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Showing posts with label Kelly Cutrone. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kelly Cutrone. Show all posts

Allie Crandell Banned From Fashion Web Site

http://i.dailymail.co.uk/i/pix/2010/12/23/article-0-0C91FC09000005DC-48_468x669.jpgAllie Crandell has been told she can no longer model for fashion retail Web site Revolve until she puts on weight.

After Crandell appeared on the site modelling clothes by BCBG Max Azria, complaints poured in. "As a normal, healthy woman with a healthy body type," wrote one shopper, "how can I possibly imagine what this dress would look like on me when it is shown on an emaciated frame?"

Crandell's arms look bony and sinewy in the pictures, and her waist is impossibly small.

Revolve said they won't feature Crandell until she gains weight. The site issued a statement saying, "We are working closely with both the model and her agent to get her to a healthier size. She won't be appearing in any of our new product batches or in any of our fashion editorial photos moving forward until the issue is adequately addressed. We have been attempting to respect the privacy of the model in question while dealing with the issue on our end."

The painfully thin model also appeared on MTV reality show "The City," a spin-off of "The Hills," in which Whitney Port works for fashion designer Diane von Furstenburg and a PR company. Fashion publicist Kelly Cutrone told Crandell she was too thin, and Crandell claimed she ate healthily.

It does appear that Crandell is unhealthily underweight - her head looks too large for her body, and her arms are like sticks. If this really is the state of her body when she eats normally, perhaps she should try eating a diet that's richer in healthy fats and protein, just to put on a few more pounds. The commenter above was right - it's impossible for a normal-sized woman to see what a dress will look like on her when someone so thin is modelling it. And it almost goes without saying that featuring such an emaciated model means promoting distorted body images for women.

Whitney Port Is Sad That "The City" Is Over

http://img2.timeinc.net/people/i/2009/features/tvblog/090119/whitney_port.jpgFirst The Hills ended, and now The City.

The MTV reality show, which followed California Girl Whitney Port as she broke into world of New York's fashion industry, won't be back for a third season, its star confirms.

"It's always sad when one major chapter in your life comes to a close, but for me, this is the beginning of an entirely new one," Whitney wrote on her official blog. "I loved filming The City. It was just such an adventure and I'm so grateful for every opportunity it gave me."

The show, which was a spin-off of The Hills (itself a spin-off of Laguna Beach), also starred Olivia Palermo as Whitney's fashionable nemesis, Roxy Olin as a friend and roommate and People's Revolution's Kelly Cutrone as her no-nonsense mentor in the fashion PR world, among others.

Unlike The Hills, which came to a close with an elaborate series finale, fans of The City will have to settle with the season 2 finale, which had Whitney facing Kelly after taking a meeting with a competing PR firm.

"I'm so excited for whatever is next for me," Port's blog continues. "There are definitely a few things in the works, but right now I'm primarily focusing on my clothing line Whitney Eve. After all, it is my baby. I'm just so happy to be back home, I can finally spend unlimited time with those I love." 

Credit: People

'The Hills' Was 'Not Scripted,' Kelly Cutrone Says



Was it real or fake? That's the question many fans seem to be considering since credits rolled on "The Hills" for the last time on Tuesday night. The show's creator, Adam DiVello, revealed on Thursday (July 15) that the final moment between Brody and Kristin was staged. But a onetime castmember of the hit reality series, PR maven Kelly Cutrone — now on MTV's "The City" — insists that everything else on the show is for real.

"Well, not really, because the show's not scripted," Cutrone told MTV News when asked whether fans should now re-think the show given the finale episode. "It's just not. I've been on the show, it's not scripted. I think it's a whole piss-take on everybody going, 'Is the show scripted? Is it not scripted?' "

Plus, Cutrone said, it was the best possible way to end a show that is, in fact, a reality show.

"I mean the show's got to end somehow, and if the show's based in reality, how do you end something that's real? I mean, what do you do? So the whole [thing] was a flip," she concluded. "I thought it was funny that it ended with Brody!"

Credit: MTV