EOD Roundup
EOD Roundup: ‘Lean In’, Sheryl Sandberg’s Critics, and Working-Class Women
6:30 pm, March 4th | by Colette McIntyre
In today’s EOD roundup, an interesting piece on how Sheryl Sandberg’s Lean In has (perhaps unintentionally) brought the needs of working-class women to the forefront of major news outlets for the first time in a long time. [The Atlantic]
This list of outlandish ways to ditch a creepy guy at a bar probably would’ve come in handy this weekend, especially if you were me and a dive bar’s bouncer overheard it was your birthday and wouldn’t stop whispering in your ear that he liked his girls “a year older.” (WHEN DID BIRTHDAYS BECOME A FETISH?!) [xoJane]
Ugh. Read this article about how Lindsay Lohan turned down Charlie Sheen’s help and then watch the 1998 version of The Parent Trap followed by Mean Girls and feel pretty terrible about everything. [NY Mag]
“We know that you secretly think you look like Rose Byrne, and that’s why you sometimes “randomly” start conversations about which celebrities people resemble, but no one else agrees and never will.” — One of the “Ten Things You Should Never Say to a Mom.” [The Hairpin]
Nineteen-month-old Harper Seven Beckham’s shoe collection is worth $2,300. Excuse me while I go weep into buckets, drink my tears, and then cry them out again. [Styleite]
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