It’s Barbie’s world, and we’re just living (and shopping) in it. Barbie-mania has fully taken over ahead of the Greta Gerwig–helmed, Margot Robbie–starring film’s official release—so much so, moviegoers are carefully planning what to wear when they head to theaters this Friday. While we can’t divulge everything that happens in the highly anticipated movie, we can say that Barbie will certainly strike a chord with adult women—even more so than with young girls.
Decades after Destiny’s Child took the world by storm, the founding members of the iconic girl group reunited for a photo that could break the internet.
LeToya Luckett, one of the four original members of Destiny’s Child, shared a sweet picture of the group on Instagram. The photo appears to have been taken backstage during fellow founding member Beyoncé’s Renaissance World Tour. Luckett and three other members—founders Kelly Rowland and LaTavia Roberson, and Michelle Williams, who joined the group later—attended Bey’s hometown Houston show in September.
Portable music players have been around for decades. Bringing up the term also brings back fond memories of the Walkman, or more recently, Apple's iPod. But there's a reason why, for most people, they're a happy memory rather than something they still use every day. For the most part, our smartphones have filled the void left by music players, and we're getting our music from services like Spotify, Apple Music, or YouTube Music.
The mum-of-two shared a revealing snapshot on Instagram Alex Jones faced a very relatable dilemma this week. The One Show star braved the heat and headed out for a run on Monday – but she found herself diverted by the promise of an ice-cold drink. Alex, 43, took to Instagram Stories to share a photo of an iced coffee, which was already half-drunk. She wrote in the caption: "Is it cheating if I go out on a run and stop half way for one of these?
April 25, 2023 One hundred years ago (2018), in the dark ages before Container Queries existed, Philip Walton put together Responsive Components, a JavaScript-based technique for flopping out classes on elements at certain widths (element widths, not viewport widths) such that you could re-style them in CSS. It was a fine technique. A fairly lightweight ResizeObserver flopping out some classes is pretty straightforward. I imagine some people used it, but I’d say it never really took off.