tigerrouge
don't look down
- Joined
- Feb 25, 2005
- Messages
- 17,856
- Reaction score
- 7,186
If Cardi B does get the cover of HB, would that make her the second female Hip Hop artist to grace their cover? Lauryn Hill is the only other one i can recall.
For Nicki, who has booked American Elle, Marie Claire, the independents and a couple foreign covers, I could imagine it feeling like a huge slight, especially considering her role in further bringing hip hop and rap back into the mainstream in the past decade. They'll give Selena Gomez, someone who literally dislikes being famous, multiple covers and Nicki gets nada? Nicki always talks about her huge respect for the fashion industry, and she definitely influences what young people wear today, so i just don't see why they wouldn't put her on the cover? Is it because she doesn't have a big brand/advertiser backing her?
I totally agree! To add, “confidence is key” but Nicki seems extremely arrogant and it’s just not cool to be that way anymore. She’s 10 years late and she’s also a sellout lolMy momma always said if you want a boy to like you don’t chase him. I think this is Nicki’s problem. Much like Celine Dion, she tries way too hard to get into the good graces of fashion people and that always comes off as a little desperate. She wants so much to be “in” it’s too obvious.
Vogue Japan December is Kaia Gerber by L&I.
a la mierda!!! so earlyVogue Japan December is Kaia Gerber by L&I.
The very teensy bit of redeeming feature with Vogue's current cover is that it features a new face. Claire Foy had to have a film to promote in order to book it. Vogue still seems stuck in 2005 when tv actresses were considered low-brow yet they want to appeal to series obsessed millennials.
Ugh, why though. Both are overexposed and I can do without either. Michele should throw his weight around and get Lana Del Rey on that cover. She's way overdue.
The very teensy bit of redeeming feature with Vogue's current cover is that it features a new face. Claire Foy had to have a film to promote in order to book it. Vogue still seems stuck in 2005 when tv actresses were considered low-brow yet they want to appeal to series obsessed millennials.