Blackpink's Kristen Stewart, Jennie and Gracie Abrams feel free at Chanel

Kristen Stewart worked on her first script and teased some of her writing prowess at the show Chanel. The show opened with a short film featuring Stewart as herself, with voice-over lines including: "It's important to burn your best yesterday, every day, so that you can start again."

"I wrote them," Stewart said after the show. “I am a better writer than I am an outspoken speaker. I mean, I can at least be on the verge of expressing myself when I have a minute alone."

The actress said it reflects her philosophy of constantly challenging herself, and it fits the current cultural climate.

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"We are all now allowed to transform daily and evolve, and I think that's really important, not necessarily burning it, but never feeling like you've landed or being so proud of a fixed idea because every day the world changes,” she said.

The film, directed by Inez and Vinoodh, is a bit of a play about the paparazzi and the lives in the spotlight, as photographers track Stewart as she leaves a restaurant. She also says there that the world is "highly pressured" and that it is moving so fast that it gives it a "boost".

"You're not always going to be at the forefront of the change that's going on, because you get f–king old,” the 32-year-old said. not yourself, someone else will do it for you." And it's painful. These kind of ruins live,” she said of tabloid culture.

The former child star reflected on her childhood in the 2000s, when the media treated people harshly. young female stars and expected hyperfemininity. “It was a really tough time for women, so judgmental and incredibly rigid, in terms of who we were allowed to be. Now he just feels sprawlingly free. She said that although she grew up in front of the camera during this time, she never had social media, which gives her the opportunity to distance herself from the buzz that constantly swirls around her.

To that end, the star attended the show with her fiancé Dylan Meyer and sported a new short mullet pixie.

"When I was little, people said, 'Oh, you look like a boy.' No one would say that anymore… we crack open words in a way, which to me feels like a release,” she added.

Gracie Abrams, fresh off a tour with Olivia Rodrigo and gearing up to drop her next single on Friday , reflected on Stewart's film as a 23-year-old budding pop star.

"Life gives me 100% whiplash. I thought it was so true," she said. "I'm trying to stay present as much as possible right now. For an anxious person, it takes a lot of practice, but I've improved recently and it's increased my quality of life tenfold."

She said that mediation, therapy and "writing music is my number one tool for stay sane". She listens to Nina Simone and Joni Mitchell as inspirations. "As a writer, I'm lucky to live in a time where women are speaking out as much as we are, and so I kind of try to stay quiet and listen to everyone's voice."

His new single "Difficult" was co-written with friend Aaron Dessner and is a bit of a change in his sound and approach based on a lot of self-reflection. "This song is more introspective about my relationship with myself, less about my relationship with others."

Abrams will celebrate the release in Paris before returning home to L.A. and continuing to work...

Blackpink's Kristen Stewart, Jennie and Gracie Abrams feel free at Chanel

Kristen Stewart worked on her first script and teased some of her writing prowess at the show Chanel. The show opened with a short film featuring Stewart as herself, with voice-over lines including: "It's important to burn your best yesterday, every day, so that you can start again."

"I wrote them," Stewart said after the show. “I am a better writer than I am an outspoken speaker. I mean, I can at least be on the verge of expressing myself when I have a minute alone."

The actress said it reflects her philosophy of constantly challenging herself, and it fits the current cultural climate.

Related Galleries

"We are all now allowed to transform daily and evolve, and I think that's really important, not necessarily burning it, but never feeling like you've landed or being so proud of a fixed idea because every day the world changes,” she said.

The film, directed by Inez and Vinoodh, is a bit of a play about the paparazzi and the lives in the spotlight, as photographers track Stewart as she leaves a restaurant. She also says there that the world is "highly pressured" and that it is moving so fast that it gives it a "boost".

"You're not always going to be at the forefront of the change that's going on, because you get f–king old,” the 32-year-old said. not yourself, someone else will do it for you." And it's painful. These kind of ruins live,” she said of tabloid culture.

The former child star reflected on her childhood in the 2000s, when the media treated people harshly. young female stars and expected hyperfemininity. “It was a really tough time for women, so judgmental and incredibly rigid, in terms of who we were allowed to be. Now he just feels sprawlingly free. She said that although she grew up in front of the camera during this time, she never had social media, which gives her the opportunity to distance herself from the buzz that constantly swirls around her.

To that end, the star attended the show with her fiancé Dylan Meyer and sported a new short mullet pixie.

"When I was little, people said, 'Oh, you look like a boy.' No one would say that anymore… we crack open words in a way, which to me feels like a release,” she added.

Gracie Abrams, fresh off a tour with Olivia Rodrigo and gearing up to drop her next single on Friday , reflected on Stewart's film as a 23-year-old budding pop star.

"Life gives me 100% whiplash. I thought it was so true," she said. "I'm trying to stay present as much as possible right now. For an anxious person, it takes a lot of practice, but I've improved recently and it's increased my quality of life tenfold."

She said that mediation, therapy and "writing music is my number one tool for stay sane". She listens to Nina Simone and Joni Mitchell as inspirations. "As a writer, I'm lucky to live in a time where women are speaking out as much as we are, and so I kind of try to stay quiet and listen to everyone's voice."

His new single "Difficult" was co-written with friend Aaron Dessner and is a bit of a change in his sound and approach based on a lot of self-reflection. "This song is more introspective about my relationship with myself, less about my relationship with others."

Abrams will celebrate the release in Paris before returning home to L.A. and continuing to work...

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