Girl Crush of the Month: Lena Dunham

There’s been a lot of talk about girls on the internets lately; both girls, the gender, and Girls, the really frank and funny new HBO television show about four young twenty-somethings (girls, obvs) living and trying to make it in New York. The buildup to the series premiere was pretty astonishing; I’d never heard so many opinions about a television show that hadn’t even yet aired (journalists got a sneak peek at the first couple episodes). Some, mostly women, loved it, others, mostly men, didn’t; no one had seen the full season, but early judgments about it on both sides blew up the wide world of the web. That both subjects, girls and Girls, were then and are still being heavily discussed and in direct correlation to one another is no coincidence and the reason for this is the 25-year-old creator and star of the show, Lena Dunham. 

Not afraid to be honest about something that’s now being termed the “girly narrative” (a term I dislike but that’s another post) but what is really just the story of what human beings with vaginas think, feel and experience, Dunham created this show that depicts the struggles of young girls in their personal and professional endeavours and their attempts at figuring themselves out in the process (you know, like LIFE). In doing this, she created what her character Hannah Horvath calls, facetiously, in the pilot episode, the “voice of my generation.” Except I think the joke’s on her because, um, she kind of did. And in doing that, she gave a voice to all the other young girls in her generation (and even some who aren’t, hiiiiiiiii) who recognize themselves completely in Dunham’s characters, in all their messy, imperfect, confused, self-doubting, still-figuring-it-out awesomeness. 

Because when I think about the girls of Girls, I think about my girlfriends and me; specifically, how the girls of Girls ARE my girlfriends and me. After watching the first episode together a friend turned to me and said, “It’s like they put a camera in this apartment and just filmed US.” And that’s generally the reaction I get from every girl I speak to about the show. By drawing on her own experiences and telling her own stories, Dunham is really telling the story of the overall girl experience (that’s girl, not girl-y, and there’s a difference, to me anyway). Life is hard, often embarrassing and full of making mistakes and doing stupid things and having shitty boyfriends and feeling like you want to be more than you are but not knowing how to get there and Dunham was astute enough to harness this secretly universal thing and present it in a refreshingly honest, realistic and hilarious way, showing us that we’re not at all alone, like for real.

Which is why I think Dunham is the perfect role model for teenagers: she tells it like it is, not how you wish it were. Unlike other television shows that present these aspirational lives for you to covet – not that I don’t love SATC but  – Girls makes you feel like you’re still okay even though you don’t have a walk-in closet filled with fabulous designer labels and an easily-paid-for-by-a-single-weekly-newspaper-column one-bedroom apartment in New York. She shows us that all the insecurities and doubts we feel, the hardships we encounter along the way to becoming grownups, are normal and part of the process and everyone’s the same in more ways than we think and isn’t that what we all, particularly teens who are just beginning the growing up thing, really need to hear? By baring it all (both figuratively and literally – in the first episode she’s naked in the tub eating a cupcake) and putting her insecurities, embarrassments and body out there, Dunham presents a way more realistic version of what life’s going to be like as a young adult than anything I grew up with as a teen. Which is, frankly, healthy and also a total relief because finally we have a show for girls that’s accessible. And I’m apparently not the only one to think so because girl just got nominated for FOUR Emmy awards. So when I said above that it’s difficult to watch Girls and not see your reflection and those of your friends in the characters? I think that if we can see even a little bit of ourselves in the smart, funny, candid, thoughtful person that Lena Dunham is, well, then I feel like we’re going to be just fine.

If you haven’t seen the show, check the trailer to get started and if you have…like omg, amIright?

Girl Crush of the Month: Chloe Sevigny

Not only is Chloe Sevigny a critically and commercially acclaimed indie actress (Boys Don’t Cry and HBO’s Big Love), a clothing designer, and former model, this intelligent, multi-talented woman also reigns the fashion “It Girl” club with her effortless, nonchalantly cool personal style. Like seriously, we would dress like her everyday if we could. And we try. Regularly.

With a preference for vintage over designer clothes, cutesy print dresses with black leather jackets, and short shorts and skirts with socks and chunky ankle boots, Chloe Sevigny has got this eclectic, edgy, downtown New York, feminine thing going and we can’t get enough. She distinguishes herself from the cattle of look-a-like actresses in magazines these days and she consistently tops style blogs and best dressed lists as one to watch for style inspiration.

She’s gained both a serious reputation and a cult following (guilty) for her unique signature style. In fact, long before she received recognition for her acting, Sevigny made a name for herself in the fashion industry when big name chain stores began emulating her look in the ’90s. She continues to influence fashion, and our wardrobes, today, having designed several clothing collections inspired by her style, most notably with New York clothing boutique,Opening Ceremony

Can we just LOOK at these outfits? Excuse us while we go shopping.

Girl Crush of the Month: Joni Mitchell

Except I use the qualifier “of the Month” lightly, because Joni Mitchell is actually the girl crush OF MY LIFE. Sincerely: this woman has taught me everything I know about life and love (well, there may have been a few relationships that influenced me as well, I guuueeessss, but she’s definitely responsible for most of my romantic education). I discovered her music in my early twenties and it had the most profound effect on me out of any music I’d ever heard, ever. It was like every emotion I’d ever had, love, longing, sadness, heartbreak, confusion, disillusionment, happiness, a desire to wander and lose myself in the world – you get the idea, ya? – had just been given expression by way of this intelligent, passionate, fiercely independent, deeply observant woman. If you don’t know about her already…well, you’re welcome.

A Canadian musician and singer-songwriter from Saskatchewan, Joni Mitchell became hugely popular and influential in the ’60s and early ’70s with her folk songs and heart-wrenching confessional lyrics. Her most well-known album is probably Blue, which she released in 1971 and for which she received instant critical and commercial success due to its raw, acoustic sound and honest lyrics (if you buy – and you should buy Joni Mitchell, not download – only one album of hers, make it this one). With this album and many more she helped define a generation of music that includes Bob Dylan, Leonard Cohen, Carly Simon, The Band, Carole King and James Taylor. To name, you know, just a few. After Blue, she began to steer away from her folk roots and experiment with other sounds, namely jazz and pop fusion, but it’s her earlier work, her folk songs and visceral lyrics that have really stuck with me music critics and her adherents.

Besides her gut-piercing, achingly beautiful lyrics and angelic voice (I LOVE HER), Mitchell is also known and revered for her musical technique. Mitchell had polio as a child which made it difficult for her to form traditional chords on the guitar so, instead of giving up, she just… made up her own. She invented her own chords and distinctive open-tuned style as well as an intricate way of picking and strumming, which you can see in some of the videos of her on youtube. Rolling Stone Magazine also named her one of the 100 greatest guitarists of all time. So…ya.

Have I mentioned that every musician and recording artist ever – Madonna, Prince,  Led Zeppelin, Morrissey, Alanis Morrissette, Stevie Nicks, K.D. Lang, Janet Jackson, Tori Amos, Kurt Cobain, Fiona Apple, Joanna Newsom, Regina Spektor, Ani DiFranco, Elvis Costello, James Blake, Annie Lennox, among them – has included her in their list of influences? Ok, there, I just did. 

A list of songs I really want you to hear, if you haven’t already:

“This Flight Tonight”

“You got the touch so gentle and sweet
But you’ve got that look so critical
Now I can’t talk to you baby
I get so weak
Sometimes I think love is just mythical”

“Chelsea Morning”

“Woke up, it was a Chelsea morning and the first thing that I heard
Was a song outside my window and the traffic wrote the words
It came a-reeling up like Christmas bells and rapping up like pipes and drums

Won’t you stay
We’ll put on the day
And we’ll wear it ’til the night comes”

“A Case of You”

“I remember that time you told me you said
“Love is touching souls”
Surely you touched mine
‘Cause part of you pours out of me
In these lines from time to time
Oh, you’re in my blood like holy wine
You taste so bitter and so sweet”

“Help Me”

“Help me
I think I’m falling/In love again
When I get that crazy feeling, I know
I’m in trouble again”

“Free Man in Paris”

“I was a free man in Paris
I felt unfettered and alive
There was nobody was calling me up for favours
And no one’s future to decide”

“California”

Oh it gets so lonely
When you’re walking
And the streets are full of strangers
All the news of home you read
Just gives you the blues
Just gives you the blues
So I bought me a ticket 
I caught a plane to Spain 
Went to a party down a red dirt road 
There were lots of pretty people there 
Reading Rolling Stone reading Vogue
They said “How long can you hang around?”
I said a week maybe two
Just until my skin turns brown 
Then I’m going home to California”

“Cactus Tree”

“There’s a lady in the city 
And she thinks she loves them all 
There’s the one who’s thinking of her
There’s the one who sometimes calls 
There’s the one who writes her letters
With his facts and figures scrawl 
She has brought them to her senses 
They have laughed inside her laughter 
Now she rallies her defenses 
For she fears that one will ask her
For eternity
And she’s so busy being free”

“Both Sides Now”

“Moons and Junes and Ferris wheels
The dizzy dancing way you feel
As ev’ry fairy tale comes real
I’ve looked at love that way

But now it’s just another show
You leave ‘em laughing when you go
And if you care, don’t let them know
Don’t give yourself away

I’ve looked at love from both sides now
From give and take, and still somehow
It’s love’s illusions I recall
I really don’t know love at all”

“Carey”

“Come on down to the Mermaid Café and I will
Buy you a bottle of wine
And we’ll laugh and toast to nothing and smash our empty glasses down
Let’s have a round for these freaks and these soldiers
A round for these friends of mine
Let’s have another round for the bright red devil 
Who keeps me in this tourist town”

“All I Want”

“I want to be strong I want to laugh along
I want to belong to the living 
Alive, alive, I want to get up and jive
I want to wreck my stockings in some juke box dive
Do you want – do you want – do you want to dance with me baby
Do you want to take a chance
On maybe finding some sweet romance with me baby
Well, come on”

Soooo… am I right? The crushiest of girl crushes.

Girl Crush of the Month: Kristen Wiig

We’ve been crushing on Kristen Wiig, Saturday Night Live superstar and co-writer/star of the hit movie Bridesmaids, mega hard lately. She’s smart, witty and hilarious to boot, having created some of the most memorable characters ever to grace the SNL stage and writing the kind of comedic gold that keeps her on everyone’s radar and youtube screen week after week.

Wiig joined the cast of SNL in 2005, after starting her comedy career with LA-based improv troupe,The Groundlings. She quickly rose through the ranks of both to become, well, the awesome, funny, intelligent and wickedly creative gal we watch every Saturday night (or Monday morning on the internetz). Not afraid to look unattractive, be gross or make a complete fool of herself in front of millions of people, she’s daring, without ego, unabashedly herself and totally owns what she does every time she does it. In short, girlfriend rocks.

Below, Wiig as Lana Del Ray on SNL:

Girl Crush of the Month: Florence Welch

Florence Welch, British singer-songwriter and front-woman for indie pop band Florence + The Machine, is one rad rocker chick. With her uninhibited stage presence and arresting voice, a way with words that pierces your heart (“A falling star fell from your heart/And landed in my eyes/I screamed aloud as it tore through them/And now it’s left me blind” um, what?) and an eclectic boho style that includes fringed bodysuits, sparkly shorts, flowing maxi dresses and towering heels, this passionate performer is like Kate Bush, Stevie Nicks and Patti Smith all rolled into one powerful, fiery red-haired, glamorous earth goddess.

We read somewhere that she calls her style “scary, gothic, bat lady” but we love the way she wears whatever she damn well pleases. Whether it’s a cute printed dress with brogues or denim short shorts with a plaid button down shirt and an ’80s blazer, she’s got mad style, however she plays it. She pays no attention to trends, choosing instead to wear what SHE likes and that’s what makes her look so personal and unique. It comes from within and reflects her personality. It’s gothic, romantic, dramatic – it’s her. Plus we love that signature red hair and lipstick HARD. Florence knows how to stand out from the crowd and we totally can’t get enough of her.

Get The Look

Channel Florence’s boho glam earth goddess look by throwing together a few hippie pieces and mixing in some bold statement jewelry. Hipster hippie rocker flower girl bat lady style, right this way!

Mulberry Rose Crown $79.01 from Free People

Topshop Pleated Frill Dress $90.00 from The Bay

Floppy Wide-Brim Hat $19.95 from H&M

Floral Filigree Bracelet $9.80 from Forever 21

Two-tone Fringe Earrings $9.80 from Forever 21

Floral-Print Scarf $17.95 from H&M

Chunky-Heeled Ankle Boots $39.80 from Forever 21

Shopper Handbag $34.99 (beige for pic) from MANGO

Florence pictures from:
florencewelchamazing.tumblr.com
www.interviewmagazine.com/music/florence-welch-1