Every time a generation of Kardashian/Jenner baby is born, there’s a semi-exciting wait to find out exactly where the new baby’s name will be placed on the level of ingenuity.
someone bit their tongue when Kim’s first daughter was named North West. Reign, Saint, Dream, Chicago, True, Stormi and Psalm appear in rapid succession. Last year, Kylie gave birth to her second child, younger brother Stormi. He was named Wolf Jacques. So far, looking forward to…
However, six weeks later, Kylie announced that she regretted the baby’s name. The name Wolf didn’t seem to suit her son so she decided to change it. With a few weeks to go until the boy’s second birthday, Kylie Jenner has yet to make her son’s new name public.
Unless Kylie is waiting for a more opportune / lucrative time to make the announcement to an army of overzealous fans, this is the rarest practice for the Kardashians.
After all, they are the family that has devoted every little detail of their private lives to the public. Privacy has never been a food group for them.
Not sure what to call Kylie’s son, the press simply referred to her second child as ‘Technically still called Wolf’ or ‘The baby formerly known as Wolf’. Paradoxically, the child without a name gets more attention than the Kardashian kids whose names are announced from the highest point of Calabasas Peak.
More and more celebrities are deciding to keep their children’s names, and sometimes their pregnant names, out of the spotlight.
Alicia Vikander and Michael Fassbender revealed they only welcomed their son when he was a few months old. In an open letter to the press last year, model Gigi Hadid asked photographers not to take pictures of her infant daughter.
She wrote: “For a child, I can imagine that the frenzied or dramatic paparazzi hunts must have been overwhelming and disorienting… he is still an adult who understands and deal with it regularly.
Earlier this year, Grimes and Elon Musk secretly welcomed their daughter Exa Dark but only after a while Vanity Fair The reporter heard the baby cry during an interview. Grimes went on to tell the reporter: “I have no right to talk about these things… whatever is going on with the housework, I just feel like the kids need to stay away from it.”
She has a point, you know. While adults freely dedicate themselves and their lives to the public for enjoyment/speculation/criticism, their children rarely consent to encroachment on their lives.
Once upon a time, the merry dance between celebrities and the media went something like this: once a person became famous, a kind of Faustian pact was created, whereby the celebrity made aspects of their private lives that are popular with the public, often to keep their profile up to date or to promote a product.
However, the fine line in the sand about how much is too much when it comes to the privacy of celebrity children is another conversation altogether.
Kylie Jenner’s decision to pull back and keep her son’s life more private is admirable, though it may have been a case of too little, too late.
She owes us nothing, but from a family that has built a multi-billion dollar empire by making every moment of their innermost lives public, we are so used to seeing Access to what we want to know about them, when we want. Think horses, doors and latches.
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Adele was shocked by a fan-filtered video of her. Photo: Peter Cziborra
Adele was shocked by a fan-filtered video of her. Photo: Peter Cziborra
Adele’s Unfiltered Reality Check
After her epic performance in Vegas, Adele proved that even she has her limits when it comes to dazzling special effects.
After a winning performance that saw Adele manage to make a dramatic disappearance on stage, she strolled among the crowd after the show.
Chatting with a female audience member filming the show on her phone, Adele was pretty intimidated by the fan-heavy video filter (and to be fair, the force was strong in this particular case). this).
Looking at her almost alien figure and flawless skin on her phone, Adele winced in shock and exclaimed: “What have you done to my face? Why do you have such filter? We don’t look like that, honey.”
Seemingly inadvertently, she said what most people feel about over-filtered selfies and videos in a fixed five seconds. That’s the call we need to hear.
I fully support people who use whatever effects and filters they want, once they understand that underneath it all, they really don’t look like that, honey. Because for many young, impressionable women, that particular truth – no one looks like this – is often lost.
It will always take someone like Adele to break the craze and point out positive filtering, and it’s a pity that many ideals don’t or won’t.
Some news I can agree with
After 42 years with RTÉ, newsreader Eileen Dunne called it a day and documented the secret to her marriage’s success in a breakup interview.
Married for nearly 30 years, Dunne and her husband, actor Macdara Ó Fátharta, have one rule that keeps their marriage strong, which is to give each other space.
It reminds me of someone who said that the secret to a happy marriage is a separate bed and separate TV. As a proponent of bed-sharing – or rather, co-sleeping but occasionally sneaking into a spare bed for a good night’s sleep – I can totally agree.
https://www.independent.ie/opinion/comment/kylie-jenner-has-every-right-to-keep-her-sons-name-quiet-but-isnt-it-a-bit-late-for-the-kardashians-to-start-being-private-42186801.html Kylie Jenner has the right to keep her son’s name private, but isn’t it a bit late for the Kardashians to start keeping things private?
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