The stogie-chomping 'Knives Out'/'Glass Onion' detective subverts the typical cigar smoker archetype in the most refreshing way.
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The stogie-chomping 'Knives Out'/'Glass Onion' detective subverts the typical cigar smoker archetype in the most refreshing way.
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Before our current pandemic turned life upside down, I had spent the winter joking with friends that I was ready to become a Wine Guy. And by Wine Guy, I meant: to possess the confidence and vocabulary to tell a trained professional what I like to drink, rather than relying on adjectives my parents threw around at Olive Garden in the ’90s. So I started listening. Mostly to my partner, who is smarter than me and explains wine in a fun, approachable manner. You should talk to Grant, she said. Grant, it turns out, was Grant Reynolds, an award-winning sommelier and owner of New York City–based wine shop Parcelle and a partner at the restaurants Charlie Bird, Pasquale Jones, and Legacy Records. He cowrote a book, out next month, with the writer Chris Stang, very conveniently titled How to Drink Wine: The Easiest Way to Learn What You Like. I tore through the book. It offered very actionable tips, like “Ultimately sniffing is just smelling” and “Body is how the wine feels in your mouth.” As I got more into wine, I realized it was less about '80s American Psycho excess and more about living within one’s means. For me that’s a nice $24 bottle of Gamay (light, refreshing) to have on the couch at home. Or bringing a $33 bottle of Montepulciano (juicy!) to a friend’s for dinner (whenever we can go to friends for dinner again). Nice wine. Good wine! Nothing hilariously extravagant or ostentatious, and no worrying about soil or rare grapes or vintage.
Use this moment to master the fine art of the naked selfie.
This isn’t news, of course, but nothing in the world makes sense right now—and that goes doubly for pants. Cargo pants have graduated from the frat house to your office. Track pants are now sprinting straight down red carpets. Wiz Khalifa has sworn off skinny jeans, and boot-cuts are threatening to make a comeback. In 2019, if you’re looking to make a statement with your fit, you don’t do it with a slogan tee or a lapel pin—you do it with your trousers. Baggy, cropped, carpenter, whatever your heart desires. We’re living in the Golden Age of Bottoms. Everything is in play. Everything, that is, including pleats. Remember those? You probably haven’t seen them since your dowdiest teacher wore a tent-like pair of pleated khakis to AP Bio—and even he eventually switched to flat-fronts by 2003. But now they’re back, far closer to their original Bogart-era sophistication than the aforementioned biology-class fustiness. Pleats are still an unexpected move, the kind of calculated, in-the-know risk that kicks your whole style up a notch. And as the eight pairs below prove, there’s no one kind of pant that pleats look best on, and there’s no one specific way to wear them. Find the trousers that best suit your wardrobe and lifestyle, tuck everything from tie-dye tees to stark white dress shirts into ’em, and embrace the madness of this fashion moment.
Here's how to pull off cozy footwear when the temperature drops.