Life Style

36 Funny Couples’ Costumes That Will Win Any Contest

Are you planning to dress up with your partner or best friend for Halloween this year? Look no further - these funny Halloween costumes for couples are just what you need for inspiration ahead of the impending spooky season. We found hilarious outfit ideas for every kind of duo, whether you want to get nostalgic with a '90s cartoon throwback, reference a comedic onscreen pair from a movie or TV show, or go the punny route with a play-on-words concept. The best part about these funny Halloween costume ideas? Most of them are simple and easy to DIY by raiding your closet at home, or, if you want to pull off something a bit more elaborate, you'll just need to make a quick trip to the craft store to bring them together. From "Home Alone" robbers Marv and Harry to Colonel Sanders and a feathery chicken, these funny Halloween costumes are sure to elicit some laughs from friends and fellow partygoers. Read ahead for the 36 best funny Halloween costumes for couples to wear in 2023. And if you end up waiting until the last minute to decide on an outfit, POPSUGAR's guide to lazy, low-effort Halloween costumes has you covered with plenty of options. - Additional reporting by Lauren Harano, Sara Youngblood Gregory, and Victoria Messina Related: 40 Group Halloween Costumes For the Office
Read More36 Funny Couples’ Costumes That Will Win Any Contest

How Rita Ora Approached Designing a 169-Piece Collection That Starts at $5

On the day Rita Ora reveals her Primark collection to the world, she's wearing the gray acid-wash denim set, consisting of a boxy moto jacket and matching miniskirt with an asymmetrical zipper down the front. She styles the co-ords with leather thigh-high boots, several chunky rings, and a fluffy shopper, one of the signature accessories in the 169-piece collection. It's clear she's familiar with them all as she singles out members of her design team at the NYC launch party who are also decked head to toe in Rita Ora x Primark, beckoning them to pose for the crowd. One such look is a tan three-piece pantsuit, my favorite that I've seen so far. But the rest of the lineup is easily accessible to me, displayed on racks for guests to sift through and even try on. The 32-year-old musician has spent two years dreaming up the versatile, season-less, affordable range that emits '90s grunge and her own brand of sex appeal. "It was a combination of the friendship that I created with the CEOs and spontaneously being at the same restaurant," Ora tells me after the intimate preview, when I ask how the collab came to be in the first place. As it turns out, her genuine love for the brand began with early shopping trips to her local Primark in Hammersmith, West London, when she considered herself an everyday fashion fan who didn't want to break the bank. "It was such a great opportunity to reconnect to my roots, respect the journey that I've been on, and understand the customers, because I was one of them," she says. Codesigned by Primark and Ora, alongside emerging London-based designer Jawara Alleyne - and styled by Rita's personal stylist, Pippa Atkinson - the wardrobe staples allow the singer's fans to re-create her famous aesthetic on any budget. It's no surprise that as soon as the first drop was manufactured, Ora began weaving items into her outfits, slowly building suspense and teasing her followers about what was to come. All the while, the accompanying campaign was being shot in Trellick Tower and around Golborne Road in West London, where Ora grew up. "Keeping it really real was all I cared about. That's the reason I joined with Primark in the first place, so it only made sense to go back to where it all began," she explains. Available on Sept. 19 in all 430-plus of Primark's stores, the international collaboration - starting at $5 for clothing and accessories, $28 for outerwear, and $20 for footwear - will be available to browse on primark.com, with the option to use a stock checker before heading out to shop. It also prioritizes circularity and sustainability, with two-thirds of the pieces crafted from recycled materials. Ahead, Ora joins POPSUGAR for an exclusive interview about launching the fashion line. Related: Rita Ora Turns Heads in a Thong Bodysuit and Naked Cape Gown
Read MoreHow Rita Ora Approached Designing a 169-Piece Collection That Starts at $5

Viral Gossip Account DeuxMoi Reviews 6 Celebrity Hair Brands

Picture this: DeuxMoi - famed gossip account with two million devoted Instagram followers - is fresh out of the shower. Her hair is wet, and she's cozied up in a plush bathrobe. You can't envision her face, but if you listen to her "Deux U" podcast, then you know her voice. She's the purveyor of Hollywood's juiciest blind items, anonymous tips, nanny drama, you name it. And today, she's ready to test some celebrity-owned beauty products. (Again.) This time, the assignment is hair care. After posting about the Lolavie Glossing Detangler from Jennifer Aniston's line, her DMs were swarmed with questions about other celebrity hair brands. "It's the holy grail for me of hair products," DeuxMoi tells POPSUGAR. "When I talked about why I liked it, I've never gotten more feedback from people wanting to know more." There are plenty of A-list options to choose from, after all, including (but not limited to) Jonathan Van Ness's JVN Hair, Tracee Ellis Ross's Pattern Beauty, and, yes, Aniston's Lolavie. Still, the hair space is more nuanced than other categories like makeup or fragrance. When considering products, you have to take into account your individual hair type and texture, and not all formulas are one size fits all. For DeuxMoi's fine and wavy hair, we zeroed in on one of the more universal subcategories and one that nearly every celebrity hair brand has: leave-in conditioner. As a novice to the space, the mission was to find a formula that's hydrating but not heavy. "I want to be convinced I need a leave-in conditioner, because I don't usually use them. That's the challenge," she says. In the slides ahead, read as DeuxMoi tries six celebrity-owned leave-in conditioners - noting on texture, scent, packaging, and price point - and spills her unfiltered opinion on each. Welcome to the live testing session.
Read MoreViral Gossip Account DeuxMoi Reviews 6 Celebrity Hair Brands

I Tried a Body-Planing Treatment, and, Not Gonna Lie, It Was Pretty Gross

My face wants for nothing when it comes to an extensive skin-care routine, but when it comes to my body, things are a little lackluster. I shave my legs a few times a week, exfoliate if I'm planning to use a self-tanner, and hydrate multiple times a day with lotion, but that's about it. Although I'm committed to dermaplaning my face once every couple of months, I've never thought about doing the same to any area below my neck. One of my exes was the proud owner of what I like to call "dolphin skin," and while I don't think about him (or his skin) very often anymore, when I first heard about a spa treatment called "body planing," I wondered if it would be the thing to finally hand me a VIP membership to the elusive soft-skin club. I didn't know much about what the process would entail prior to going into it, other than knowing it involved exfoliation. However, people online claimed it gave them skin softer than a baby's bottom, which was enough to convince me I needed to see what the hype was about. I wasn't sure if it included shaving the hair like dermaplaning does, but I figured my best bet would be to try a professional treatment. So to test it out, I visited the spa at the Conrad Los Angeles. When I arrived, I was escorted to a treatment room, where I met the therapist who would be performing the body planing. Before the treatment even started, she showed me the tool she'd be using, which I have to admit looked a little intimidating. Upon closer inspection, I realized it was the Esker Body Plane Exfoliator ($45), which you can purchase for use on your own at home. It's essentially an updated take on a strigil, a curved blade that was used by ancient Greeks and Romans to scrape off dirt when bathing. This version works similarly, but it utilizes a sterling-silver blunt edge to remove dead skin while gently massaging the body. After I plopped face down onto the massage table, the therapist positioned a steamer near my feet and legs to soften my skin. From there, she applied a detoxifying body oil, then she got started with the body-planing treatment. She started with my toes on the left side and gently moved the exfoliator in an upward motion in long strokes. The purpose of moving upward rather than downward, she explained, is to work energy up toward the heart center and stimulate the nervous system. While I was nervous that the process would in some way hurt (I wasn't kidding when I said the tool looked intimidating), I quickly realized it was quite relaxing. After finishing with my left leg, the therapist moved the steamer, then repeated the process on my other leg, my back, and both of my arms, and then it was time to flip over. When I flipped on my back, the therapist repeated the process, except I opted to have my stomach done as well, which required a little finagling with towels to make sure everything other than my belly was covered. Before I knew it, the hour was up. And while I did have that "just had a massage" calm feeling, the process wasn't entirely what I'd expected. If you too were envisioning "body planing" as an intense rubdown to remove dead skin, that's not the case. This treatment felt more similar to someone dragging their acrylic nails all over my body. It didn't hurt at all, and when I sat up and touched my arms and then my legs, I could feel a stark difference in how my skin felt after the treatment versus before. It was noticeably softer and smoother and even looked a little glowier. What really surprised me, though, was what I saw on the towel that the therapist showed me post-treatment. After each scrape of my skin, she had wiped off the remnants from the body-planing tool onto a white towel. What was left behind was one of the grossest things I've ever witnessed: dirty brown skin shavings. I wasn't freshly exfoliated or even showered prior to my appointment (I had spent a couple hours at the hotel pool beforehand), but still, what I saw on the white towel was not what I'd expected and made me think that a body-planing treatment - whether done by a professional or at home - was something I needed to add to my weekly routine ASAP.
Read MoreI Tried a Body-Planing Treatment, and, Not Gonna Lie, It Was Pretty Gross

Was Charlotte York Always This Funny?

No one has made me laugh more than Charlotte York-Goldenblatt on the second season of "And Just Like That." Charlotte (Kristin Davis) has somehow become the funniest friend of the extended friend group. (And yes, that includes the actual comedian among the crew.) Between her quest to find condoms for Lily during a literal snowpocalypse to her drunken outburst after one too many cocktails with new coworkers, she's provoked countless laugh-out-loud moments over the course of the season. After watching her provide the majority of - if not the only - comic relief in one episode after another, I couldn't help but wonder . . . was Charlotte always this funny? Now, I've seen the original "Sex and the City" series several times over, and I don't quite recall Charlotte being particularly humorous. Sure, she had her moments, but Samantha usually provided the bold one-liners and sex jokes. Who would have thought the more traditional, sometimes judgmental one would evolve into the comedic star of the series? In season two of the reboot, Charlotte's friends deal with heavy situations and face big life decisions. Miranda has her ongoing tensions with exes Steve and Che, Carrie is stuck in a love bubble with Aidan, and Lisa Todd Wexley is overwhelmed with, well, everything. That leaves room for Charlotte to take on the fun, perhaps sillier, storylines that still further her character development. Charlotte shrieking, "Please! My daughter needs condoms!" into a pharmacy window has to be one of my favorite scenes of the show. For one, we see Charlotte's growth as a parent. Previously known for her modesty in the original series, she becomes sex-positive and creates a safe space for her kids to talk to her about sex. (Charlotte shrieking, "Please! My daughter needs condoms!" into a pharmacy window has to be one of my favorite scenes of the show.) The plot thickens as she and Miranda discover Lily and Brady may be having sex. The two parents are hilarious scene partners as they spy on their kids and decipher their body language to figure out their relationship status - until Charlotte finally decides to give her daughter space and let it go. Later in the season, Charlotte makes the exciting decision to return to work, and after a series of non-urgent asks and phone calls from her family members, she delivers a passionate monologue, declaring, "I was a person before all of you!" She tells Harry, Rock, and Lily that they need to "get it together" because she is more than just a wife and a mom. Of course, she says all of this after a handful of tequila shots, so the delivery is amusing, but that doesn't take away from the powerful way in which she draws important boundaries and finally prioritizes herself. Whether she's learning as a parent or sharing a silly exchange with Harry (never forget the kegels), there's humor baked into her moments, both big and small. Though fans have criticized Davis's exaggerated acting, viewing Charlotte's character as a caricature of sorts, I'd argue Davis's sometimes-amplified portrayal makes Charlotte who she is. Charlotte was always dramatic! She's a breath of fresh air this season, and simply put, it's just nice to see someone having fun on the show. Here's hoping we get to see more of her comedy in season three. Let's take a look back at some of Charlotte's funniest scenes in "AJLT" season two below. Related: Only Carrie Bradshaw Could Wear a Puffer-Coat Ballgown - and Look Amazing
Read MoreWas Charlotte York Always This Funny?

Ava Glass’s “The Traitor” Is a Thrilling Race to the Truth – Read an Exclusive Excerpt

In Ava Glass's "The Traitor," when an MI6 agent who was investigating Russian oligarchs turns up dead under unusual circumstances, fellow British spy Emma Makepeace must go undercover on one of the Russians' million-dollar yachts to investigate the murder. But with the killer possibly close by, Emma's life is put in more and more danger as she gets closer to uncovering answers. Ava Glass weaves a thrilling race to the truth in "The Traitor" ($28), publishing on Sept. 19. Read an exclusive excerpt of the novel below. Through the door of her cabin, Emma could hear the others talking and laughing. A short time later, Conor called from the end of the hallway, "Hurry up, Sara! We're heading out." Sara shouted back, "Coming. But I've lost my bloody phone." Other voices joined in with sympathy and advice. But Sara said resignedly, "God knows where it is. It's my own fault – the place is a tip. I'll just have to stick with you lot, I guess." There was a knock at Emma's door and Sara cracked it open. Emma was on the bed, holding a book. "Sorry to leave you alone, lovely," Sara said. "Don't be lonely." Emma held up the book. "I'll be fine. Have fun." The door closed and the voices faded as they headed down to the launch. A few minutes later she heard the unmistakeable rumble of the powerboat engine. Emma watched through the small cube of a window as the long, blue boat swung into view. She ticked the passengers off her list: the captain, the bosun, the engineer, the two kitchen crew, Sara, and, at the wheel, Jason. No Cal Grogan. Emma's heart dropped. The mercenary had stayed behind. She watched as the boat cut a white curve in the cobalt sea and powered towards the marina. Grogan was becoming more of a problem. The fact that he'd decided to stay on the Eden was unlikely to be a coincidence. His suspicions about her must have grown after last night. Emma leaned back against the wall, her thoughts racing. This had been her best chance to get into Volkov's office. How could she do that with Grogan on board, watching her every move? He was the one person on the boat she was afraid of. He had the training and the bulk to defeat her. But she couldn't let him stop her from doing her job. There's no way to teach someone not to be afraid. Fear is an intrinsic part of us. But there are ways to make people forget their fear. Soldiers are taught to think of their enemy as something other than human. Spies are taught to think of their enemy as a traitor. This training had been particularly effective in Emma's case because even before she joined the Agency she already despised traitors. Her father had been betrayed by someone in Russia he trusted, and that betrayal had led to his execution. To Emma there was no sin worse than betrayal. She had a fierce loyalty to her colleagues, and a deep love of her adopted country. In the way of many immigrants, she was more loyal to her adopted land than some whose families had lived there for generations. She didn't feel even slightly Russian, despite the fact that she spoke the language fluently and Russia had been part of her life since she was born. She was British to her core. As far as she was concerned, Cal Grogan was a traitor. He was as British as she was, but had spent a decade working for Russian despots. He'd sold whatever soul he had long ago. Something in him had been lost, and he'd filled that space with money and violence. She had to stop him. In her mind, she went over the layout of the yacht. Volkov's office was on the same level as the pool deck. Grogan tended to spend his time in the lounge, one level up. Gradually, a plan began to come together. Moving quickly, she changed out of her uniform and into a bikini and a pair of shorts. She slid the phone, containing the Agency's SIM card now, into one pocket, and the knife into the other. Grabbing her sunglasses and a book, she slipped out into the corridor and up to the pool deck, where she stretched out on a deck chair. Now, she just needed Grogan to find her. Apprehension seemed to make Emma's hearing more acute. Everything sounded loud. The breeze blowing against the upper decks. The jangling of metal against metal. Water splashing. Gulls cawing overhead. The rumble as other boats sped by. And Cal Grogan's heavy footsteps, as he walked across the deck towards her. "Making yourself at home?" he asked, with contempt. Emma lowered the book and looked up at him in surprise. "What are you doing here? I thought you'd gone with the others." "Thought I'd hang around. Keep an eye on things." He fixed her with a long look that seemed to see all of her plans. Emma reminded herself that he was an expert in deception. But then, so was she. "Great!" she said, brightly. "The boat's kind of creepy when it's empty." "It was kind of funny you coming down to the aft deck last night," he said, after a long pause. Emma met his gaze. "Funny isn't the word I'd use." "Uncanny timing, then," he said. The tension between them thickened until Emma could almost see it in the air. He didn't trust her but he was still trying to understand why, and she wasn't about to help him figure it out. "Is Madison okay?" she asked, sitting up. "What did the doctors say?" "They said she needs to get sober. They're going to help her." "When is she coming back?" There was a pause. "I don't see how any of this is your business. They're taking care of her. She's not our problem anymore." Grogan's Adam's apple bobbed as he swallowed. "It's my business because I like her. We all want Madison back, safe and sound," Emma said, pointedly. "Well I doubt she's ever coming back after her little performance yesterday. And don't go telling the crew what you saw down there." He thrust a thumb towards the rear of the boat. "Madison wouldn't want people knowing she was like that." "Sara already knows," she said. "I told her last night." Grogan stiffened, his scarred face darkening. "Why does every b*tch on this boat have such a big mouth?" His fury was so instant and visceral, it took effort not to flinch in the face of it. Emma gave him an icy look. "If you need me for anything," she said, deliberately, "I'll be here for the rest of the afternoon." She leaned back and opened her book. Grogan didn't leave. She could sense him looming over her. Refusing to look up, Emma stared at the page until the words swam. At last, he turned away. As soon as his heavy tread faded into the stairwell, Emma sat up again. Finding the pool deck empty, she dropped the book to the floor. In theory, she could walk across the deck, through the glass doors and straight to Volkov's desk. But she didn't dare. Not yet. She needed to know where Grogan had gone. Leaving her book and sunglasses on the chair, she headed to the staircase. He could have gone down but there was nothing there for him. She was willing to bet he'd gone to the lounge. She climbed the steep stairs, her bare feet silent. The bar deck was deserted. Emma strode out across the teak flooring, warm beneath her toes. She tried to see through the dark glass into the lounge but the glare of the light made it impossible. She headed to the kitchen, as if that had always been her destination. Conor and Lawrence had left it spotless. The appliances gleamed. Emma poured herself a glass of orange juice, taking her time as she listened for any sign of Grogan on the silent boat. Where was he? If he wasn't up on this deck, she didn't dare break into the office. When she walked out on deck a few minutes later, she took her time, stopping to lean against the rail and take in the view of the city across the water. Sara's phone was a dead weight in her pocket, a constant reminder of what she was meant to be doing. What she could not do with Grogan right there. It could be weeks before she was alone on the Eden again. By then who knew what deals Volkov would have made? What weapons he might have sold? How many people might be dead? She had to do it now. If she had to fight Grogan, so be it. As she turned back towards the stairwell, her mind made up, she heard a voice coming from the lounge. Through the tinted glass she could just make out Grogan's shape on one of the sofas in the airconditioned room, a phone pressed against his ear. She couldn't hear what he was saying, but she walked deliberately slowly, making sure he could see her sipping from her glass of juice before retracing her steps to the staircase. As soon as she reached the stairwell, she broke into a run, flying down the steps to the pool. She set the juice glass on the deck next to her sandals, and dashed through the glass door, into the shadowy hallway. The carpet was velvet soft beneath her bare feet as she opened the double doors into Volkov's office. The adrenaline rush made her head feel light. Doing this with Grogan right above her was insane. But he'd probably be there for at least a few minutes, and she had to take the risk. Bypassing the desk, Emma headed straight to the cabinet on the wall. The Dottling was thick-walled and dark. When her fingertips brushed the keypad, the numbers lit up in pale blue. Every safe has a back door code – a way to open the device if the owners lose or forget the code they've created. A way for a spy to see what's inside. Ripley had given her the code for this one. Holding her breath, Emma typed in the sequence she'd memorised two days ago: 1001091969. For a breathless moment, nothing happened. Then the device whirred and the safe door unlocked with an audible metallic clunk. When she pulled the heavy door ajar, the first thing she saw was money. Lots of it. Multiple thick stacks, all of them bound with paper strips. It had a smell – a kind of sweet-sour scent, like sweat. This, she thought, must be what Volkov had collected in St Tropez. She reached for a stack of green hundred euro notes. As she picked it up, two small plastic bags fell out from the safe, landing at her feet. Emma picked them up gingerly. Each held fine white powder. Emma remembered the mirror she'd seen on Madison's dresser, with its white powdery residue. Pulling Sara's phone from her pocket, she took a photo of the drugs and money together. As she worked, she constantly listened for any sound, but this office was well sound-proofed; the carpet thick enough to absorb footsteps. Whatever happened, she wouldn't hear Grogan coming. She needed to work fast. She'd been in here two minutes so far. She could allow herself no more than five to get what she needed. Hurriedly, she began pulling documents out of the depths of the safe. Tucked away behind the first stack she spotted her phone. She left it where it was and worked quickly through the documents, taking pictures of any that looked useful. Most of the paperwork documented the movement of money. Hundreds of thousands of pounds in one account. Millions in another. Some based in London, but others in Dubai, in Moscow, on Jersey. There was no time to read. She shot each one that looked useful and moved to the next. Still, it was time consuming work. By the time she finished the first stack and started on the second, the five minutes were up and her nerves were on edge. But she couldn't go now. There had to be something incriminating in here. Some proof of the chemical weapons Volkov was selling. She was flipping through a stack of papers when one document stopped her. It looked like a ledger, of sorts. Everything had been written by hand – as if the person keeping track hadn't wanted to put the information on a computer. It held nothing but a series of transactions. The amount of money involved was stunning. Tens of millions of pounds. Emma took a picture of it, before slowing down to read it. It looked to her like a register of recent payments. Each line held an amount, who it came from, a code in the middle, and which account it went to. The biggest single transaction was a transfer of fifteen million pounds from a bank in Iran. The other countries on the list of those making payments to Volkov's company read like a roster of the despotic nations. She was sure this was it – the ledger of his sales. This was why Garrick hadn't found what he needed. It wasn't on any computer. Volkov had wisely decided no computer was safe. Even here, though, on paper, the chemical names were in code – he was that cautious. MI6 could break the code. But one thing was abundantly clear already: nobody would be safe when he was finished with these deals. These were the kinds of countries that wouldn't just buy banned weapons – they'd use them. As she turned the page, a piece of paper fell out and fluttered to the floor. When she picked it up, Emma noticed it didn't look like the other documents. It was on thicker paper, and the handwriting was different. It looked like it had been shoved inside the ledger by mistake. It held a note scrawled in Russian: "I'm getting tired of cleaning up your messes. This must finish it. There's too much at stake." It was signed "Oleg". It was dated two days after Stephen Garrick was murdered. Gripping the phone tightly, she photographed it. It had to be from Oleg. Former director of the Russian spy agency, smarter by far than Andrei Volkov, and much more ruthless. This was visible, quantifiable proof that Federov had given Volkov money directly. Proof that both men knew something had gone wrong. Proof that they were working together. But was it enough? Before she could answer the question, a sound stopped her. It was very faint. If she hadn't been so still, she might have missed it. But in that instant of silence it was clear and unmistakeable. It was the ding of the elevator arriving.
Read MoreAva Glass’s “The Traitor” Is a Thrilling Race to the Truth – Read an Exclusive Excerpt

The Best Toys on Amazon for Every Age – All Under $30

Describing the challenge of shopping for toys on Amazon as daunting is an understatement. There are pages upon pages of highly-ranked sensory toys, building sets, arts and crafts, and more, not to mention similar items from different brands with competitive prices can be overwhelming. But before you give up altogether, hear us out: we've compiled 20 of the most popular toys on Amazon for all ages to help simplify your shopping experience. We've included top-rated options for babies, toddlers, elementary schoolers, and even picky big kids. The best part is that all of our selections are under $30 - because the truth is that you don't need to splurge to find the perfect toy. We can practically guarantee you'll find something on our list, whether you're shopping for a birthday gift or prepping for the holidays. A few of our favorites include a mess-free drawing pad ideal for keeping little ones occupied on long car rides, a mystery set of cute Squishmallows, and a tracing pad to help build their creativity skills. There's so much more where that came from, though. Keep scrolling to shop these products and more of the best toys on Amazon. Related: 15 Toy Organizers That'll Restore a Semblance of Order in Your Home
Read MoreThe Best Toys on Amazon for Every Age – All Under $30