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Ultra-fast Fashion Is Eating the World Rachel Monroe This article was published online on February 6, 2021. Last February, on a sunny afternoon in West Hollywood, two girls with precise eye makeup paused on Melrose Avenue and peered in the windows of a building whose interior was painted a bright, happy pink. Two pink, winged unicorns flanked racks of clothes: ribbed crop tops, snakeskin-print pants, white sleeveless bodysuits. One of the girls tugged on the door, then frowned. It was locked, which was weird. She tugged again. Inside, a broad-chested security guard regarded them impassively from behind a pink security desk. Erin Cullison, the U.S. public-relations rep for PrettyLittleThing, a fast-fashion brand founded in 2012, watched the girls give up and walk away. She sighed. Although the West Hollywood showroom closely resembles a store, it is not, in fact, a store. It is not open to the public; the clothes on the racks don’t have price tags ....
Ultra-fast Fashion Is Eating the World Rachel Monroe This article was published online on February 6, 2021. Last February, on a sunny afternoon in West Hollywood, two girls with precise eye makeup paused on Melrose Avenue and peered in the windows of a building whose interior was painted a bright, happy pink. Two pink, winged unicorns flanked racks of clothes: ribbed crop tops, snakeskin-print pants, white sleeveless bodysuits. One of the girls tugged on the door, then frowned. It was locked, which was weird. She tugged again. Inside, a broad-chested security guard regarded them impassively from behind a pink security desk. Erin Cullison, the U.S. public-relations rep for PrettyLittleThing, a fast-fashion brand founded in 2012, watched the girls give up and walk away. She sighed. Although the West Hollywood showroom closely resembles a store, it is not, in fact, a store. It is not open to the public; the clothes on the racks don’t have price tags ....
This Kennedy descendant insists in her New York Times Book Review that How to Blow Up a Pipeline doesn t offer any actual instructions for explosions. Pictured: The New York Times building seen on June 30, 2020, in New York City. (Photo: Johannes Eisele/AFP/Getty Images) Commentary By Tim Graham is director of media analysis at the Media Research Center and executive editor of the blog NewsBusters.org. If the name Tatiana Schlossberg sounds like a brand for white privilege, you would be right. She’s not a top chef or fashion designer. She’s the 30-year-old daughter of Caroline Kennedy and Ed Schlossberg, the granddaughter of former President John F. Kennedy. ....
Climate Action Alliance of the Valley climate, energy news roundup: Jan. 30 edition Published Saturday, Jan. 30, 2021, 8:45 pm Join AFP s 100,000+ followers on Facebook Purchase a subscription to AFP | Subscribe to AFP podcasts on iTunes News, press releases, letters to the editor: augustafreepress2@gmail.com Front Page » Local/State » Climate Action Alliance of the Valley climate, energy news roundup: Jan. 30 edition Climate Action Alliance of the Valley produces The Weekly Roundup of Climate and Energy News. Excerpts from a recent Roundup follow. Full Roundup is here. Politics and Policy Prioritizing environmental justice, Biden signed an executive order establishing a White House interagency council on environmental justice, created an office of health and climate equity at Health and Human Services, and formed a separate environmental justice office at Justice. He took other actions, causing immediate pushback from the fossil fuel indus ....
If the name Tatiana Schlossberg sounds like a brand for white privilege, you would be right. She s not a top chef or fashion designer. She s the 30-year-old daughter of Caroline Kennedy and Ed Schlossberg, the granddaughter of former President John F. Kennedy. Like Maria Shriver at NBC News, Tatiana became an objective journalist for a while, covering the environment for The New York Times from 2014 to 2017. When she wrote a book in 2019 called Inconspicuous Consumption, NBC put her on TV and pushed her to run for office. She deferred, saying she is a journalist . a political activist of a different stripe. ....