Dish reportedly agrees to $5B deal for T-Mobile and Sprint’s wireless assets – CNET
21 Things to Buy Immediately From Net-a-Porter’s Rare One-Day Beauty Sale
ALERT: Net-a-Porter is having a beauty sale, which is a rare and beautiful thing, but the catch is that it’s only for one day—today, July 23. As I reported a few months ago, Net-a-Porter’s beauty section is chock-full of highly effective luxury products with a cult following, many of which you’ll rarely find marked down anywhere. The discount is for 15% off, and some brand exclusions apply, but I will say that every highly covetable brand I just added to my cart was eligible for the discount.
It’s hard not to be a fan of Net-a-Porter’s epic selection of fashion items, but I urge you not to sleep on this sale. It stocks some of the most covetable brands on the planet, including Charlotte Tilbury, Le Labo, La Mer, Byredo, Dr. Barbara Sturm, and Tom Ford. You know what to do now—scroll to shop the things I highly recommend adding to cart immediately.
58 Behind-The-Scenes Facts About “Queer Eye” That’ll Blow Your Mind
Goldschmidt’s grand slam lifts Cardinals to wild 6-5 win over Pirates in 10 innings
On the 8th anniversary of his MLB debut Jason Kipnis made it a night to remember with diving catch
Margot Robbie Basically Wore a Wedding Dress on the Red Carpet
Summer is the best time to go to the movies, not least because it’s an air-conditioned respite from the oppressive heat. This month has seen the release of The Lion King, which brought us a new crop of Beyoncé red carpet looks, and now it’s almost time for the movie I circled with a big fat red pen on my calendar this summer: Once Upon a Time in Hollywood. Starring the dream trifecta of Brad Pitt, Leonardo DiCaprio, and Margot Robbie…oh, sorry, did you actually need any more info?
Here’s the gist: It’s Quentin Tarantino’s ninth film and it delves into the movie and TV industry in 1969 Los Angeles. Only time will tell if it will live up to the likes of Tarantino’s Pulp Fiction and Kill Bill, but the red carpet premiere photos will have to tide us over ahead of the July 26 release date. Naturally, the whole cast was on-hand, including Pitt, DiCaprio, and Robbie, who wore a custom white version of a Chanel Couture fall 2019 dress that was originally navy blue on the runway. Scroll down to see the best outfits from the Once Upon a Time in Hollywood red carpet premiere.
Next up, Scarlett Johansson just revealed her alarmingly massive engagement ring.
A Journey of 10,000 Steps: How Many Per Day Do You Really Need?
Have you ever tried to log 10,000 steps a day? If you’ve got a fitness tracker, you’re probably familiar with that benchmark. And you know it can be tough to reach just by going about your day, especially if that day includes sitting in a desk chair or car hour after hour.
I first got a Fitbit to unlock the secrets of my sleep patterns but got hooked on the tiny jolts it administered that spurred me to get off my butt and take a few laps around the office.
It wasn’t long before I realized that hitting 10k a day was going to take some doing. In fact, it started to feel like a full-time job. And since I already have a bunch of of those—my actual full-time job as editor at Bare Necessities, parent, wife and human being with interests of my own that include laying on the couch trying to find where Instagram ends—making my steps began to feel like one more thing on an endless list I felt obligated to get done every day, like flossing.
At times, crossing the invisible finish line happened without trying very hard: weekends, mostly. Days we ran around a playground, or I had dance class, or I would suit up in workout clothes and go for a short jog (fine, power walk). Days on trips—New York, Tokyo—when hitting 20,000 steps or more happened by noon.
But most days, a journey of 10,000 steps felt about 3,000 steps out of reach.
My husband found the relentless pursuit annoying. If, by 9 PM, I was only a thousand steps short, I would haul myself up off the couch and march in place while we watched TV.
My 6-year-old began paying close attention to the flashing lights on my Fitbit and how many footfalls I had made, my allegedly healthy preoccupation insidiously becoming hers.
“I marched in place in the shower, walked the stairs while snacking. I all but stopped standing still”
I guilted my cubicle-mate into standing up with me while we cleaned out our email in-boxes. I endlessly circled kitchen islands and conference room tables, marched in place in the shower, walked the stairs while mindlessly snacking. I all but stopped standing still.
This supposedly awesome thing I was doing for myself was feeling like a drag instead of replenishing my energy but, ever the rule-follower, I soldiered on, telling myself I had to do it for my health and longevity no matter how drained or ridiculous I felt.
Then, just recently, I read this National Public Radio article (“10,000 Steps a Day? How Many Do You Really Need to Boost Longevity?”) and felt instant reprieve. Absolution. The rubber handcuff’s grip loosened.
“There’s nothing magical about the number 10,000,” it starts before going on to explain that the origin of the figure was a decades-old Japanese marketing campaign to sell pedometers. Somehow, it became adopted as a universally-accepted health standard.
In a new study to find out how many steps it really takes to maintain or better your health, I-Min Lee, a researcher at Brigham and Women’s Hospital, found that taking just 4,000 steps is enough to increase lifespan, and the benefits of walking actually end at 7,500 steps.
“Taking just 4,000 steps is enough to increase lifespan, and the benefits of walking actually end at 7,500 steps”
And that’s only steps they measured. Incidental exercise like gardening, housework, biking or swimming didn’t factor into the study at all—things we can safely assume are an added health boost.
My Fitbit app tells me I average 8,684 steps per day. Now, rather than constantly striving to span the distance between me and some arbitrary number, I don’t feel an ounce of guilt about changing into pajamas, kicking back and watching The Office for the umpteenth time. When I hit 9,700, instead of pacing around the house, I call it close enough. Other days, I limp my way to 5k because life.
This past spring, on a trip to Italy, I left my tracker home and haven’t put it back on since. I don’t need a gadget to tell me that I walked my butt off, slept through the night or drank enough water. All things in moderation. Turns out a little stillness and couple of glasses of wine are pretty good for you, too.
The post A Journey of 10,000 Steps: How Many Per Day Do You Really Need? appeared first on Bare it All.
The Boom 3’s Magic Button turned a good speaker into the best one
In today’s digital age, it sometimes feels like hardware has taken a back seat to the software that drives our devices. Button of the Month is a monthly look at what some of those buttons and switches are like on devices old and new, and it aims to appreciate how we interact with our devices on a physical, tactile level.
The Ultimate Ears Boom has long been the best Bluetooth speaker around. But for all its popularity, the line of speakers was plagued for years by a critical flaw: it lacked a play / pause button. Then, in 2018, it finally got one, and the addition has made all the difference between the Boom being a great Bluetooth speaker and the single best option for taking music to the pool.
The Magic Button (its name, not mine) does…
Manny Pacquiao, 40, Defeats Keith Thurman and Father Time to Win WBA Welterweight Title
Manny Pacquiao knocked down Keith Thurman in the first round and went on to win a convincing split-decision victory Saturday night, capturing a WBA welterweight title after a thrilling 12-round slugfest.
The 40-year-old Pacquiao (62-7-2), who also serves as a Senator in his native Philippines and has has been a pro boxer since 1995, dropped the previously unbeaten Thurman with a combination late in the first round, and put on a performance that evoked the ferocious prime of the only eight-division champion in boxing history.
The 30-year-old Thurman (29-1) tested the legendary Pacquiao’s chin with big shots as both boxers fought at a furious pace in front of a sellout crowd at the MGM Grand in Las Vegas, but in the end, Pac-Man’s first-round knockdown made the difference.
“It was fun,” Pacquiao said after the fight. “My opponent is a good fighter and boxer. He was strong…I think he did his best, and I did my best. I think we made the fans happy tonight because it was a good fight.”
Two judges scored the bout 115-112 for Pacquiao, while a third scored it 114-113 for Thurman.
Pacquiao, who already owned one version of the WBA welterweight title, continues his recent comeback after back-to-back wins over Lucas Mattyhysse and Adrien Broner, which came after a controversial decision loss to Jeff Horn in 2017.
“I knew it was close,” Thurman said after the fight. “He had the momentum because he got the knockdown in Round 1…I wish I had a little bit more output to go toe to toe. My conditioning, my output was just behind Manny Pacquiao’s tonight. Tonight was a blessing and a lesson.”
Before the fight, Floyd Mayweather got into the ring and wished both fighters good luck. The retired pound-for-pound superstar watched from the crowd in the same arena where he thoroughly outboxed Pacquiao four years ago in their historic—if ultimately disappointing—superfight.
Meanwhile, Pacquiao’s trainer, Freddie Roach, has said he hopes Mayweather will come out of retirement for a rematch with Pacquiao, who has said he fought injured in their first bout.
But many boxing observers believe the two most dangerous active welterweights for Pacquiao at this point are Terrence Crawford and Errol Spence, both undefeated fighters who are among the most highly-skilled in the sport.
Here, some of the best Twitter reactions to the fight, from Sly Stallone to Stephen A. Smith: