<![CDATA[Jezebel: campbell]]> http://tags.gawker.com/assets/base/img/thumbs140x140/jezebel.com.png <![CDATA[Jezebel: campbell]]> http://jezebel.com/tag/campbell http://jezebel.com/tag/campbell <![CDATA[Presence Of Plus-Size Models Cause Consternation At London Fashion Week]]>

  • Oy. Vey. When Mark Fast chose to use three plus-size models in his Friday show, one staffer allegedly quit in protest and the stylist was so abusive to the models that she was fired; a Telegraph stylist stepped in. [Fashionista]
  • And it gets worse! Because some claimed that "the larger models were in need of supportive underwear beneath the tight dresses." [Guardian]
  • Ashley Dupre - otherwise known as the hooker who brought down New York governor Eliot Spitzer - was not welcome at the Tommy Hilfiger store opening. [NY Post]
  • Gisele is getting her helicopter pilot's license. [TMZ]
  • She's also been named a United Nations Environment Programme Ambassador. Maybe that's why she needs the license? [New York]
  • And she's taking on the Brazilian government over Amazon deforestation! [AP]
  • Agyness Deyn is reportedly back on with Albert Hammond, Jr. Does this count as fashion news? [Daily Express]
  • Pringle of Scotland is remaking its trad tweeds image in time for London Fashion week. [Independent]
  • Burberry's pinning its economic hopes on Spring 2010, premiering tonight in London. [TimesUK]
  • A good sign: Mary-Kate and Ashley will reportedly be at the show. [Sassybella]
  • Celebrating a quarter century, London Fashion Week doesn't feel a day over 24: "London fashion has been iconoclastic and edgy for a quarter of a century, and the shows on the runways - from wacky 1980s revivals to whimsical romance - are bringing a gust of energy to a chastened fashion world." [NYT]
  • La Wintour agrees: "I love the spirit of London, it is such a place for original talent. I love the way they can makes clothes out of nothing, conjure up an atmosphere out of nothing. It's very special." [Telegraph]
  • Who needs nothing when you've got Naomi Campbell? "The supermodel took the Issa Spring/Summer 2010 show by storm, revealing the same flawless figure she debuted 20 years ago." [Daily Mail]
  • The word on Jimmy Choo for H&M: it's ok. [Racked]
  • Speaking of "democratic" collabs, Ruffian is designing for Anthropologie. [WWD]
  • Norma Kamali does them one better: she's designing for Wal-Mart. And eBay. On an iPhone. [WWD]
  • Which is nice for eBay, because they were just fined 80,000 euros for ripping off LVMH. [Reuters]
  • LVMH can use the money, because they may be investing in fashion It girls Rodarte. [Fashion Week Daily]
  • Donna Karan is launching her own line of Spanx. Except they're not called Spanx, they're called Smoothies. [WWD]
  • Also in packaging news: Brian Reyes is designing condom wrappers, the proceeds of which go towards Planned Parenthood. [Sassybella]
  • This is clearly going to sell out instantly. "The YSL Edition New Vintage collection will comprise a numbered range of archival styles in various fabrics from the Paris firm's inventory." Okay, probably not to us. [WWD]
  • DVF talks about her husband's sexuality, which we thought was acknowledged to be gay, but whatever. "He doesn't know why (he never dated women.) He was very held and reserved. And with me it's like, shumm! [She mimes a door bursting open.] So I was flattered." [TimesUK]
  • Are we ready for The Real Kate Moss? Apparently a new documentary on her friend, celeb stylist James Brown (not the dead one) will show us "how funny and warm and caring she is." [WWD]
  • Twiggy: "I'm careful what I eat now as I'm older but I love food and I love cooking. I've definitely changed shape...When I was younger I weighed six and a half stone but ate like a horse. I'm now eight and a half stone and at last I have boobs – I never had those in the Sixties." [Daily Express]
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<![CDATA[Hard-hitting Times Piece Tackles Narcissism, Shopaholics, This Thing Called "Hotornot"]]> Have you heard? People are too full of themselves these days! T, The New York Times Style Magazine, has the scoop.

According to T (in these tough times for publishing, we hate to question the relevance of any publication, but seriously, why does it exist?), narcissism is totally hip right now, but it will destroy both narcissists and those around them. Writer Holly Brubach reports on a new book by Jean M. Twenge and W. Keith Campbell, The Narcissism Epidemic: Living in the Age of Entitlement, which offers a fantastically tone-deaf and out-of-date list of our society's narcissistic symptoms.

"Average Americans" — like the ones on "My Super Sweet 16" — want to keep ambulances off their streets during their birthday parties. Time Magazine made "You" the person of the year in 2006! And if that's not enough, there's "a Web site called hotornot.com, where people post pictures of themselves for strangers to rate their sex appeal." What will they think of next? Some kind of webternet application where people can post profiles, take surveys, and even send messages to online "friends"?

Twenge and Campbell offer some solutions for this obviously crippling social disease (after all, if the kids on "My Super Sweet 16" aren't grounded and altruistic, who is?). The solutions sound pretty decent — "saving rather than spending, practicing gratitude and mindfulness, telling children no, applauding hard work rather than talent or brains" — although the last one might feed into the A-for-effort epidemic. But Brubach says these fixes "may not go down easy with the shopaholic candidate for a tummy tuck." Um, the what?

Honestly, Brubach's piece made us worry less about narcissism and more about journalism. If newspapers just spew random assortments of trendy phrases, no wonder nobody reads them anymore. And if the New York Times is going to uncritically regurgitate Twenge and Campbell's list of three-year-old cultural references, I'll just read their press release, thanks. Whatever — I have to go Facebook my Myspace page so I can find a Botox rainbow party to go to in my Harry-Potter-O.C.-Dawson's-Creek costume! See you on Friendster!

Enough About You: A Little Narcissism Goes A Long Way [NYT]

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<![CDATA[Bruno Crashes Paris Fashion Week!]]>

  • Apparently emboldened by last week's success in Milan, Bruno — aka Sacha Baron Cohen — crashed Stella McCartney today. "With his red thong clearly visible above his jeans, the comedian — who was virtually unrecognisable in a flamboyant leather gilet, with his slicked-down hair dyed blonde and brown — sucked Tampax, clapped along to the music and generally disgruntled the front row by continually pushing aside those sitting in front of him for a better look at the models." He then delivered a "lone standing ovation." [VogueUK]
  • In total radness: DVF to design a comic book in connection with her Wonder Woman-inspired collection. Really hoping she has to make the rounds of the comics conventions. [Fashionista]
  • Chloe Sevigny gets into menswear. Well, Gallo will wear it. [Nylon]
  • Andre Benjamin's clothing line is for the modern fop. "To create a persona for his fashion line, Mr. Benjamin combined his surname with that of Bill Bixby. The character is a world traveler whose wardrobe includes things like a $995 cotton corduroy blazer, a $350 felted waistcoat and a $95 newsboy cap." [NY Times]
  • Whoever wears that will surely be the intended demographic for "J. Crew's first book." "Written by Max Blagg and illustrated by Hugo Guinness, What a Man Should Know is a collection of 50 (very) whimsical tips for the modern male. So what should you know? Chess, wine, and figure-drawing." [Men.Style]
  • Some people claimed Heidi stole the Project Runway premise — aka the same setup every single competition reality show has ever had ever. A judge, not surprisingly, dismissed it. [wwltv]
  • Michelle Obama sports H&M on the campaign trail. [BlackBook]
  • Lagerfeld video. Nuff said. [NY Mag]
  • Scary Spice Mel B wants a Project Runway-style reality show. Get in line, kid. [E]
  • Rather than going bargain basement, Target courts recessionistas. [Business Week]
  • More on Miss Sixty's woes. [BBC]
  • Sorta It-Girl Cory Kennedy to replace Kinda It-Girl Daisy Lowe as the face of Docs. [Fashionista]
  • Levi's tries way, way too hard: "The San Francisco company has launched a new viral effort it hopes will attract young men to pass along videos of customized "beasts" emerging from the button-fly of Levi's jeans. At Unbuttonyourbeast.com, visitors can choose from nine different animated characters with names like Trout Troutman, Paul the Pincher and Sock Nasty, then customize the beast's message by calling a toll-free number. The effort, unsurprisingly, is geared to young men just out of college." The emails are titled, "Do you dare to unbutton my beast?" [AdWeek]
  • India eases the way for the burgeoning luxury market. [IHT]
  • Guy Ritchie's first hit since hooking up with Madge: a Nike ad gets big on YouTube. [Telegraph]
  • Naomi Campbell's gonna walk for Hermes; everybody flips out. [Fashion Week Daily]
  • I wish these celebs would stop calling their mix tapes "albums." Anyhoo, Heatherette designer Richie Rich's, "Celebutante," is about to drop. [Fashionista]
  • "If there were a gold medal for marathon modeling, Shalom Harlow would surely win it for the Viktor & Rolf fashion film that will begin today on the Dutch duo’s Web site. 'It was like the fashion Olympics,' said Rolf Snoeren, who, with Viktor Horsting, reenacted a high-tech version of 'Funny Face' to showcase their spring collection. 'It was 14 hours a day on high heels, but she was a champion.'” [WWD]
  • 80's power shoulders are big (sorry) on the Paris runways. [WSJ]
  • That gold statue of Kate Moss was just unveiled. [Mirror]
  • UGGS are like cockroaches: all that will be left after a nuclear holocaust. While everything else is foundering, UGGs is way up! [WSJ]
  • The Lauren Conrad line forlorn and unbought. [Page Six]
  • Bossy new bikini has "decorative beads" that change color when UV rays grow dangerously high. [Telegraph]
  • Screw Jimmy Choos. Cheap shoes make more sense for actual walking. [Daily News]
  • "Margherita Missoni, meanwhile, has experienced some teasing for wearing vintage sparkling Harper’s Bazaar frames — due to an eye problem. 'Suzy Menkes says it’s my Sarah Palin look,' she laughed. 'It is definitely not inspired by her.'" [WWD]
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