Dan Levy is in full David Rose mode as host of this wholesome quest for Canada’s best home baker. It’s proof you don’t need spats to make good reality TV
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Iâm Mark Ronson and this is The FADER Uncovered Podcast. In this interview series, Iâll be speaking with some of the most influential and groundbreaking musicians in the world, from genre-defining stars to avant-garde trailblazers about their lives and careers. Each episode will be rooted in these musiciansâ iconic FADER cover stories, an institution that over the past two decades has told artistsâ stories like no other. The podcast is the chance for us to talk about the past, present, and future, reflecting on their breakthroughs, diving into their lives when their covers hit shelves, and discussing what the future might hold now. Itâs an opportunity for me to speak to some of the artists I most admire.
LOS ANGELES â Ruth Alcantara stepped closer to her grandmother. Then closer, and closer still.
She crossed into the six-foot buffer zone that had separated them for so long and wrapped her arms around the older woman. Hola, abuelita, le extrañe mucho, she said, inches from her grandmother s ear. Hi, grandma, I missed you so much.
She felt a kiss on her forehead. Her throat constricted with emotion.
As more Americans are vaccinated against COVID-19, reunions among loved ones are becoming increasingly frequent and, for many, hugging is the main event.
First routine, then forbidden and now precious, hugs have come to symbolize the next phase of the pandemic, our emergence from the isolation of the past year. Simply put: Hugs can t be given from six feet away.
Fighting back with hugs
By Soumya Karlamangla - Los Angeles Times
Jessica Holzer, 35, of West Hollywood, hugs friend Madeline Brozen, 35, of Los Angeles, for the first time since the COVID-19 pandemic, at Plummer Park on April 11 in Los Angeles, CA. Brandon Carpenter, sitting left, is Holzer’s fiance. People are looking forward to hugging family and friends once they have their COVID-19 vaccine.
LOS ANGELES – Ruth Alcantara stepped closer to her grandmother. Then closer, and closer still.
She crossed into the six-foot buffer zone that had separated them for so long and wrapped her arms around the older woman.
“Hola, abuelita, le extrañe mucho,” she said, inches from her grandmother’s ear. Hi, grandma, I missed you so much.