Gigi Hadid marks launch of Havaianas line with new campaign
Gigi Hadid marks launch of Havaianas line with new campaign/node/2602967/lifestyle
Gigi Hadid marks launch of Havaianas line with new campaign
Gigi Hadid has unveiled a new campaign with Brazilian footwear brand Havaianas. (Instagram)
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Updated 01 June 2025
Arab News
Gigi Hadid marks launch of Havaianas line with new campaign
Updated 01 June 2025
Arab News
DUBAI: US Palestinian Dutch supermodel Gigi Hadid has unveiled a new campaign with Brazilian footwear brand Havaianas.
The model, who launched a line with the flip flop label, stars in a vintage-inspired series of photographs. In the shots, she shows off slippers from her collection with the brand and is seen wearing retro outfits on a beach.
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Hadid celebrated the launch at a party in Altro Paradiso in New York last week.Ìę At the event, she wore flip flops paired with a white tweed Marc Jacobs minidress, featuring vibrant scattered crystals.
The model is no stranger to making creative decisions and is also the founder of her own cashmere brand, Guest in Residence.
She launched her clothing label, which features soft, colorful knitwear, in September 2022.
âOver the last handful of years, I didnât want to be backed into starting my own line just because there was an offer on the table or a deal to be made,â she wrote to her followers on Instagram at the time.
âThe earliest days of Guest in Residence came about when I started to question the cashmere market, and those answers gave me a path,â she wrote.
âI believe that because of its sustainable qualities â natural and made to cherish and to pass down â cashmere is a luxury that should be more accessible.â
Earlier this year, Hadid celebrated her birthday party at Le Chalet in New York City.
Hadid entered the venue with her partner, Oscar nominee Bradley Cooper on April 25, and met up with her sister Bella Hadid, mother Yolanda Hadid, father Mohamed Hadid, Russian media personality Keni Silva and US actress Anne Hathaway, among others.
Gigiâs birthday was on April 23, and the internet was abuzz with celebrities, designers, family and friends who sent birthday wishes to the supermodel as she turned 30.
DUBAI: The race for the next âTed Lassoâ continues with âChad Powers,â which seems like it was put together by a bunch of Disney execs based on focus-group results. Sports? Check (American football). Humor? Check. Recognizable storyline that plays well across demographics? Check. Recognizable star who plays well across demographics? Double-check (Glen Powell plays two roles.)
Fortunately, âChad Powersâ is not as horrific as that scenario sounds. And thatâs largely due to the undeniable charisma of its star and co-creator. Powell brings his A-game to a pretty flimsy and derivative plot, and the result is a surprisingly layered take on an old idea.
Powell is Russ Holliday, star quarterback at a major US college whose talent is matched by his narcissism. He manages to ruin his chances of a pro career by melting down in spectacular fashion at a televised championship game, punching a fan into a wheelchair-bound kid with cancer.
Time passes and Holliday is working for his dad â a prosthetics specialist for Hollywood movies with whom he has a shaky relationship at best. Russ is asked to deliver some of said prosthetics to a movie studio. On his drive there, he sees (a) a report that the floundering South Georgia Catfish are holding an open call for a new quarterback and (b) a poster for âMrs. Doubtfireâ (in which Robin Williamsâ character disguises himself as an old Scottish woman to maintain contact with his kids following the breakdown of his marriage). You see where this is going?
You do.
Holliday heads to South Georgia, where he dons a wig and prosthetics and becomes Chad Powers, a bumpkin who has rarely left the house at which he was home-schooled (a ruse dreamed up with the help of the teamâs mascot, Danny â the only person who knows Chad is really Russ). Cue various set-pieces in which Chad must avoid losing his prosthetics or wig.
And Russ needs not only to maintain his disguise, but to nurture a character entirely unlike his own â i.e. humble, likeable, and a team player. Powell convinces both as the preening braggard Russ and the shy, mumbling Chad.
Along the way, of course, lessons are learned and opportunities open up, including a possible romance with the head coachâs daughter, Ricky (Perry Mattfeld). Which sounds cheesy, but the show manages â sometimes â to undercut its often-easy choices with an uneasy tension that makes âChad Powersâ more than the sum of its unimaginative parts.
Bella Hadid rings in 29 with star-studded tributes
Updated 11 October 2025
Arab News
DUBAI: Birthday tributes poured in for model Bella Hadid this week as the catwalk star marked her 29th birthday.
âITâS @bellahadid DAY,â her sister and fellow model Gigi Hadid wrote on Instagram Stories, sharing a throwback photo of the sisters as toddlers.
In another slide, Gigi posted a black-and-white snapshot of herself with Bella, both wearing matching leather jackets in different colors. âSheâs our walking heart,â she wrote.
Instagram/ @gigihadid
Bellaâs friends and family also took to Instagram to celebrate the occasion, including Italian designer Donatella Versace, model and entrepreneur Hailey Bieber, filmmaker Logan Mays, Sudanese model and actress Aweng Ade-Chuol, as well as her relatives â sister Alana Hadid, father Mohamed Hadid and mother Yolanda Hadid.
The American model of Dutch and Palestinian heritage recently returned to work after undergoing treatment for Lyme disease.
In September, she revealed she had stepped away from social media and the runway to receive treatment for the illness, and has previously spoken about her ongoing battle with the condition, which she has had since the age of 16, noting symptoms such as headaches, brain fog, light and noise sensitivity, inflammation and joint pain.
Lyme disease can also cause depression, anxiety and attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, which Bella has also reportedly suffered from. The condition is a bacterial infection that can spread to humans through infected ticks.
Her first runway appearance since her recovery took place last month, when she walked for Saint Laurent during Paris Fashion Week.
The model wore a metallic mustard-yellow ensemble with a loose, billowing silhouette. The look featured a long-sleeved, gathered top with a high round neckline, paired with matching knee-length shorts.
A textured belt in the same shade cinched the waist, adding structure to the voluminous fabric. The outfit was styled with sheer black tights and pointed black heels, along with oversized brown sunglasses and statement earrings.
This week, she also shared her latest campaign images for Chopard, wearing the brandâs LâHeure du Diamant watch, necklace and earrings paired with a form-fitting purple turtleneck dress.
Bella has a long-standing relationship with Chopard. In 2017, she became one of the faces of the brandâs high jewelry collections.
Since then, she has appeared in multiple campaigns and frequently wears Chopard pieces at major international events, including the Cannes Film Festival, the Met Gala and Paris Fashion Week.
Review: âHades 2â is the best roguelike you will ever play
Updated 11 October 2025
Shyama Krishna Kumar
DUBAI: âHades 2â is a bold and dazzling sequel that leans into ambition at every turn. Where the 2020 original laid the foundation, this new chapter deepens the mythos, sharpens the combat and turns the visual dial up to 11.
The sequel follows the original hero Zagreusâ sister, Melinoe, daughter of Hades and Persephone who is born after the events of âHades.â She returns to a shattered Underworld after Chronos usurps power and imprisons key figures.
From the first few runs, the story weaves tension and mystery: Who is the real threat of time? How do the fates and titans dodge their own destinies? The narrative is layered, with revelations gradually unlocked between runs, and many dialogue moments that feel earned.
Visually, âHades 2â is a triumph, even if early runs may feel a little too familiar to the original. Every character is richly drawn; the environments shift from the, at times, claustrophobic corridors of the Underworld to the majestic heights of Olympus (and beyond) with grace. The color palette moves beyond reds and blacks, embracing verdant hues, turquoise veils and shimmering light. Even in fast-paced combat, the animations remain crisp and fluid.
Mechanically, âHades 2â innovates significantly while retaining its signature intensity. Melinoe wields physical weapons but also commands Magick, with a new âMagick Barâ that depletes and recovers based on your actions. Boons now carry elemental affinities and infusions; Arcana cards add constant passive effects you choose pre-run; Hexes summon powerful spells that evolve mid-run; and the sprint mechanic encourages fluid repositioning rather than repetitive dashing.
While the added complexity is demanding and can be frustrating at times, it is definitely worth it.
In short, âHades 2â offers a richer and more expansive mythic journey, stunning visuals, and a combat system that feels both familiar and fresh; standing as a worthy â and, often, superior â successor.
Saudi American author Eman Quotah discusses her new novel, âThe Night Is Not For YouâÌę
âI wanted to bring together concerns that are universal,â says Eman Quotah
Updated 10 October 2025
Sumaiyya Naseem
JEDDAH: Saudi-American author Eman Quotah blurs the line between the real and the monstrous in her new novel âThe Night Is Not For You,â a feminist horror tale about a string of murders that send shockwaves through a community.âŻ
Quotahâs debut novel, âBride of the Sea,â won the Arab American Book Award in 2022 and established her as a distinctive voice in Arab-American literature.
The author was born and raised in Jeddah, but she draws deeply from a life lived between continents, languages, and traditions. She currently lives in the US, near Washington D.C., with her family.
The landscape of Al-Baha was a source of inspiration for Quotah's new book. (Photo credit: Prof Mortel)
âșÚÁÏÉçÇű, during the second half of my childhood, was so influential,â Quotah tells Arab News. Indeed, the landscapes of șÚÁÏÉçÇű were a significant inspiration for her new novel, as are the fears, rumors, and suspicions that circulate when violence strikes too close to home.
âBride of the Sea,â set in the Kingdom and the US, was about secrets within a family. âThe Night is Not For Youâ expands the frame to an entire community, asking how towns tell stories about themselves and what gets whispered when violence erupts.
âThis book seems really different, but, for me, the distance isnât so far,â she says. âItâs still about family, community, history, and the stories we tell about ourselves and the people around us.â
Eman Quotah receives the Arab American Book Award in 2022. (Photo credit: Andrew Chen)
Quotah resisted rooting the novel too firmly in one geography. Instead, she created a fictional world inspired partly by Al-Baha, Abha and Jeddah, but stitched together with details from other places.âŻ
âI wanted it to feel real, but also not so specific that it could only be one place,â she says. âWe used to take vacations in Baha, and I was also thinking about the neighborhoods and architecture in Jeddah. (Itâs) a fictional world. I could draw my own boundaries. Itâs not strictly Saudi society â it could be, but it could also not be. I wanted to bring together these concerns that are universal.â
The antagonist of the novel â based loosely on a female djinn from Khaleeji folklore â becomes the focus of communal fear, a mirror for human violence and paranoia.âŻ
The cover of Quotah's latest novel, a feminist horror story. (Supplied)
âEvery culture has boogey men and women. Every culture has paranoia,â Quotah says. âI wanted readers not to say, âThatâs how they act over there,â but to recognize something universal: Human fears, human struggles around acts of violence.â
Though âThe Night Is Not For Youâ is steeped in gore and horror, Quotah insists the violence serves as more than a shock inducer.
âI wanted it to have the quality of campfire stories, but also to move the plot forward, to make us feel the grief of people whose loved ones were violently murdered, not just see the violence and move on,â she says. âI wanted to show the conversations that happen around it, how communities make sense of it.â
She was able to draw on her own experiences to ground the novel in reality.
âI actually know two people who were murdered,â she says. âItâs something I donât often bring up in conversation. Having had that experience myself helped me write about violence. Because it happens to real people, and families have to keep living with it. I dedicated the book to those two people.â
For Quotah, horror is not simply escapism; it âhelps us make sense of the really violent stuff of real fears.â
Quotah says she was six when she decided she wanted to be a writer. Along the way, her mother kept her shelf filled with books brought from the US, and her father pushed her to study abroad even when few Saudi women were doing so. It was something he had done, making him a part of history that often goes unacknowledged.âŻ
âWhen I won the Arab American Book Award, I went to Dearborn, to the Arab American National Museum (to receive the award),â she recalls. âAnd there was this one small display about students from the Gulf who came to the US to study, and I thought, âThere we are! A small part of Arab-American history.â To see how my fatherâs story was part of that larger history was really meaningful.â
Having her novels published is not only a personal milestone but, Quotah believes, part of a larger literary shift in the US. âThereâs been a history of struggle for Arab-American writers to get published,â she says. âBut over the past decade, weâve really seen wonderful growth.â
She recommends a few books from her two stints as a judge for the Arab American Book Award: âThe Stardust Thiefâ by Chelsea Abdullah; âIf An Egyptian Cannot Speak Englishâ by Noor Naga; Deena Mohamedâs graphic novel âShubeik Lubeikâ; and âDearbornâ by Ghassan Zeineddine. âThereâs still more to accomplish,â she adds, âbut weâre definitely having a moment.â
And she is doing her share to ensure that moment continues. Aside from her own writing, she is also a board member of the Radius of Arab American Writers.
âNo one writer can represent a culture,â she says. âWe need more â more Saudi voices, more Arab-American voices, more translations, more cultural exchange. I want my books to be in conversation with other works by Saudi, or Arabian Peninsula, writers.ââŻ
Her advice to aspiring writers in șÚÁÏÉçÇű reflects that ethos: âRead a lot, write a lot, and find community. If you donât see it, create it. Publish your friends, publish the people you admire. Thereâs someone waiting for what youâre writing.â
âTron: Aresâ star and director on exploring the future of AIÌę
Jodie Turner-Smith and Joachim Ronning discuss the latest installment in the seminal sci-fi franchiseÌę
Updated 09 October 2025
Shyama Krishna Kumar
DUBAI: When British actress Jodie Turner-Smith stepped into the sleek, neon-lit world of âTron: Ares,â she wasnât just joining an iconic sci-fi franchise â she was diving headfirst into a meditation on the intersection of technology and humanity.
In the latest installment, âTron: Ares,â Jared Leto plays Ares â a sophisticated digital program sent into the real world on a perilous mission. Itâs humankindâs first encounter with artificial intelligence in the flesh and a test of what happens when code meets conscience.
Alongside Greta Leeâs Eve Kim â the ENCOM CEO searching for the elusive code written by software engineer Kevin Flynn (the protagonist of 1982âs âTronâ) â Ares finds himself questioning not just his programming but his place in a world full of unpredictable humans.
At Aresâ side â and mostly at odds with him â stands Athena, his second-in-command, portrayed by Turner-Smith. Describing her character, the actress said, âI think itâs always fun when a character represents more of the chaos. In her own way, Athena is the chaos that can come when nuance is unable to be interpreted. And thatâs Athenaâs struggle throughout the movie; interpreting nuance while sheâs having this experience that is changing her.
âI think we made a really fun movie, and ultimately, I think thatâs what we go to the cinema for: to have an experience,â she continued. âI love to go to watch movies for fun. âTron: Aresâ really is event cinema. Itâs so immersive and interesting.â
While âTron: Aresâ promises the spectacle fans expect â breathtaking visuals, kinetic action, and a pulse-pounding soundtrack from industrial rockers Nine Inch Nails â Turner-Smith says it also leaves room for reflection. âI want people to go away having a conversation,â said the 39-year-old. âThereâs so much talk about the doom and gloom of artificial intelligence and all the bad things that can happen, but I want people to walk away from the film with the state of mind of Dr. Eve Kim, who is thinking, âHow do we keep this technology human-centered? How do we use it to make the world a better place?â
âOur movie is not answering these questions, but it is sitting in the question, which I think is important for any film. Itâs to make you think and to make you talk,â she continued. âAnd hopefully thereâs going to be a kid watching this movie who is a future programmer, who is the genius who is going to create a program like Ares that improves the world.â
Jodie Turner-Smith as Athena in 'Tron-Ares.' (Supplied)
Director Joachim Ronning says the film reflects his own ambivalence toward AI. âI think itâs a little bit of both,â he said when asked if the movie envisions a utopia or a dystopia. âI have mixed emotions about it. As a filmmaker and an artist, I guess Iâm nervous â I hope that we can move forward carefully and with some guardrails to AI. But on the other hand, it could also help advance humanity and find solutions to things that we wouldnât otherwise.â
For Turner-Smith, the emotional weight of âTron: Aresâ was clear from the moment she read the script. âIt had heart, it had humor â it struck me how funny it was; I didnât expect that â and it was cool, you know?â
Jared Leto (L) and Jodie Turner-Smith at the premiere of 'Tron-Ares' in Hollywood on Oct. 6. (AFP)
Working with Leto, she said, was an especially rewarding experience. âI had a blast with him, really. He is a âTronâ head. Heâs a huge fan of this franchise. And you could feel how much he loved and cared about it.â
That energy, she added, was infectious. âHe was super-supportive of me, very encouraging. I loved doing our stuff together as Athena and Ares, I really did, but I wanted more. I feel like we didnât have enough. Iâm looking forward to âTron 4â when Athena returns.â