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Dear Jeremy | Money | The Guardian

Problems at work? Our agony uncle – and you the readers – have the answers. Send your queries to dear.jeremy@ theguardian.com Chosen problems will appear on the Work blog where readers will offer their thoughts. The best advice, along with Jeremy's own insights, will appear in Saturday's Guardian Money section. Please note Jeremy is unable to answer questions of a legal nature or reply personally to your emailncG1vNJzZmivp6x7tbTEoKyaqpSerq96wqikaKWfo7K6e9KeqaKdo2Sxpq3Ro5yrnZ2u

Photos from Taylor Swift & Tom Hiddleston: Romance Rewind

Advertise With UsLicensing & Reuse of Contentsubmit a news tip Your source for entertainment news, celebrities, celeb news, and ​celebrity gossip. Check out the hottest fashion, photos, movies and TV shows! © 2024 E! Entertainment Television, LLC A Division of NBCUniversal. All rights reserved. ncG1vNJzZmivp6x7prvNpaCnnV6YvK57z6GmraejZH56fJJrZq2ZqaG8s3nSsKCfrF2pvK55x6KbnaSVqMGwuoyrpqaZnpiybr7EsKCnnA%3D%3D

Polyglutamic Acid FAQs, Answered - Does It Live Up To The Hype?

If you thought hyaluronic acid was the most potent hydrator on the market, meet its under-the-radar sibling: polyglutamic acid (pronounced poly-glue-ta-mic) or PGA.  Anyone who experiences dry skin will likely already be familiar with the skin-plumping benefits of hyaluronic acid, which is widely considered the gold standard solution for dehydration. But with an ability to hold 5000 its weight in water (five times the capacity of hyaluronic acid), polyglutamic acid is threatening to knock hyaluronic acid off its throne.

Princes Baltimore Is a More Complex Kind of Protest Song

Sunday night’s live audio stream for Prince’s Rally 4 Peace concert at the Royal Farms Arena in Baltimore — hosted for free by Tidal — went on the fritz about an hour into the show, but not before he played, for the first time in concert, his new song “Baltimore.” Released via SoundCloud on Saturday, “Baltimore” is a protest song about, among other victims, Freddie Gray, the 25-year-old black man who died after sustaining spinal injuries while in police custody in Maryland.

Workaholics Actor Jessie Hudson Dies

The cast and crew of Workaholics are mourning one of their own. Jesse Hudson, who played the always snazzily dressed Jet Set Hudson on the raunchy Comedy Central sitcom, died last week, E! News has confirmed. He was 59. "I'm very sad to report that we've lost a member of the Workaholics family," read a post on the show's official Tumblr page. "Jet Set Hudson passed away late last week, after contributing some of the funniest, sweetest moments of our just wrapped season 3.