Who Is Nina Lin in ‘Only Murders in the Building’?

Spoilers ahead.

Season 2 of Only Murders in the Building has brought us a slew of new characters including mysterious artist Alice, played by Cara Delevingne; Amy Schumer, played by, well, Amy Schumer; and Bunny’s mother, played by the legendary Shirley MacLaine. But we also get some other surprise newcomers, such as incoming Arconia board president Nina Lin, played by Dave and Tigertail star Christine Ko. While we only caught a glimpse of her in the season’s first two episodes, we learned a little bit more about her this week, and I’m not sure if the details are entirely comforting.

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The first thing you need to know about Nina is that she’s incredibly on top of her shit. As we see in a flashback to Bunny’s final day, she’s memorized the Arconia rulebook inside out, which makes her a fitting successor to lead the Arconia board. She knows who to call to fix the bulb in the fountain or lay out floor mats when it starts to snow. She knows that the mops are in the window closet, second door from the stairs. She has such a keen eye for detail that she’s noticed the flowers by the elevator need refreshing. Nina is extremely dedicated to the role, even before she’s officially started and even though she’s pregnant. So pregnant, in fact, that she’s trying to induce labor with a special ankle massage while whispering to her womb, “Come on, eject!” On top of all that, she’s also impeccably dressed. In episode 3, the hedge fund manager-by-day exudes cozy-chic in her off-white coat, red dress, knit headband, and cream heeled booties. What can’t this woman do—except perhaps evade suspicions of murder?

Nina (center) at Bunny’s surprise retirement party.

Craig Blankenhorn/Hulu

Only Murders is a whodunnit, after all, with Bunny Folger (Jayne Houdyshell) slain and her killer still unknown. But could Nina be the killer? Her relationship with Bunny began as a sweet mentorship, but when Bunny decided not to retire as board president in the end, thus keeping Nina from the promotion, they get into a bitter fight and Nina’s ulterior motives are exposed. She resents that Bunny became board president because of nepotism (her mother had the same role) and, more importantly, believe Bunny is keeping the Arconia in the past. Nina has a plan to “modernize” and “monetize” the historical building, to bring it into the 21st century, and she won’t let a “relic” like Bunny stop her.

Now, we’ve gotten hints of Nina’s ferocity before. In an earlier episode, Howard warned that she’s is a bigger “bitch” than the no-nonsense Bunny, and Nina said herself that she would give the Arconia residents “hell” if they didn’t follow the building rules. But is that enough to convince us that she’s a potential murderer? Was she so dead-set on becoming board president that she killed Bunny for the coveted role? Or is that all a little too obvious?

All we know is that by the end of the episode we see how Bunny dies: She answers a knock at the door of her apartment (thinking it’s Charles, Mabel, or Oliver) to find a mysterious visitor (whom we can’t see). While the person remains unidentified, they seem to be someone Bunny knows; when she opens the door, she asks, “What the fuck do you you want?hinting that she recognizes the face. The person responds by attacking Bunny, stabbing her to death. Whether that late-night visitor was a jealous mentee or someone else remains up in the air.

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Cameron Diaz and Benji Madden Were Seen Kissing at Adele’s Concert

On Friday night, 65,000 people gathered for the the BST Hyde Park Festival in London to watch Adele take the stage, and in the crowd were actress Cameron Diaz and her husband Benji Madden. Photographers snapped pics of the couple getting groovy and very affectionate as they took in the Grammy-award winner’s performance.

The pair have been married since 2015 and have a 2-year-old daughter named Raddix Madden, but their romance is obviously still very much alive. They were seated in the VIP section, clearly enjoying their date night as they laughed and kissed throughout the show.

Adele is good friends with the couple’s sister-in-law, Nicole Ritchie, so it probably wasn’t too hard to get the quality seats. Also in the VIP section was actor Tom Cruise, who apparently enjoys Adele’s lovelorn ballads. Other celebrities at the show included James Corden, Cameron Diaz, Niall Horan and Milly Bobby Brown.

Adele admitted to the audience that it was an emotional moment for her to be returning to the stage after so long since her last live performance in Wembley in 2017, but soon into her set she declared, “My god, I’m back at home.”

The show opened with “Hello,” and included classic hits “Rolling In The Deep” and “Someone Like You.” She did perform five tracks from her latest album, 30, as well.

The singer was set to open her Las Vegas residency in January of this year, but ended up postponing the start of her running show. In a new interview with the BBC, she said that the backlash to that decision was very difficult to face, and left her a “shell of a person” for a while. She also said that the new dates for her upcoming residency should be announced soon.

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Reactions to ‘Only Murders in the Building’ Season 2 Episode 1

We’re back at the Arconia, the fireworks are sparkling in Charles Haden-Savage’s imagination, and wouldn’t you know it—more people are dead! Last season’s finale of the hilarious murder-mystery comedy Only Murders in the Building ended, as expected, on a quaint note: Mabel Mora (Selena Gomez) returned to her apartment in the famed Upper West Side building to discover the building president, Bunny Folger (Jayne Houdyshell), bleeding to death, one of Mabel’s knitting needles sticking out of her chest. Mabel’s new friends Charles (Steve Martin) and Oliver Putnam (Martin Short) rush down the stairs to discover her kneeling over Bunny’s dead body. She insists “it’s not what you think,” but the police who handcuff each of the amateur podcast co-creators aren’t so sure. In the words of Charles himself, this takes the investigation into a whole new direction.

At the top of season 2, episode 1, “Persons of Interest,” Charles, Mabel, and Oliver are each in the hot seat, under the withering glare of police officers Detective Williams (Da’Vine Joy Randolph) and Detective Kreps (Michael Rapaport), the latter of whom likes to “say ‘fuck’ a lot” and refers to Charles and Oliver as “low-hanging, dehydrated scrota-sacks.” Williams wants to believe that none of these idiots could have killed Bunny, but the circumstances are a little too funky to ignore. (It doesn’t help that, in the podcast they co-created, Mabel talks about a “recurring dream” in which she stabs an intruder with her knitting needle.) Neither Charles nor Oliver are thrilled about their names scrawled onto the suspect list alongside Mabel’s—Oliver even demonstrates his characteristic willingness to throw a friend under the bus—but there’s one key point saving them: The police don’t have the murder weapon, which was not a knitting needle but a knife.

Williams lets them go, but with the knowledge that they’re persons of interest, and New York City, ever hungry for gossip, is watching. When the trio emerge out onto the courthouse steps, they’re instantly surrounded by cameras—a development about which Oliver makes no attempt to hide his glee. (Short’s line deliveries are as intelligent and vivacious as ever, with “I’m just like you!” a standout this episode.)

As the friends attempt to return to their lives, it’s Mabel who objects to the idea of investigating Bunny’s murder. Sure, she wants her name cleared, but she’s also sick of living a life constantly infused with death. Her former friend Tim Kono (Julian Cihi) was murdered last season by his ex-lover Jan (Amy Ryan), who almost succeeded in killing Charles, too. She’s ready to spend a few months or years as a “boring” 20-something with old-guy friends who play chess in the park. But, of course, that’s not what the Arconia has in store for them.

In spite of all the murders, life at the Arconia moves on. There’s a new tenant taking over Sting’s old unit: Amy Schumer, playing Amy Schumer. (Not all OMitB fans were thrilled with this development.) For reasons that don’t make much sense, she wants to work with Oliver on optioning the trio’s podcast for a streaming series “with exclusive internet content leading to gamification,” and Oliver practically combusts on the spot. He’s not the only one with third-party attention, either; Charles is invited to a meeting regarding a reboot of Brazzos, the cop serial he starred in as a young(er) actor. And Mabel, she’s caught the attention of Alice Banks (Cara Delevingne), an art collector interested in the mural Mabel painted in her apartment. She invites Mabel to a gallery opening, and something—maybe a need for change, maybe an addiction to danger—incites Mabel to go, now rocking a bob haircut.

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Strutting into the gallery in a ravishing orange shirt-dress, Mabel looks cool and confident, until her reverie is interrupted by an overeager “Bloody Mabel” fan who wants a selfie. (It would appear our favorite murder suspect now has a nickname.) Curator Alice rescues her from the embarrassing photo opp and proceeds to, slowly, unveil her ulterior motives: She wants Mabel for their artist collective, in part due to her new friend’s “natural talent” but also because, right now, she has “everyone’s attention.” The chemistry between these two is certainly bubbling, but it also seems obvious that Alice’s intentions for Mabel extend well beyond painting.

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As each of our protagonists contemplate these new opportunities, they discover an old podcasting champion is out for blood. The NPR legend Cinda Canning (Tina Fey) and her team of lackeys are developing their own podcast, Only Murderers In The Building, based entirely around the ongoing investigation of Charles, Oliver, and Mabel. The announcement and its accompanying insults, though broadcast over radio, feel so intimate to the trio that they each imagine Canning at home with them—in Charles’s bed, in Mabel’s living room, and leaning over Oliver’s writing desk. Fey is a delight in this sequence, her wry pompousness accented with a wink.

Mabel insists that “Cinda doesn’t even know what happened that night,” which, of course, begs the question: What did happen? Mabel doesn’t remember much—she was drunk on champagne—but she thinks Bunny said the word, “Fourteen.” That little tidbit isn’t much to go on, but it’s something, and the suspects now have extra motivation to clear their names. Screw Cinda Canning; Charles can’t lose Brazzos—or, uh, Uncle Brazzos!

Just as it seems they’re about to embark on season 2—meta very much intended—their conversation is cut short by Bunny’s disembodied voice telling Oliver to “fuck off.” Confused and disturbed, they hunt down the source of the noise and discover, inside Bunny’s apartment, a parrot mimicking Bunny’s voice. (I’m not convinced Bunny didn’t intentionally teach her bird to say, “Stuff it up your ass.”) Anyway, since they’ve already trespassed on Bunny’s apartment, they might as well look around, right? And destroy a few of Oliver’s nastily written notes along the way?

Before they get far, two other Arconia tenants, Uma (Jackie Hoffman) and Howard (Michael Cyril Creighton), walk in through the front door discussing Bunny’s eye for “erotic art”—in particular, an expensive Rose Cooper painting that’s very “balls-forward.” Uma’s looking to get it appraised, but, naturally, the painting is missing from Bunny’s apartment. The art thief couldn’t possibly be connected to the murder, right? When Charles returns to his own abode hours later, there it is, inexplicably: a portrait of his father and an unknown woman, naked, wrapped around each other in a fit of passion.

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That’s one hell of a way to end a premiere episode, and it’s tinged with Only Murders in the Building’s signature infusion of dark humor, quirky wit, and real emotional stakes. That’s a good sign the show’s sophomore chapter will be able to continue the momentum of its killer first season, but only if Only Murders doesn’t get too haughty in its pursuits. We all know what happens when big ideas fall apart in execution; just ask Oliver Putnam about Splash! The Musical.

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Best Hair Color Removers 2022

What should we look for in a hair color remover?

Cassie Siskovic, of Alfaparf Milano Professional says the first step in figuring out what type of hair color remover to use is understanding the type of color you need to remove. “You can figure this out by thinking through your hair color history, and then making a decision with this in mind,” she says.

Before moving forward with removing hair color at home, Siskovic recommends thinking about the following:

  • If you used a pastel color conditioner on your highlights/lighter hair.
  • If you used a color/received color that went darker than you expected.
  • If you’ve been coloring your hair for years and want to make a change.

If you fall under example one or two, you could remove your hair color with a clarifying shampoo. “Usually, in these cases, the outer layer of your hair (the cuticle layer) is already open because your hair has been bleached or colored,” she adds. Since the cuticle is already open, the color you want to remove has a good chance of coming out easily.

If you fall under example 3, it’s likely clarifying your hair won’t remove your color. “The more consistent you are with hair color, whether it’s the same color or if you change it, the more stained or pigment loaded your hair becomes,” Siskovic explains. At that point, the best option for you may be to head to a salon.

What should we avoid?

Siskovic suggests avoiding any at-home chemicals, bleaches, dish soaps and detergents. “You’ve seen the horror videos on TikTok of people pulling out chunks of their hair due to damage — we deserve better than that,” she says. It’s best to try a safer method, like using a clarifying shampoo, or visiting a salon you trust.

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Jennifer Lopez Shared Some Selfies of Her In a Bubble Bath

On Friday, JLO Beauty shared an intimate clip of their founder Jennifer Lopez in their Instagram Stories. In the short glimpse into her life, fans could see Lopez enjoying a very bubbly bubble bath and modeling her incredibly smooth skin.

The 52-year-old actress released a skincare line made with olive oil, and often presents her own youthful complexion as evidence that these products do what they promise. In the tub, she smiles for the camera, glowing from every angle.

JLO BeautyInstagram

A lot has happened for Lopez this year already, even before the launch of her new line. She released a movie, Marry Me, starring across from Owen Wilson in the playful romantic comedy. She became engaged to her boyfriend Ben Affleck for the second time, decades after their original engagement.

And soon, her new documentary Halftime will be coming out on Netflix. The film’s title is a nod to Lopez being in her fifties and a reference to her stand out Super Bowl Halftime Show with Shakira. In the documentary, she talks about facing scrutiny when she first found success in Hollywood because of her curves and being Latina.

“There were many times where I was just like, I think I’m just going to quit. I had to really figure out who I was. And believe in that and not believe in anything else,” she says. “When I started working, the beauty ideal was very thin, blonde, tall, not a lot of curves…I grew up around women with curves so it was nothing I was ever ashamed of. It was hard, when you think people think you’re a joke—like a punchline.”

At the time, Affleck even asked her is it bothered her after observing the constant criticism.

“‘I’m Latina, I’m a woman, I expected this,’” she replied.

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Step Inside Tiffany’s ‘Vision & Virtuosity’ Exhibition

In the immortal words of the late, great Audrey Hepburn, “I’m just CRAZY about Tiffany’s!” To be honest, aren’t we all? Thankfully, London’s Saatchi Gallery is making all our wildest jewelry dreams come true by giving a home to the house’s traveling “Vision & Virtuosity” exhibition, open now through August 19. Featuring 400 archival pieces and Tiffany-adjacent items, from the original Breakfast at Tiffany’s script to the first-ever Blue Book—the O.G. Tiffany & Co. catalog—a deep dive into the history of what is arguably the jewelry world’s most illustrious brand is the perfect way to mark its 150th anniversary since arriving in the British capital.

Regarding the title of the exhibition, “Vision is the concept that an artist or creative person has an inkling, a spark of a concept or idea that hasn’t happened before…and has the boldness to realize it,” curator Christopher Young exclusively tells ELLE.com. “Virtuosity, on the other hand, is the excellence of the ability to do that—incredible craftsmanship, incredible materials.” The duality of vision and virtuosity is inextricably linked to Tiffany’s founder, Charles Lewis Tiffany, who first dreamed up the idea of fancy store in New York City that sells exotic goods from overseas, like sapphires and Mississippi River pearls.

Tickets for “Vision & Virtuosity” are currently available on the Tiffany & Co. Exhibition app, available on the iOS and Google Play app stores. If you can’t make it across the pond, take a look inside the exhibition here.

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Why Kourtney Kardashian Isn’t Happy With How Her Scott Disick Drama Has Been Edited

On The Kardashians, the family’s new Hulu reality series, Kourtney Kardashian’s relationship with Travis Barker and the anguish it has caused Scott Disick, her ex-boyfriend and father of her children, have been major plot points. But in the latest episode of the show, Kardashian lamented to her friend Steph Shepherd that, in reality, the Disick drama is much more minor in her life, and the show is being editing in a way that misrepresents the situation.

“[Travis and I] film and have the best time ever, and then we’ve been watching the edits, and it’s been so annoying because they’re swirling us in with this Scott drama,” Kardashian told Shepherd, via BuzzFeed.

Kardashian was particularly upset with her relationship with Disick overshadowing her engagement during the episode Barker proposed to her. “While shooting our show, we are all executive producers, so we get to see cuts of the show and give notes on the episodes and make sure our stories are being told,” she said. “I am in one of the best places I’ve ever been in my life, and it’s time for our show to catch up.”

“That night [Barker proposed to me], I wasn’t like, ‘God, everyone’s such fucking assholes for bringing up this [Disick’s reaction] because it wasn’t a part of the night. It was like two seconds of the night. I didn’t even remember it until I saw a cut of the episode,” she added. (In the episode, Kendall Jenner accused Kardashian of not having sympathy for Disick and how he felt about her moving on and marrying Barker rather than him.)

In a confessional, Kardashian added that the way the show was edited is “enabling this old narrative and buying into something that doesn’t really exist.” She continued, “It should be an empowering episode about me getting out of toxic relationships and really having this fairytale love story that is my reality.”

With the Disick stuff in particularly, Kardashian told Shepherd, “I wish they would take that out and put it in the next episode, and give us our respect and let us have our moment. I’m like, ‘Why is the fairytale not being told? Like, how could this be taken negatively?’” She added that she and Disick “have been broken up for seven years,” and she’s “allowed to create new memories and new ways of doing things.”

You can read the full recap of Kardashian’s conversation on BuzzFeed.

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Odessa Young On HBO’s ‘The Staircase,’ If Michael Peterson Did It, and The Problem With Personas

On a mid-May morning in Brooklyn, Odessa Young is recognizable, though muffled under a shield of ubiquity. In her home neighborhood of Williamsburg, she arrives at the snug café Marlow & Sons with her eyes hidden behind a pair of tortoiseshell-rimmed tinted glasses. She’s makeup-free, dressed in the local uniform of black loafers and socks, a clip holding up half her blonde hair while the rest tangles at the nape of her neck. Loping at her side is Slim Jim, a mutt she rescued after discovering him abandoned in a parking lot in Atlanta about a year ago. A teeny chestnut-colored poodle-miniature pinscher-shih tzu-cocker spaniel-American Eskimo dog mix, he repeatedly interrupts to fight for a nibble of her pastry. Young leans in, grinning: “Can you imagine all those dogs in this tryst?”

I’ve read before that Young doesn’t come off like a star, or even like most other actresses of her caliber. It’s unclear if this fuck-it attitude is curated or natural, though I suspect the latter once she tells me why she got into acting in the first place: “There are just some parts of me and my personality and the way that I was built that inherently lend itself to doing this job. Because if I wasn’t an actor, I’d probably be a grifter.”

Case in point: She’s a high-school dropout, an Australian expat who convinced her musician father and writer mother in Sydney that, following two roles in Aussie films Looking for Grace and The Daughter, she could go full-time. After enduring unemployment for about a year, she made the big move to LA; after that, she abandoned Hollywood for New York City. “I don’t like rules,” she says, by way of explanation for her career choices. “Unless they are the Ten Commandment-esque rules of, ‘Don’t kill people’ and ‘Do unto others…’ But in terms of the rules of how we’re meant to behave in public, how we’re meant to carry ourselves, what we’re meant to believe and how we’re meant to express that? I find all of those rules a little confounding. I think that acting gives me an opportunity to express that confoundedness.” She shrugs, takes a self-deprecating swing. “Didn’t finish high school, so I make up words.”

Now Young divides her time between the East Coast and West, simultaneously convinced of her talent and conflicted about it. “I think that everybody in the fucking world has the ability to be on a screen and move someone [who’s] watching,” she says. “And I know I have that ability. What is difficult is figuring out all the stuff around it.” I don’t have to nudge her toward these more existential topics; she falls into them willingly, if not gracefully, plugging her nose before the dive.

Her most recent role, as Martha Ratliff in HBO’s true-crime drama The Staircase, lends itself to a particularly soul-searching chat. Something of an ingénue wunderkind, especially after her lauded role as a housekeeper in the 2021 film Mothering Sunday, Young’s enjoyed a steady command over her own performances. The Staircase was a departure.

In the series, based on the French documentary of the same name, she plays one of the adopted daughters of Michael Peterson (Colin Firth), accused and convicted of murdering his wife, Kathleen (Toni Collette), after she’s discovered dead at the bottom of their household staircase. Throughout both the real-life case and the HBO adaptation, Martha insists on her father’s innocence, even after a nearly identical case is unearthed from years prior: Her own mother, who died when she was a child, was found dead at the bottom of a staircase before Michael and Kathleen adopted Martha and her sister, Margaret (played in the series by Sophie Turner). In both reality and fictionalized reality, Michael isn’t exactly known for his forthcomingness; he’s caught in several lies and omissions, but the majority of his family members—and those crafting the documentary about his case—remain convinced of his innocence. Of all his children, Martha identifies the most with her father’s secrecy: He’s eventually revealed to be a bisexual man who hid his frequent affairs with men from his wife and family. Martha is a closeted lesbian.

Young never made contact with the real-life Martha, in part because The Staircase creator Antonio Campos had met with the real-life Margaret, whom she said made it clear the Peterson family didn’t want to be “anything more than just conversationally involved.” (Some of the real people involved with the documentary have also expressed their displeasure over the HBO series.) But sequestering the real Martha from the show Martha was also a sign of respect. “I’m not her friend,” Young says. “She doesn’t have any reason to tell me secrets about her.”

Christopher Schoonover

In hindsight, that distance might have made it trickier for Young to get into Martha’s head. So much of The Staircase is about projection and perception, how a different lens can provide a different—but equally convincing—account of reality. Was Michael Peterson unjustly vilified for his bisexuality? Was he a pathological liar and cold-blooded killer? Did an owl kill Kathleen? Did an alcohol-induced fall? What about a blow poke? Does Martha actually believe in her father’s innocence, or does she need to?

“The revelation is not that [Martha’s] gay,” Young says. “The revelation is that she has an understanding of her father’s secrecy and propensity to hide. She understands how someone can feel—even when they’re telling the truth—they feel like they’re lying, because if you’re lying about one core thing, it creates this haze around everything else.”

For someone like Young, who’s less obsessed with the “integrity” of a performance than the clarity of it, that haze felt like an actual menacing presence on set. “I see a bit of a lostness in my performance, that, for me, feels painful to watch. Because I know that I, as a performer, was lost,” she says. Young couldn’t discern how much of Martha was real, how much was a persona for the public, nor whether she should replicate mannerisms from the documentary or trust her own instincts. “That was always the pendulum for me as the performer, and I never felt like the pendulum settled.”

Never mind that no one, including her cast-mates, could settle on whether Michael actually killed Kathleen or not. Each tended to fall into the perspective of whatever character they were inhabiting. At this point, Young’s a little sick of even considering Michael’s guilt or innocence. “I thought for a long time that I was going to be the really smart one to figure it out, to see something that no one had seen or think of something that no one had thought of,” she admits. But like all those who’d come before her, chiseling into the warped psyche of Michael Peterson, “now I know that’s not going to happen, and so I’m like, it’s actually none of my business.”

“We’re becoming really lazy about discerning between narrative and reality.”

Yet she does, desperately, want her performance as Martha to have merit. Perhaps that’s why she’s frustratingly insecure about it: She needs people to watch this series and get something—anything!—out of Martha’s tears, her dye-dipped hair and early-aughts glasses, her kisses behind closed doors. All the discomfort during filming—and it was discomfort; “I don’t think I’ve ever been so uncomfortable for seven months, from the beginning to end, all the time…I had all sorts of existential crises every single day playing that character”—couldn’t be for show.

There’s an almost childlike earnestness that rears its head when Young, now 24, discusses her repertoire. She’ll rein herself in when buzzwords slip out—“Oh my God, this is so fucking corny”—but the terrible truth remains: She’s a card-carrying member of the Acting Matters fan club. Sue her! It’s in vogue for artists to exhibit a healthy cynicism, to admit Netflix isn’t researching cancer cures and Star Wars isn’t therapy. (Young would add, duh.) But for a would-be grifter, she’s no skeptic.

“I believe so greatly and devoutly in the power of this work and the power of cinema and drama and all that sort of stuff, even though I hate it with a passion and wish I could just fucking drop it and move to the woods,” she says. Tearing a hunk off her pastry, she adds, as a way of accepting her fate, “I unfortunately do believe in it more than anything.”

The problem is that Hollywood’s a package deal: If you want the big, meaningful stories, you’d best be prepared to craft a persona to deal with “how intent this industry is on distracting you from actually doing the work,” Young says. When I ask her for clarification, she drops back into jokes at her own expense: “I remember I did a bunch of mushrooms once, and thought I’d figured this out and then promptly forgot it.”

But, the gist of her argument—not that it’s anything new—is this: For how often it waxes poetic about artistic purity, Hollywood’s still a business, and its job is to sell commodities. Sometimes those commodities are films; often, they’re actors themselves. That means actors are competing products, which explains why Young finds herself flustered when she encounters a film set in the city and her name’s not on the trailer. “I get fucking grumpy, because I’m like, Why didn’t they hire me? Why didn’t I know about this?” That competition is intensified for female actresses, who not only commodify their personas but also their bodies. Their performances become an image and their image a skincare line. There are old performances of Young’s that she’ll watch every so often, ones where she can just tell she couldn’t forget the presence of her own face. It doesn’t help that directors have told her not to raise her eyebrows in crying scenes before, supposedly because she has too many forehead wrinkles. Ironically, Young’s little imperfections, the aforementioned forehead wrinkles, her slightly crooked teeth, are part of what make her performances feel so—God, that word again—real. Meaningful. Like they matter.

“We’re preoccupied with showing controlled ugliness [at the detriment] of showing realities,” Young says. “We completely ignore true ugliness, for fear that it will reveal or create a misunderstanding between us and the audience…We’re becoming really lazy about discerning between narrative and reality. And it’s a little worrisome.”

I point out that, well, isn’t that exactly the point of some of these films and TV shows? One like The Staircase, for instance? That there is a place where narrative and reality mesh, and can anyone really know where the line is drawn?

Odessa Young (center) as Martha Ratliff.

Courtesy of HBO Max

She agrees, but insists that line still matters. She uses a friend of hers as an example: a so-called “multi-disciplinarian” with a strong social media following, “where her persona is a fictionalized version of herself,” Young says. “Despite the fact that she says, all the time, ‘It’s partly fabrication,’ people refuse to see that and think that they are welcomed into her life and her experiences by the very fact that they’re witnessing what they think is her real-life experience. It becomes dangerous when we cannot discern between reality and narrative, because it means that we will live to the standards of those narratives, not to the standards of those realities.”

“That’s how those rules you dislike come about,” I say.

“Exactly!” Young says. “But truly.”

So then I ask about her persona, if she has one, which of course she does, because don’t we all? I tell her a colleague of mine once described her as a cinematic “It Girl,” and Young reacts like I’ve just let a fart loose in a place both sacred and hysterical, like a wedding or a funeral. “An It Girl?” she repeats, equal parts disgusted and giddy. “No! Who said that? Oh my God. What are they reading? That’s shocking. Because in order to be an It Girl, you need to have lots of friends and be in lots of places. I don’t leave my house and I have four friends.”

Well, the narrative has to come from somewhere, right? So what evidence has been manipulated this time to give Young the sheen of tastemaker? “I’m going to be thinking about that the whole week,” she says, then considers. “No, I think really what has happened is that, since I stopped thinking that my worth in the industry was based on how many people wanted to work with me without knowing why, I have actually become way more confident.”

As she thinks more, she ends on a paradox: “I don’t want my persona to be a persona. I’d like it to be somewhat real, while also knowing that, as an actor, it’s impossible for me to know who I am.”

Photographed by Christopher Schoonover, styled by Chloe Hartstein for The Wall Group, hair by Takuya Yamaguchi for The Wall Group, makeup by Tyron Machhausen for The Wall Group.

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Where Was Season 4 of Stranger Things Filmed?

After almost three years, Stranger Things is back this summer with season 4 and it has been way too long for fans. The excitement for the new season has only grown with the delay, but there were a lot of issues around filming. The main one was the pandemic, which caused filming to halt and then begin again in October of 2020. Gaten Matarazzo, who plays Dustin Henderson, told Us Weekly in December 2020 that it definitely changed the way things worked on set.

“It’s definitely an unorthodox form of shooting,” said Matarazzo. “Everyone on set has been very diligent about wearing their PPE. Even for our off-camera work, we keep our masks and goggles on. Lots of distancing. Separation during lunch, and transport from base to set.”

So where was this “unorthodox” filming happening? Warning: minor spoilers ahead.

To start, there were quite a few locations that were needed for the show because some of the biggest characters, Eleven and Byers, have moved across the country to California when the season opens. Dustin, Lucas, and Max are still in Hawkins, Indiana, and Hopper is not disintegrated— but he is trapped deep in Russian territory.

Scenes set in “Hawkins” are generally shot in Atlanta, Georgia, but Decider reports that the scenes in California were actually filmed in Albuquerque, New Mexico. Eleven and Will are attending a fictional school called Californian Lenora Hills High School, and those scenes were filmed at Albuquerque’s Eldorado High School. Other scenes happened at Albuquerque’s Roller King skating rink and in Los Lunas, New Mexico.

All the shots in Russia were done in Vilnius, Lithuania. The scenes where Hopper is seen in a jail cell are remarkably authentic in that they were filmed in Lukiškes Prison, which is centuries old. It is no longer in operation, except for TV and movie making. Pretty much the perfect place for Stranger Things.

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Yes, Even Oily Skin Needs Hydration. Here Are The Only 14 Moisturizers You’ll Need.

Delmaine Donson

The first rule of getting soft, expensive-looking skin? Never forget to moisturize. Sure, there are more critical rules (always wear sunscreen! invest in a proper facial cleanser!), but whether you drink a lot of water, eat a lot of fruits, and exercise—or not—moisturizing your skin is just as vital as cleansing. Finding the most excellent skin-saving moisturizer is easy because everyone fits into one or more of the following skin-type categories: oily, dry, combo, or normal, and each category has its own set of moisturizing serums and creams.

Believe it or not, oily skin needs just as much hydration as normal, dry, and combination skin. “It’s a misconception that people with oily skin do not need to use moisturizers. Stripping the skin of oil can interrupt the skin barrier and cause unwanted irritation. So it’s important to find a moisturizer that does not add additional oil to the skin but is hydrating,”

Dr. Lian Mack, MD, board-certified dermatologist, tells ELLE.com. “Consumers should be looking for products that are both oil-free and non-comedogenic (meaning it does not clog pores or cause acne), and that hydrates the skin with water-loving ingredients like hyaluronic acid.” Good thing lightweight, oil-free moisturizers are just a click away.

Ahead, shop the best drugstore, luxury, and derm-approved face creams to keep your skin hydrated, not greasy.

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1

Best for Daytime Use

CeraVe AM Facial Moisturizing Lotion SPF 30

When searching for the perfect moisturizer, board-certified dermatologist Dr. Joyce Imahiyerobo-Ip, MD suggests looking for products that say “non-comedogenic,” which means that “it doesn’t contain ingredients that will clog your pores and cause you to break out. CeraVe’s AM Moisturizer is great because it combines a lightweight moisturizer with sunscreen (which is also a must for everyone).”

2

Best Splurge

SkinCeuticals Hydrating B5 Gel

The gel texture allows this hydrating formula to easily absorb into the skin without leaving a heavy film or a greasy finish. Plus, a little goes a long way if the price has you a bit startled.

3

Best Gel Formula

Neutrogena Hydro Boost Water Gel

  • Not best for sensitive skin

Neutrogena’s Hydro Boost Water Gel is basically a cool splash of water in a bottle.

4

Best for Sensitive Skin

Moisturizing Lotion

Having oily and sensitive skin isn’t the easiest to treat but Vanicream’s Lite Lotion comes highly recommended. “If you have extremely sensitive skin or are prone to allergic reactions, I suggest you try Vanicream’s light lotion,” Imahiyerobo-Ip added. “Again, this product is non-comedogenic and free of any preservatives or allergens that may irritate the skin.”

5

Derm-Favorite

Oil Absorbing Moisturizer with SPF 30

According to Lian Mack, Cetaphil’s Oil Control moisturizer is great because of its key ingredient, a mineral called silica. “Like clay, silica is a mineral that helps to absorb oil,” she says. “The micro pearl technology of this product makes the skin appear matte. It has broad-spectrum coverage for both UVA/UVB rays. Reducing exposure to the sun rays prevents activation of the sebaceous or oil-producing glands in the skin.”

6

Best for a Lightweight Feel

The Water Cream Oil-Free Pore Minimizing Moisturizer

The pretty mint pot looks as beautiful on the outside as the nutrient-packed ingredients bottled up on the inside. It’s lightweight and has a water-like consistency that absorbs seamlessly into the skin.

7

Best for Layering Makeup

boscia Green Tea Oil-free Moisturizer

  • Works as a primer as well

You likely drink a cup of green tea every morning, but did you know it also works wonders for your skin? The fast-absorbing formula melts into the skin for a supple, matte base to create a flawless canvas for your makeup.

8

Best for Luxurious Feel

Cloud Cushion Plush Moisturizer with Ceramides + Peptides

Airy and lightweight, Eadem’s moisturizer feels like nothing on the skin with a formula that does so much. While its main function is to reduce the appearance of dark spots and dryness, it also hydrates and plumps the skin to reveal youthful radiance.

9

Best for Mattifying

La Roche-Posay Effaclar Mat Daily Moisturizer for Oily Skin (1.35 fl. oz.)

  • Can be layered under makeup
  • Doesn’t stay matte for too long

Reach for this moisturizer when you want to stay matte all day long. This oil-free lotion not only moisturizes the skin, but it helps to improve the appearance of pores and keeps you hydrated without any signs of grease.

10

Oil and Pore Control Mattifier Broad Spectrum SPF 45 PA++++

11

Best for Daily Use

Ultra Sheer Moisturizer

  • Light enough for every day

SkinMedica’s moisturizer goes on sheer and melts into the skin like butter. Formulated with vitamin C and E to nourish the skin throughout the day.

12

Best for Sun Protection

UV Clear Broad-Spectrum SPF 46

Sunscreen and moisturizer in one, this iteration from Elta MD glides onto the skin clear, doesn’t feel greasy, and works well under makeup.

13

Best for Hydration

Epionce Renewal Lite Facial Lotion

Dr. Rebecca Kazin recommends the Epionce Renewal Lite Facial Lotion for its hydrating formula. “I recommend this to my patients for its ability to hydrate the skin without occluding your pores. The formula provides ultra light-weight hydration for oilier skin types,” she says.

14

Best Skin-Loving Ingredients

Peter Thomas Roth Water Drench Hyaluronic Cloud Cream Hydrating Moisturizer (1.6 oz.)

Don’t be stingy with this cloud-soft creamy mixture of hyaluronic acid and elderberry extracts that come together to provide a boost of hydration for up to 72 hours (!).

What makes skin oily?

A lot of factors contribute to your oily skin, from over-cleansing to the products you use daily. But overall, “the reason for oily skin is simply due to excess sebum production,” says Dr. Rebecca Kazin, MD, director of clinical research at Icon Dermatology & Aesthetics and creator & medical director for HairSanity. “Visually, if your skin looks shiny by the end of the day, particularly your nose and chin, you have oily skin,” Dr. Kazin adds.

What ingredients should those with oily-prone skin look for in a moisturizer?

It’s important to look at the label when shopping for moisturizers, as anything that isn’t “oil-free” can make things worse. “When shopping for a moisturizer, look for labels that say for oily skin or non-comedogenic.

What ingredients should those with oily skin stay away from?

The heavier the formula, the heavier it can feel on the skin. Dr. Kazin advises to use products with a gel or lotion-like formula instead of a cream. “Stay away from heavy cream-type formulas that include a high concentration of ingredients such as oils and shea butter,” she explains.

I recommend Epionce Renewal Lite Facial Lotion to my patients for its ability to hydrate the skin without occluding your pores. The formula provides ultra light-weight hydration for oilier skin types.

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