Click on the Manage Content for adding and managing content.
Click on the Rotator Settings and choose what and how it will be displayed.

How escapist should fashion be?

Kraig Pakulski 0 14 Article rating: No rating

By Rachel Tashjian, CNN

Paris (CNN) — “Stop this world, let me off,” the blues musician Mose Allison once crooned – a relatable sentiment when war has broken out, inequality is top of mind and a general darkness hovers over almost all things.

Allison never intoned just which stop he’d like to get off on – but one imagines that Paris Fashion Week, where many of the shows this past week have been wackadoo with lovely, at times ditzy and always customer-pleasing prettiness, would make for a nice layover en route to something more permanent. Crises erupt across the world with alarming regularity, and yet the biannual fashion shows press on. Designers conceive of collections months (okay, at least weeks) in advance of their show dates, giving them little time to readjust to the outside world. Most keep calm and create a compelling-enough distraction as if fulfilling marching orders, their escapism a duty.

For proof of why such persistence is good, look to Dior, the second women’s ready-to-wear collection from still-fresh creative director Jonathan Anderson. Staged outdoors on a stage hovering above a pond of faux lily pads, his heaps of scalloped fabric under soft bar jackets in glorious colors, feather trimmed dresses and shoes like precious candies, made for the rare show that united the opinions of wealthy shoppers, online commentators and the prickly fashion crowd craning arms to snap pics in the room.

Some of Anderson’s early Dior efforts have been too conservative, lacking the bite that made him a hero during his decade designing at Spanish label Loewe. His best shows, like this one, feel bigger than products –– they’re layered with enough feelings that an audience can sense there’s something for them to take away that isn’t just buying something. Here, it was a pop gauntlet thrown down to say that that easiest look, prettiness, can be something beyond insipid bows and flowers and instead technically, materially spectacular.

Because the truth is that pretty, maybe more than anything else, makes you want to buy, and that’s what this luxury industry, in its topsy-turvy state, needs. Chanel, the season’s other major anchor, is surely basking in this reality: before its Monday show, it was all over social media in the form of ravenous women unpacking their “hauls” from the Rue Cambon store, where artistic director of fashion activities Matthieu Blazy’s first pieces have just arrived.

Clearly Blazy is doing things right, but if that weren’t enough, his show was pretty overload: a panoply of the classic Chanel skirt suit dazzled out of its bourgeois stiffness and dreamed up in pastel sequins, layered with a trucker-style jacket, or eased down with the uptight tweed jacket swapped for an overshirt. The great Chanel look, a beacon of bourgeois sobriety, doesn’t need to be imperious: women who crust their hair with gold glitter instead of L’Oreal Satin Hairspray can also make it pretty.

Pretty is almost foolproof in a time of uncertainty. (Pretty, we should clarify, is not beautiful. If you want beauty, look to the Japanese designer Yohji Yamamoto, with his aching procession of kimono-inspired coats. Or Hermès, with its red-blooded leathers – ostrich skin bodysuits stuffed into ostrich skin thigh-high boots and little biker shorts worn with gorgeous leather jackets, cut with bags made of canvas, like a mint sorbet served between rich meat courses.)

Pretty is easy for everyone, except the designer. Dries Van Noten may look effortless in its mixing of lovely autumnal shades: candy apple green, deep happy reds and dense but ditzy florals. But it is the result of discipline on behalf of creative director Julian Klausner, who only took over for Dries Van Noten a little over a year ago. When you consider how elegantly he has adapted to his role, focusin

Fact check: Trump’s latest false, unproven, and contradictory claims about the Iran war

Kraig Pakulski 0 15 Article rating: No rating
President Donald Trump speaks during a press conference at Trump National Doral in Miami

By Daniel Dale, CNN

(CNN) — President Donald Trump, pushing back at the suggestion that the US was responsible for a deadly strike on an elementary school in Iran, claimed at a press conference Monday that Iran has Tomahawk cruise missiles. But Trump’s claim was immediately rejected by arms experts.

There has never been an indication that Iran has any Tomahawks, which are made by US defense manufacturer Raytheon for the US military, subject to strict export controls and not the “generic” product Trump claimed Monday. Since the 1990s, a small number of US allies have been permitted by the US government to purchase them; the list includes the United Kingdom, Australia, Japan and the Netherlands but not Israel or any other ally in the Middle East.

It certainly does not include Iran, which has been an adversary of the US since the late 1970s.

“Iran definitely does not, repeat does not, have Tomahawks,” Jeffrey Lewis, distinguished scholar of global security at Middlebury College, said in a text message Monday evening.

“Astonishing bald faced lying. Childish,” tweeted retired US Army Gen. Barry McCaffrey, a Trump critic, in response to the Trump claim.

Trump made the claim after a reporter told him that video footage showed “a Tomahawk missile likely destroyed that Iranian girls’ school” and asked, “So will the Americans – will the US accept any responsibility?”

A video published by a semi-official Iranian news agency appears to show a US missile targeting the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) naval base adjacent to the school. It has not been definitively determined who struck the school itself, but analyses by CNN and other news outlets have found the US was likely responsible.

Trump responded to the reporter: “Well, I haven’t seen it (the footage), and I will say that the Tomahawk, which is one of the most powerful weapons around, is used by, you know – is sold and used by – other countries. You know that. And whether it’s Iran, who also has some Tomahawks – they wish they had more. But whether it’s Iran or somebody else, the fact that a Tomahawk – a Tomahawk is very generic. It’s sold to other countries. But that’s being investigated right now.”

The US has not sold Tomahawks to Iran. Lewis said that it’s possible Trump was using the word “Tomahawk” as a generic term “like some people use ‘Kleenex,’ to mean any sort of cruise missile, but we have eyes” – and “we can clearly see,” he said, that the missi

US intelligence community ramps up warnings of possible retaliatory attacks by Iran

Kraig Pakulski 0 23 Article rating: No rating
Pictured is the Department of Homeland Security headquarters in Washington

By Josh Campbell, CNN

(CNN) — The US intelligence community has issued a flurry of private warnings in the past week to American companies and government agencies urging vigilance and the hardening of possible targets of cyber attack by the Iranian regime in response to the war with Tehran, according to national security sources and memos reviewed by CNN.

While no specific or credible threat has been outlined, in one recent bulletin to US law enforcement agencies, the Department of Homeland Security warned of a heightened threat environment following the killing of Iran’s supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.

US intelligence officials routinely send bulletins to law enforcement agencies across the country, sharing information on potential threats and best practices for protecting the public.

Citing open-source intelligence, the DHS “critical incident note” said that “two top Iranian religious leaders issued separate Farsi-language fatwas calling on Muslims worldwide to take revenge for the killing” of Khamenei.

“The fatwas, Iranian government rhetoric, and online messaging from regime supporters promoting retaliation against the US heightens the threat from violent extremists who support the Iranian regime,” the bulletin said.

The bulletin also referenced a decree from the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps, which indicated “the enemy … will no longer have security anywhere in the world, even in their own homes.”

US officials have not announced any known credible threats to the homeland, but a law enforcement source familiar with the situation previously told CNN the FBI went on an elevated alert status across the country following the launch of strikes by US and Israel. Authorities were particularly concerned about enhancing security measures around US energy infrastructure, hardening potential government targets against cyber threats from sophisticated Iranian actors, and securing the border.

In a separate recent bulletin to private companies, US security officials warned: “Ongoing claims and calls for cyber attacks targeting US entities by Iranian-aligned groups could lead to an increase in malicious activity against the financial services sector,” adding that “historically, the US financial sector has been viewed as a priority target and a target of opportunity by Iranian-aligned cyber actors.”

The bulletin listed numerous recent public claims of responsibility by Iranian-affiliated hackers targeting the cyber infrastructure of Israel and allied nations.

“Although these claims are unverified,” the bulletin read, “organizations are advised to continue to be vigilant and monitor for any potential incoming threat actor targeting.”

In another recent notice to US defense contractors, the FBI and National Security Agency warned that “Iranian-affiliated cyber actors may target US devices and networks for near-term cyber operations,” noting that defense-related companies, “particularly those possessing holdings or relationships with Israeli research and defense firms, are at an increased risk.”

The-CNN-Wire
™ & © 2026 Cable News Network, Inc., a Warner Bros. Di

Governor Gavin Newsom’s Approval Rating Falls Far Below President Trump in New National Poll

Kraig Pakulski 0 21 Article rating: No rating
Governor Gavin Newsom’s favorability rating trailed far behind President Donald Trump’s in a new national survey, even as both leaders received overall negative ratings in a political climate where figures […]

The post Governor Gavin Newsom’s Approval Rating Falls Far Below President Trump in New National Poll appeared first on edhat.

RSS
First25362537253825392541254325442545Last