Jennifer Lopez caused a stir with her risqué Superbowl halftime performance. And while the 50-year-old was criticized for her show, she was also widely praised by viewers on social media who believed she was owning her age in a new way, according to the New York Times. Lopez and Donatella Versace concocted her outfits, which included a mirrored bodysuit which took more than 700 hours to make.
How one of the most powerful women in tech beat Uber in China
Jean Liu is president of Didi Chuxing, a rideshare company in China that hosts 30 million rides per day, which is 10 million more than Uber. Liu is the daughter of Lenovo founder Liu Chuanzhi, but she earned her own fame in tech when she joined Didi, and later acquired Uber China, its biggest rival. Bloomberg profiled Liu and explained how she bested Uber, and why her business might be at risk in spite of past successes.
10 women who will shape what you watch, see, and read in 2020
Harper’s Bazaar listed 10 women in the arts who are releasing important projects in 2020. Author Zadie Smith, known for her fiction, will be publishing her first play called “The Wife of Willesden” this year. Performance artist Marina Abramović is hosting a retrospective and showing new work in the U.K., while Phoebe Waller-Bridge — writer and star of “Fleabag” — is releasing a new HBO comedy thriller series called “Run.” Other artists on the list include “The Good Wife” actress Cush Jumbo, “Black Panther” prequel director Cate Shortland and Céline Sciamma, a director who gained acclaim at Cannes 2019 for her film “Portrait of a Lady on Fire.”
How Lea Michele learned to shut down critics who said her look was “too unique” for tv
Before she was Rachel Berry on “Glee,” actress Lea Michele was told that her look was “too unique” for TV. She was even pressured into having a nose job at age 13 (she refused). Michele spoke with Know Your Value about how she overcame these criticisms to become a massive star. The Emmy and Golden Globe nominee, who was diagnosed with polycystic ovarian syndrome, also discussed how she learned to prioritize her health above all else.
Forget golf courses and cigars: a new networking startup is focused on executive women
Like men, female senior executives need a place to gather, speak confidentially and also have fun. Carolyn Childers is CEO Chief, an exclusive networking group that maintains two clubhouses in New York City, with new ones coming in Los Angeles and beyond. Chief raised $22 million in a recent funding round, and it has 7,000 women on the waitlist. Members include executives from Spotify, Walmart, and Johnson & Johnson. Childers called the experience of Chief “elevated,” well beyond network events that feature cheese and “warm white wine.”









