Looking stylish lies at the classy intersection of good taste and unwavering confidence in yourself. And it s really the latter that s the more important of the two. That s one of the things that the founder of the Megababe beauty brand and body acceptance advocate Katie Sturino wants to show the world.
The New Yorker dresses up just like celebrities and proves that you don t have to be runway model-skinny to look so darn good, you set the internet on fire. Check out some of Sturino s hottest new looks below. Remember to upvote your fave pics and let us know in the comments which of her outfits you loved the most and why.
and the clothes don t fit, the haircuts are funny and the food sucks. and the company s usually not much better. when i turned 18 or around the time i went off to college, i became curious of what actually happened. i had always been told that my father had killed my mother and he went to prison. but i still was curious as to what happened. mostly why, why it happened. we also had newspapers describing the murder. articles from newspapers in austins, papers in houston. and if i could read the newspapers, then i could just move on from that part of my life, and i would no longer have to think about my father as the man who murdered my mother. so he didn t have to be a part of my life anymore.
security. and it s a world of concrete and steel. and the clothes don t fit, the haircuts are funny and the food sucks. and the company s usually not much better. when i turned 18 or around the time i went off to college, i became curious of what actually happened. i had always been told that my father had killed my mother and he went to prison. but i still was curious as to what happened. mostly why, why it happened. we also had newspapers describing the murder. articles from newspapers in austins, papers in houston. and if i could read the newspapers, then i could just move on from that part of my life, and i would no longer have to think about my father as the
and the clothes don t fit, the haircuts are funny and the food sucks. and the company s usually not much better. when i turned 18 or around the time i went off to college, i became curious of what actually happened. i had always been told that my father had killed my mother and he went to prison. but i still was curious as to what happened. mostly why, why it happened. we also had newspapers describing the murder. articles from newspapers in austin, papers in houston. and if i could read the newspapers, then i could just move on from that part of my life, and i would no longer have to think about my father as the man who murdered my mother. so he didn t have to be a part
texas and there s no smell quite like walking past a cell block with several hundred men. the chow hall smells a certain way. that many people, there was 26,300 guys on some of those units. they crank out a lot of garbage every day. it has a distinct aroma. and the agricultural units like ramsey one, there could be livestock issues, but mainly it s the scent of a large number of men in close proximity and in a very humid climate in the heat of the summer. no air conditioning. a fan if you ve got the money to buy one. and the cell blocks aren t built for ventilation and comfort. they re built for utility and security. and it s a world of concrete and steel. and if the clothes don t fit,