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| | Khloe Kardashian, like Kim, believes the 1969 moon landing was faked | | Added 74 minutes ago | Source: CeleBitchy |
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 Last month, Kim Kardashian revealed something shocking: she believes the government ?faked? the 1969 moon landing. She spoke about it on The Kardashians (their Hulu show), and she even cited her extensive TikTok research to ?prove? her bullsh-t conspiracy. Well, as it turns out, Kim is not the only Kardashian to believe that the moon landing was faked. Khloe Kardashian believes that as well, and she even claims to be the one who convinced Kim (the blind leading the blind, I swear to god). Khloe also believes in aliens and ghosts, and she will discuss all of that in the new season of her podcast.
Another Kardashian sister also believes the moon landing was faked ? and shes taking the blame for getting Kim Kardashian wrapped up in the conspiracy theory.
I dont believe in the moon landing, Khlo Kardashian tells PEOPLE. Thats very controversial. And I feel bad because I think I riled Kim up about it, and Ive gotten her into a lot of trouble!
Despite experts coming forward and stating that the landing did in fact happen after Kim said it during an episode of The Kardashians, Khlo, 40, cant be swayed.
I dont think it happened, she confirms. I think me and my brother, weve fed her a lot of information. I dont know, I feel bad about that, but Im going to die on this hill!
Khlo says shes into other conspiracy theories too ? but usually keeps them to herself.
I dont expect the government to admit the moon landing was faked, because then if they admit that didnt happen I mean, theres a long list of things you can look into, and some are too scary to talk about publicly because you dont want anyone getting mad at you.
She says she dives into these subjects a little more in the third season of her podcast, Khlo in Wonder Land, which comes out each Wednesday. In one upcoming episode, Khlo gets a reading from Theresa Caputo, the Long Island Medium, whom she loves and also fully believes in.
One of my best friends, his name is Savas, hes actually on the show with me this season, because hes so obnoxiously against anything I believe in, she tells PEOPLE. So he doesnt believe in ghosts. He just thinks that when you die, you die. And aliens, he doesnt believe in them either. Im like, What are you talking about? Those are just facts!
[From People]
Here?s what really bothers me about Khloe and Kim specifically saying this stuff: they are way too old to believe in the sh-t they see on TikTok. And in Kim?s case, she?s way too old to cheat on law exams by using ChatGPT. These women are Millennial elders!! Why the fk are you believing in every bullsh-t conspiracy you see on TikTok? Granted, I don?t think ?believing in ghosts? is some huge deal plenty of people believe in ghosts, and plenty of people think the government has lied about aliens for decades. But the moon landing stuff is just worrisome.
Photos courtesy of Khloe?s IG, Kris Jenner?s IG and Backgrid.
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| | Mail: Princess Kate is bringing back Princess Diana's 'sloane Ranger aesthetic' | | Added 74 minutes ago | Source: CeleBitchy |
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 For decades, British people have been talking about ?Sloane Rangers.? The root of this started with then-Lady Diana Spencer, the daughter of an earl and a young woman living in London with some girlfriends. Diana loved clothes, and in those days, she dressed like many titled, aristocratic young women tweeds, eyelets, jodhpurs, shoulder pads, tartans. The country-girl-in-the-city. The idea is to look like you?re always on your way to or from a horse. Ralph Lauren has been trying to remake this upper-class British look for many years. Well, the Princess of Wales is not a Sloane Ranger. She never was and never will be. But she?s tried, at times, to imitate the look and vibe and failed miserably. But now, magically, the Daily Mail claims that Kate is doing it successfully.
The Sloane Ranger aesthetic is enjoying a quiet renaissance. And at its centre, guiding the revival with elegance and unspoken authority, is the Princess of Wales. When Kate stepped out in an ivory silk blouse to open the Future Workforce Summit, she made a deliberate nod to the aesthetic that shaped a young Princess Diana.
The cascading ruffles of the Knatchbull design echoed the precise elements that made Dianas Sloane-era style so distinctive and Kates interpretation mirrors that spirit with a distinctly modern twist. But this style moment didnt appear out of nowhere. The clues have been building quietly for months, outfit by outfit, bow by bow, pleat by pleat.
Think back to her graceful ensemble chosen to meet Melania Trump: a corduroy jacket and a tweed midi skirt. It was classic Kate, of course, the perfect balancing act of modern and traditional, yet it also spoke fluent Sloane. The length, the stiffness, the inherently proper modesty; it was the kind of skirt that would not have looked out of place in the pages of Tatler circa 1987, arranged next to a black cab and a Filofax.
What makes Kates Sloane revival so compelling is that it feels deliberate but never forced. This is not a princess trapped by nostalgia. Instead, Kate appears to be drawing from a style vocabulary that feels both meaningful and strategic. In an era where fashion is louder, faster, and more disposable than ever, she has chosen to return to the understated codes that once defined an entire subsection of British high society.
Its a style rooted in heritage checks, pussybow blouses, swishy midi skirts, and sensible heels soft, feminine silhouettes that broadcast quiet privilege rather than shouty affluence. And perhaps its no coincidence that Kate was born in 1982 the very year The Official Sloane Ranger Handbook was published, setting out the social rules and fashion commandments of the young aristocratic set that helped shape Princess Dianas early public image.
Of course, Princess Diana herself was the original Sloane Ranger par excellence.Before she became the most photographed woman in the world, she was simply Diana Spencer, a Sloane girl with a penchant for pie-crust collars, and a wardrobe full of the kind of clothes that signalled class without ever appearing ostentatious. Kate, meanwhile, offers a different kind of Sloane story. Where Dianas Sloane style was organic, Kates is curated, a conscious nod to heritage, lineage, and soft power.
[From The Daily Mail]
Yeah, it?s not that Kate is ?making the Sloane Ranger aesthetic her own,? it?s that she?s clearly trying to copy/homage Diana. This piece acts like everything Diana wore over the course of her adult life fits into the Sloane Ranger aesthetic. It did not, and that?s why Kate?s style is all over the place too she?s trying to copy Diana?s looks from different years/eras. That?s why Kate?s look never comes across as ?modern princess living in the 21st century? as well she?s trying and failing to copykeen an outdated cultural aesthetic to which she does not belong. She?s culturally-appropriating the posh-white-woman look!! It comes across as a costume because that?s what it is to her.
Photos courtesy of Avalon Red, Cover Images.
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