Lifestyle
A music festival booked Kanye West, now known as Ye, and lost major sponsors
Rapper and producer Ye, also known as Kanye West, seen before a 2025 concert in Shanghai.
Hector Retamal/AFP via Getty Images
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Hector Retamal/AFP via Getty Images
Sponsors are exiting a major U.K. music festival and the country’s prime minister has been critical after the influential rapper Ye was announced as the event’s headliner.
The once widely revered musician and fashion impresario, formerly known as Kanye West, has gained notoriety over the years for his antisemitic comments and activities glorifying Nazis, including a 2025 song called “Heil Hitler” and selling swastika T-shirts on his clothing site.
Yet organizers announced last week that West would headline the Wireless Festival in North London for the entirety of its three-night run in July, invoking outrage from politicians and withdrawals from festival sponsors. Those include Diageo, the company that owns popular liquor brands such as Johnnie Walker and Captain Morgan.

In a statement emailed to NPR, Diageo confirmed that it will no longer sponsor the 2026 festival “as it stands.”
Pepsi, another company that reportedly pulled sponsorship, did not respond to NPR’s request for comment, nor did the Festival Republic team handling publicity for the shows. However, Pepsi confirmed to The Associated Press and others that it was withdrawing from its lead sponsor role.
The festival, which plays in Finsbury Park, is a major rap and hiphop event in the U.K. that draws tens of thousands of attendees each year.
British Prime Minister Keir Starmer was among those expressing distaste for the headliner selection. “It is deeply concerning Kanye West has been booked to perform at Wireless despite his previous antisemitic remarks and celebration of Nazism,” he told the newspaper The Sun on Sunday. “Antisemitism in any form is abhorrent and must be confronted firmly wherever it appears. Everyone has a responsibility to ensure Britain is a place where Jewish people feel safe.”
Earlier this year, the artist took out a full-page ad in The Wall Street Journal in which he apologized for his antisemitic behavior — not for the first time. Ye has attributed his outbursts to manic episodes due to bipolar disorder. He has not commented publicly on the Wireless Festival controversy.
The musician is attempting to resuscitate his once-storied career. He recently sold out two shows in Los Angeles following the release of his new album Bully, which debuted at number two on the Billboard 200 charts.
Lifestyle
Street Style Look of the Week: A Work Wear Staple in Gentle Pastels
“I love one-piece dressing — this is my jam,” April Dinwoodie said of her chiffon jumpsuit. “I’m not great with making things happen, with tucking in shirts and all the things.”
She was in spring pastels when our paths crossed in Harlem on a recent Saturday in April. As she excitedly showed off her new engagement ring to a friend on the stoop of a brownstone, I recognized her from a photo assignment back in 2020. A light blue jacket draped over her arm and a brightly colored scarf rounded out her look. She said that a couple of pieces she was wearing had been acquired at sample sales. “I know what things cost at retail because I’ve worked in the business a little bit,” she said.
Dinwoodie, 54, a marketing and communications specialist who focuses on diversity and inclusion in her career, said that her work largely informs the way she dresses. “Understanding who I am and what I’m about has been this lifelong journey,” she said.
Lifestyle
The ‘baby of the group’ is 83: How a Pacific Palisades book club remains unbreakable
The members of Becky’s Book Club in Pacific Palisades couldn’t stand “Play It as It Lays.” Snakes, freeways, difficult men and Didion’s quiet brutality hang in the air like the oppressive heat of this unusually warm spring day. At their feet, a regal Airedale terrier named Phoebe lounges, looking as though she belongs in an oil painting.
“If I had read this book before coming to Los Angeles, I would have never come,” says Raymee Olin Weiman, one of the members of the book club. She’s a spirited talker who eventually concedes a compliment to Didion. “I did not like it, but I was compelled to read it, because the writing is so brilliant.”
Becky Nedelman, an 85-year-old who organizes the book club, agrees. “To me, Maria is when you drive by an accident, and you don’t want to look, but you do,” she says of Didion’s aimless and troubled protagonist.
Amy Silverberg, the book club facilitator (who is also a Times contributor and friend of this reporter) had warned the group the month prior that they might shudder at the unnerving novel. When she walked in the door, they confirmed Silverberg’s fears, immediately airing their displeasure. “You are to blame,” she tells them with a smile. “I want to reiterate that.”
For all their grievances with Didion’s fiction, the women’s lives bear a striking resemblance to Didion’s own. Some of the women in the book club are older than the late author Joan Didion, who would have been 91. A few of them are in their 90s, save for Gail Heltzer — “the baby of the group,” as she’s called — who is 83.
The book club comprises old friends who have been meeting to discuss literature for over 25 years. Long-standing book clubs in Los Angeles are a rarity — many flame out due to dwindling interest, scheduling conflicts and waning enthusiasm. That hasn’t been the case for Becky’s Book Club, which still sparks lively debate at every meeting.
The gathering, which takes place in the women’s homes, has endured through each phase of their lives — marriages, motherhood, even illness.
Nancy de Brier and Barbara Smith share a laugh during their book club meeting.
(Ariana Drehsler / For The Times)
“The only way we’ve lost members, unfortunately, has been by passing away or moving away,” says Becky Nedelman.
Today, they meet at Emily Lawrence’s home, where she has prepared peanut butter cookies and an elaborate cheese board for the occasion.
With each passing year, the sentimental value only swells.
“The longer it goes on, the more important we become to one another. We’re the age where we occasionally lose friends; we lose husbands — lots of us have. So, this is very important,” says Nancy deBrier, one of the members. The group credits the book club’s enduring success to its organizer, Becky Nedelman.
Nedelman has assembled the book club over the decades, inviting women from different parts of her life, including investment clubs and Planned Parenthood organizing along with high school classmates. In the end, she chose members who were serious about books.
Host Emily Lawrence with her copy of Joan Didion’s “Play It as It Lays.”
(Ariana Drehsler / For The Times)
“We wanted to be with a group of women who were really readers. We didn’t come to talk about recipes or kids and grandkids, but we really wanted to focus on the book,” says Nedelman.
Since June 2001, the group has read 252 books together, maintaining a detailed record of every book. The group mostly reads contemporary literature, but once a year, they tackle a classic — or “a downer,” as they’ve come to call them.
“Apeirogon” by Colum McCann and “The Correspondent” by Virginia Evans stand out to them as particularly engaging. They read “Anna Karenina” and “Crime and Punishment,” an experience they agree was challenging but rewarding. Their commentary is astute and heartfelt, even when it’s critical. “Are any of the classics fun?” asks Harriet Eilber.
What makes a book club run so smoothly for over two decades? Gail Heltzer attributes it to the group’s open-mindedness and inherent chemistry. “Everybody is willing to read a wide variety of books on different subjects. We don’t reject any ideas,” says Heltzer. “Everybody has opinions and is extremely respectful, and everyone leaves smarter.”
The book club has encouraged the women to reconnect with reading later in life. DeBrier, who has a master’s degree and practiced law, explains that reading has been a gift throughout her life. “My reading life post-college was so much more interesting in many ways,” she says. “You’ll find that that’s the good thing about life, right? It’s very enriching to keep reading.”
“Their open-mindedness at their age is really inspiring to me,” says Silverberg. “I hope to have that open-mindedness in my 80s and 90s. What is a better path for open-mindedness than to read?”
To ensure the book club runs efficiently with riveting discussions, the women have enlisted the help of Literary Affairs — an L.A.-based company that offers facilitators at over 50 book clubs in L.A. The facilitators often have exceptional literary resumes; many are novelists and hold PhDs in literature. Silverberg, the facilitator of Becky’s Book Club, is also a novelist and comedian and has worked for Literary Affairs for five years. Last year, her debut novel, “First Time, Long Time,” was released — and the book club attended her book launch at Skylight Books in Los Feliz to offer support.
“Whether they like the book or not, they’re always willing to turn the page,” says Silverberg of the group. She enjoys the hour and a half she spends discussing literature with them. “They make me think about a book differently, and I appreciate that. They let me argue with them. I’m always on the side of the book.”
The book club has been meeting together for over 25 years and has read more than 250 books.
(Ariana Drehsler / For The Times)
During today’s discussion, Silverberg bravely makes a case for “Play It as It Lays.” The women stare back at her with sullen but intrigued faces. Silverberg reads a passage of the novel to the group. Her voice is light but insistent. “She’s so at the mercy of the men in her life,” says Silverberg.
“That was the ‘60s,” retorts Weiman. In spite of their initial resistance, Didion’s writing pulls buried recollections to the surface. At times, the novels stir up memories from the women’s lives, prompting poignant, often vulnerable discussions. DeBrier reflects on her own experience of motherhood in the 1960s. “I was having a baby — I didn’t know what existential meant,” she remarks.
Later, the women share memories on the 1960s sociopolitical issues of birth control, homosexuality and the Vietnam War. They maintain that they had a hopefulness that contrasts with Didion’s protagonist.
“Despite how bad things were in the middle of the war, I did not consider everything bleak,” says Heltzer. “I knew that we were going to keep trying and the people were going to help move the nation.”
The conversation shifts into a broader reflection on womanhood.
“I always had a free mindset about what I wanted to do. Until my 20s, when I got married, I didn’t realize I had choices in my marriage,” reflects Weiman. She feels Didion’s novel urges women to reconnect with themselves, using protagonist Maria as a cautionary tale. “What she did then was a gift to all women — in writing this novel.”
At the end of the book club, the women break into convivial chatter. They hover around the cheeseboard and cookies. Emily Lawrence showcases her collection of first-edition William Carlos Williams poetry. She has a growing collection of books that she would like to donate to the Palisades branch library, which was destroyed in the 2025 fires. With Lawrence’s donations, her aim is for the Palisades to begin to enjoy new stories, new characters and new beginnings in the wake of disaster. Perhaps evoking an oft-quoted Didion quote: “We tell ourselves stories in order to live. We live entirely by the impression of a narrative line upon disparate images, the shifting phantasmagoria, which is our actual experience.”
Connors is a writer living in Los Angeles. She hosts the literary reading event Unreliable Narrators at Nico’s Wines in Atwater Village every month.
Lifestyle
At the ‘Euphoria’ Wedding, All Eyes Were on the Guests
During Sunday night’s season 3 episode of HBO’s Gen Z drama “Euphoria,” viewers found themselves watching yet another messy, disastrous and unhinged wedding unfold onscreen — which was probably inevitable considering that it centered on the wedding of the delusional Cassie (Sydney Sweeney) and the toxic Nate (Jacob Elordi).
Before the ceremony, Nate experiences a panic attack. His ex-girlfriend, Maddy (Alexa Demie), tries to pull a power move by showing up to the event. The wedding dance is tacky and strange, and the night ends in an absolute nightmare. (Details will be spared to avoid spoilers.)
But perhaps what had the internet talking the most were the fashion choices of the wedding guests, particularly Cassie and Nate’s former high school classmates.
There was Maddy, Cassie’s former best friend, in a striking, revealing green dress with a beaded back, paired with a fur shawl. “We see a lot of power dynamics between Maddy and Cassie this season,” Natasha Newman-Thomas, the show’s costume designer, said in an interview. “And it had to be something equally powerful to Cassie’s dress if Maddy is going to show up to this thing.”
There was Jules (Hunter Schafer), who wore another revealing look — a dusty blue Acne Studios runway gown, which Newman-Thomas described as “a representation of her newfound status,” pointing to the character’s shift to a more elevated style since she began dating an older, wealthy man. Jules had her own reasons to show off at this wedding, where she was seeing many of her former high school classmates for the first time in over four years.
Jules was color coordinated with Rue (Zendaya), who picked a vintage men’s suit paired with, yes, dirty Converse. Her signature Chuck Taylors were a must at the request of Sam Levinson, the showrunner, who “really wanted Rue to be in her Converse throughout the entire third season to represent her lack of emotional development between the Season 2 and Season 3 jump,” Newman-Thomas said.
And there was BB (Sophia Rose Wilson), who arrived in a red minidress with a slit in the midsection that revealed her pregnant belly. It looked like a club outfit from 2019, when Season 1 aired. That, too, is reflective of her character: “She kind of just shows up in something maybe akin to what she would have worn in high school, in this kind of garish full stomach out, no-class outfit,” Newman-Thomas said.
Each fashion choice reflects both the character’s personal style and emotional state. And while some viewers have discussed how untraditional their ceremony outfits were, that’s exactly the point.
“These aren’t very buttoned-up characters,” Newman-Thomas said. “We’ve met them in the past, and we’ve lived with them.”
“It’s not a traditional wedding in the sense that it’s ‘Euphoria,’” she said, adding that “it should feel a bit surreal and exciting.” After all, the girls showed up to high school in previous seasons in mini skirts, crop tops, iridescent eye makeup and tiny purses (not backpacks).
But “Euphoria” also possesses a keen sense for capturing the mood and style of Gen Z, a demographic now entering its wedding era. And the characters’ fashion choices reflect more of an openness to veering away from traditional wedding dress codes.
There are plenty of real-life examples. Earlier this year, Amber Rose wore a deep plunge halter dress to the wedding of the Republican strategist Alex Bruesewitz. Kendall Jenner wore a very little black dress at her friend Lauren Perez’s wedding in 2021. On social media, some guests have even shared that they have attended weddings with a dress code to “upstage the bride,” where guests wear their most flashy and outrageous outfits. (Think hot pink suit with ruffles and lantern-like fringe headpieces that cover the face.)
“Couples are encouraging their guests to express more of their individual style,” said Corinne Pierre-Louis, a bridal stylist and fashion editor, of contemporary dress codes. “In the past, it used to be: black tie, formal, or semiformal.” But in recent years, she has worked with couples who have had dress codes like “seaside elegance,” “Mediterranean chic,” and “come as you are,” which was perhaps the code for Cassie and Nate’s wedding, she said, jokingly.
While the show’s fashion choices are naturally a bit inflated, they are aligned with the wedding culture of a younger generation, for which personal style and self-expression might take precedence over etiquette.
“It’s kind of poking fun at the fact that the wedding guest fashion is changing, and let’s see how far we can stretch it with this exaggerated cast,” Pierre-Louis said. “Gen Z, they’ve seen their parents and older generations get married and they see photos, and they think it’s stuffy and they want something unique and trendy.”
But, Pierre-Louis said she probably wouldn’t advise a client to wear a dress like the one that Jules or Maddy wore: “You don’t want to give the grandmother a heart attack.”
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