Tech / Technology

How to watch the October Apple event — expect new MacBooks

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Wondering how to watch the October Apple event? We’ve got the scoop on when and where you can watch the “Scary Fast” live stream.
Apple October event 2023 invite with Finder icon

Wondering how to watch the October 2023 Apple event? Rumor has it that the Cupertino-based tech giant has plans to release new MacBook Pro models as well as the next-generation iMac.

Apple is hosting a livestream billed “Scary Fast,” but what’s interesting is that it’s during a non-traditional hour. However, if you’re a tech enthusiast like myself, or you simply want to watch the livestream everyone’s been gushing about on social media, check out the information below to find out how to watch it.

How to watch the October Apple event

You can watch Apple’s “Scary Fast” livestream three ways:

In my experience, Apple’s official website is typically a second or two ahead of the YouTube livestream.

What time is the October Apple event?

Apple’s “Scary Fast” livestream is on Oct. 30 at 5 p.m. PDT. And no, that is not a typo. For the first time ever, Apple is hosting a nighttime event, feeding into the Halloween vibes.

For your convenience, here are the start times for the Apple October 2023 event for other parts of the world:

  • Mountain Time: 6 p.m.

  • Central Time: 7 p.m.

  • Eastern Time: 8 p.m.

  • Rio de Janeiro: 9 p.m.

  • London: 1 a.m.

  • Berlin: 2 a.m.

  • UTC: 12 a.m.

As you can see, this is a late start for almost everyone. Some will be getting ready for bed – and others will already be in bed.

What to expect from the October Apple event

According to Bloomberg’s Gurman, the Apple October 2023 event is expected to reveal three MacBook Pro models: the 13-inch MacBook Pro, 14-inch MacBook Pro and 16-inch MacBook Pro. We also may see a new iMac.

colorful iMacs with M1 chip

iMac
Credit: Apple

For more in-depth details about what to expect, click here.

Tech / Technology

12 of the best romantic comedies streaming on Hulu in 2023

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“Fire Island,” “Palm Springs,” “Brown Sugar,” and “Sleepless in Seattle” are among the best romantic comedies now streaming on Hulu.

There’s nothing like a feature-length chance to fall in love. And there’s no better time to see it than right now.

Whether you’re preparing a cozy evening for two, having a long-distance hang with friends, or embarking on a private, solo cry over love lost/love won/the state of the planet/etc., romantic comedies are one of our greatest resources for emotional catharsis. Roll into the romance and humor of it all with abandon (and our help). Mashable has combed through every rom-com on Hulu to assess the best of the best for your streaming buck.

Here are the 10 best romantic comedies now on Hulu.

1. Palm Springs

A man and woman float in a pool.


Credit: Hulu

In one of the best movies of 2020, Andy Samberg and Cristin Milioti play nihilistic wedding guests who become stuck in a time loop à la Groundhog Day. Stupidly funny and surprisingly sweet, this sci-fi nightmare-meets-rom-com explores a been-there-done-that premise with a fresh approach and two leads you’ll fall for instantly. (Fair warning: If you’re in the middle of an existential crisis, maybe hold off on this one. Palm Springs isn’t your average meet-cute.) — Alison Foreman, Entertainment Reporter

How to watch: Palm Springs is streaming on Hulu.

2. Brown Sugar

Sanaa Lathan and Taye Diggs in "Brown Sugar."


Credit: K C Bailey / Fox Searchlight / Kobal / Shutterstock

Forget enemies to lovers, can you handle traveling the rocky road from friends to lovers? Rick Famuyiwa’s 2002 rom-com follows a pair of childhood friends on their journey to grown-up lust and commitment. Their story begins on a street corner, where listening to hip hop spurred big career dreams for a boy and girl. Years later, Dre (Taye Diggs) is a successful record exec, while Syd (Sanaa Lathan) is a powerful magazine editor. But despite their natural chemistry, other could-be loves keep getting in the way. Can they get “the best of both worlds…the buddy and the booty?” Interweaving a passion for music with desire for each other, Brown Sugar lays down a sweet and smooth story you can’t help but fall for. Nicole Ari Parker, Boris Kodjoe, and Queen Latifah co-star. — Kristy Puchko, Film Editor

How to watch: Brown Sugar is streaming on Hulu through Starz.

3. Fire Island

A group of friends hang out in the sun on "Fire Island."


Credit: Hulu

Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice gets a modern makeover with Fire Island. Joel Kim Booster reimagines the rom-com of manners as a gay love story set in the eponymous vacation spot. There, a chosen family of gay men and their lesbian den mother (Margaret Cho) revel with sunshine, champagne, and karaoke. But an unexpected buzzkill arrives in the form of a pretentious and posh lawyer (Conrad Ricamora), who seems to sneer at the group’s idea of a good time. Despite an awkward introduction, the lawyer and the group’s main character (Booster) kick off a promising romance. But can it be more than a summer fling? — K.P.

How to watch: Fire Island is streaming on Hulu.

4. Sleepless in Seattle 

It might get frequently confused with You’ve Got Mail, but Sleepless in Seattle is in solid company in the niche but excellent Tom-Hanks-and-Meg-Ryan-fall-in-love-without-meeting genre. Hanks plays widower Sam, whose son (Ross Malinger) convinces him to talk about his late wife on the radio. This story captivates listeners around the country, including Annie (Ryan), who writes to Sam and asks him to meet her at the Empire State Building on Valentine’s Day. As the day ticks closer, life mostly goes on, but chance encounters and missed connections pile up until the fateful meeting.

We know what you’re thinking: Do they go to the Empire State Building? Do they live happily ever after?? Who knows!!*Proma Khosla, Senior Entertainment Reporter

How to watch: Sleepless in Seattle is now streaming on Hulu.

5. Crush

Three teens stand gawking in a high school hallway.


Credit: Hulu

The most refreshing thing about Hulu’s latest queer rom-com is that all the characters are super queer. This isn’t a coming-out story about the one queer girl at her high school or the shy lesbian who’s secretly crushing on the cool, unattainable straight girl — relatable, yes, but we’ve done it. Crush follows a playful (if predictable) love triangle in which very-out Paige (Rowan Blanchard) desperately tries to lock down her longtime crush Gabriella (Isabella Ferreira), the popular girl (guess what, she’s queer!), while drumming up a sweet connection with Gabi’s twin sister (Auli’i Cravalho), an introverted bi skater-girl type. The flirting is a little elementary at times, but the short-and-sweet Crush excels at showing young queer people being themselves and getting a sappy love story to call their own.* — Oliver Whitney, Freelance Contributor

How to watch: Crush is streaming on Hulu.

6. 50 First Dates

50 First Dates is one of those rom-coms you never remember loving quite as much as you do. (See what I did there?) Adam Sandler stars as a laid-back womanizer who falls head over heels for a woman with short-term memory loss, played by Drew Barrymore. This classically funny premise offers a framework for some killer comedic acting by the movie’s entire cast, as well as a surprisingly sensitive reflection on what it means to love unconditionally. Plus, it’s got penguins! And a walrus! —A.F.

How to watch: 50 First Dates is streaming on Hulu.

7. I’m Your Man

Maren Eggert and Dan Stevens in "I'm Your Man."


Credit: Bleecker Street

Want an edge of sci-fi to your romance? Then you’ve got to watch this 2021 gem, which was German’s entry for the Best International Feature Oscar. Maren Eggert stars as a scientist tasked with testing out a robot companion to see how convincingly human it might be. Tom (Dan Stevens) is handsome, attentive, and loves to dance. He’s designed to say the right thing and anticipate every need. The idea is seductive, but this deeply rational (and a bit cynical) woman isn’t so eager to fall for a robo-boy toy whose beating heart is an aim-to-please algorithm. Can real love bloom between (wo)man and machine? And what would that even mean!? Find out with I’m Your Man. K.P.

How to watch: I’m Your Man is streaming on Hulu.

8. Rye Lane

David Jonsson and Vivian Oparah play on a seesaw in "Rye Lane."


Credit: Searchlight Pictures

Among the most winsome movies of Sundance 2023 is this South London-set romantic comedy. Directed by Raine Allen Miller, Rye Lane stars David Jonsson (Industry) and Vivian Oparah (Class) as heartbroken twenty-somethings who fatefully cross paths and might just tumble into new love. A humbling beginning with a bathroom meet-not-so-cute swiftly spins into a happenstance first date full of fun, banter, surprises, and a wee bit of breaking and entering. (Hey, breakups get messy.)

Painted in saturated colors, paced like a dance party, and brought to life by a kinetic ensemble cast, Rye Lane is a pure pleasure to watch. But it’s Jonsson and Oparah, with their killer comedic timing and off-the-charts chemistry, that make this movie soar.*K.P.

How to watch: Rye Lane is now streaming on Hulu.

9. Notting Hill

English screenwriter Richard Curtis is the luminary of rom-coms, having contributed to such delights as Love Actually, Bridget Jones’s Diary, About Time, and Four Weddings and a Funeral. Among his most beguiling romances is this tale of boy meets movie star. Hugh Grant headlines as a humble bookshop owner whose simple life is thrown into spin — and the spotlight — when he falls for an ultra-famous American actress (Julia Roberts). Their flirtations are an alluring collision of British charm and American candor. The supporting cast boasts a scene-stealing Rhys Ifans, and the finale will make you cheer and swoon. — K.P

How to watch: Notting Hill is streaming on Hulu.

10. Sliding Doors

If you can handle a dash of drama in your rom-com, you’ll love writer/director Peter Howitt’s 1998 head-spinner. Offering two tales of love for one subway ticket, Sliding Doors follows Londoner Helen Quilley (Gwyneth Paltrow) on a splintered story of what happens to her if she catches her train or misses it. In one scenario, she catches her philandering boyfriend (John Lynch) in bed with another woman (a deliciously devilish Jeanne Tripplehorn). In the other, she arrives too late to expose his infidelity, so their relationship rumbles along while her other persona pursues passion with a charming stranger (John Hannah). Peppered with whimsy, warmth, and some shocking turns, this one will have you gasping, but leave you grinning.*K.P

How to watch: Sliding Doors is now streaming on Hulu.

11. Happiest Season

Kristen Stewart and Mackenzie Davis star in this sapphic rom-com co-written and directed by Clea DuVall. But rather than it being a charming tale of falling in love, this is a rocking Christmas-set comedy about the drama of meeting the parents. When metropolitan Abby (Stewart) accompanies her girlfriend Harper (Davis) home for the holidays, she not only meets kooky family members, and a smoking hot ex (Aubrey Plaza), but also discovers her lover is closeted. Can this couple have a happy holiday under these conditions? Hijinks, drag queens, and Dan Levy will ensue. —K.P.

How to watch: Happiest Season is now streaming on Hulu.

12. Easy A

Want a raunchy teen comedy that’s surprisingly smart? Then revisit 2010’s winsome rom-com Easy A. Emma Stone stars as Olive, a modern-day Hester Prynne, which in this context means a high school girl who’s trading fictional sexcapades for gift cards. The boys get high fives for their sexual prowess, while — double standards being what they are — Olive get slut-shamed as a pariah. But don’t worry, she’s got a plan.

Will Gluck directs a star-studded cast that includes You‘s Penn Badgley as a lovable crush, Amanda Bynes as a judgmental mean girl, Thomas Haden Church as a confounded mentor, and Patricia Clarkson and Stanley Tucci as Olive’s parents, who are funny, outrageous, and the definition of couple goals. They’ve got a pocketful (pocketful, pocketful) of sunshine, and all you have to do to enjoy is hit play.* — K.P.

How to watch: Easy A is now streaming on Hulu.

UPDATE: Oct. 27, 2023, 11:28 a.m. EDT This post has been updated to reflect the current selection available on Hulu.


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Tech / Technology

Emma Rogue, Gen Z thrifting queen, on ‘childhood nostalgia-core’ and the future of fashion

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Emma Rogue, Instagram creator and thrift queen, on Gen Z ‘nostalgia-core’ and how technology is making fashion ‘accessible to the masses.’
Three photos of Emma (one of her in the glasses, one smiling, one of her throwing up two gya-ru peace signs.

We’re hanging out at Emma Rogue’s thrifting dreamland in downtown Manhattan, the physical embodiment of her adoration of the last 30 years of style. A handful of young women in exquisitely curated outfits sift through clothing racks as the Pussycat Dolls and Backstreet Boys play in the background. Tees and trinkets from the early 2000s adorn the walls, making the shop feel more like Emma’s childhood bedroom than a booming thrift business.

Emma knows a thing or two about looking good. Her Instagram and TikTok videos celebrate New York street style, spotlighting the looks of strangers, celebs, and fellow creators alike. But today, she’s trying something completely new: wading into the waters of wearable tech.

Emma is one of a handful of creators tapped to bring Meta’s “It’s Your World” campaign to life by showing people how the nebulous (and sometimes confusing) world of AI and the metaverse can be put to use IRL. The company’s new Ray-Ban Meta smart glasses are her first piece of wearable tech. The shades can livestream, shoot photos and videos, play music, and offer assistance via Meta AI, and she’s already filmed a few clips on them for her Instagram.

In between shots, Mashable asks Emma about her vision for the future and digital fashion.

Mashable: Thrifting can be an accessible form of fashion. How do you see tech making fashion more accessible?

Emma Rogue: Everything, in every way. With Rogue, we utilize Instagram Reels’ short-form videos a lot. It’s become integral to our business model. We do short-form interviews with customers who come to us organically through word of mouth or if they’ve seen us online. A lot of the time, they’re wearing thrifted outfits, [so] just being able to showcase that online and show our viewers that, yes, you can dress in an amazing fit and it all be from the thrift. That’s a great form of making it accessible to the masses.

A lot of times people are afraid of style, right? You might be scared to tap into that world. So when they see someone that looks similar to them or their age looking amazing, and they realize it’s all thrifted, it might spark a light in their head like, “Oh, maybe I could try doing that.” They’re gonna screenshot that outfit, then they’re gonna go to their local thrift and be like, “OK, I love her look, let me try to recreate it.”

So that’s one way we do it. Every day we post a video. Volume and consistency are key in the content game. It’s the Victoria Paris method, shout out [to] Victoria. I love her. She sold with me on my opening day.

I think the first time I saw you online was in Caleb Simpson’s apartment tour series. You showed him your Pop-Tarts collab. 

Oh yeah, right there! [points to a Pop-Tarts box in display case.] And our Guinness World Record is right over there, too. We built the world’s biggest Pop-Tarts throne, 8 feet!

Where is the throne now?

In my parent’s garage in New Jersey. A lot of my stuff has been removed from it, but the throne remains.

Are you into digital fashion at all? How do you dress in the digital world?

I don’t have a gaming avatar, but I would dress it in something I would not wear every day because it’s maybe a little uncomfortable. I would put myself in a peak Emma fit: big platforms — I just got my first ever Rick [Owens] shoes so I might do some crazy Rick heels — thigh highs, a cute mini skirt, maybe a cargo mini? That would be cute. A mesh long sleeve and a tank top on top of that, a strappy cami. Accessories everywhere. A lot of metal rings, pigtails, with two strands of hair in front. And arm warmers and leg warmers.

I’m so excited for the day Rogue exists in the metaverse and customers all over the world can shop our stuff there.

Have you been talking about opening a Rogue in the metaverse?

I have a friend who’s really into the metaverse. He’s like “Emma, you gotta get on, buy some land, and build Rogue!” I’m not that deep into it. I haven’t bought land yet because I’m kind of nervous. But I’m excited for when it comes.

The thing is, we have such a big audience. It pains me when they say like, “Build a Rogue in London!” or “Come make a Rogue in Italy!” or I’ll get a DM from some kid in Germany, and they’ll say, “Can you come to this little town in the middle of nowhere?” So if Rogue was in the metaverse and existed there, it’d be so cool for these kids to just like tap in and visit. It would be cool if we could update it with all our new drops and then they could dress their avatars in them.

What does Rogue in the metaverse look like?

Childhood nostalgia-core bonanza. Foam pits, trampolines everywhere, giant slides into fluffy mattresses. Remember in Princess Diaries 2 when they slid down the slide? Stuff like that. Everything you wanted to do as a kid in one place. Everywhere your parents wouldn’t take you in one place. Disney World. All the best parts of your childhood.

I get so happy thinking about my childhood, thinking back to the times when I had no worries. I think everyone can relate to that in some sort of way. As you get older, it’s amazing, right? We’re growing, and learning more every day. But you’ve got bills to pay and it’s like, “I don’t want to do taxes!” Like, come on! There will be no taxes in Rogue World.

I would love to have a zoo in there. You know, ride the elephants or something. Literally your wildest imagination. The NeverEnding Story is one of my favorite movies of all time, so there’s going to be Falkor in there. Maybe different themed rooms, or zones. There’d be a room [that] anyone could walk into and it’d become their favorite dream. I think cooler than a room would be like a dome. Many different domes, so it doesn’t look like a ceiling.

Like in “Club Penguin.”

I’m more of a Webkinz girl.

I love the way that Gen Z has repurposed and revived Y2K tech. Why is your generation so drawn to those items and aesthetics?

They never experienced it. It’s exciting to them because it was never part of their day-to-day, but maybe they heard their mom talk about it or their brother talk about it. Maybe they saw it in their favorite movie. Those pieces of technology have become ephemeral. [Gen Z] never got to experience that but [they’ll see it on] old online mood boards or certain aesthetic pages on Instagram. In music videos on YouTube [from the 2000s] they held Sidekick phones. [Gen Z] never had that experience. They’re experiencing something they never got to, they’re transporting back in time.

You mentioned mood boards and Instagram accounts dedicated to a particular aesthetic. Where do you find inspiration online?

I like Instagram’s Explore page and Reels a lot to find inspiration and to find new talent — maybe to find emerging brands that we want to have a drop with here [at Rogue]. Or someone we want to collaborate with or a designer I want to commission to design a piece for me in my new collection. Instagram is part of my daily life and also for connecting with people. Sending a DM is the best thing that we could have access to. I posted Diplo on my story yesterday because I was at his concert, and he reposted me and DM’d me back! And I was like, “Perfect, pull up to the shop and we’ll get a fit check.” There’s no limit to what we have access to.

Tech / Technology

Explainer: ‘Gen V’ episode 7 reveals 2 bombshell connections to ‘The Boys’

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“The Boys” spin-off “Gen V” reveals two major secrets about Dean Shetty and Victoria Neuman in episode 7, “Sick.”

To say a lot happened in episode 7 of Gen V would be an understatement.

Cate (Maddie Phillips) murdered Dean Shetty (Shelley Conn). Sam (Asa Germann) became radicalized by supe supremacists. Vice-presidential candidate Victoria Neuman (Claudia Doumit) is back to her head-exploding ways. But perhaps most shocking of all are two major connections to The Boys that completely change the game at Godolkin University.

Up until now, Gen V has kept its connections to The Boys mostly limited to a few cameos, like Ashley (Colby Minifie), Adam (P.J. Byrne), and even Soldier Boy (Jensen Ackles). However, episode 7 of Gen V, titled “Sick,” takes that connection up a notch with these two reveals.

Dean Shetty hates supes because of a devastating moment from Season 1 of The Boys.

Dean Shetty from "Gen V" in her office.

Shelley Conn in “Gen V.”
Credit: Brooke Palmer/Prime Video

Despite being the dean of a university for budding superheroes, it’s clear Dean Shetty despises all supes with a burning passion. She tortures them in the secret laboratory known as The Woods, and she’s been secretly developing a virus that could kill all supes should it become contagious.

But just why does she hate supes so much? Well, it all ties back to Season 1, episode 4 of The Boys, titled “The Female of the Species.”

“The Female of the Species” features one of the most well-known — and most horrifying — sequences from The Boys to date. Homelander (Antony Starr) and Queen Maeve (Dominique McElligott) try to stop the hijacking of Transoceanic Flight 37, only to irreparably damage the cockpit. Instead of making an effort to save the passengers onboard, Homelander decides to leave them all to die. That decision remains one of his most monstrous moments yet, and it’s had lasting consequences throughout The Boys — and now Gen V.

Once Marie Moreau (Jaz Sinclair) realizes Shetty’s up to no good, she and Jordan (London Thor and Derek Luh) sneak into her office to learn more about The Woods. There, they discover documents and newspaper clippings about Flight 37. The flight manifest reveals that Dean Shetty’s husband and child were both onboard when it crashed, explaining why Shetty has a vendetta against supes. Gen V has teased this motivation throughout the season, with Shetty telling Marie early on that she had a daughter who died. The Homelander connection does prove an intense twist, though, and one of Gen V‘s most overt links to the plot of The Boys so far.

Marie Moreau and Victoria Neuman have the same powers.

Victoria Neuman from "The Boys" and "Gen V" speaks at a town hall, wearing a blue suit.

Claudia Doumit in “Gen V.”
Credit: Brooke Palmer/Prime Video

If you thought the Flight 37 reveal was the biggest trick “Sick” had up its sleeve, think again. Armed with the knowledge of The Woods, Marie tries to get word to Victoria, who is holding a town hall on campus. What she finds is way more than she bargained for.

Victoria seems to know more about Marie’s powers than even Marie does, telling her that she should be able to sense key information about people by reading their blood. Thanks to this advice, Marie determines that Victoria is a supe as well — but not just any supe! She’s a supe with the same powers as Marie.

We see this when Victoria cuts open her hand and creates a tendril of blood, just like Marie tends to do. This moment is huge news in both the world of Gen V and The Boys. Gen V-wise, it finally tells us who Marie’s mysterious benefactor is, and it gives us a hint at just how far Marie may be able to push her powers. In terms of The Boys, it clues us into the extent of Victoria’s powers. Throughout The Boys, we’ve only seen her blow up people’s heads (and sometimes other body parts). Now we know that she’s capable of other kinds of blood manipulation — and she’s not the only supe with this set of powers.

Victoria seems friendly enough with Marie, bonding with her over their time at the Red River Institute and insisting that they stay in touch. But this is head-exploding, power-hungry Victoria Neuman we’re talking about here. Is she really going to let a supe with her skills continue to run free in the world? Will she attempt to manipulate Marie and take her under her wing, or try to eliminate her entirely?

On the flip side, what does this reveal mean for Marie? Will she follow in Victoria’s footsteps and start blowing up people’s heads? Could she become just as powerful as Victoria, or even more so? Who knows — maybe the Gen V Season 1 finale will treat us to a blood-bending battle between the two.

Gen V is now streaming on Prime Video.