There’s a lot to get excited about when it comes to vegan beauty. If you’re thinking about giving your beauty stash an animal-friendly shake-up, there’s never been a better time.

There’s a lot to get excited about when it comes to vegan beauty. If you’re thinking about giving your beauty stash an animal-friendly shake-up, there’s never been a better time.
What Twitter is today is not necessarily the best or most useful version of what is possible for users moving forward. The more fascinating outcome of Musk’s acquisition, and a potential exodus of users, is how it might give rise to the next iteration of the social internet somewhere else.
The inevitably of Twitter’s end should not be cause for despair—there is excitement in what awaits us on the other side, in what comes next. That, for me, has always been the addictive charm of the social internet: that we continually find new ways to interact, create, be. That no matter what, we never stagnate.
One of the many things inherent in the digital age—and especially on social media, where the tinkering and retooling of relationships is a constant—is the certainty of impermanence, the assurance of the ephemeral. Things are here and then, in a spectacular flash, they are not.
At a time when trust is fractured and attention is the most coveted currency in marketing, one message echoed powerfully across the stage at Converge @ Cannes: the future belongs to those who build with creators, not merely around them.
Corporate America is at a crossroads. In recent months, household names such as Citi, Pepsi, Nissan, PwC, Anheuser-Busch, and Comcast have quietly stepped back from Pride activations, scaling down sponsorships, pulling out of parades, and rethinking long-supported campaigns in cities like New York and San Francisco.
The LGBTQ+ community represents $4.7 trillion in annual global spending power, and more than 23% of GenZ identifies as LGBTQ+. And yet, in addition to struggling to connect with this powerful market, many brands are abandoning it altogether in today’s climate.
Coming up with the best Christmas gifts seems to be getting trickier every year. It can’t be just us. We’re almost paralysed by choice – and even when we do land on a good idea, we realise we already bought them something similar circa December 2021.
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annabrown
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cmsmasters
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