JiveBlog

Nastia Liukin's Olympics Style Rules

The 2016 Olympic games kick off this week, and the women’s gymnastics events — some of the most-watched competitions of the entire games — will start Sunday, August 7. (Set the DVRs now because seriously.) And every time we watch these dazzling, delightful tumbling athletes, we have to wonder, what exactly is going on over there? Who decides their leotards for the individual competitions? What is the deal with the scrunchies?

The beauty products Kate Moss can't live without

In interviews, Kate Moss tends to get asked about her modelling career, the parties, the friendships and her trend-setting style. But beauty? Not that much. But let's face it, Mossy has worked with the best make-up artists around so surely she has a few nuggets of wisdom to part with. In this interview Kate talks festive beauty, the products she can't live without, and the ultimate tip for a healthy glow.

Save $160 On This Innovative Ocean Wave Lamp

TMZ may collect a share of sales or other compensation from links on this page. Get ready to transform your space into a tranquil oasis with the LampDepot Ocean Wave Lamp. The mesmerizing water ripples of this lamp will transport you to a state of relaxation and comfort. With its dynamic and multi-colored light display, this lighting will make you feel like you're basking under the magical glow of the ocean evening.

'Hellhound' Trails King Assassin James Earl Ray

Writer Hampton Sides was a 6-year-old living in Memphis when Martin Luther King Jr. was assassinated on April 4, 1968. "I remember the tension," he says. "I remember seeing tanks, and I remember feeling that our city was ripping apart." Hellhound on His Trail: The Stalking of Martin Luther King Jr. and the International Hunt for His Assassin By Hampton Sides Hardcover, 480 pages Doubleday List price: $28.95 Read an Excerpt

A Woman Walks into a Bank review tricksy Russian tragicomedy with a talking cat

TheatreReviewTheatre503, London Roxy Cook’s award-winning debut is a whimsical, layered meta-tale about the clash of old Soviet ways and modern, capitalist culture This play opens just as the title promises. Two narrators tell us the story of an elderly woman (Giulia Innocenti) from old Russia who is stranded in the new Moscow of 2018 that is still high from hosting the World Cup. She is sold a loan with an extortionate interest rate by a callow, morally slippery bank manager (Sam Newton), even though it is intimated that she is in the early throes of dementia and can’t keep hold of the manager’s name.