Empty Talk
‘I Feel My Appetite Growing’: The Giant Dreams of Bartees Strange
Published
4 days agoon

Bartees Strange needs a new hobby. Back when he wasn’t playing football in high school, studying communications in college, or working a nine-to-five at the FCC, he devoted every free hour to music. Now, his only job is writing, recording, and performing songs that defy the gravity of genre to scale some of the highest ambitions on the planet — and that leaves him with time to kill.
He’s thinking of taking up rock climbing.
“I’ve been watching all the documentaries,” Strange, 33, says between spoonfuls of pho on a gray late-March afternoon in Brooklyn. He’s never actually been rock climbing, he’s quick to add: “I’m horrified of heights, which is probably why I want to do it.”
Whatever Strange wants to do, odds are he’ll pull it off. That doggedness is a big part of what has made him, in just two short years, one of the most riveting voices in rock and beyond. He announced himself in March 2020 with Say Goodbye to Pretty Boy, less a covers EP than a wholesale reimagining of five songs by the National, one of his favorite bands. Seven months later, in the thick of the pandemic, he released his debut album, Live Forever. It was pop punk, indie rock, hip-hop, emo; it was R&B, psych-noise, deep house, country. It was all of this, seamlessly distributed across 11 tracks, and sometimes packed into one perfect song, like the instant stunner “Boomer.”
Jamie Coletta, Strange’s co-manager, remembers hearing Live Forever for the first time in 2019: “At first, frankly, I was scared of it. As someone in the music business, you’re always looking for something like this… It was like hearing the future.”
Live Forever was a fixture on critics’ lists in 2020, and it put Strange at the center of a bidding war that eventually landed him a deal with 4AD, the venerable U.K. label that will release Strange’s second album, Farm to Table, on June 17.
Bartees Strange wrote some of the key songs for his new album at the same London flat where TV on the Radio once worked
Daniel Dorsa for Rolling Stone. styling by Marissa Pelly. Top and bottom by Angel Chen. Shoes by Dr. Martens. Jewelry by Bernard James.
The new album came as a surprise to Strange, who was working on an entirely different LP when this one sprang into being last fall. It was a time of big change: opening for Phoebe Bridgers and Lucy Dacus, upgrading his Ford Transit to a roomier ride, flying out to London to record at 4AD’s studio, thinking about the where-are-you-going, where-have-you-been whirlwind of his life.
Fifteen years earlier, in 2006, a young Bartees Cox Jr. had channel surfed into TV on the Radio’s Tunde Adebimpe howling “Wolf Like Me” on Letterman — a crystallizing moment that gave a Black kid in the largely white town of Mustang, Oklahoma, the first real glimpse of the kind of music he wanted to make. Now, he was literally sleeping in the same London flat where TV on the Radio did some early work on their David Bowie-featuring song “Province.” He looked around, took it all in, and thought “Damn, I’ve got a shot here.”
“I used to be on a farm, but now I’m at the table,” Strange says. “This is a new world. But I feel ready for it, and I feel like I’m bringing something that’s uniquely me.”
The track “Cosigns,” which he wrote on that London trip in 2021, serves as a thesis statement for the album, and it’s in no way hyperbole when Strange says, “I’m the only person who can write that song.” It’s a wildly energetic rap-rock hype-up anthem in which Strange spits witty bars about his tours with Bridgers, Dacus, and Courtney Barnett; boasts about FaceTime calls with Bon Iver’s Justin Vernon; quips, “I’m-a thief when things get big/Look, I’m-a steal your fans”; and casually tosses off what may well be the only big-up to Beggars Group’s 72-year-old founder, Martin Mills, in recorded music history: “I’m with Martin in the mill, we grinding, making bread.”
(While Mills was unable to provide comment, Strange says the Beggars boss would often hang in the studio and watch him work in London. When he heard “Cosigns,” Strange recalls, “He was so chill about it. His eyes kind of perked: ‘I don’t know if I’ve ever been mentioned in a song before.’ And I was like, ‘Well, thanks for signing me.’”)
“Cosigns” is the rare song that can stop you cold and also crack you up. It transcends itself halfway through, as the beat quickens, the woozy guitar loops unsnarl into roars, and Strange bellows a refrain he first wrote in a poem in his early twenties: “How to be full, it’s the hardest to know/I keep consuming, I can’t give it up/Hungry as ever, it’s never enough, it’s never enough, it’s never enough.”
Those lines express something very real about Strange. “As I get close to achieving things that I’ve wanted for a long time, I feel my appetite growing with it … I talk to my therapist about that a lot,” he says with a laugh. “I feel like I’m going to run myself into the ground if I keep raising the bar for myself. But that’s how I am. I love that shit. I like doing things that are hard to achieve. And the bar keeps going up.”
The day Live Forever came out in 2020, Strange was in Maine making music with his friends. For all his confidence, he was anxious about how the record would be received. But he also really wanted to cut some demos at that exact moment. Everything, he accurately intuited, was about to change.
“We all had this feeling of, like, ‘OK, this is real. We might pull some shit off. Let’s remember what this feels like,’” Strange recalls.
“Cosigns” notwithstanding, Strange is too restless and perceptive to simply run a victory lap. He’s thought a lot about the fact that the career breakthrough he’s been working toward for years has coincided with incredible upheaval and pain in the world. He wrote “Hold the Line,” a devastating country-soul ballad, after watching George Floyd’s daughter give TV interviews about her father’s murder. On “Escape This Circus,” he nods to Gil Scott-Heron’s “Whitey on the Moon,” while pondering the space expeditions of bored billionaires. And on “Mulholland Dr,” Strange sizes up the blissed-out, moneyed characters he encountered during a surreal stay in L.A., where he witnessed “so much power that you could do anything with it, except help anyone.”
Strange knows that power imbalance well. After leaving college in 2012, he moved from Oklahoma to Washington, D.C., drawn in part by his love for local legends like Bad Brains and Fugazi. He’d secured an internship, and as he packed up his car, he assured his parents he had a place to stay, too. He then spent two days trying to actually find one. The spot he ended up with was a backyard shed with no water and dirt floors; after running into problems with his landlords, he bailed and spent a couple of months unhoused, showering at the YMCA and sleeping in his car outside the metro station where he commuted to work.
Strange eventually befriended a Howard University student who let him crash at her dorm. To pull this off, Strange pretended to be a student, always making sure to enter the dorm at the same time as his friend, and slipping some treats to the guards at the door for good measure. He attended events on campus, hobnobbed with students and professors, sold everyone on the idea that he belonged there. Within a few months, he found a job that paid well enough for him to move out; a couple of more years, and he was working at the FCC as a deputy press secretary during the Obama administration.
“D.C.’s weird,” Strange says, laughing at the understatement as he recalls playing hardcore shows at night before going to work on the Hill in the morning. “I mean, arguably there’s no more powerful city in the world, and the issues are so outsized — and that feeds into the music.”
Strange views crisis and injustice, like so much else, with a sanguine tenacity. Not even several years working for nonprofits in the climate movement could saddle Strange with despair. Instead, he came away more devoted than ever to optimism, “even though it’s really fucking hard.”
He’s especially shrewd on “Mulholland Dr.,” a song sung from the perspective of someone so sun-drunk and well-off that their response to drought, fire, and famine is a placid “Yeah.” “I don’t believe in the bullshit of wondering when we die,” Strange sings serenely. Cutting as that might sound, it’s essentially the sentiment he himself holds, with a key distinction.
“We need to take a lot more responsibility for the impact we have on each other and on the planet,” he says. “I can’t be around people who feel like things are out of their control. Because I don’t feel like that in my life.”
Like his debut, Farm to Table is a communal effort that draws on Strange’s deep network of musical friends. Pretty much everyone comes from the community he found in Crown Heights, Brooklyn, where he moved around 2015, frustrated with his professional life and determined to take a proper stab at music. Around the same time, he took his stage name for a short-lived band called Bartees & the Strange Fruit. (After a few years in New York, he moved back to the D.C. area, where he currently lives.)
The way Strange and his current bandmates tell it backstage before their second of three shows with Car Seat Headrest in Brooklyn, they all met at the can’t-miss parties hosted by Taja Cheek, the experimental artist who performs as L’Rain. “There should be a documentary called Taja’s House,” Strange jokes. “It was all these Black and brown artists who were top quality. I saw them, and I had new heroes — like, I want to command a stage like that, I want to play like that, I want that grace. It pushed me to be myself, because everyone there was so different than the next person.”
Farm to Table, like its predecessor, demonstrates Strange’s ability to blend a stunning array of influences into something coherent and new. It can be easy for critics to fixate on the genre-busting nature of his music — but really, friends say, that’s more like a core feature of his artistry than the sum of its parts. “It’s a given,” is how Cheek puts it. “Bartees has so many different interests, and he’s done lots of things in his life. Of course his music would be a reflection of that.”
Chris Connors, another friend from those days and a close collaborator who worked as an engineer and co-producer on Farm to Table, remembers Strange’s “joy of exploration” at their London sessions. “He was on the ground, we were running some vocals, and he’s so into it,” Connors says. “He’s so happy, twisting the knobs and getting these cool sounds. It was so playful and natural and pure.”
The song Strange was working on then was “Black Gold,” a song that he says he’d been trying to write for a while. It’s a classic “I’m leaving home song,” a theme he’d explored before, though this iteration needed more time, clarity, and maturity. With a vibe that’s something like a folked-out Big Red Machine via Frank Ocean, Strange reflects on hightailing it out of Oklahoma the first chance he got: “I was way too rough with how I left my town,” he sings. “Now it’s big city lights for a country mouse.” There’s grace and reverence, acknowledging that while he left home and found his dreams elsewhere, the farm is still with him at the table. Hell, the way he tells it, it sounds practically Biblical.
“There are so many stories in the Bible about leaving home, going somewhere new, ascending, remembering where you came from, returning home a different person — literally the prodigal son,” Strange says. “All these romantic, beautiful stories.”
On the bridge to “Black Gold,” Strange flattens the distance between past and present: Everything drops out except his acoustic guitar, and then a chorus of warm, cheerful voices appears — recordings he’s made of his family singing over the years.
Growing up, that family was close, devout, and itinerant. His father was an engineer in the military, his mother an opera singer, and they bounced around Europe in his early childhood before settling in the Great Plains. On “Tours,” Farm to Table‘s remarkable acoustic centerpiece, he reflects on the loneliness and frustration he felt when his parents left for long stretches, especially his dad, who was sometimes dispatched to active combat zones. (“Where is Kuwait, is that in the States?” goes one line.)
“Tours” isn’t meant to be a guilt trip; more like a recognition of a truth about himself. “They did it for us, and they did it for them, too, because they loved it. And I’m about to do what I love,” Strange says, thinking of his own life on the road and what that might mean for any future family. “I want my kid to see me doing things that I love, so they do what they love.”
With a sigh, he admits he hasn’t played “Tours” for his parents yet. “I think so highly of them, but I know when they hear it, they’ll feel bad. But it’s like, ‘Actually, it’s OK. I’m about to do it, too.’”
Backstage in Brooklyn, Strange gives his band a pep talk. “But, yeah, man, you know, it’s just rock & roll,” he ad-libs with a goofy grin. “We’re just rock & roll kids playing rock & roll, jazz, hoochie-koo for years now.”
Onstage in Brooklyn, 2022, opening for Car Seat Headrest.
Sacha Lecca for Rolling Stone
So far, Strange has toured mostly as an opener. “Opening is a trip,” he continues. “Sometimes the sound guy gives a shit about you. Sometimes they don’t give a fuck and you get what you get, and you gotta prove it to people despite it all.”
He doesn’t mind that kind of challenge. In fact, he relishes it. “What I do is different,” he adds a few weeks later over the phone. “Oftentimes I’m the only person in the room that looks like me, and I’m throwing a lot at people, between the rap stuff, the country stuff, and the rock stuff… Even before all of this happened, any time I played a show, I’d go into it like, ‘I’m going to show you something new today.’”
The foundation Strange has built for himself feels sturdy enough to support his endless ambition. For him, it’s as much about securing his own dream of a long, sustainable, healthy career in music as it is about ensuring the same possibility for other Black and brown artists in indie rock — a genre that remains overwhelmingly white, from audience to label to media.
“Someone the other day on Instagram called me a token for only playing with white bands,” he says. “And I was like, ‘I’m doing this so that you can be here.’ I might be the only one today, but who are you going to tour with in two years? Hopefully me! I’m obviously not the first Black person to do this, and there’s a lot of other Black people in the space, but it’s interesting, grappling with that feeling. Either way, I’m trying to create space for more people who look like me.”
Strange thrives on competition, delights in challenge and skepticism. He sees the world as something to be explored, and molded, and changed. It’s an instinct that’s been with him his whole life.
“My dad always said, ‘I am God,’” he remembers. “And we’d always make fun of him, but what he was saying was: You make choices, and you have the opportunity to make them good or bad. And if you make enough things happen, you create gravity, and things will revolve around you in a way that didn’t before. I’m feeling gravity turn in a new way in my life.”
He continues: “I don’t go to church anymore or anything like that, but I still have this spiritual connection to a higher power. I feel it in my music. Or I’ll look in the crowd and just be like, ‘Man, this feels bigger than me.’ Whatever this feeling is, it’s so real, and we’re all experiencing it together. Maybe that’s God.”
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Empty Talk
Summer Entertaining on a Budget: 17 Deals on All Things You Need
Published
56 mins agoon
May 16, 2022
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We independently selected these products because we love them, and we think you might like them at these prices. If you buy something through our links, E! makes a commission on your purchase. Prices are accurate as of publish time. Items are sold by the retailer, not E!.
As unbelievable as it may be, summer is right around the corner. If you’re planning on having guests over for an outdoor summer bash, a family barbecue or a pool party with friends, it’s the perfect time to start shopping for everything you’ll need to make that happen.
Fortunately, throwing a summer get together that’s memorable for your guests doesn’t have to break the bank. If you didn’t already know, QVC has a ton of really great stuff that’s perfect for outdoor entertaining. We’re talking fun tiki tumblers, an entertaining turntable you can use to create your very own taco bar, cute and colorful high-quality speaker that’ll really get the party going, and of course, Mrs. Prindable’s delicious caramel apples that are a total crowd-pleaser.
You can get many of these items on sale for really good prices, and you can even find some solid items for under $50. Best part is, QVC offers Easy Pay options on their Summer Essentials so purchasing a brand new grill can be doable.
We’ve rounded up some of the best deals summer entertaining must-haves at QVC. Check those out below.
Libbey Tiki Split Tumbler Glasses – Set of 4
These Libbey Tiki Split Tumblers are super fun and can hold anything from cocktails to desserts. These are guaranteed to be a hit with guests.
Temp-tations Seasonal Wine Glasses with Toppers – Set of 2
These stemless wine glasses with toppers were pretty much made for summer. Right now, they’re even on sale for just $20.
HOST Margarita FREEZE Cooling Cups – Set of 2
Margaritas anyone? These innovative cups will keep your drinks chilled during those warm summer afternoons. According to one QVC shopper, these are seriously amazing. All you have to do is put these in the freezer until you’re ready to serve.
Libbey Blue Ribbon Impressions Cooler & Rocks Glass Set – 16 Pieces
This set of stunning glasses are sure to wow your guests. Included in the set are 16 pieces: eight cooler glasses and eight rocks glasses.
Pineapple Pitcher with Welcome Charm by Valerie
This ceramic pineapple pitcher is so cute and classy, all your friends are going to ask you where you got it. According to numerous QVC reviewers, the pitcher looks even prettier in person and also makes a great decorative piece when not in use. It’s a must-have for us!
Copco 15-inch Entertaining Turntable with Removable Containers
This entertaining turntable is super versatile. You can use this to serve chips and salsa, you can create a fun little taco bar, or you can even use this to put snacks and candy for the kids. The blue is bright and perfect for the season. Plus, it’s on sale for just $26.
Picnic Time Wine-Appetizer Plates – Set of 4
Your guests will no longer have to struggle with juggling a glass of wine and snacks. The wine-appetizer plate in itself is also so classy. Right now it’s on sale for $38.
Picnic Time Ship Wheel Lazy Susan Cheese Board& Tools Set
Going for a cool coastal vibe? This fun lazy Susan cheeseboard is a must-have, and it’s sure to delight guests! Right now it’s even on sale for $45.
Temp-tations Floral Lace Centertaining Lazy Susan Set
This lovely “Centertaining” Lazy Susan Set has everything you need for an intimate brunch with you and your friends. The set comes with the lazy Susan, a pitcher, creamer, a 10-oz sugar bowl and salt and pepper shakers. It’s originally $64, but it’s on sale now for $44. Such a great deal!
Kansas City 6-oz Brisket Burgers with Seasoning Packets – 20 Count
Planning a backyard barbecue? You’ll want to check out these juicy brisket burgers by Kansas City Steaks. Each pack comes with 20 burgers, two Kansas City Steak seasoning packets and one Kansas City Steak book. According to QVC shoppers, you won’t regret getting these. As one wrote, “Oh my gosh, these are great, very juicy and easy to cook!” Another wrote, “Received these burgers today and made a couple for me and my husband. These burgers are the best burgers I’ve ever tasted. They are juicy and don’t shrink up. They are fabulous.” Right now, they’re even on sale for $87!
Just Bagels NYC Kettle Boiled Bagel Sampler – 24 Count
Treat your guests to the authentic taste of NYC bagels with this 24 count sampler from Just Bagels. It’s perfect for an outdoor brunch!
Mrs. Prindable’s 10-Piece Stars & Stripes Summer Assortment
You really can’t go wrong with these tasty caramel apples from Mrs. Prindable’s. This 10-piece summer assortment features the apples rolled in red, white, and blue sprinkles. You just can’t throw a summer party without these! They’re so good.
Camp Chef 14 x 16-inch Italia Artisan Pizza Oven
Making pizza has never been easier with the Camp Chef Artisan Pizza Oven. You can use this to cook several styles of pizza including artisan and frozen. If you have a family of pizza lovers, you’ll want this ASAP.
FLIKR Fire Outdoor Tabletop Fireplace With Base
This tabletop firepit will instantly level up your table. You can use this for ambience or roasting marshmallows. Right now, it’s even on sale!
Navy and White 4-Position Sling Beach Chair by Lauren McBride
This beach chair is bringing all the vacay vibes, which is perfect for a summer get-together. . It features a built-in pillow headrest, has three-position functionality and it’s easy to store. You also can’t go wrong with classic navy and white stripes. It’s originally $86, but it’s on sale now for $69.
Hey! Play! Giant Wooden Yard Dice with Carrying Case
The possibilities for fun are endless this summer with these giant wooden yard dice.
JBL Flip 5 Portable Waterproof Bluetooth Speaker
No summer bash or backyard barbecue is complete without music! This top-rated Waterproof Bluetooth Speaker from JBL comes in a wide variety of bright and playful colors including pink, teal and yellow. It’s originally $130, but you can get it on sale today for $100.
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Uncategorized
See Kristin Cavallari Embrace “Shenanigans” With Lauren Conrad’s Exes Jason Wahler and Stephen Colletti
Published
56 mins agoon
May 16, 2022
Spencer Pratt Admits “The Hills” Date With Audrina Was FAKE
Coming clean with the ultimate ’00s reunion.
Kristin Cavallari served up all the nostalgic feels when she posted a photo to Instagram alongside Jason Wahler and Stephen Colletti.
“Shenanigans,” the 35-year-old captioned the snap on May 16, as she posed in between her former Laguna Beach co-stars in Nashville, Tenn.
Fans were quick to point out that both Jason, 35, and Stephen, 36, famously dated Kristin’s on-screen high-school nemesis Lauren “L.C.” Conrad, who later went on to star in the spin-off series The Hills. After Lauren left the L.A.-based show halfway through its fifth season, she was subsequently replaced by Kristin through The Hills‘ sixth and final season in 2010.
“Lauren Conrad likes this,” commented one fan, while another joked, “I just know LC is punching air because the queen of laguna is back.”
Jason posted the same pic on his own Instagram, account with the cheeky caption, “up to no good….”
The old MTV crew came back together for the soon-to-be-launched Laguna Beach rewatch podcast, Back to the Beach With Kristin and Stephen. According to Variety, Dear Media ordered 40 episodes featuring the Very Cavallari star and One Tree Hill alum—who also dated as teens—as they revisit the series, which ran for three seasons from September 2004 until November 2006.
The podcast is slated to premiere this summer.
“Eighteen years later and we’re finally ready to revisit Laguna Beach: The Real Orange County,” Kristin told Variety on May 2. “Stephen and I can’t wait to take listeners behind the scenes of what really went down, how it impacted us, and to relive those high-school days—the good, the bad and the ugly.”
Keep scrolling to see what else the former stars of Laguna Beach and The Hills have been up to recently.
MTV; Getty Images
Lauren Conrad
Literal LOL at Teen Vogue‘s Lisa Love telling Lauren, “You’ll always be known as the girl who didn’t go to Paris.” (A line actually lifted from Vogue‘s Anna Wintour, a 2019 Hills deep dive revealed.) More than a decade after that (admittedly questionable) decision and her subsequent split from Jason Wahler, LC has earned a few more laudatory descriptors: New York Times best-selling author; co-founder of The Little Market, with a mission to empower female artisans worldwide; and, of course, fashion designer, her Kohl’s Line LC Lauren Conrad just the start of her now wide-ranging lifestyle empire. Now long past fights outside Les Deux, she married Something Corporate rocker and law school grad William Tell in a 2014 Pinterest wedding of our dreams. In 2019, their second son, Charlie Wolf Tell, joined older brother Liam James Tell.
Getty Images; Bravo
Kristin Cavallari
The star of E!’s Very Cavallari and everyone’s favorite bad girl went from being a (well-compensated) s–t-stirrer to full-on boss with her successful lifestyle brand, Uncommon James opening its second brick-and-mortar location in Chicago last fall. Rounding out her growing empire: a Chinese Laundry shoe line and two cookbooks, with True Comfort coming out Sept. 29, a little more than two years after New York Times best-seller, True Roots.
Teammates for 10 years, she and retired NFL quarterback Jay Cutler welcomed sons Camden Jack Cutler and Jaxon Wyatt Cutler and daughter Saylor James Cutler before splitting in April 2020.
In 2021, Kristin filmed a cameo for The Hills: New Beginnings season two.
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Heidi Montag & Spencer Pratt
One of the more surprising reinventions saw The Hills‘ resident villains transform into dedicated parents to 2-year-old Gunner Stone Pratt, entirely self-aware of their place in the annals of reality television. Following an admittedly rocky season that saw them take their marital problems (either real or contrived for headlines) to any show that would have them—Celebrity Big Brother (UK version), I’m a Celebrity . . . Get Me Out of Here, Marriage Boot Camp: Reality Stars—they successfully lobbied to make Speidi famous again, spearheading 2019’s The Hills: New Beginnings reboot. “Reality TV is kind of a career for Spencer and I at this point,” Heidi explained to Vogue. Though, having learned from their years of overspending, they also have a few side hustles thanks to their podcast and his Pratt Daddy crystal business.
Michael Buckner/Getty Images, Vivien Killilea/Getty Images for Simply LA
Lo Bosworth
Truthfully, LC’s BFF would prefer to be excluded from this narrative. When an exec gauged her interest in returning to The Hills, “I was like, ‘F–k no!'” she recalled on a 2018 episode of her Lady Lovin’ podcast. “I don’t want any association with any of those people. The dissociation from all those people is what I’m hungry for.” Which, to be fair, sometimes that happens when you change careers. Now based in NYC, The International Culinary Center grad and The Lo-Down author founded Love Wellness, a line of personal care products for women, in 2016. In 2020, she told E! News, “I live such a different life now than I did 10 years ago.”
In March 2021, Lo shocked fans when she revealed on Instagram that she had secretly suffered a traumatic brain injury in an accident two years prior.
MTV
Brody Jenner
His original stint on The Hills saw him juggling purported romances with both Lauren and Kristin and set the tone for the interest in his love life that would continue even after he stepped off camera to lean into his work as a DJ. (His 2015 E! series Sex With Brody may not have helped things.) Though it appeared he’d found his forever when he wed now-Hills costar Kaitlynn Carter in a 2018 Indonesian ceremony, the two ended their romance in 2019. He’s gone on to date TikTok star Daisy Keech, model Josie Canseco and Briana Jungwirth—Louis Tomlinson‘s ex.
MTV; Shutterstock
Audrina Patridge
A reality TV pro at this point, Lauren and Heidi’s camera-ready neighbor followed up her Hills gig with a 2010 spin through the Dancing With the Stars ballroom, her own VH1 series, Audrina and a short-lived hosting stint on NBC’s traveling series 1st Look. Now back on MTV with Speidi, Brody, et. al, she also dove into the world of designing with her Prey Swim line. And while she’s dated after her messy divorce from BMX biker Corey Bohan, revisiting an old romance with Ryan Cabrera and sharing an entirely unsuccessful dinner date with Justin Bobby Brescia, her number one these days is daughter Kirra Max Bohan.
MTV; Getty Images
Whitney Port
The girl who did go to Paris (except, not really, as she revealed to Vogue) enjoyed a brief stint in The City in 2008 before heading back to Los Angeles, with future husband Tim Rosenman, an associate producer on her NYC-based spinoff, in tow. A judge on the eighth cycle of Britain & Ireland’s Next Top Model, she now juggles her Love, Whit line with Rent the Runway and With Whit podcast alongside her return to The Hills and her son Sonny Sanford Rosenman.
MTV; Getty Images
Stephen Colletti
When he’s not giving us new material for our LC-Kristen-Stephen love triangle fan fic, Laguna’s resident heartthrob is focused on building a pretty solid acting career. He was a recurring castmember on the CW’s One Tree Hill for five seasons and starred as Taylor Swift‘s love interest in her “White Horse” music video. He also had a temporary gig as an MTV VJ on Total Request Live (the original, not the reboot). In 2018m he appeared in the TV movie Hometown Christmas. In January 2021, he and OTH co-star James Lafferty debuted a Hulu series, Everyone Is Doing Great.
MTV; Twitter
Jessica Smith
KCav’s Laguna Beach pal has largely stayed away from reality television after her run on the MTV show ended. Following a brief return to notoriety, thanks to a 2007 DUI arrest, she settled into a quiet life in Texas with her husband, Michael Evans, “the most kind, patient, strong, amazing, loving and ridiculously handsome human I’ve ever met,” as she put it on Instagram, and their four children. Though she has her own blog and Amazon shop, mostly, she jokes on Insta, she’s “just trying not to lose a kid.”
Evan Agostini/Getty Images, Rob Kim/Getty Images for Buzzfeed News
Jason Wahler
The resident bad boy of Laguna Beach and The Hills ran into nothing but trouble after his time on the reality series: drugs, DUIs, fights, arrests…you name it. It wasn’t until he appeared on Celebrity Rehab with Dr. Drew Pinksy that he finally cleaned up. Wahler went on to marry girlfriend Ashley Slack, a relationship he claims is his first sober one, and he and “the most beautiful, loving, kind and caring woman I know” welcomed daughter Delilah Ray in August 2017. In February 2021, the couple revealed they are expecting their second child.
The founder and owner of Widespread Recovery, he continues to be open about his struggles, both on The Hills: New Beginnings and his YouTube series, JAWS Diaries with Jason & Ashley Wahler.
Tommaso Boddi/Getty Images for iHeartMedia, ANDREAS BRANCH/Patrick McMullan via Getty Imagess
Stephanie Pratt
Originally brought in to face off with Lauren, she befriended her instead, leading to seemingly unending drama between Stephanie and brother Spencer. Following years across the pond appearing on UK reality fare such as Celebrity Big Brother and Made in Chelsea—and one 2015 memoir detailing her struggles with bulimia, crystal meth and staying out of trouble—she headed home to The Hills….to resume stirring up drama. After a scathing takedown of her castmates (she labeled sister-in-law Heidi “evil” and Audrina “crazy”), Stephanie announced she won’t be returning for season two.
MTV; Casey’s Cupcakes
Casey Reinhardt
Though she wasn’t an original castmember of Laguna Beach, her arrival to the reality series was a memorable one. Since then, Casey launched a successful foray into the world of confections by opening Casey’s Cupcakes in Orange County. She even won Food Network’s Cupcake Wars in 2011. Her home life, meanwhile, is just as sweet. Wed to Sean Brown (a relative of the late Nicole Brown Simpson) since August 2015, they share daughter Kensington Kelly Brown and son Sean Brown Jr.
Stephen Shugerman for Getty Images, Dieter Schmitz/Instagram
Dieter Schmitz
Lauren and Stephen’s bestie left the Beach behind for his future in hospitality and hotel management, moving first to New York and, in 2019, to Washington, D.C. where he works as general manager of the Lore Group, leading the February opening of Riggs Washington DC. He’s still tight with his high school crew, though, Lauren, “proud groomsman” Stephen, Trey Phillips, and Loren Polster turning out for his 2016 Monterey, Calif. wedding to Isabell Hiebl. The pair welcomed their first child, son Nico Josef Schmitz, in September 2018.
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Empty Talk
Penn Badgley’s Next Project Will Bring You Back to Middle School Awkwardness
Published
56 mins agoon
May 16, 2022
Lukas Gage LOVES Working With Penn Badgley (& Why That Scares Him)
No sleuthing needed to step into your middle school shoes.
Earlier this month, Penn Badgley announced a new podcast, and now it’s almost here. He shared in a tweet on May 16 that Podcrushed will be out May 18, and he’ll be the one narrating listener-submitted stories from everyone’s most awkward stage in life: middle school.
“Coming-of-age stories from that crushing time we call middle-school in the US (11-14ish),” he wrote in the tweet. “I narrate stories submitted by you & interview guests with my two co-hosts who are chill former teachers.”
What does Penn know about middle school? Well, nothing. The You star admitted in a teaser he posted May 16 that he is a “middle school dropout.” Instead, he spent his pre-teen life taking on Hollywood. Penn will be accompanied by Nava Kavelin, a former middle school director, and Sophie Ansari, a former fifth grade teacher, for the weekly podcast with SiriusXM’s Stitcher.
The 35-year-old actor will narrate embarrassing, sad and shocking middle school stories.
“The butterflies in my stomach are turning into, I don’t know,” Penn narrated in the teaser. “But suddenly I feel hot and wet and… No, no, no, no, no. Am I peeing?”
In a joint statement from the three hosts, they wrote, “Podcrushed began as a way to dig into people’s most awkward and funny moments in middle school, in order to highlight the universality of getting crushed in some way.”
Michael Loccisano/Getty Images
“But as stories started rolling in from all over the world, the humanity of it all floored us—there weren’t only stories of heartbreak, humiliation and delicious comeuppance, but also stories exploring confusion, identity, and loss,” they continued. “What the show makes clear is that these experiences unite us all, and we can’t wait for you to hear it.”
The podcast also has its own lineup of celebrity guests, including Amy Schumer, Andy Grammer, Ayo Edebiri, Drew Barrymore, Jenna Ortega and more.
Penn added in the teaser, “They’re all mega-listenable because the guests we bring along, they’re mostly my friends, let’s be real.”
Podcrushed will be available to listen May 18 wherever you get your podcasts.
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