Lifestyle
Lily Allen Says She Often Turns Down Husband David Harbour's Sex Requests
Lily Allen‘s getting real about her sex life … saying she’s just not as experimental in the bedroom as she used to be — and, she often turns down her husband’s sexy time desires.
The actress talked through it with Miquita Oliver on their “Miss Me?” podcast … pulling back the sheets on hooking up with her man David Harbour — and, she says she regularly axes her dude’s desires.
The way LA explains it … she’s not trying to kink-shame DH — but, she admits David will say he wants to experiment between the sheets, and then straight up tells him it’s not happening.
She says she doesn’t try to shoot him down in a mean way … but, she jokes she regularly says she has a headache and doesn’t feel up to gettin’ down in that way.
When asked why she’s not as adventurous as she used to be … Lily chalks it up to quitting drinking — saying she almost never had sex without being intoxicated before getting with Harbour.
Lily also gives some details on her past behaviors … including hooking up with female sex workers — something she previously revealed in her memoir “My Thoughts Exactly.”
Lily jokes she hopes David — who she married back in 2020 — doesn’t listen to the pod … ’cause if so, he might wonder where all her sex appeal went!
Sounds like the two are still very much in love … even if they’re not always getting their kink on.
Lifestyle
Street Style Trend of the Week: Clashing Prints
Jeffrey Bernick, 41, in his numerous patterns and prints, was impossible to ignore as he was walking on Fifth Avenue in the Flatiron district of Manhattan on a Saturday in December.
Mr. Bernick, a costumer for TV shows and films, said he was on his way to Trader Joe’s and had just been browsing the selection of clothes and accessories at the nearby Filson store. He described the outfit he was wearing as cozy and having an “upstate vibe.”
“I spend most of my days surrounded by tons of clothing and lots of creatives that all have their personal style,” Mr. Bernick said. “I feel I take inspiration from them and vice versa. We get to play all day and put things together that you may not have thought would work, but look amazing onscreen.”
Lifestyle
Chris Brown Hits Warner Bros. Discovery With $500 Million Defamation Suit
Chris Brown is suing the producers behind Investigation Discovery’s “Chris Brown: A History of Violence” docuseries … alleging the project was full of straight up lies.
In new court documents obtained by TMZ … the singer accuses Warner Bros. Discovery, Ample, and other individuals behind the series of promoting and publishing defamatory claims against him — even after allegedly being provided with “proof” that their narrative was false.
Not only does Brown state the Jane Doe at the center of the docuseries has been repeatedly discredited, but he highlights he has never been found guilty “of any sex related crime” … slamming the docuseries for labeling him “a serial rapist and a sexual abuser.”
He claims they based the docuseries largely on a lawsuit Jane Doe brought against him … adding she later withdrew the suit because it was full of lies.
Brown says the producers and the Jane Doe chose to disregard fact in order to defame him and his reputation … which he says he’s spent over a decade repairing.
The singer claims he’s taken accountability for his “past mistakes” – including the physical assault on ex-girlfriend Rihanna – and has grown from them … and slams ‘A History of Violence’ producers for pushing an old narrative in the name of fame and fortune.
Brown says he’s been directly impacted by this docuseries … as it’s taken a toll on his reputation, career, and business opportunities. So, he’s seeking $500 million in damages … which he partly plans to donate to victims of sexual abuse if awarded.
We’ve reached out to Ample and Warner Bros. Discovery for comment … so far, no word back.
Lifestyle
Fresh Off ‘Severance,’ John Turturro Tries Male Modeling
When John Turturro saw that the setting for Zegna’s runway show here was a grassy knoll, he wondered if he’d fallen into an Italian wormhole and landed back on the set of “Severance.”
“That was my first thought,” Mr. Turturro said backstage after the show, still bristling with energy from having just completed his first ever turn as a runway model.
See, Zegna’s verdant stage looked a lot like a set from Season 2 of “Severance,” which had its premiere on Friday. It’s not quite a spoiler to discuss this, as the nubby green landscape is visible in the season’s trailer. Still, Mr. Turturro, 67, the journeyman American actor who plays one of the metaphysically split Lumon Industries employees on the show, was not keen to reveal any more about where the show was heading.
So we left it at that. But, Mr. Turturro was happy to discuss his modeling cameo for 115-year-old Zegna. (For what it’s worth, the setting was designed to evoke the grassland where sheep graze: Zegna used the collection to introduce Vellus Aureum designs, which it boasts are made from the finest wool in the world. Grass, sheep, wool. Got it.)
“That was my virginal walk,” said Mr. Turturro, still dressed in the plunging V-neck sweater and swishy pleated trousers he sported on the runway. He had shed the va-va-voom tweed coat, and it was lying nearby.
A “Severance” outfit this was not. That show’s corporate cogs trudge about in blue suits and uninspired no-iron shirts — clothes that make them appear inoffensive to the point of being invisible.
In contrast, this masterful Zegna collection, designed by Alessandro Sartori, Zegna’s longstanding artistic director, demanded close inspection and a good bit of attention. Plaids were scaled up as if peered at through a microscope. And a corduroy suit, a men’s wear archetype about as old as Zegna itself, slouched like a nubbly bathrobe.
Peer closer: Yes, that was two button-up shirts trickily stacked on top of each other. (It may have been lost on Mr. Sartori, an Italian, but to American eyes, this is a layering move that calls to mind one person: Steve Bannon.) And the button on that sport coat was planted lower than usual. And yes, its lapels were beefier than the average, making the models, many of them gray-bearded and a good generation beyond the models you normally see in Milan, look like 1970s casino magnates you wouldn’t want to cross.
As Mr. Turturro walked his rookie walk — his coat easing back at the shoulders, his hands stuffed in his pockets, a slight smirk conveying that he was in command and unbothered — it was evident just how Zegna had won over the Davos set and the self-assured Hollywood types.
“You would feel that at my age you don’t get new experiences,” Mr. Turturro said after the show. “This was a new experience for me.” Certainly he was a long way from Lumon Industries.
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