Birkenstock Super-Birki Shoe
Birkenstock is, and always will be, the first name in the clog game, and for good reason. If you stopped scrolling now you'd still be set. Birkenstock Boston Soft Footbed Shoe
And when it comes to Birks, don't overlook the classic, the icon, the infallible Boston clog with suede leather.
Oofos OOcloog
These were built with post-workout recovery in mind, but they'll still make your feet happy even if your entire "
Where to Buy: Williams Sonoma, Amazon, Sur La Table, Walmart
Price Range: $ to $$
Editor's Choice: The Upgraded Lodge Cast Iron Skillet With More Character
Down South, Lodge cookware is in everyone's kitchen, and a lot of it is handed down from great or great-great-grandparents. A cast iron skillet or dutch oven is also a traditional newlywed gift, because it's supposed to symbolize how long your marriage will last: forever.
Book of EliThe angle? Thirty years after things have gone fully dystopia. Eli (Denzel Washington) marches along as the world has turned into a landscape of dark nothingness, and while he prefers to keep things peaceful, he's also not afraid to fight. Oh, and he's blind. There are furless cats, chainsaw fights, and Mila Kunis.
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I Am LegendWill Smith's turn in I Am Legend is a particularly powerful one, actually.
Bonobos, known for creating luxury suits, trousers, denim, and shorts, has mastered the laidback linen pant. Made out of a cotton, linen, and spandex blend, they're breathable, crafted with a button closure on the waist, and can easily be paired with just about anything you already own in your closet. Our testers noticed how this option felt more lightweight when compared to the others, and the perfectly hemmed bottoms gave them an overall modern and sleek vibe.
Gold Diggers of 1933 (1933)Even if the name Busby Berkeley doesn’t ring any bells, you know his impact. It’s right there in the pre-Baby Ruth water ballet in Caddyshack and the Dude’s bowling-pin fever-dream sequence in The Big Lebowski. Berkeley turned musicals into lavishly choreographed eye-candy with a hint of pre-Code kink. Gold Diggers of 1933 is spiciest celluloid fantasia and it was just the balm that Depression-era audiences needed. The blowsy Joan Blondell is unforgettable and a cash-hungry Ginger Rogers memorably belts out “We’re in the Money.