While most students are officially on summer break, I've just started another quarter of grad school. Between classes and work, I’ll sleep when I’m hooded. And while I'm not juggling it all in heels like Trinity Rodman, I am doing my best to keep up. Maybe it's no coincidence that stories of endurance have caught my eye lately. I've become invested in Kelsey Pfendler's attempt to become the first American woman and youngest female to row from California to Hawaii solo, and her rapidly dwindling coffee supply. I'm also still trying to wrap my head around Kate Middleton climbing three mountains in three UK countries in less than 24 hours (especially with conditions that looked less than ideal). And with the World Cup knockout stage now underway, I also found myself Googling how many miles players could log if they make it all the way to the final. Suddenly, my calendar doesn't seem quite so intimidating. Now, let's get to the rest of the headlines…
— Jordan Galloway / Editor / Katonah, NY
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Fashion Takes Center Court at Wimbledon
What's going on: Maybe it’s all the white, but is this year’s Wimbledon feeling vaguely… bridal to anyone else? The ever-closer marriage of fashion and sports means athletes often serve looks on their way to competitions, but Naomi Osaka just entered a league of her own. The No. 14 seed glided onto the Wimbledon grass on Monday looking almost regal, wrapped in flowing, white kimono-inspired attire made from vintage Japanese wedding garments. She told reporters the look was a nod to Lucy Liu's Kill Bill character (not a woman you want to cross). Osaka set the tone for what "tennis whites" could mean, and several men's and women's players have tried to keep up. Taylor Fritz (or should we say, Fits) rebranded business casual when he wore an all-white suit — complete with tearaway pants — to his first-round match. Meanwhile, Marta Kostyuk took a more personal approach, wearing a new version of a tennis dress inspired by the wedding gown she codesigned with Wilson in 2023. Aces all around.
Our take: On paper, Wimbledon shouldn't be tennis's biggest fashion stage. The All England Club signs off on every outfit players plan to wear a year in advance and dictates nearly every detail, Sunita Kumar Nair, who literally wrote the book on tennis style, told theSkimm. It’s spent more than a century treating white attire as a symbol of tradition and uniformity. Even seemingly small changes — like permitting shorter hemlines in the early 1900s or finally allowing women to wear dark undershorts in 2023 — have sparked debate. That's exactly what makes this moment so remarkable. Kumar Nair says that today's players increasingly see their walk-on outfits and court attire as chances to express their personality, confidence, and flair. She adds that designers now "relish the challenge" to create something memorable within Wimbledon's famously rigid rules: “From Lacoste’s jacket for Novak [Djokovic], to Coco [Gauff]’s Miu Miu baby-doll dress, to Naomi with her incredible Japanese traditional look, there is no way that all white is boring.”
⛳ Tom Holland made a bogey with his response to a mental health question on live TV, andZendaya let him know it. Let’s just say he’s not ready to play the newlywed game.