a tapestry of work stress, family drama, heartbreak, bad traffic, too little money, too much belly fat...

...too little sleep, too many dirty dishes, holes in your favorite jeans, missed connections, long lines, dropped calls, bacne, hangovers, shaving nicks, broken promises, lost pens, terse emails, burnt toast, clogged drains, pulled muscles, pet funerals, people funerals, insurance claims, kitchen plants that wither and fade no matter what you do to save them, accidental left-swipes, forgotten passwords, split ends, horrible coffee, ideas that sounded good at the time, cracked screens, crying in public, crying in private, Sunday nights, Monday mornings, lost luggage, chipped teeth, IMs from your boss that say "hey, got a minute?", uncontrollable hiccups, other people describing their dreams, bruised apples, litigation, feeling unheard, feeling unseen, feeling upset with yourself for being upset in the first place, worrying that you will never do the things that in your wild little heart you know you have to do to be whole, and paper cuts.

memeguy.com

Luckily, there exists this very zen dog.

Luckily, there exists this very zen dog.

gifbay.com

This lovely rainfall.

This lovely rainfall.

giphy.com


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Here's All The Proof You Need That Tom Felton Belongs In Gryffindor

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Let’s examine the evidence.

As you may be aware, Tom Felton has joined J.K. Rowling's website Pottermore, and despite playing blond-haired Slytherin brat Draco Malfoy in the Harry Potter movies, was sorted into GRYFFINDOR.

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So let's have a look at all of Tom's Gryffindor traits. Here's what the Sorting Hat has to say: "You might belong in Gryffindor / Where dwell the brave at heart / Their daring, nerve and chivalry / set Gryffindors apart."

So let's have a look at all of Tom's Gryffindor traits. Here's what the Sorting Hat has to say: "You might belong in Gryffindor / Where dwell the brave at heart / Their daring, nerve and chivalry / set Gryffindors apart."

Warner Bros.

Tom is most definitely brave and daring.

Tom is most definitely brave and daring.

Twentieth Century Fox / Via http://elizabethgillies.tumblr.com


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10 Epic Headshots Reveal The Faces Behind The Hand Models

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“I call myself a hand specialist, but I got the label ‘supermodel.’ My hands were insured for a seven-figure sum.”

Oli writes, "When you work in creating print and TV ads, you work with hand models quite a lot. You actually don't realize how often you see 'model' hands every day. So we thought it would be fascinating to take headshots of those hand models and set about contacting an agent who represented them, thats when it all came together."

Delphine Jean-Gilles

Delphine Jean-Gilles

Oli Kellett / Via http://olikellett.com


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The Internet Is Flipping Out Over This Woman Who Lets Her Husband Spy On Their Family With An App

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Catharine Higginson told BuzzFeed News that the furore is “utterly ridiculous”.

Two days ago, teacher Catharine Higginson, 45, told The Mirror about a discovery she'd made regarding her husband, James, 42.

Two days ago, teacher Catharine Higginson, 45, told The Mirror about a discovery she'd made regarding her husband, James, 42.

James Higginson

After 10 years of marriage I had always believed husband James and I didnt have secrets from one another.

Turns out there was a huge, totally shocking one that I only discovered by accident.

Last year I was teaching in a particular building at school where there was no mobile phone reception which meant I missed a text from my bank with an activation code to make an important financial transfer.

When I got home I started to apologise to my husband James who immediately replied, "Oh, don't worry about it – I've sorted it."

When I looked at him, puzzled, he continued: "I was able to get into your phone and locate the code to activate the transaction" before casually adding: "I don't need you here to be able to read your text messages."

She revealed that he'd "installed a tracking app by Cerberus on my phone and those used by my children Daisy, 19, Tilly, 16, and Max, 12, from my first marriage."

She revealed that he'd "installed a tracking app by Cerberus on my phone and those used by my children Daisy, 19, Tilly, 16, and Max, 12, from my first marriage."

And she went on to add: "While I was very shocked at first about the extent of the snooping I ultimately don’t have a problem with him doing this because I’m not up to anything. But I can see that for those for whom cheating is in their DNA, they’d panic about being caught out."

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Sexism Row Erupts After Top Female Tennis Player Asked To "Give Us A Twirl" On Court

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Eugenie Bouchard was asked to show off her outfit following her victory in the second round of the Australian Open.

An Australian tennis commentator has been accused of sexism after asking Canada's Eugenie Bouchard to "give us a twirl" in a post-match interview.

Tennis Australia commentator Ian Cohen, who was holding a Channel 7 microphone during the interview, asked the No. 7 seed to show the crowd her outfit following her straight-sets victory over Kiki Bertens in the second round of the Australian Open.

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Cohen made the request after Bouchard expressed her love for Serena Williams' outfit at the competition earlier in the week.

Cohen made the request after Bouchard expressed her love for Serena Williams' outfit at the competition earlier in the week.

He said to the 20-year-old: "Last night you tweeted you loved Serena’s outfit. Obviously the fluoro is working for you girls at the moment – she was kind enough to give us a twirl, can you give us a twirl and tell us about your outfit?"

Twitter: @geniebouchard

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How Normal Are Your Bad Habits Compared To Other People?

McDonalds Has Revealed What Its Fries Are Really Made Of And It Involves Some Chemicals You've Never Heard Of

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YUM! I love the smell of dimethylpolysiloxane in the morning.

In this video, Grant Imahara "reverse engineers" McDonald's fries.

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And in this video, he talks us through the ingredients.

And in this video, he talks us through the ingredients.

The MailOnline claims there's an ingredient "used in Silly Putty" and a "petrol based" chemical in there, but it's apparently fine.

Moving on :-/

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Here's the end of the process: the potatoes being frozen.

Here's the end of the process: the potatoes being frozen.

They've just come out of a 50-yard freezer tunnel.

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Before that, they're partially fried.

Before that, they're partially fried.

This is to give them a "crisp outer shell", and now I'm hungry.

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Ball Boy Takes A Ball To The Balls At Australian Open

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Yup, that’s going to hurt.

A ball boy at the Australian Open had to leave the court on Thursday morning after being hit in the groin by a 200km/h serve from No.12 seed Feliciano Lopez.

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Ouch.

Ouch.

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Lopez asked the ball boy if he was OK before walking to other side of the court to check on him.

Lopez asked the ball boy if he was OK before walking to other side of the court to check on him.

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The young chap eventually had to leave the court as he recovered from the ordeal.

The young chap eventually had to leave the court as he recovered from the ordeal.

He wasn't the only person to retire during the game.

Lopez progressed to the third round of the competition after his opponent, Adrian Mannarino, was forced to call it quits, due to suspected heat exhaustion, while leading two sets to one.

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Author James Patterson Has Released A Self-Destructing Book That Costs £200,000

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The lucky reader will have 24-hours to finish the book before it explodes. Don’t worry, there’s also a free ebook version.

James Patterson, one-man publishing empire and independent bookshop supporter, has released a new book. Just one.

James Patterson, one-man publishing empire and independent bookshop supporter, has released a new book. Just one.

It costs £193,503 ($294,038), and will self-destruct after 24 hours.

http://themosthrillingreadingexperiencemoneycanbuybyjamespatterson.com

Here's the trailer.

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Serious bidders with a spare £200,000 in their back pocket will have a chance to buy "the most thrilling reading experience money can buy":

Serious bidders with a spare £200,000 in their back pocket will have a chance to buy "the most thrilling reading experience money can buy":

It's not clear why the dinner will be unforgettable, presumably because James Patterson is a master raconteur, not because of the terrifying possibility of death.

themosthrillingreadingexperiencemoneycanbuybyjamespatterson.com

The campaign takes a pleasantly cheeky tone – yes there is a self destructing book worth £193,503, but there are also 1,000 self-destructing ebooks up for grabs.

The campaign takes a pleasantly cheeky tone – yes there is a self destructing book worth £193,503, but there are also 1,000 self-destructing ebooks up for grabs.

They are free, and won't destroy your iPad.

selfdestructingbook.com


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Here's The "Willie Horton" Ad Romney Almost Ran Against Mike Huckabee

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“This is my daughter… she was murdered by a serial rapist released early from prison in Arkansas. Will we see a version of this unaired ad — obtained by BuzzFeed News — in 2016?

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In the fall of 2007, as Mike Huckabee was surging in the Iowa polls, Mitt Romney's foundering presidential campaign dispatched a camera crew to Arkansas with the charge to produce one of the most brutal ads of the election cycle.

The final product — a withering spot that tied Huckabee to a 2003 murder committed by a serial rapist who was paroled while he was governor of Arkansas — never saw the light of day. But the unaired ad, obtained this week by BuzzFeed News, highlights a potentially potent line of attack on Huckabee as he considers a 2016 bid for the presidency.

The ad's existence was first reported in the 2012 book The Real Romney (and noted, then, by BuzzFeed News). The book's authors report that Alex Castellanos, then the Romney campaign's chief strategist, was aiming for an emotionally hard-hitting commercial that would have the same effect as the infamous "Willie Horton" attack ad on 1988 Democratic presidential candidate Michael Dukakis.

Others in the campaign, including Stuart Stevens, believed going after Huckabee so harshly would backfire. The operatives ultimately deferred to Romney, who spiked the ad, believing it would make him look "desperate."

The ad features an interview with the mother of the murder victim, condemning Huckabee's judgment and ruling him unfit to be president.

"This is my daughter," the mother says in the commercial. "She was pregnant with her first child. She was murdered by a serial rapist released early from prison in Arkansas. It was Mike Huckabee's intent that Wayne Dumond be released from prison. It's a pattern of bad judgment — very bad judgment. I don't know how you could trust that person with the highest power in our country."

On the screen at the end of the ad, white lettering appears against a black backdrop informing viewers, "Mike Huckabee granted 1,033 pardons and commutations, including 12 murderers."

Though this ad never ran, Romney did eventually produce a softer spot attacking Huckabee's extensive use of pardons to cast him as soft on crime. No doubt many of these cases are sitting in opposition research files belonging to Huckabee's prospective 2016 opponents — although it's unclear whether such a line of attack would carry the same force eight years later, at a time when many Republicans are rethinking their approach to criminal justice.

A spokesman for Romney declined to comment on the ad, while an adviser to Huckabee did not respond to a request for comment.

24 Struggles Every Netflix Addict Will Immediately Understand

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“Are you still watching?” is Netflix telling you to get your life together.

The main problem is always struggling to decide what to watch.

The main problem is always struggling to decide what to watch.

Thinkstock / Twitter: @lmlosingmyself

Since the reality of Netflix is actually this.

Since the reality of Netflix is actually this.

buzzfeed.com / Adam Ellis

Then you get into a new show and are getting up to speed on it and suddenly, out of nowhere, there are no more episodes left.

Then you get into a new show and are getting up to speed on it and suddenly, out of nowhere, there are no more episodes left.

IFC / Via imgur.com

And being immediately irrationally angry.

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This Character From "Wolf Hall" Looks Just Like Edna Mode From "The Incredibles"

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Or is it Johnny Depp in Charlie And The Chocolate Factory? Or Linda Hunt? Or Ian Beale? So many options.

BBC / Giles Keyte

Was it Ian Beale (Adam Woodyatt) from EastEnders?

Was it Ian Beale (Adam Woodyatt) from EastEnders?

BBC / Kieron McCarron


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The Trouble With "It Girls"

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Vanity Fair

On the cover of the February issue of Vanity Fair, Rosamund Pike gives her best icy blue-eyed Grace Kelly. The cover’s intro — "From Bond Girl to Gone Girl to 2015’s It Girl" — is banal: Pike's beauty here is the real draw.

But still, there's that phrase, "It girl”: one that Vanity Fair wielded back in 1998 for the then-up-and-coming Gretchen Mol, who struggled so mightily to make good on the promise that the New York Times dubbed it the “Vanity Fair Cover Curse,” and that Vogue uses in its own February cover story on Fifty Shades of Grey star Dakota Johnson, “who exudes the effortless cool of an It Girl.”

Motion Picture Magazine

In naming someone an It girl, a publication is either hedging a bet (Gretchen Mol will be all that anyone’s talking about in 1998) or trendspotting (Cara Delevingne is everywhere in New York; you’ll be seeing her everywhere else soon). In this contemporary iteration, “It girl” has come to mean some cross of a new, young, generally hot thing known for attending parties and movie premieres and a new, young, generally hot thing who makes her name in a sphere (politics, journalism, golf, rap) broadly delimited to men. It’s a seemingly safe way to declare someone as worthy of your attention without actually articulating what, exactly, merits that attention. These girls are it: no matter that the antecedent to “it” remains unknown.

So what’s the fascination with naming — and reading about — prospective It girls? The term may seem like a cliche, ambiguous, employed out of editorial imprecision, and it certainly is many, if not all, of those things. But the century-long history of the It girl, coupled with a remarkable usage spike over the last decade, points to a broader and enduring trend in which writers flag a certain type of behavior, demeanor, or ambition, name it, and, in so doing, map a certain type of (limited, limiting) career and behavior trajectory in which the woman is forever marked by both her gender and her ineffable thing-ness. There’s no such moniker, after all, as an “It woman.”

The modern It girl age can probably be traced to a seminal 1994 New Yorker profile of Chloë Sevigny in which Jay McInerney dubbed the 19-year-old “the It Girl with a street-smart style and down-low attitude.” The article’s lede set the scene for this ‘90s version of the It girl, which is to say, part socialite, part fashion plate, part indie oddity:

It’s weird, this happens all the time. Chloë Sevigny is sitting at one of the outdoor tables at Stingy Lulu’s on St. Mark’s Place just off Avenue A, absorbing a mixed green salad and devouring the just-out September Vogue. A black girl and an Asian girl huddle anxiously on the corner a few yards away, checking her out. The two are about Chloë’s age, which is nineteen, and they seem to be debating whether or not to approach. Do they recognize her from the Sonic Youth video—the one filmed in Marc Jacobs’ showroom, which was kind of a spoof of the whole grunge thing—or did they catch her modeling the X-Girl line last spring? Maybe they saw her photo in Details, the ones taken by Larry Clark, who has just cast Chloë in his new movie, “Kids.”

Vogue

Sevigny wasn’t beautiful, exactly, or sexy, per se; she was different, and indifferent, and that’s what made her It. Sevigny’s It-ness manifested a particular sort of abrasive, even erudite hipness. So much about her seemed to scream “fuck you, I contain multitudes,” yet the profile attempts, as profiles must, to unite that multiplicity under a single theme: It-ness. In so doing, the New Yorker transformed an unruly woman like Sevigny, with her nontraditional looks and unfamiliar club-kid ways, into a digestible rhetorical pile of It.

And thus began the beginning of the It girl deluge. Entertainment Weekly started a yearly “It List” cover in 1997, and the Times used it for another potentially threateningly different young woman (Fiona Apple) and, in “The Making of an It Girl” (1998), Keri Russell. The Guardian put it to work for “professional posh person” Tara Palmer-Tomkinson in 2000; in 2001, the character of Amelie was an It girl (Globe and Mail); in 2002, it was Parker Posey, snowboarder Tara Dakides, Chelsea Clinton, and Italian Baroque painter Artemisia Gentileschi; in 2003, the WNBA’s Sue Bird and “Almost It Girl” Jaime Presley; in 2004, Belinda Stronach, CEO of Magna International, Lindsay Lohan, and Joanna Newsom.

Then it gets so ridiculous I can only offer you a semi-chronological It bomb:

Feist, Michelle Monaghan, war zone It girl Lara Logan, Michelle Wie, Margherita Missoni, “dewy It girl of spirituality” Marianne Williamson, lit’s It girl Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie, tennis It girl Nicole Vaidisova, Carey Mulligan, Katherine Heigl, “It girl of the social network scene” Facebook, opera’s It girl Anna Netrebko, Pakistani politician Benazir Bhutto, George Clooney’s ex-girlfriend Sarah Larson, gymnast Shawn Johnson, The New Yorker cover of the Obamas fist-bumping, “It girl for the poorer, darker Russia” Agniya Kuznetsova, Alexa Chung (who published a book simply entitled It), Betty White, Blake Lively, CBC radio personality Frances Bay, Freida Pinto, “lesbian It girl” Ruby Rose, Frances Bean, San Francisco It girl Rose Pak, Elizabeth Olsen, Zooey Deschanel, “Russia’s Scandalous It Girl Kseniya Sobchak,” Carly Rae Jepsen, Lena Dunham, Gabby Douglas, “fashion’s new It girl...and boy Andrej Pejic,” Sofia Vergara, Suki Waterhouse, Annie Lennox’s daughter Tali, Kerry Washington, reality star Gigi Hadid, Lupita Nyong’o, Jennifer Lawrence, Pantone’s Color of the Year “Marsala,” model Cara Delevingne, Rita Ora, Kendall Jenner, hip-hop’s Jhené Aiko, “indie It girl” Aubrey Plaza, Ariana Grande, “director-DJ-designer” Vashtie Kola, softball player Mo’ne Davis, Emma Watson, Felicity Jones, Dakota Johnson, the Nine West It girl tote, French actress Clémence Poésy, Gossip Girl character Jenny Humphrey, “Piperlime’s new holiday It girl” Shay Mitchell and, from Vogue in 2014 alone, slideshows of British It girls, Japanese It girls, Korean It girls, country It girls, and Parisienne It girls.

According this list, an It girl can be a serious war reporter, a fearless politician, an impressive athlete, a person of color, over 40, over 80, a color, a magazine cover, a persona who buys an $80 tote, a social networking site, an androgynous man, a celebrity scion, a model, an Oscar-winning actress, a writer, a lesbian, a person who drinks wine from a terrifically ugly glass. The It girl’s gone democratic. But to what end?

Dorothy Thompson with husband Sinclair Lewis.

AP Photo

You could argue that today’s hazy, often imprecise use of “It girl” isn’t indicative of lazy writing so much as an expanded understanding of what sex appeal, charisma, and the type of personality that can “change the chemistry of a room” might look like: women of different nationalities, sexualities, backgrounds, and careers.

That’s something worth celebrating, of course. But the persistence — or at least the resurgence — of the term in the mid-’90s also aligns with the rise of postfeminism, an ideological attitude in which the advances of second-wave feminism are traded in for the rhetoric of “choice”: freedom through self-objectification and consumption of goods, empowerment via the capacity to attract the attention of men, “girl power” in the place of systemic progress against patriarchy.

Those goals are a throwback to the 1920s understanding of female empowerment, a decade in which women reconciled freedoms enabled by suffrage, conspicuous consumption, and the entrance of women into the public sphere with the endurance of patriarchy. These “New Women,” as they were called, were “free” — to have jobs as shopgirls, to use their wages to buy things — but in a profoundly limited sense of the term.

And no one crystallized those contradictory freedoms better than Clara Bow, the original It girl. Bow was the cat’s pajamas, the bee’s knees, the real fucking deal. She was pretty, sure, but so were a lot of girls on the silent screen.

She had something more: a curious and beguiling mix of sex appeal and modernity and charisma that no one really knew how to describe — save cultural commentator and author Elinor Glyn, who, over the course of the ‘20s, coined the designation of “It” and held forth as its arbiter. While some equated “It” with sex appeal, Glyn made it something more complex: “The It factor lives in the girl who doesn’t know she’s beautiful, who’s utterly without self-consciousness or pretense.”

For years, Glyn resisted attributing “It” to any single star or public figure. But then Paramount optioned her It novella, crafted a very loose adaptation thereof, and cast Clara Bow in the lead, effectively marrying her name to the concept.

Photoplay Magazine

Watch a clip from It, and you can come close to understanding the power over audiences Bow had in 1927. I think it probably felt like watching joy, or the future, or the first time you saw a firecracker. Part of the attraction stemmed from her cool-girl antics offscreen; part was her embodiment, vis-à-vis her character in It, of a specific ethos of female liberation and consumerism, shot through with the overarching goal of marriage. It was sex appeal, but it was also just short of truly transgressive.

Because when Bow did cross the line of acceptable female behavior — stringing too many men along, gambling, drinking — is when she fell from It girl favor. In 1927, she was arguably the biggest star in the world; by 1932, having weathered a string of scandals and high-profile breakups and a truly awful tabloid smear campaign, she retreated from Hollywood completely.

Yet the mantle of It girl remained hers: At her peak, during her decline, in retrospectives and film revivals, and in the obituary of her husband, actor and Nevada lieutenant governor Rex Bell, she is invariably referred to as “It girl Clara Bow.” Even as new stars (Jean Harlow, Mae West, Ava Gardner, Lana Turner) took up the mantle of Hollywood sexpot, the press and studios resisted dubbing them the latest It girl.

Outside of Hollywood, “It girl” was used to describe criminals and what would later be referred to as femme fatales: The “It Girl of Chicago Gangs,” mentioned in the Chicago Daily Tribune (1931), was “known to the police as ‘death angel’” and “all of her suitors met death by bullets or other violence.” Or, in the newspaper Afro-American, It girl Helene Morgan’s love meant “astonishing and tragic things” for the four men who fell for her.

“It girl” could also be highly localized: The Philadelphia Tribune followed the social life of “It Girl Miss Peggy Dee” in 1937, while the industrious men of MIT made elaborate plans for “a special meter, replete with electronic tubes” for a “unique method of testing college girls, office girls, and those who are ‘at home’” to devise “the amount of ‘It’ in their make-up.”

“It” was clearly still a concept with currency — and one plebes could possess in limited, apparently quantifiable amounts — but that concept remained powerfully linked to Bow. In the 1940s, however, “It girl” took on a new valence: a smart woman, usually one of few in her field, who played by men’s rules with wit, cunning, and style. The New Yorker used it for a 1940 profile of Dorothy Thompson, the so-called first lady of American journalism, who was a foreign correspondent, wife to author Sinclair Lewis, and a widely read columnist in the years preceding World War II.

Motion Picture Magazine

Thompson was a former suffragette and what my granddad would call a total pistol: stubborn and aggressive; sexy not for her body, but her mind. Lewis referred to the “international situation” (the burgeoning conflict in Europe) in relation to Thompson as “It,” thereby rendering her the It girl. It’s a play on the term, but it fostered a connotation of uniqueness, even brashness, that clings to contemporary uses of the phrase.

In 1946, for example, the Boston Globe called Clare Boothe Luce the “It girl of Congress,” a reference that referred not only to her status as a “glamorous representative” married to one of the most powerful publishers in the world, but also the presence of a fiercely intelligent, occasionally combative, and unequivocally beautiful woman in elected office.

During this period, the press also applied the term to various non-Hollywood spheres: Broadway’s It girl (Mabel Scott), It girl of European capitals (Una Mae), It girl of opera (Geraldine Farrar). But it wasn’t until Bow’s death in 1965 that the term was transmuted on to another type of girl.

It’s coincidence, really, that Edie Sedgwick began hanging out with Warhol the same year that Bow died. Yet the rise of Sedgwick — and the particular sort of waifish ingenue she represented — would guide another iteration of the It girl, this one marked by privilege, excess, and decline.

Sedgwick was an It girl without the specific designation: In June 1966, the New York Times grouped her with Warhol’s other “superstars”; a month later, Vogue featured her in a full-page spread, declaring her a “Youthquaker.”

The Times followed her around town, describing her antics with Warhol and Chuck Wein (“They made a scene in Paris by turning up at Castel’s with 15 rabbits and Edie clad in a white mink coat and black tights that have become her signature”) and habits (losing jewels, stripping to her bra and dancing in a pool, biting her nails). “It’s not that I’m rebelling,” she told the Times. “It’s that I'm just trying to find another way.”

Underground superstar, Youthquaker, but never an explicit It girl. She would be retrospectively dubbed as such — in the 2000s, reviews and publicity for Factory Girl, the Sienna Miller-starring film about Sedgwick, repeatedly made use of the term — but for most of the next three decades, the term was wielded only intermittently, affixed to a horse named “Bowl of Flowers,” the apparent “IT Girl of the Turf Scene,” Diana Ross (1988), young Jessica Lange (1983), and literary bête noire Tama Janowitz (1987) before the 1994 Sevigny profile sparked the It girl deluge.

In the early ‘30s, Clara Bow was forced to recognize the limitations of her freedoms when fans turned on her particular brand of sex appeal and behavior. Dance on tables, the instructions for It-ness went, but not too many tables. The label of “It girl” thus becomes a sort of rhetorical disciplinary device: a means of channeling a woman’s potential in a sexualized yet ultimately contained direction in which she attracts the gaze, but never controls it. Even the term’s application to Dorothy Thompson in 1940 or Benazir Bhutto in 2007 is a means of containing an otherwise unruly, powerful woman, transforming her accomplishments into a fad, a spectacle, the playful and ultimately unimportant work of a girl.

When I first saw the Rosamund Pike cover, I thought I was annoyed because of the misapplication of the term. Pike, I thought to myself, is no Clara Bow. But as I’ve thought more about the term, it’s become clear that maybe I’m just subconsciously irritated by the way in which popular magazines wield the term as the ultimate backhanded compliment.

Because it’s one thing to look back at Bow, and analyze, understand, and bemoan her It-ness, a label that simultaneously elevated her to the height of stardom and anchored her asunder. It’s another to see the term — and all its insidious, objectifying power — resurface, proliferate, and thrive nearly a century later. Only this time, it’s saddled not on one woman, but any woman who seems primed to be more than an object — an It, passive and pliable — in the narrative of their own lives. And that’s nothing to be celebrated on the cover of a magazine.

15 Thoughts Lesbians Have While Reading Women's Mags

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Whose reality is this, even?

I don't think I GET Ryan Gosling.

I don't think I GET Ryan Gosling.

Does he ever not look like he's guarding a very gross secret? Is that part of his appeal?

giphy.com / Via http://tumblr.com

Can lesbians be basic?

Can lesbians be basic?

I just read an article on replacing carbs with kale and took mental notes. Question answered. #NotAllLesbians

wifflegif.com / Via http://heykaytay.tumblr.com

Alexa Chung is seriously good looking.

Alexa Chung is seriously good looking.

Like, frighteningly fit. Straight girls, you're noticing this too, right?

Oh no, you're too busy trying to work out what Ryan Gosling's gross secret is. If you're not looking at Alexa Chung and at least thinking, "maybe...", I will never completely understand you.

blog.nextmanagement.com / Via Glamour Magazine

"Naughty" red velvet macaroon recipe. OK stop.

"Naughty" red velvet macaroon recipe. OK stop.

This is how to be naughty with cake, take note: Putting your tit on someone's birthday cake and mushing it around, thereby destroying the cake? That's naughty. Throwing a pavlova off a balcony, because YOLO? Also naughty.

Eating cake? Not at all naughty.

giphy.com / Via http://www.reddit.com


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Could You Pass The Australian Citizenship Test?

Will Ferrell Threw A Basketball At A Cheerleader's Head During A Lakers Game

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But don’t worry, it was just for a movie! And Mark Wahlberg was there too!

Will Ferrell surprised fans by throwing a half court shot directly at a cheerleader's head during the halftime show of Wednesday night's Los Angeles Lakers and New Orleans Pelicans game.

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It was all part of the filming for an upcoming movie called Daddy's Home.

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According to IMDB, the film is about what happens "when a divorced guy's ex-wife re-marries someone way more uptight."

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24 Realities College Students Face During Syllabus Week

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Are you going out tonight? Uhm HELLO yes… it’s sylly week.

Getting to your first class of the semester:

Getting to your first class of the semester:

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Walking into the wrong classroom:

Walking into the wrong classroom:

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Picking THE most perfect texting spot in class:

Picking THE most perfect texting spot in class:

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Seeing someone else planted on it next class:

Seeing someone else planted on it next class:

You just messed up the class' unwritten seating chart man.

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Suspect Charged In 2 Of California's Infamous 1976 "Gypsy Hill" Killings

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Rodney Halbower, a convict with a long history of violence against women, was linked to the killings of Paula Baxter and Veronica Cascio through DNA evidence, authorities say.

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41 Things You Wish You Knew Before Your Wedding Day

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You don’t have to wear heels — and your feet will thank you.

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Choose bridesmaids VERY wisely.

Choose bridesmaids VERY wisely.

"Choose bridesmaids wisely. Pick those who know how to put up with YOU and you know how to put up with them in intense situations. They could make the day more stressful or dramatic (alcohol, money, or lack of attention on them). I could not imagine my kids looking at my wedding album and not knowing a bridesmaid, a person who I thought was my closest of close friend. It is not worth the drama. Stick to sisters and childhood friends. I got lucky, but many friends did not." — Submitted by Jillian Breska (via Facebook)

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And you can totally let them pick out their own dresses!

And you can totally let them pick out their own dresses!

"Letting the bridesmaids pick out their own dresses is a decision I'm still very happy I made. They looked wonderful and there was no stress or grumbling over budgets. We made a lot of wedding party decisions based on that and it's something I think more couples should keep in mind. No one needs a flask or another pair of earrings — cover half the cost of their hair or tux instead!" — Submitted by Kelsea Tooley (via Facebook)

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