Sydney Cummings: Bringing the Gym to You

It’s a new year, which means New Year’s resolutions. Many of you probably have some form of “work out more” or “be healthier” or “take care of my body” on that list, right? But how often do you ever actually get around to those resolutions? Well, I’ll make it easy for you and share my secret on how I was able to keep active while in a small apartment instead of making the trek to Ratner or purchasing a Peloton.

You may have heard of fitness influencers like Chloe Ting, who posts workout videos on YouTube and is known for her “2 Weeks Shred Challenge.” You may have even tried it yourself during peak quarantine. Although I never tried it, I remember hearing friends who started it but were never able to finish, or who did the entire thing and didn’t really see much of a difference in their physique. Well, let me tell you why Sydney Cummings is a different kind of “influencer” and why she is, frankly, the best.

 Free workouts:

Sydney posts a brand-new workout every day at 5 AM as part of her fitness company she runs with her fiancé called Royal Change. These videos are posted to YouTube, where you can view them for free! She even refuses ads so that they don’t interrupt the videos and more importantly your workout! Although many of her workouts use dumbbells or other home equipment, she often mentions ways you can modify the exercises if you don’t have the proper gear. She is committed to showing how anyone, regardless of living space or fortune, can get up and be active.

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Researched, enjoyable workouts:

Because Sydney is a National Academy of Sports Medicine Certified Personal Trainer and Fitness Nutrition Specialist, she has the proper knowledge that many fitness influencers don’t actually have. Each month, she creates a theme and designs daily workouts that are made to progressively increase your strength, conditioning, and overall health. By the end of the month, you’ll be surprised at just what your body can do! Plus, she makes working out fun: the special effects of her set, her motivational words, and her very unique exercises will make you love getting up to work with her.

This month’s theme, “Ignite.” Image via

This month’s theme, “Ignite.” Image via

Optional group membership:

Outside of YouTube, Sydney offers entrance to a group called the “Sydney Squad.” While this membership isn’t free, it is a Facebook group of 3.3K+ driven people who foster an incredibly supportive environment. I was in the Squad for a few months in quarantine, and seeing people post their transformations since starting with Sydney was incredibly inspiring. Plus, if you were to post, you would get about fifty comments from complete strangers praising you with the sweetest of messages. In a time of strife and hardship, it’s a blessing to know that there are people who have your back, even if they don’t know you. This group also offers a workout schedule for the entire month so you know what will be coming, private Q&As with Sydney, daily challenges, a nutritional program based on your specific needs, recipes, and knowledgeable guest speakers. 

Sydney with some members of the Squad early last year. Image via

Sydney with some members of the Squad early last year. Image via

A different idea of health:

I won’t sugarcoat it: most influencers are super skinny. Sydney has a very muscular physique: while she certainly has minimal body-fat, she doesn’t have the same type of Chloe Ting skinniness that many teenage girls strive for. In an era of increasing awareness of different body styles and a changing definition of “beautiful,” Sydney offers something different: to be healthy and beautiful is to be strong. Strong can mean both physically, where you can bench X number of pounds, but can also mean mentally. She makes the point that every day when you do her workouts, you exhibit mental strength because you were able to push through the pain and finish. At the end of every workout, she delivers a pep talk where her pride in you genuinely shows and motivates you to show up the next day. Sydney teaches people that if you can get through her workouts, you can get through your day or any other struggles you may be going through; you just have to search for that determination you have in your workouts and apply it to your daily life.

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Sydney Cummings is one of the most inspirational people I have seen on the internet: she has gone through the struggles of losing a brother in an accident, losing a job, and even getting shot. Still, every day, she shows up for her audience. She shows up because she knows she can make a difference in their lives and spread good in the world. She has picked me up when I’ve felt down and has motivated me to become my best self. You won’t find another fitness trainer like her, I guarantee you.

Subscribe to her at https://www.youtube.com/c/SydneyCummings.


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YouTube's Late-Night

Is there anything worse than telling a joke and having no one laugh at it? For the past several weeks, this has been the reality for the hosts of late-night talk shows. Aside from being super awkward, the shift to online content is showing the vulnerabilities of traditional TV entertainment.

When the COVID-19 epidemic began to spread in the US, late-night shows removed their live audiences and kept only their production crew on site. As workplace restrictions increased, however, TV shows and movie productions everywhere came to a complete halt. Rather than going on hiatus, the show had to go on somehow, and the obvious place for this was YouTube.

Already late-night shows had relied on YouTube to maintain an online presence. Clips of episodes were regularly being uploaded, and for many that do not have a cable, YouTube has been the only way to keep up with late-night programming. John Oliver and Jimmy Kimmel have found particular success with their YouTube presence—often being at the top of the trending page.

Thus came the barrage of self-made Youtube videos by the hosts of late-night. Seth Meyers took to a hallway, Samantha Bee opted to the woods outside her home, and Jimmy Fallon had his dog Gary make a cameo. As endearing as Fallon’s at-home awkwardness is, what was incredibly clear (by Meyers’ horrendous audio) was that these hosts were simply that—hosts. While incredible comedians and entertainers, the ability to set up a camera or choose the best place to record is out of their wheelhouse.

Outside of talk-shows, SNL was having similar issues while learning how to maintain the magic of live tv with video chatting. Taking one look at their comments section, and people were not pleased with certain decisions like trying to maintain a laugh track. Downsizing has not proved easy.

To the host and their team’s defense, there has been a steady improvement in the quality of videos. It appears that most are reading the feedback and are ramping up their at-home production. Rather than trying to act like things are completely normal, Fallon and Samantha Bee have opted to include their family wherever possible, which has brought a great sense of relatability that is often missing from late-night. Conan O’Brien, Seth Meyers, and most others have also continued guest appearances via video chat. Moreover, beside several videos, there is a direct tab to donate to various charity organizations, or the video itself is partnered with an organization that is providing relief to those in need.

Most interesting has been the continuation of musical appearances. James Corden and Fallon have both invited musical guests like Kesha, Gwen Stefani, and Blake Shelton to perform their latest hits from their home. Aside from some performances being more stripped back due to the lack of equipment, artists like Dua Lipa managed to incorporate her back up dancers, singers, and band despite being separated.

The big question is—how long can late-night stay home?

In 2015, Grace Helbig ventured out of YouTube into the late-night talk show world with The Grace Helbig Show on E!. The format included Grace inviting the guest into her “home” where she would play various games followed by an interview. She seemed to be so ahead of her time that the show did not get past season one. At the time it was clear that a YouTube star was not able to translate her viewership to a traditional TV setting. Even this year, YouTuber Lilly Singh has been the source is widespread criticism over her new late-night show. Like her predecessor, she has not hit the mark.

It seems that jumping between platforms has been hard for YouTube stars, and this may become the case for the other side. Despite late-night having found success online, it has been largely a result of viewers feeling like they are getting premium TV entertainment for free: a high budget production on a free site. Now that all crews are home, the hosts are being left to fend for themselves in the sea of Youtube personalities. 

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“Shout out to YouTubers who have been doing this for a long time,” Seth Meyers jokes at the beginning of another hallway video. Indeed, current YouTube giants like David Dobrik and Emma Chamberlain know how to frame, light, and edit their videos masterfully. What happens when these online pros are paired against the late-night icons? Of course both can co-exist—as do most YouTube stars. With so much extra free time, people can consume more content. However, YouTube is personality driven, and as the world faces the reality that large group gatherings like TV show productions may not return until 2021, hosts are going to have to adapt more than ever. Their writing staff can certainly write equally high value comedy remotely, and celebrities can Zoom-in, but late-night will not be the same once it returns to television.

Audiences are drawn to the down-to-earth celebrities, which is why YouTube has grown to dominate the entertainment industry in the last decade, slowly killing traditional cable TV alongside Netflix and other streaming services. The longer late-night hosts are immersed in the world of YouTube, the more likely that production companies may begin to shift their attention to YouTubers that are masters of at-home entertainment rather than stand up comedians. Current late-night hosts have established themselves well enough to survive this disruption, but the format and faces of late-night are being challenged more than ever.

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Fashion on YouTube: A Facet Worth Exploring

YouTube really is something. There’s nothing you can’t find on it. There are always new genres of home-produced content, new forms of vlogs, new “lo-fi chill study music” videos waiting to be discovered. But there’s so little time and so many recommended-video-playlist-rabbit-holes to avoid! I’ve got you covered. Get a taste of some style vloggers the world is enjoying right now, and let’s form some opinions.

Favourite Outfit via

Favourite Outfit via

bestdressed

bestdressed, run by the recent UCLA graduate Ashley, started off as your average “I’m trying to be an influencer” channel, but now has a whole 2.3 million followers. Full of thrift hauls, thrift flips, lookbooks and collaborations with other YouTubers, she also films occasional room makeovers and even conversations with her followers on twitter. Her style is preppy with a lot of thrifted vintage items being moulded into current trends (not too hard since the 90s are literally back).

I liked her a lot, you know, I really did. Her obsession with gingham and ruffled babydoll tops dipped in pastels and floral patterns were my Urban-Outfitters-flavoured wet dream. But now her style seems a little repetitive, and maybe even juvenile. Her thrifting finds get more and more refined each time, and she maintains her cute editing style with the captions chalked on in a handwritten font. But I crave a fresher take. And fewer forced monologues on the patriarchy, being awkward and being single (we get it Ashley- ur rElAtaBLe). I, however, will not stop drooling over her collection of strappy sandals from the 2000s, chunky buckled boots and pointy-toed slip-ons with the small wedge heels.

Favourite Video: 30 BACK TO SCHOOL OUTFITS to help you survive the school year

Studio86

Favourite Outfit via

Favourite Outfit via

Sisters Bao and Sheng run this chic channel that is admirably focused on delivering as a fashion blog. Dotted with some skincare tutorials, majority of this channel is thrift hauls, thrift flips and lookbooks. My personal favourite- the section dedicated to exploring the versatility of the items in their wardrobe, called “Maximize Your Wardrobe” (they once created a hundred outfits from fifteen garments?!). Versatility is the backbone of affordable yet innovative street style and they keep that in mind.

Their essence lies in the maturity and composure that their outfits convey. A collage of solid earthy tones presented in unique silhouettes, I think of culottes, linen button-downs and straight-legged jeans when I think of them. Unfortunately, I also think of every single search result for “minimalist fashion” on Pinterest when I think of them (it’s all those oversized blazers!). Their outfits sometimes border unexciting and their colour palette, unadventurous- two words anyone would hate to describe style as. But they pull everything off with elegance, and elegance is an accessory that everyone can use.

Favourite Video: HOW TO PUT TOGETHER AN OUTFIT 101

Shahd Batal

Favourite Outfit via

Favourite Outfit via

One of my more recent discoveries, Shahd’s style leaves me intrigued. She is more of a lifestyle vlogger, with daily routines, make-up tips and a whole set of “Get Ready With Me” videos. Her fashion videos are mostly hauls and look books that showcase her less conventional style. Shahd’s outfits don’t conform to any single aesthetic or colour scheme, so you could find looks bestdressed would endorse and outfits that look like a Studio86 creation in her videos, with her own twist to them.

Shahd takes the opposing aesthetics of hypebeast and minimalist chic and sandwiches them together. Her fresh spins on current trends leave me grinning, like the time she layered two handbags to add a new dimension to the tiny-grandma-purse fad or when she paired a trendy snakeskin print in her hijab with a solid rust gown. The only thing that you can find faults in is her editing. Her footage isn’t as sharply or stylishly edited as the others in this article, making the experience less visually appealing. But no one can doubt, her style is exciting.

Favourite Video: WHAT I WORE IN A WEEK

Valeria Lipovetsky

Favourite Outfit via

Favourite Outfit via

Another one of my more recent discoveries, Valeria has actually been around for a while and is more popular than most vloggers I have mentioned here, with over a million subscribers. Valeria is a model turned influencer, a nutritionist and a mother of 3 adorable boys whose childhood she documents in her weekly vlogs. Valeria, being older, has a more sophisticated style but still puts in some livelier, more individual touches here and there.

You get a sense of how to look put-together with Valeria, as she guides you through season essentials in flawlessly shot and edited videos. There’s something so relaxing about watching her crisply trimmed clips compiled with upbeat music; it’s like ASMR for fashion-vlog-junkies like me. Her little habit of letting a fluorescent, contrasting bra peek through a silk cami and layering a blazer under oversized coats add personality to her work. Her channel is not the most experimental, though, and she seems fixated on the idea of her outfits appearing “expensive.” But you go to it for more sombre everyday looks curated with class.

Favourite Video: 10 Coats You NEED This Season | **Winter Essentials** (her best editing yet)

CatCreature

Favourite Outfit via

Favourite Outfit via

Probably the most artsy on this list, CatCreature or Anabelle is a RISD student and her channel is a whole lot of vlogging with bits of style here and there. I included her in this list because all the rules that Valeria might recommend you follow, all the colours Studio86 would be too shy to touch and all the trends that bestdressed isn’t able to explore fully, all come together in the few fashion videos that Cat puts up.

Her hauls come seasoned with informed monologues about textiles and garment supply chain and all that good (important) stuff you should know when choosing your outfits. Her make up is bright and coordinated with her art-museum-souvenir-shop accessories (her handmade blown glass peach earrings!!) to complement her simple but adventurous style. There’s not much fashion on the blog, so to say, but the little there is- I’m a fan. But then again, artsy isn’t the only way of doing experimental, and is certainly not what everyone looks for, so I would go in with a pinch of salt.

Favourite Video: 🌤OOTW- Last Sunny Days Before Autumn \\ CatCreature (my actual favourite is this video she took down D’: so this will suffice )

These channels capture people’s attention with their unique takes on style. We love wardrobes with perspective, and they’ve got exactly that to offer.

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Jeffree Star x Shane Dawson: Where Controversy Meets Beauty

When two of Youtube’s most controversial figures get together, there’s bound to be a slew of drama on the rise with an obvious paycheck.

During the first documentary Shane Dawson did on Jeffree Star last year, we glimpsed into the beauty world and got confirmation of the partnership that is now taking the beauty community by storm. The collab between the duo includes not only Shane’s six part docs-series that reveals details on the makeup industry, but also the Jeffree x Shane makeup collab which includes: one main palette, a mini palette, six liquid lips, a clear gloss, mirrors, and new merch.

One of the many new merch items Shane Dawson has released through his new partnership with Jeffree Star. Via

One of the many new merch items Shane Dawson has released through his new partnership with Jeffree Star. Via

The first part of the new docu-series follows Shane as he experiences the glamorous and not so glamorous parts of Jeffree’s meet and greets. It isn’t until the second part we start seeing the tea that will come throughout the rest of series. During this, we start to get a glimpse into the vicious business side of the beauty industry and how easy it is to get scammed through partnerships with big brands. Even Shane, who has been on youtube for more than a decade, decimated his own profit from his merch sales for being naive and not understanding his worth.

It is in the final parts, we are starting to see the process of how a successful beauty company rolls out a new product. We get to see how the colors, layout, and packaging are chosen. It is also during these parts, we see Shane’s full, volatile reaction during the most recent (but definitely not the last) “Shane is over Party,” resulting from comments he made on his old podcast in bad taste about his cat. Not only that, we are let in on the secret that Jeffree was robbed of product worth a million dollars. To sum it up, it seems like the beauty community doesn’t want to see them succeed. Jeffree even concludes that the two are linked in an attempt to take them down.

One of Jeffree’s latest releases: the Alien Palette Via

One of Jeffree’s latest releases: the Alien Palette Via

I wouldn’t expect anything less from a collab of these two. With this projected to be Jeffree’s biggest launch yet with a profit of over thirty million dollars, I suggest you check it out.


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The James Charles Tea EXPLAINED

While this may seem like old news and pretty much everyone’s apologized to James, let’s break down how this whole mess started.

Tati’s “Bye Sister” Video That Started it All…

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This is the video that started ALL the tea. The now deleted “exposé” included Tati Westbrook DRAGGING James Charles. She said that James Charles was a terrible friend since he endorsed a competitor company that sold supplements. This was something Tati took personally, because she said that James would never endorse her own supplements, and she was nothing but a loving mentor to him. She mentioned that she was with him through everything, and was a mother figure to him, yet he would barely put her on his channel or show any public support towards her. Tati also thought it was acceptable to throw in his weird obsession with straight boys, which was an accusation that caused the whole internet to blow up.

These are texts between Nikita Dragun and James Charles regarding him agreeing to post an ad for the competitor’s supplement company. This was used as evidence to counter Tati’s belief that the whole situation was premeditated, and that James knew ahead of time that he would be helping this brand rather than the last minute situation he claimed it was.

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However, the main cause for this drama blowing up was the claim that James is a predator towards straight men.

People were coming out with videos supporting this accusation. One was a bicurious waiter who accused James of making him uncomfortable, the other being a bicurious boy James was talking to online for months and whom he flew out to attend Coachella with.

In the gallery above, you can see a couple of the celebrities who agreed that James Charles was making “evidently” straight men uncomfortable with DMs and comments on social media.

Here is a Buzzfeed article that lists all the celebrities that unfollowed him on social media after the outbreak of the scandal.

All of this drama has simmered down after James decided to end the accusations once and for all, causing everyone to go into actual shock. Tati deleted both of the videos she made about him, and many people have spoke up and apologized for feeding into the rumors.

Both videos have been linked but basically once you watch these you will probably be VERY confused!!!!!! I’ve come to the conclusion that James Charles has - in the past - made some straight/bicurious people uncomfortable in some ways. But there really isn’t too much hard evidence to back up that he’s a legitimate predator. A lot has been said and done, but at the end of the day, let’s not forget that people love drama - and it’s very easy to hop on the excitement of the “cancelled” culture bandwagon. :(

Enjoy the memes below that show just how impactful this moment was for the entire internet!!!

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