Celebrity Social Media, October 22, 2025
There are some new photos of Kendall Jenner and Mary-Kate Olsen at Sushi Park – there must be only one way in and out of that restaurant because that balcony sees some traffic.
Hailey Bieber explained her love of Sushi Park to Harper’s BAZAAR and it’s understandable. I don’t go for sushi for the vibes, I go for the food and in my experience the more low-key the location and the décor, the better the sashimi. Once you find a place you love, loyalty is key because the seating is always limited and you need them to love you back. But while Sushi Park might meet some of those qualifications in terms of vibes, or whatever, Lainey says that the lack of vibes in itself is a vibe, more of a brand identity than an actual food quality identity. According to Lainey, the sushi there is mid. Which should not be surprising because are we seriously trusting the celebrities who are most often seen there with where we should eat?
I don’t go gaga for a red dress but Allison Williams has pulled out two really strong choices for the red carpet and on WWHL. It’s funny to see Marni become a meme in real time. Her online cachet has surpassed Jessa and Shoshanna and maybe even Hannah in terms of quotable moments. “Oh, let's make fun of the girl who took a risk and put herself out there creatively!”
This post is at 1.5 million likes so it looks like Luda has some new backup dancers who might upstage him. He may have to wait until summer break to tour though.
Kristin Scott Thomas in a vintage dress made for a museum on a Saturday night. So opulent. And the DIY makeup and hair is the right choice because too much fussing would clash with the “glamorous widow whose husband died under mysterious circumstances” aesthetic. She is too chic and mysterious for a blowout.
Speaking of opulence, the photos from Lilly Singh’s annual Diwali party are incredible. Has Vogue ever shot this? I’m going to check later.
I skimmed this story on movie stars flopping at the box office but found it hard to really get into because there’s a lot of recency bias in how we view movie success and failure. As long as there’s been movies and movie stars, there have been flops. The Mexican, starring two of the biggest stars on the planet at the time (Julia Roberts and Brad Pitt), flopped. Kiss of the Spider Woman’s box office would be more shocking if it was a smash – JLo hasn’t had one in years. The Rock is clearly moving to art house versus big budget, this is calculated and I don’t think you can frame his new work as flops. Audiences don’t just mindlessly follow familiar faces. Isn’t that what makes the industry exciting – the risk? It’s always a creative bet.




