So Lil’ Wayne has decided to throw his hat in the celebrity fashion line ring, telling XXL in their July/August issue that his new line will be named Rebirth after his 2010 rock album:

“I just figure that I… I’m funky, I got that from my stylist, Marisa. I’m funky, like she say. I wear a whole buncha items at one time, you know what I mean?

I be figuring you at least want one of them items.” Like, ‘Damn, I’d love to have that safety pin he got on,’ you know what I mean? Anything. I got on these types of shoes, these shorts, this sweater… A year from now, I want all these items to be mine. Rebirth. I want—I just figure people want to be funky like me, so I got my clothing line.”

Yeah, he may be funky and all, but if his last mixtape and that godawful song, “How to Love” is any indication, Weezy doesn’t need to start any new ventures he just needs to go back to honing his skills on the original one: his rap career. But to each his own.

I’m not sure Rebirth will have any ladies gear, but if it did, would oyu rock it?

 

Naomi already has several fragrances that a wildly popular in Europe. She has recently launched another fragrance, Wild Pearl that is a scintillating fruit scent mixing fresh watermelon, juicy peach, and delicate apple blossom. The bottle design represents the fragrance as being as luxurious and precious as a pearl in its shell.

 

Nicki Minaj is really serious about making that paper as she joins with Mac Cosmetics to create Pink Friday Lipsticks. The limited edition color will be available for the next four Fridays via MACCosmetics.com. The color is a light bubblegum pink – which fits Minaj’s very colorful image. Pink Friday Lipsticks is selling for $14.

 

Chanel Iman looked fabulous in her frosted pink dress at the GQ Magazine’s 2009 Gentleman’s Ball last night in New York.

Kid Cudi also made an appearance looking rather dapper in his gray suit. Who knew he cleaned up so well.

Chanel Iman also had a mystery date…anyone know who he is?

 

First of all Raven Symone deserves a hearty congratulations for her very obvious weight loss. She made an appearance at the United Nations event the other night in NYC in a taupe Roland Muret dress showing off all her new found cuves.

While the dress fits and I’m sure it’s being helped by some sturdy underwear, I just don’t know if she’s really pulling off the whole look. Something just seems a little off to me.

So what say you ladies and gents?

Is Raven Symon’s United Nations look Fugly or Fabulous?

 

So the 2009 Rodeo Drive Walk of Style Awards went down the other night and Gabrielle Union walked the red carpet looking like someone’s grandma. This white/cream dress with Mary Jane-ish heels was not the business. This was definitely not a fab look for Gabrielle and her man Dwayne Wade should have told her that before she walked out of the house.

I expect better from the home wrecker starlet.

More pictures of Gabrielle Union’s style disaster when you keep reading. Continue reading »

 

Fantasia was at the 2nd annual Thurgood Marshall Scholarship Fund Gala and she looked…almost fab. The dress is cute, but not quite the best fit for her and the shoes are horrendous…but the who look isn’t horrendous…more on the line of O.K. It’s definitely an overall improvement from how she usually looks so…it’s a step in the right direction at least.

 

Amber Rose looked simply stunning at the 16th annual Elle women in Hollywood tribute that took place in Los Angeles. She rocked this peachy, ruffled cocktail dress and clearly reminded everyone why Kanye is one lucky son of a bitch.

It never ceases to amaze me how one moment she will rock some spandex catsuit, but the next rock som gorgeous gown and remind all of us just how class she can be in the right clothes and setting.

Amber Rose is truly the baddest of bad chicks.

 

Zoe Saldana was hitting all of the right notes in her little red dress at the International Tokyo Film Festival, however it is hard to say whether she did the same in this little white number she wore to the 16th annual Elle women in Hollywood tribute.

I can’t decide whether I think she looks fabulous or I think she looks awful in a white sack.

So what say you: Is Zoe Saldana’s dress fugly or fabulous?

 

Another day, another case of someone in a western country dressing up in Blackface. This culprit this time is a model in French Vogue:

Seeking ever edgier territory, having dispensed with motherhood and cannibalism as sources of controversy, Vogue Paris took pictures of Dutch supermodel Lara Stone in blackface. Stop me if you’ve heard this one before!

In the October issue of the magazine is a 14-page editorial featuring the Dutch beauty. Shot by Steven Klein and styled by editor-in-chief Carine Roitfeld, the piece starts off by praising Stone’s “sensual” body, her “uninhibited gappy teeth” and the “radical break with the wave of anorexic models” that she supposedly represents. Too bad they changed everything they claim to love about her for the shoot.

What Klein and Roitfeld should know — as the producers of the Australian program Hey, Hey, It’s Saturday also should have known — is that painting white people black for the entertainment of other white people is offensive in ways that stand entirely apart from cultural context. France and Australia may not have the United States’ particular history of minstrel shows as a form of popular entertainment going back to the 19th century, but something about the act of portraying a white woman as black ought to sound an alarm, somewhere.

The fact that the issue, dedicated to “Supermodels,” contains no black models, should also have been noticed, and corrected.

Given Klein is American, it would be nearly impossible to even argue that the magazine didn’t know what buttons it was pushing. It’s kind of sickening to think that minstrelsy has become just another “reference” for po-mo fashion editorials to “appropriate” to show how “edgy” they are, “conceptually.”

After painting Stone’s body brown, the makeup artist then apparently painted parts of her white again. Inexplicably, the editorial moves from the studio to a location. The token Lady Gaga picture at least clears up one troubling question: why it is that Stone spends the editorial wearing only a black thong on her lower half. I looked at this editorial, and I just thought, pathetic, pathetic, pathetic. When I got to this shot, I thought lame. Since when does Carine Roitfeld seem so out-of-date

The emphasis is mine.

So now the American photographer in French Vogue, a country notorious for the mistreatment and blatant racism against the black and brown folk in their own borders, thinks it’s “edgy” to paint a model black in an issue of the highest of high fashion magazines dedicated to non-black supermodels, during a time when the dearth of black and brown models is constantly being discussed and months after the historic “black” issue of Italian Vogue.

Am I the only who thinks the French are poking fun at the rest of us? Saying: See you wanted diverse, we’ll give you diverse, here’s your nigger model right here.

So this is what my post-racial America looks like.

There is never a time blackface is NOT offensive.

Never.

I’m incredibly tired of folk looking at blatantly racist events and then coming up with a myriad of reasons why said racist act isn’t racist:

Oh it’s edgy.

Oh it’s a discourse on the futility of racial classification, since anyone can be black?

Or my personal favorite: French Vogue didn’t mean to be racist, it was an unintentional consequence and since it wasn’t intended, it’s not racist.

In the end the intentions don’t matter. The inherent racism and the long and painful history of some acts mean they should rarely (I’d argue never) be undertaken to make any kind of statement.

Blackface is never okay or edgy or artsy or making a statement.

Or let me put it like this: If a fashion magazine decided to dress up a German model as Anne Frank would be still be talking about the edginess of the pictorial?

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