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Paris Hilton is GLAMOUR’s February cover star

[ Written on February 23 2023 by karina ]

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Paris Hilton is standing next to me wearing a black Alice + Olivia pleated mini skirt and top with an embroidered collar, Louboutin boots with pearl studded heels, black Prada bucket hat, sunglasses and phone case around her neck, leaving voice notes for her Uber driver. He’s mistakenly arrived at The Beverly Hilton hotel to collect her, as opposed to the Waldorf Astoria, where we’ve just spent the afternoon together. As far as I can tell, the Uber driver has no clue that the passenger issuing him directions is, in fact, the most famous member of the Hilton hotel dynasty. It’s the voice; several octanes deeper when off-duty, compared to Paris Hilton’s ‘on duty’ soft, coquettish, baby voice. It’s quite extraordinary to witness this vocal dichotomy IRL.

I tell Paris I’m surprised that there’s no chauffeur waiting, delivering one of her fleet of supercars (including a Barbie pink Bentley and an iridescent holographic BMW i8 Roadster with butterfly wings.) “Oh, I don’t drive those very often,” she replies (in the deep voice). “Getting an Uber is much easier.”

Paris’s low-key mode of transport is a surprise, for sure. But it is just one of the many, much more significant and startling things that I discover during my two hours with the 42-year-old world-famous icon of pop culture. Afterwards, I think how incredibly unbridled and honest Paris was, opening up for the first time about many dark elements of her past. But then the following week, I discover – along with the rest of the world – that she was keeping a massive, life-changing secret, more on which later.

Many of us grew up with Paris on our screens, but for those who think they know Paris Hilton, the forthcoming publication of Paris The Memoir on March 14 is about to blow everything out the water. It’s one of the best celebrity biographies I’ve ever read; the revelations within it are shocking, moving and deeply personal.

Paris opens up for the first time about her experiences of sexual assault and abuse, including being groomed by one of her teachers and a narrow escape from an aggressive encounter with Harvey Weinstein. It really does offer a different context to her life and past behaviours.

It also reveals Paris as funny, self-aware and surprisingly profound, while offering a fascinating insight into celebrity culture, which she has undoubtedly helped define for the last two decades.

Paris Whitney Hilton was born in New York City on February 17, 1981, the first child of property developer Rick and former child actress Kathy, and the great-granddaughter of legendary hotel magnate Conrad Hilton. Her childhood was one of extraordinary privilege as she and her three siblings – sister Nicky and brothers Barron and Conrad – divided their time between Bel Air and Park Avenue. When Paris was growing up, she wanted to be a vet and was a tomboy who had a collection of pet ferrets and a goat. “I didn’t even like pink”, she tells me.

As the woman whose name became universal shorthand for blonde, spoiled and rich in the early noughties, thanks to her hit reality TV show The Simple Life – which spawned the omnipotent cult of reality TV (never forget Kim Kardashian was once Paris’s assistant) and whose ‘That’s hot’ catchphrase is as famous as she was for being a “hot mess” in her twenties – it may be surprising to hear that Paris’s book tells a different story: one of female empowerment and survival.

“I’m not a dumb blonde, I’m just very good at pretending to be one,” she tells me. “The real me is someone who is strong and resilient, brave, smart and fun.”

A dark, secret past
Paris arrives for our interview entirely on her own, bar Ether, her miniature white Pomeranian, who is literally the size of a guinea pig. She’s giving Cher from Clueless meets Audrey Hepburn vibes and it’s easy to see why she’s become a Y2K fashion icon to Gen-Z on TikTok – and why Donatella Versace chose her to close her show in Milan at Fashion Week last September.

In the Diptyque-scented serenity of the white marbled lobby, the only thing belying the fact that this tall, willowy blonde is indeed Paris Hilton, is her bubblegum-pink dog carrier – emblazoned with her catchphrase, ‘Loves It’ – from her luxury pet accessories range. (Yours, or rather your pooch’s, for just $750.)

Paris admits she is nervous about the interview, and her hands are visibly shaking as she struggles to get the key card to work in the elevator. Other guests are starting to twig and selfies are rapidly requested, to which the woman who invented the selfie, politely obliges (cue on-duty baby voice.)

We arrive in a suite high above Beverly Hills and the room is filled with pink roses, Diet Coke, herbal teas, bowls of crisps and a plate of peanut butter and jelly sandwiches, cut into circles, no crusts. “I just love kids’ food,” she says, peeling back one of the sandwiches to layer on more jelly as she settles on the sofa next to me, Ether in between us.

Full interview: glamourmagazine.co.uk

Bretman Rock On Co-Star Paris Hilton for Klarna’s Y2K-Inspired Campaign, Hollywood Ambitions

[ Written on February 19 2023 by karina ]

Bretman Rock co-stars with Paris Hilton in a new Y2K-inspired Klarna campaign — and he’s eyeing roles on even bigger screens.

“I’m tired of being on everybody’s phone, so I think it’s time to get Bretman Rock a movie,” the 24-year-old Philippines-born, Honolulu-based social media star tells The Hollywood Reporter. He’s set to release his first book, You’re That Bitch, on Feb. 14.

The content creator — who is represented by UTA and boasts a combined 51 million followers across YouTube, Instagram, TikTok, Twitter and Snapchat — and Hilton highlight the retail platform’s flexible payment options and other shopping features in two whimsical videos helmed by music video director Tanu Muino (who has worked with Harry Styles, Cardi B, Lizzo, Lil Nas X and others). The short films and stills will officially debut Feb. 27 on Hilton and Rock’s social media accounts and across digital, broadcast and OOH advertising platforms.

In the videos, Hilton wears a bead- and fringe-embellished emerald green velvet tracksuit, nodding to her blingy aughts-era Juicy Couture uniform. The duo also filmed a cheeky behind-the-scenes “hot or not”-style game examining which 2000s trends are “smooth or not smooth.” (Watch the video and ad campaigns below.)

Rock (née Bretman Rock Sacayanan Laforga) is a global ambassador for Klarna, which released a Y2K fashion and shopping trends report to celebrate its 2000s-inspired campaign. Among the findings: 27 percent of survey respondents were “nostalgic for indoor malls and shopping centers,” nearly half said that Y2K fashion is better than today’s styles and more than half want “fashion-forward sweatsuits and loungewear” should return.

“One thing that I really like about Klarna — and I’m only saying this because we recently just used it because I’m going to the Philippines soon — is that they will tell you everything about your purchase,” Rock adds. “And being the environmentally-friendly bitch that I am, I like how they’re very aware of airline and hotel emissions. It was just like really interesting when I got the invoice, it also said, this is how much you’re burning, bitch.”

Sitting in a midcentury-inspired ball chair in his bedroom (which he once described as an “alien superstar sex dungeon“) at his home in Hawaii, Rock recently caught up with THR over Zoom before jetting off to the Super Bowl, which he’ll attend with Fenty Beauty to watch its superstar founder perform at the Apple Music Halftime Show.

“It’s my first Super Bowl ever. I don’t even know who the fuck is playing this year,” he jokes. “I think the question is, what are my Rihanna plans this year? What I’ve been thinking about a lot is what is she going to sing, what is she open up with?”

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=y0kQYZTMCOw

Source: hollywoodreporter.com

Paris Hilton Is Dropping the Act

[ Written on February 19 2023 by karina ]

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On the day her son was born, Paris Hilton put on a brunette wig and a hoodie and checked into a hospital under a different name. Her platinum-blond hair is one of her many calling cards, and it felt imperative that she go unnoticed. Her baby’s impending existence was, at that point, a secret to the rest of the world, known only to Hilton, her husband, Carter Reum, and their surrogate. Even their immediate families would not find out until just before she announced his arrival on Instagram.

“My entire life has been so public,” Hilton says over the phone in late January, hovering outside of the baby’s nursery and speaking quietly while he naps. “I’ve never had anything for myself. We decided that we wanted to have this whole experience to ourselves.”

Once he’d been cleared to leave the hospital, she and Reum brought their son home, to the house they recently bought in Beverly Hills. For two full days, they were truly alone (they’d told their staff the house was being painted), enjoying the relative quiet of life with a newborn—getting used to his sleeping and feeding schedules and singing him lullabies. (Hilton was partial to “Twinkle, Twinkle, Little Star” as well as her 2006 hit, “Stars Are Blind.” “The acoustic version,” she clarifies.) Then, when it seemed like the news was about to come out on its own, they broke the spell and announced they’d become parents.

Even with a surrogate, a pregnancy is a big secret to keep. But Hilton is used to keeping parts of her life hidden. In the 2020 documentary This Is Paris, she came forward for the first time about the abuse she suffered in her adolescence, after her parents, Rick and Kathy Hilton, shipped her off to a series of boarding schools that promised to reform troubled teens. She has since become a prominent advocate for shutting down the so-called troubled-teen industry; in 2021, she supported a bill to further regulate the schools in Utah, and she is now pushing for federal reform.

It was the start of a transformative three years for Hilton. The entrepreneur, reality-television star, DJ, performer, perfumer, model, and socialite helped invent a certain kind of vacuous fame in the early aughts, when she was mostly famous for her last name, going to parties, being hot, and saying “That’s hot,” but at 42, the endlessly iterative star has traded playing Paris qua Paris for a more authentic, transparent version of herself. Her memoir, Paris: The Memoir, out this month, puts Hilton squarely in charge of her own cultural recontextualization—“How do we not see that the treatment of It Girls translates to the treatment of all girls in our culture?” she writes at one point, sounding Elle Woodsian—and plunges into darker, shocking details from her high school years. It’s the final step in her unburdening and all of the attendant change that has come with it, including marriage, motherhood, and a fundamental shift in her priorities. “Advocacy,” she writes in Paris, “saved my life.”

Hilton’s own childhood ended abruptly, violently. One could understand why she’d want to ensure her son’s welcome into this world felt sacred and safe. “I want to protect him and to be with him every second,” she says. “You have this mother instinct that kicks in, which I’ve never had before. I feel so complete now.”

It’s well documented that Hilton has two distinct voices. One is her regular, private speaking voice, which is low toned and almost sonorous; the other is the voice she uses for the public-facing character of Paris Hilton, which is higher pitched and coquettish, the real-life Valley Girl standard. In a mid-2000s clip that went viral on TikTok, where Hilton has flourished thanks to a new Gen Z fan base, Hilton bellows to the driver of a waiting car to wait “two minutes.” When an awaiting paparazzo asks how she’s doing, she transforms midstep: “Goooood,” she purrs.

In Paris, Hilton describes the character as “my steel-plated armor,” a “dumb blonde with a sweet but sassy edge”: “I made sure I never had a quiet moment to figure out who I was without her. I was afraid of that moment because I didn’t know what I’d find.” Dropping the act would mean navigating, and overseeing, yet another public reconstruction of herself.

Full interview: harpersbazaar.com

Paris Hilton Explained Her Bimbo Persona On Meghan Markle’s Podcast

[ Written on October 19 2022 by karina ]

Meghan Markle invited Paris Hilton onto her podcast, Archetypes, to discuss being labeled as a “bimbo” and “dumb blonde.” During the show — which breakdowns harmful stereotypes thrown at women — the two media moguls discussed Hilton’s traumatizing boarding school experience and how that led to the Barbie-like persona she’s known for.

At the beginning of the interview, they discussed how tabloids often referred to Hilton as a “dumb blonde” due to her privileged upbringing and appearance. “Was there ever a moment where you heard it so much that you just had to buy into it and say, ‘Welp, I guess that’s what I am?’” Markle asked. “Or did you even get a chance to decide?” After a momentary pause, Hilton explained that she never was that person. The “bimbo” that Hilton portrayed was a fake persona she developed while attending an abusive boarding school.

“When I was 16 my parents sent me away to these places called emotional growth boarding schools,” she said. According to the hotel heiress, her parents believed they were sending her to a “normal” behavioral intuition to correct her rebellious behavior. However, as shown in the documentary This Is Paris, they abused the children in their care. “Some of the places I went to have been shut down because of the horrible things that have been happening,” Hilton said to Markle. “Deaths and all types of abuse are happening at these schools.” As Hilton spoke about her experience, she initially struggled to recount the details and said, “Sorry, I get a little emotional when I think about it.” “It was all about breaking you down,” she continued. “[They would say] ‘you’re worthless, no one loves you, you’re going to be nothing in life.’ They would just do that to us all day long. It was very painful.”

Hilton said she was under the impression that the facility would be more of an escape, where she could ride horses and reflect on her life thus far. The reality, she said, “took away my childhood.” Hilton further expressed being forced to do a strip search in front of strangers upon arrival, and noticing that the other enrolled children were like “zombies.”

“The only thing that kept me going in there was thinking about who I wanted to be and who I wanted to become when I got out of there,” she said. “In there I started, kind of, building this sort of fantasy life, and Barbie doll character, I guess, just to not think about the pain.” As Hilton then explained, Barbie was the ideal fantasy because she was “beautiful” and “always happy.”

After Hilton left the facility she was asked to star in The Simple Life with Nicole Richie. The reality show — which became a cultural phenomenon — sent both celebrities across the country to work on a farm. While on the show, Hilton channeled the Barbie character and eventually became her brand. “During that time it was encouraged, almost,” she said. “It was like cute to be dumb and bubbly and that kind of like ‘blonde’ thing. I look at it now and I think it’s so much cooler to be smart and intelligent, but back then it was like they wanted girls to be like that in some way.”

Though Hilton was able to commodify the stereotype and use the public misconceptions to her advantage, she said it was difficult to break out of. “I almost got, like, stuck and lost in the character,” she said. “At some points, it was like, lines got blurred. It’s like I forgot who I was.”

As she grew more famous, the persona became a barrier between her and the media, which she described as “vicious” and “cruel.” Markle asked if the character was a defense mechanism and Hilton agreed. “They’re not talking about me, they’re talking about this character I created,” she explained.

These days, Hilton does not identify with the character at all. “It wasn’t a good feeling for people to think of me in a way that I wasn’t,” she said. “I’m thinking of having my daughter one day and what I want her to be like and I don’t want her to think it’s cool to be a dumb blonde, or dumb herself down for society, or anything like that. I want her to feel free to be whoever she wants to be and to feel strong and brave and not let the world take that away from her.”

Source: nylon.com

Paris Hilton Takes World Of Fashion 2022 By Storm At The Bazaar Closet

[ Written on October 18 2022 by karina ]

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Paris Hilton is painting Dubai #Bazaarcore pink as she made an appearance at the World of Fashion 2022 at Mall of the Emirates today.

The heiress-turned-entrepreneur and fragrance mogul paid a visit to the BAZAAR Closet, taking a tour of the pop-up — located in the Central Galleria — and exploring the exclusive range of items curated by Bazaar Arabia‘s fashion team.

Earlier that day, she did a meet-and-greet with fans at Debenhams Middle East as part of a promotional tour for her new fragrance, Ruby Rush; naturally, the perfumes adorned the walls of the Bazaar Closet and Paris couldn’t resist spritzing herself with the delicious scents whilst shopping.

Walking around the closet with Harper’s Bazaar Arabia’s Editor in Chief, Olivia Phillips, Paris couldn’t stop herself from trying on a few outfits — and changing into something a little more #Bazaarcore. She walked in wearing a red dress, complete with matching gloves, and left donning a bright pink printed dress by Philosophy in the shade of the season: pink.

“This is so amazing,” Paris says, noting how the entryway — which was holographic — reminded her of her car. “So sick. Walking around all the pink it reminds me of my closet.”

Paris isn’t the only celebrity who will be making an appearance this week at the closet; Egyptian actress Yasmine Sabri was also spotted earlier that day, as she opened World of Fashion 2022 and Cynthia Samuel, Nour AlGhandour, Renee Farah, Eleen Suliman and others notable personalities will also be making an appearance throughout the week.

World of Fashion this year is bigger, better and bolder, as Harper’s Bazaar Arabia joins forces with Mall Of The Emirates, bringing the BAZAAR Closet to the Central Galleria for a week of celebrity appearances, talks with industry insiders and much more. From styling sessions to bespoke shopping services, get ready to experience the World of Bazaar like never before, from Tuesday, Oct 18 to Sunday, Oct 23.

Source: harpersbazaararabia.com

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