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Joshua Kushner and Karlie Kloss are selling their NYC apartment for $7 million. Here's a look inside the luxurious condo that comes with a fully landscaped terrace

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kushner kloss apartment

 

Venture capitalist Joshua Kushner and supermodel Karlie Kloss are selling their apartment in New York City for nearly $7 million

Kushner is the brother of Jared Kushner and son-in-law of President Donald Trump.

The couple, who got married in 2018, bought the condo in October 2013 for $4.5 million, according to Curbed. It's located in a Roman and Williams-designed building in the trendy downtown neighborhood of Nolita.

The apartment at 211 Elizabeth Street is listed by Nick Gavin and Josh Doyle of Compass.

Here's a look inside.

SEE ALSO: Michael Jackson's Neverland Ranch is on the market for nearly 70% off the original price — here's a look inside the 2,700-acre property with its sprawling mansion and Disney-themed train station

DON'T MISS: Maggie Gyllenhaal and Peter Sarsgaard just listed their 4-story Brooklyn townhouse for $4.59 million — here's a look inside the home and its private garden

Supermodel Karlie Kloss and investment banker Joshua Kushner are selling their New York City apartment for $6,995,000.

Source: Compass, Curbed



The two-bedroom apartment is located in a luxury building in Nolita that has 15 condominiums and amenities including a doorman, gym, bike room, extra private storage, and a landscaped roof terrace.

Source: Compass



The East-facing living room is divided into three distinct sitting areas.

Source: Compass



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3 busy fitness instructors share the 15 products that make showering at the gym a breeze

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  • Showering at the gym becomes necessary when you're squeezing workout time into your busy schedule. 
  • You can maintain an efficient yet effective skin-care and hair-care routine by packing the right products in your gym bag. 
  • Three busy fitness instructors shared the products they use to master the shower gym. They include moisturizing facial creams, body washes made of simple ingredients, and dry shampoo. 

Whether you go to the gym in the morning, middle of the day, or evening, how to freshen yourself up after a sweaty workout is an inevitable conundrum to face. If you'd rather not show up to work or dinner and announce through appearance and smell that you just worked out, the gym shower is where you'll find yourself. It's no spacious, high-pressure system like the shower you have at home, but it'll get the job done. 

No one has been in more gym showers and understands the struggle of transitioning from gym to regular life than fitness instructors, who hop between gyms and other commitments as their job. Through experience, they've developed fail-safe rosters of skin-care and body-care products that mimic their home routines and help them clean up efficiently. 

We consulted three fitness trainers from Talent Hack, an employment and networking platform for fitness professionals, to find out what products live in their gym shower bag. The number of products is low — five to six per person — because they (and you, too) want to travel light. Accordingly, each product must be versatile, high quality, and highly effective.

See the 15 personal care products fitness instructors use to make showering at the gym a breeze below. 

SEE ALSO: This is the only shower cap that's ever actually kept all of my hair dry — it's pricey at $43, but worth it

Holly Rilinger: Nike Master Trainer, creator of LIFTED, and founding Flywheel Instructor

1. The Body Shop Tea Tree Skin Clearing Facial Wash, $11.72: Clogged pores are breeding grounds for acne. This simple face wash is infused with purifying tea tree oil to fight sweat-induced breakouts and targets excess oil. 

Buy it here: Amazon | Ulta

2. Laura Mercier Illuminating Tinted Moisturizer SPF 20, Natural Radiance, $46: Since you probably have limited time before rushing off to the next event in your schedule, products that combine capabilities — in this case, moisturizing, tinting, and sun protection — are key. "Two for one and it's simple and easy, while adding a little glow." 

Buy it here: Amazon | Sephora | Nordstrom

3. GoodWipes Women's Deodorizing Body Biodegradable Wipes, 10-count, $9.99: In case even a quick shower is out of the question, you can cheat in the locker room by using these wipes, which are pH balanced, alcohol-free, and hypoallergenic. They also won't dry out your skin. 

Buy it here: Amazon

4. Oribe Gold Lust Dry Shampoo Purse, $22: Dry shampoo enthusiasts swear by this specific brand because it doesn't leave behind residue or make your hair look stiff. "I have a lot of hair and that means I don't always have time to wash it. This stuff works magic." 

Buy it here: Nordstrom | Dermstore

5. 37 Actives High Performance Anti-Aging and Firming Serum, $175: This lightweight serum that Rilinger uses under her moisturizer contains a whopping 37 ingredients to help firm the skin and reduce the appearance of wrinkles and lines. 

Buy it here: Amazon | Net-a-Porter



Gabriel Snow: Performix House founding trainer

1. Oribe Dry Texturizing Spray, $46: Another popular Oribe hair product to try, especially if you're seeking extra volume and texture, is this spray. According to Snow, it helps you get the "I just rolled out of bed and still look good" look, as opposed to the much less desirable "I just rolled out of a sweaty workout" look. 

Buy it here: Amazon | Nordstrom | Dermstore

2. Fatboy Hair Spray Putty, $9.13: This is hair putty in light and convenient spray form, so you don't have to get your hands dirty again as you freshen up post-workout. It's best for fine to medium hair. 

Buy it here: Amazon

3. Sisley Paris Restorative Facial Cream with Shea Butter, $119.79: Silky and moisturizing, this cream was made for use after outdoor exposure to sun and wind, but it's equally suited to treat the harsh, dry conditions of an indoor gym. 

Buy it here: Amazon | Nordstrom

4. Tom Ford Private Blend Oud Wood Eau de Parfum, $148: Oud wood is rare, and accordingly, expensive. The distinctive and well-rounded payoff, however, is well worth it. "Tough and built to last." 

Buy it here: Nordstrom

5. Old Spice Deodorant, Timber With Sandalwood Scent, $4.97: Smelly armpits are an inevitable effect of working out. The aluminum-free deodorant from this classic brand lasts for up to 24 hours, allowing you to sail through the day odor-free. 

Buy it here: Walmart | Walgreens | Amazon



Bec Donlan: Founder of Sweat with Bec

1. Le Labo 31, $82: Once you've tried Le Labo, you'll want it on you at all times. Donlan won't leave the house without this spicy floral fragrance. 

Buy it here: Net-a-Porter

2. Huda Beauty Kayali Elixir 11, $118: If it's not Le Labo, she has the Kayali perfume on hand. This warm floral also manages to smell fruity, with hints of red apple. 

Buy it here: Sephora

3. Recess Face 101 Cleansing Wipes, $26: Containing ingredients like hyaluronic acid, eucalyptus, and aloe, these wipes moisturize and soothe at the same time they clean your skin. "Straight after I sweat I always remove my makeup with Recess removal wipes. I do this to make sure I don't break out post-workout." 

Buy it here: Free People

4. Lumify Redness Reliever Eye Drops, $11.37: No one will be able to tell you've just come off the busiest day of the week after you use these refreshing eye drops. "They're the first FDA-approved eye drops that you can use twice a day and they make your eyes look like they've been filtered!" 

Buy it here: Amazon | WalmartCVS

5. Verb Dry Shampoo, $13.75: The Gentle Cleanse + Light Volume version provides an instant hair update, removing oil and boosting body. Verb's products are free of parabens and sulfates. "I'm showering three times a day because I'm always sweaty so I definitely don't wash my hair each time — a good dry shampoo is my go-to." 

Buy it here: Amazon | Sephora | Nordstrom



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In new sentencing memo, Paul Manafort's lawyers accused Mueller of 'spreading misinformation' to 'vilify' Manafort 'in a manner that this country has not experienced in decades'

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  • In a sentencing memo filed Friday, lawyers representing Paul Manafort, the former chairman of President Donald Trump's campaign, accused the special counsel Robert Mueller of "spreading misinformation" to "vilify" Manafort.
  • They added that Mueller's team is trying to "impugn his character in a manner that this country has not seen in decades."
  • Manafort's team argued that he should get a drastically reduced prison sentence given the nature of the crimes Manafort pleaded guilty to, and the fact that he is a first-time offender.

In a sentencing memo Paul Manafort’s lawyers submitted on his behalf Friday, they argued that the crimes Manafort has been convicted of warrant a prison sentence that is “substantially below the range” the special counsel Robert Mueller’s team suggested.

Manafort’s lawyers argued in their sentencing memo Friday that the former chairman of President Donald Trump’s campaign should get a far lighter sentence than what Mueller recommended given that he is “a first-time offender and given the nature of the offenses for which” he was convicted.

They noted that in addition to accepting responsibility for two counts of obstruction and conspiracy, Manafort "admitted his guilt with respect to the conduct involved in the remaining charges in this case."

"Mr. Manafort agreed to cooperate with [Mueller] and ... met with attorneys and investigators from the government numerous times," they added. "He also testified before a grand jury" in Washington, DC, on two occasions, they wrote.

Manafort was convicted last year on eight counts of tax fraud, bank fraud, and failure to report foreign bank accounts. He was set to face a second trial for additional charges of money laundering, false statements, and illegal foreign lobbying, but Manafort struck a plea deal with Mueller’s office instead, ultimately pleading guilty to conspiracy and obstruction.

Read more:Mueller called Manafort a 'hardened' criminal who 'repeatedly and brazenly violated the law' in a harsh sentencing memo

But after Manafort agreed to cooperate, prosecutors learned that he had lied to them about several interactions and events that are under scrutiny in the Russia investigation. They were also angered when they found out that Manafort's lawyers were briefing Trump's legal team on everything he was being questioned about. The conduct was unusual, given that Trump is a subject of interest in the Russia investigation.

Last month, a federal judge nullified Manafort's plea deal after ruling that he lied to prosecutors in three out of five disputed instances Mueller's office outlined.

Afterward, Mueller’s team filed a sentencing memo in which they did not make a specific sentencing recommendation, as has been their practice so far, but noted that federal sentencing guidelines call for a prison term of 19 to 24.5 years. They urged the court to “take into account the gravity of [Manafort’s] conduct, and serve both to specifically deter Manafort and generally deter those who would commit a similar series of crimes.”

In their sentencing memo on his behalf Friday, Manafort's lawyer accused Mueller's team of trying to "vilify" their client, adding that prosecutors' conduct was "beyond the pale and grossly overstates the facts before this Court."

"The Special Counsel’s conduct comes as no surprise, and falls within the government’s pattern of spreading
misinformation about Mr. Manafort to impugn his character in a manner that this country has not
experienced in decades," Manafort's lawyers wrote.

To support their claims, the former Trump campaign chairman's lawyers referenced the Justice Department inspector general's report in June 2018 into the FBI's and Justice Department's handling of investigations into Trump and Hillary Clinton leading up to the 2016 election.

The report concluded that although FBI officials' conduct during both investigations was inappropriate, there was no "documentary or testimonial evidence that improper considerations, including political bias, directly affected the specific investigative actions we reviewed."

Manafort's lawyers also pointed to the Justice Department's recent charges against a senior Treasury Department official who is accused of leaking information concerning suspicious activity reports (SARs) related to Manafort and Michael Cohen to the media.

Neither the charges nor the inspector general's report made any allegations that government officials "spread misinformation," as Manafort's lawyers claimed in their sentencing memo.

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: What happens when the president declares a national emergency

Microsoft is putting the final nail in the coffin for its Apple Watch competitor, and offering partial refunds to anybody still using it (MSFT, AAPL)

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  • On May 22nd, Microsoft is turning off the online services for the Microsoft Band, its ill-fated fitness device first released in 2014. 
  • If you're an active Microsoft Band user, Microsoft is offering partial refunds: Owners of the original Band will get $75, and those using the Microsoft Band 2 will get $175. 
  • The Band won't stop working entirely — it can still do anything that doesn't require an internet connection, like setting an alarm or counting your steps. 
  • The first Microsoft Band was released in 2014, with Microsoft Band 2 launched in 2015. However, the devices failed to make a splash, and Microsoft stopped manufacturing the product in 2016. 

Microsoft stopped making the Microsoft Band fitness tracker back in 2016, but it still worked for anybody who bought one — like a Fitbit or Apple Watch, the Microsoft Band used an app to help users track their health. 

On May 22nd, though, that all changes, as Microsoft will turn off the Microsoft Band's online services, as well as the Microsoft Health Dashboard, and remove the apps for download across iPhone, Android, and Windows.

To make it up to users, Microsoft is offering a partial refund for anybody who bought the original Microsoft Band, first released in 2014, or the Band 2 from 2015.

For owners of the original device, Microsoft will pay out $80, and Band 2 owners will get $175. The only stipulation is that you have to have synced a Band to the app between December 1st, 2018, and March 1st, 2019, meaning it'll be limited to only active users. If your device is under warranty, however, you'll get the refund no matter what. 

There's a full FAQ for Microsoft Band owners here, including details on how to export your health data to other services. The news was first reported by The Verge

It appears that the Microsoft Band will still have some use, even without those backend services: You can use one to track your heartbeat, count steps, set an alarm, or do anything else that doesn't need an internet connection. However, Microsoft warns, if you reset a Band, it will be impossible to set it up again. 

The Microsoft Band was a little ahead of its time: While it was primarily a fitness-focused device, it came with some smartwatch-style features including the Cortana voice assistant and the ability to pay for Starbucks with a displayed barcode. However, it got extremely lukewarm reviews, with users complaining that it was clunky and inaccurate

The Microsoft Band 2 added more apps and brought a revamped design — but it was released after the Apple Watch, which stole much of its thunder. Plans for a third-generation device were scrapped, and the entire Microsoft Band line was discontinued in 2016.

Still, this misfire aside, the Microsoft Band was part of Microsoft's renewed assault on the hardware market, presaged by the surprising success of 2014's Surface Pro 3. The overall quality of the Surface line shows that Microsoft's hardware lineup still has a lot of promise — just, perhaps, not on the wrist. 

SEE ALSO: Nokia's futuristic new smartphone with 5 rear cameras is launching soon in the US

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: We compared the $1,200 MacBook Air with the $500 Surface Go, and the results were a mess

A day in the life of the top real-estate broker in the US, who sold $2.2 billion worth of homes in 2018, wakes up at 5 a.m. every morning, and works out with a personal trainer 3 times a week

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Ben Caballero is the top real estate broker in the US, according to REAL Trends, a residential brokerage industry publication. He sold $2.2 billion worth of homes in 2018.

The Texas-based broker has been ranked as the top real estate agent for nearly a decade by REAL Trends for both total sales and number of transactions. Last year, he sold 5,793 homes — an average of 111 homes per week.

"Texas is the world's greatest housing market and one of the best economies in the world," Caballero told REAL Trends after 2018 data was released. "It's said everything is bigger in Texas. Well, this number is so big even I'm little surprised by it — and delighted."

Read more: The top real estate broker in the US says a single strategy helped him sell an average of 92 homes per week

He only sells new-construction residential properties and he only works with volume builders, or companies that build several hundred homes per year — sometimes up to 3,000. 

Caballero created an online platform, HomesUSA, exclusively for volume home builders to track these hundreds of homes. The platform streamlines the process of creating a listing, tracking the progress of a house's construction, and updating the listing when photography is added and when the home is complete. Caballero manages listings for more than 60 builders in the Dallas-Ft. Worth, Houston, Austin, and San Antonio areas.

He lives in Frisco, Texas, with his fiancée, Linda, and his dog, Sammy. Caballero has two children: a son and a daughter.

Here's a look at a typical day for Caballero.

SEE ALSO: The top real estate broker in the US says a single strategy helped him sell an average of 92 homes per week

DON'T MISS: I toured the first residential building to open in Hudson Yards, NYC's new $25 billion neighborhood — and it was clear it's selling much more than just real estate

Ben Caballero is the top real-estate broker in the US. In 2018, he sold $2.2 billion worth of homes, an average of 111 homes per week.

Source: REAL Trends



The Texas-based broker created HomesUSA.com, an MLS (multiple listing service) platform for home builders to track the progress of their homes and manage listings. Caballero manages listings for more than 60 builders in the Dallas-Ft. Worth, Houston, Austin, and San Antonio areas.



Caballero lives in Frisco, Texas, a city of 184,000 people about a 35-minute drive from Dallas.

Source: Frisco, Google Maps



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

Why the world is obsessed with Orangetheory, the heart rate-monitoring workout that hit $1 billion in sales in a single year

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  • Orangetheory Fitness has over 1,100 studios across the globe and is expanding at an impressive rate — there are currently 500 more branches in the development pipeline.
  • The company recently reached $1 billion in systemwide sales for 2018 and claim to be one of the fastest-growing fitness franchise brands on the planet.
  • Orangetheory offers heartrate-based workouts, combining technology and science with community and accessibility for all.
  • We tried it out and spoke to the founder and long-time fans to find out the secret of the brand's success.

"Rachel, hi! So good to see you again," says the smiling woman behind the counter as I walk into Orangetheory Fitness in Islington, north London.

It's my second visit to the fitness studio. Not just that week, but ever.

But unlike a lot of customer-facing roles, the friendliness seems genuine, like they really are glad to see me again.

Every person who walks through the door is greeted in a similarly warm way, and this personal touch is one of the factors that keep people coming back for more.

At a time when keeping fit has never been cooler and fitness-lovers are spoilt for choice when it comes to places to workout, successfully maintaining a loyal customer-base is not to be sniffed at.

Welcome to Orangetheory, the heartrate-monitoring fitness studio which has taken the world by storm — in fact, it reached $1 billion in systemwide sales for 2018 and, as a result, claims to be one of the fastest-growing fitness franchise brands on the planet.

Orangetheory currently has more than 800,000 members with over 1,100 studios in 49 US states and 22 other countries, and there are another 500 studios in the development pipeline.

Prices vary depending on location, but a monthly "Premier" membership (meaning unlimited classes) costs around £109-£149 in the UK, or around $129-$290 in the US, so it's easy to see why the business has been successful.

Orangetheory AM_229

"We are a science-backed workout that produces results," Ellen Latham, its creator and cofounder, told Business Insider.

"That is why people come to a fitness product … for guaranteed results. Our technology allows our members in real time to see how their body is responding. What you do not measure you cannot achieve."

How it works

Orangetheory, which opened its first studio in 2010, distinguishes itself from other fitness franchises with its focus on heartrate.

Before entering the fitness studio, you strap a heartrate monitor around your arm which is linked to your personal profile. 

There are three big screens in the studio displaying each person's stats: heartrate, calories burned (you input your weight amongst other details upon signing up), and "splat points" ie. how many minutes your heartrate has been in the red or orange zones.

Orangetheory AM_03

Heartrate zones are divided into grey (rest), blue, green, orange, and red, and it's the orange zone you're aiming for, hence the name (and the matching interiors — yes, it feels a bit like EasyJet).

In an Orangetheory workout, each person is meant to try and achieve 12-20 minutes with their heartrate in the orange zone (over 84%).

The reason for this is all about "EPOC": Excess Post-exercise Oxygen Consumption. Essentially, the afterburn. 

As your body recovers post workout, your metabolism stays raised, and you continue to burn more calories afterwards if you've hit that all-important orange zone.

It's not too hard to do, either — I managed more than 20 splat points each of the five times I visited Orangetheory.

A "multi-vitamin of metabolic training"

Orangetheory workouts are 60-minute group training HIIT sessions, with time split between treadmills (raising the heartrate), rowing machines (non-impact full-body work), and floor work with weights (muscle-building).

The founders call the workouts a "multi-vitamin of metabolic training," and they've been designed with fat-burning in mind.

Everyone around the world will do the same Orangetheory workout on any given day, but they won't know what it will be until they walk through the door — each workout falls into one of three categories: Endurance, Power, or Strength (or ESP, which is a combination of all three).

Read more: Scarlett Johansson's personal trainers say burpees are a waste of time — here's what you should be doing instead

The focus is slightly different depending on the category, but customers are kept in the dark until they arrive so they don't deliberately avoid their least favourite type of training.

"Most people want to do workouts they like, never realising it is usually the ones they don't like that will give them the biggest change," Latham says.

Of course, this could also mean that someone accidentally always does one type of workout, but there isn't actually too much variation between them all.

Twenty-eight-year-old journalist India Dowley, who is based in London and has been going to Orangetheory for three years, told Business Insider the way coaches get to knock their members and encourage them to reach the orange zone is part of the appeal.

"This kind of dual set-up combining forward-thinking tech with a personal, human touch means OTF successfully caters to all levels of fitness, without anyone feeling either left behind or unchallenged," she said.

Every workout also ends with a stretch and mobility session too, which isn't the case with all fast-paced HIIT classes.

It taps into our obsession with tracking

Orangetheory has tapped into our current obsession with tracking — from our sleep to what we eat, we can't get enough of self-monitoring. Not only are you able to assess your stats during an Orangetheory workout, but a detailed report will be emailed to you afterward.

It's not about competing with others, though, and the sense of community considering the scale of the organisation is impressive. 

In fact, Latham believes Orangetheory's accessibility has been the key to the company's growth: "Any person no matter what their fitness ability level is can succeed."

Orangetheory AM_11

Unlike many fitness studios, Orangetheory isn't intimidating and all levels are catered for — for example, treadmill levels are divided into "walker," "jogger," and "runner," and if you can't run at all, you have the option of going on a cross-trainer or exercise bike instead.

The trainers push you, but they're encouraging too, regularly using people's names during workouts. Everyone leaves the studio with a high five.

Technology and community aside, for some the appeal of Orangetheory is simply that they know they're going to get a full-body workout in and not have to think.

"Despite classes of up to 30, it's a very personalised workout thanks to heartrate monitors that allow you to track your progress throughout, meaning you know when you're not training where you need to be — which will be different from the person next to you," Dowley said.

"It works for me because I know that as long as I put on my gym kit and turn up the rest is sort of done for me."

Read more: Men who can do 40 push-ups are less at risk of heart disease, according to a new study

SEE ALSO: Margot Robbie's personal trainer thinks breakfast is overrated, and he says there are 2 clear benefits to fasting in the morning

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: Take a look inside a $28.5 million NYC apartment on Billionaires' Row

18 hot cars we can't wait to see at the 2019 Geneva Motor Show

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Ferrari F8 Tributo

The 2019 Geneva Motor Show is the first major European car show of the year. As a result, the world's automakers go big for Geneva. Car makers pull out all the stops to show off their latest and greatest. 

Read more: The CEO of Volvo's Tesla challenger explains why using Google tech allows his company to avoid the major mistake made by other brands.

In years past, Geneva has been known as the show where the next great supercars are shown for the first time. That tradition continues as it once again plays host to the latest from Aston Martin, Ferrari, Lamborghini, and Pininfarina.

The show also features a host of more practical offerings from mainstream mass market and luxury brands including Audi, Mercedes-Benz, Polestar, VW, Subaru, Honda, Toyota, Nissan, and Mazda.

Read more: HondaJet's CEO explains why the $5.25 million private jet's nose is inspired by a pair of Ferragamo high heels.

The 2019 Geneva Motor Show will be open to the public from March 7-17 at the Palexpo Arena in Geneva, Switzerland. Media days will be held on March 5 and 6.

Here's a closer look at the 18 hot cars we can't wait to see:

SEE ALSO: Volvo's high-performance Polestar brand just unveiled Sweden's answer to the Tesla Model 3

FOLLOW US: On Facebook for more car and transportation content!

Geneva has long been known as the hottest show for supercars. That streak continues in 2019 where Ferrari will debut the new F8 Tributo. The F8 will be the replacement for the current 488 GTB.



Lamborghini will introduce the latest convertible version of its Huracan supercar dubbed the EVO Spyder.



Legendary Italian design house Pininfarina is also expected to unveil a hot new supercar called the Battista.



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

The wildest returns people have tried to make at Costco, according to employees (COST)

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  • Costco has a particularly generous returns policy.
  • It's not unheard of for members to get away with returning gross or old items, although consistent fraud could prompt the company to terminate a person's membership.
  • Costco employees say that members occasionally take advantage of the policy to a ridiculous degree.
Costco has an infamously generous return policy. 

And there's a reason for that. One former Costco manager explained the reasoning behind the policy, telling Business Insider that the "liberal return policy" creates a sense of confidence in members.

"They know that if it does not meet expectations they can return it," the ex-manager said. That confidence then prompts them to shop and spend more.

What's more, the former manager said that, despite the horror stores, "this policy is not taken advantage of as much as you might think."

"Being a membership club, the members have a vested interest through their membership fees to follow the rules," the manager said. "Sales and returns are tracked and fraud is easy to spot. In these cases, memberships are canceled. Many times members would have rather me call the police than cancel their membership when caught shoplifting or committing return fraud."

That being said, most Costco employees have at least one or two stories about particularly bizzare returns.

"We've seen it all," one employee told Business Insider.

Here's a few of the wildest things that members have tried to exchange at the Costco returns desk:

SEE ALSO: 5 super-expensive Costco wines that are worth it, according to the experts

DON'T MISS: 15 things you can buy from Costco, Amazon, Sam's Club, and BJ's to be ready for when the apocalypse hits

Mostly devoured food

Costco is known for its generous return policy. According to employees, members can even get away with returning mostly eaten food.

A Costco employee of 12 years told Business Insider that they wanted customers to "stop bringing half-eaten food and saying it was bad."

They added that they'd seen shoppers return bones that had been picked clean, offering the explanation that the "meat was no good" but that "they had to feed their family something."

And a different employee of the warehouse chain described seeing members bring back "all-eaten pies or baked goods" and claim that they hadn't liked the food.

So what happens to the food that Costco members return? In most cases, it must be discarded.

A Kentucky-based employee told Business Insider, "We end up having to throw the food away because it can't be resold if it left the building."

The employee cited frequent excuses, like members claiming to have "bought the wrong thing," "overbought" for their party, or even purchased a product "on impulse."



Loose flooring materials

An employee who has worked at the warehouse store for 12 years said they once saw customers "bringing back a load of flooring — and I mean a load — in pieces. Not even in the boxes."



Stinky, used clothing

One employee told Business Insider that they've seen members get a refund on "smelly socks."



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

I watched a woman get a face-lift, and it wasn't very gory at all. Take a look.

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  • Plastic surgery involves cutting, loosening, and re-sewing parts of the body together.
  • There's nothing plastic about it — the term comes from the Greek word plastikos, which means "to mold" or "to form."
  • The practice dates back thousands of years, to at least the 6th century B.C. 
  • I spent a day watching a woman get a face-lift, neck-lift, brow-lift, and eyelid-lift, and was amazed. 

Plastic surgery is a mysterious business. The average face-lift costs $7,500, though the price can get upwards of hundreds of thousands of dollars, depending on where and how it's done. Typically, none of that cost is covered by insurance. And after it's all over, patients often stay hush-hush about whether or not they've had any work done.

But in the quiet, picket-fenced town of Avon, Connecticut, patient Kim Maher and Dr. Paul Stanislaw recently let me enter their surgery room and see how plastic surgery happens up close. I was surprised by how low-tech and artful the procedure was, and fascinated by how resilient and tough human faces can be below the skin.

I also learned first-hand that performing or undergoing a face-lift is an all-day slog, with hours of meticulous injecting, snipping, and stitching. The following photos give you a brief glance behind the scenes.

But a few warnings are in order first. Please don't attempt any DIY plastic surgery — the images below show the work of a board-certified professional with 20 years of experience. If you are considering such a procedure, talk to your doctor. And for those who get squeamish about medical matters, beware: The surgery isn't terribly gory, but there is a bit of blood involved.

SEE ALSO: Why you never really die: A microbiologist explains all the ways the body lives on, and why we don't decay until we're dead

When planning a surgery with a patient, Stanislaw often asks them to bring in old photos of themselves so he can get a sense for what their face shape looked like in the past. This is Maher when she was in high school.



As people age, their skin loses elasticity, stretches out, and becomes less supple.

Muscles in the face that we use over and over again to smile and express emotion create creases. Fat that was once well distributed can also clump up and travel down.

"It's like a stretched-out Slinky," Dr. Stanislaw said. "We're taking out a couple of links of that extra stretched-out Slinky to sort of tighten up."



Maher lost 30 pounds recently, and she said she now believes her face defies her age. "I look like I'm going to be turning 60, and not 53," she said.

About a year and a half ago, Maher decided to change her eating and drinking routines. Today, she said she maintains her weight by taking daily walks and being mindful not to overeat like she used to.

"I walk like crazy," she said. "I walk between 6 and 10 miles a day. So everybody thinks 'oh, you lost all this weight,' but you know what, it didn't come off for free. I really work at it to keep it off."  

Maher didn't think there would be a dark side to losing that weight.

"I feel like I'm 20 years old again, but then I look in the mirror and it's like, Oh God, what happened?" she said. "It made me look even older."



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

Meet François Pinault, the French billionaire who has a $1.2 billion art collection, owns Christie's, and founded Kering, the luxury giant behind Gucci and Balenciaga

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  • François Pinault is the founder and owner of Kering luxury group, which includes several iconic fashion houses including Gucci and Alexander McQueen.
  • Pinault started out working for his family's timber company before eventually entering the retail market.
  • Today he is the second-richest person in France, behind Bernard Arnault, and the 23rd-richest person in the world. 

François Pinault is tied to some of the biggest names in fashion: Gucci, Alexander McQueen, and Yves Saint Laurent. As the owner of Kering luxury group, his family manages over a dozen high-end brands.

Pinault grew up in the rural French countryside, beginning his career working for his family's timber business. After establishing his own company in Rennes, he slowly moved into the retail market, before shifting solely to the luxury retail market in 2016.

Now under his son's direction, the company continues to flourish, especially with rocketing sales for both Gucci and Balenciaga. Gucci was Pinault's first fashion house purchase, and remains one the mogul's most important business deals to date. The acquisition was hard-fought in a battle between rival French billionaire and luxury brand owner Bernard Arnault.

Read more: Gucci has become hugely popular with teens and millennials. We visited a store and saw why they love it despite the high price tags.

Alongside other major holdings, such as a winery in Bourdeaux and a cruise line in Marseille, Pinault is one of the world's biggest private art collectors. His collection includes over 3,000 works of art and is worth over $1.2 billion.

Keep reading for a deeper look at Pinault's life, from his company's origins to his most recent business investments.

SEE ALSO: Meet Bernard Arnault, the richest person in Europe, who's worth $80 billion and controls LVMH, the world's largest maker of luxury goods

NOW READ: 9 unlikely items that have become luxury status symbols among the elite

François Pinault is one of the most powerful men in the fashion industry.



According to Bloomberg, he is the 23rd-richest person in the world with a net worth of $34.3 billion ...

Source: Bloomberg



... and the second-richest person in France.

Source: Bloomberg



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

I found a comfortable memory foam mattress for back and side sleepers under $1,000 — it sleeps cool too

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The Insider Picks team writes about stuff we think you'll like. Business Insider has affiliate partnerships, so we get a share of the revenue from your purchase.

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  • There are currently hundreds of "bed-in-a-box" companies competing for market share, and it seems like new companies are popping up every day.
  • Snuggle-Pedic is best known for their incredibly comfortable shredded memory foam pillows, but they recently entered the online mattress space with a dual layer memory foam mattress.
  • I especially liked that the mattress was easy to set up, there was virtually no initial odor, and the memory foam breathed well.
  • Though the Snuggle-Pedic Mattress is relatively expensive for memory foam (currently $899.99 for a queen on Amazon), you can try it risk-free for 4 months and its backed by a 20-year warranty.

Would you commit to sleeping with someone every night for the next 20 years after just talking to them for 10 minutes? Probably not. Yet, this is essentially what you are asked to do at a mattress store. A high-pressure salesperson tries to get you to commit to a long-lasting product after lying on it for 5 to 10 minutes. The bed-in-a-box industry seeks to put an end to this practice with its risk-free trial periods.

Anyone can try the Snuggle-Pedic Mattress risk-free for four months. If you decide you don't like the mattress, Snuggle-Pedic will arrange to have a charity pick it up, and they'll refund your money. I was already a fan of the Snuggle-Pedic body pillow when they asked me if I'd like to try their mattress for free. Here's my experience with it.

My first experiences with the Snuggle-Pedic Mattress

The Snuggle-Pedic Mattress came in a box about the size of a mini fridge. I liked that the company included a letter opener to make it easy to remove the plastic wrap without fear of accidentally cutting the mattress. In under 10 minutes, I had the plastic removed, and the bed was expanding to its full 10-inch-thick size.  

Though I didn't have any trouble, others might have a difficult time handling the 70 pounds of bed. Unfortunately, Snuggle-Pedic doesn't have an answer for that yet. They don't offer "white glove" delivery or setup.

I've unboxed more than my fair share of memory foam products, and they almost always have an odor that dissipates after a few days. The Snuggle-Pedic mattress had no odor. I asked Jennie Katz, a representative for Snuggle-Pedic, what their trick was, and she told me that they don't do anything special to lessen the smell. Instead, "they] use a very high-quality foam that uses a process that is far cleaner than the foam used by competitors."

Katz also recommended that I set up the bed on a firm, level surface, such as a platform, box spring, or other similar foundation. We used a cheap Zinus frame, which fit the bill, but I would recommend spending a few more bucks on something that will keep the mattress in place.

Read more: The best sheets you can buy for your bed

How the Snuggle-Pedic Mattress performed

I mainly sleep on my stomach, but I've been known to venture to my sides. With the Snuggle-Pedic Mattress, side and back sleeping were much more comfortable than stomach sleeping. I felt like I was sinking a little too much on my stomach.

The mattress has a medium firmness, which is the most common in the industry. However, Snuggle-Pedic offers a special customization process that vice president of product development Dr. Rick Swartzburg, D.C. describes this way:

We make a modular cover that allows a change to the layering of the mattress that cannot only make it firmer or softer in general but can target whether you need a firmer or softer surface, core, or perhaps even just a change in the buoyancy/springiness of the mattress.  A change in the buoyancy can be exceptionally important because some customers are happy with the feel from the get-go, but may not want as much contouring effect. In the case of a mattress modification, we would exchange a new layer by sending them directly to the customer, so they do not have to send their large mattress into us.  Of course, in both cases, they still have 120-nights to test products and can still return them even after any modifications are made.

This process is a bit of a hassle up front, but considering the mattress is designed to last for 20 years, it's important to get the feel just right.

With most beds, I sleep hot and wake up covered in sweat. This is particularly true with memory foam beds, which tend to trap heat. But, heat was not an issue with the Snuggle-Pedic Mattress. It features a patented "Airflow Transfer System" that consists of a series of ventilation holes and open side channels to allow for maximum air circulation. It clearly worked well at keeping me cool.

Despite weighing 70 pounds, the bed was easy to move around, which is important if you move your bed often or if you just want to stick to rotating your mattress every six months.

Some concerns about the mattress

I was most disappointed by the poor edge support of the mattress. Snuggle-Pedic designed the edges to have some give because they’ve found customers don’t like hard edges. Also, beds made of memory foam generally have less edge support. This should not be a concern unless you prefer a firmer mattress or are obese. If you do try the mattress and find that you need more edge support, you can contact Snuggle-Pedic for a free reinforced edge upgrade.

Initially, the mattress failed my motion transfer test. I dropped a 20-pound weight from 4 feet above the bed to see if it would knock over a can of soda sitting 1 foot away from the contact point. The can fell over each time. Upon hearing about the failed motion transfer test, Snuggle-Pedic contacted me and suggested I try the test with the mattress on the floor — and not on the cheap Zinus frame. So, I took their advice, and the Snuggle-Pedic mattress passed the motion transfer test. The moral of the story is to make sure you have a stiff, structurally-supportive foundation to minimize motion transfer.

There aren't any showrooms where you can walk in and try out the Snuggle-Pedic Mattress before you buy it. For old-fashioned shoppers, this would be nice to have available. Fortunately, the company offers a nice, long risk-free trial instead.

Bottom line

Overall, I would strongly recommend the Snuggle-Pedic Mattress to side or back sleepers who don't share a bed with others. Though you can potentially update the edge support to keep you snugly in bed, the motion transfer could wake light sleepers. On the plus side, the bed sleeps cool and provides the just-right firmness to support you on your side or back. And, though a queen will run you $900, Snuggle-Pedic backs their products with a 20-year warranty so you can count on your mattress lasting you for decades.

Buy the Snuggle-Pedic Mattress on Amazon, $550 (twin) to $1,150 (king/California king)

Updated on 03/03/2019: Updated information about the mattress' edge support and motion transfer.

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'Leaving Neverland' director explains why he didn't interview Macaulay Culkin for his brutal Michael Jackson documentary

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Black or White Epic

  • The director Dan Reed talked to Business Insider about his decision to not attempt to interview Macaulay Culkin about his 1990s boyhood friendship with Michael Jackson.
  • In the documentary "Leaving Neverland," Culkin and another boy, Brett Barnes, are portrayed as getting attention from Jackson when he distances himself from the film's two main subjects, Wade Robson and James Safechuck, who in the movie say they had sexual relationships with Jackson as boys.
  • The movie says Culkin and Barnes "categorically deny any sexual contact with Michael Jackson."
  • "I'm not in the business of outing anyone," Reed told Business Insider about not contacting Culkin or Barnes.
  • Culkin's representative declined to comment for this story.

At the conclusion of Sunday night's part one of "Leaving Neverland" — the two-part HBO documentary that focuses on two men, Wade Robson and James Safechuck, who allege that Michael Jackson sexually abused them when they were boys in the 1980s and 1990s — the director Dan Reed shows a rift in Jackson's relationship with the boys as the child star Macaulay Culkin and another child, Brett Barnes, enter the pop star's world.

Robson says in the movie that he first became familiar with Culkin while on the set of the music video for Jackson's 1991 song "Black or White." The epic music video features Culkin as a rambunctious kid playing his music too loud to the disgust of his father (played by George Wendt). Culkin later shows up in the video with Jackson lip-syncing rap lyrics.

Robson, an Australia native, says he began a sexual relationship with Jackson after winning a dance contest to meet the megastar. At the time of the "Black or White" video shoot, Robson had moved to the US.

"Macaulay was where I was in my previous trips, right by Michael's side every moment," Robson said in "Leaving Neverland." "Now I was kind of on the sideline as far as being Michael's friend and being his favorite and that was really confusing."

Following the music-video shoot, Robson's time with Jackson became limited. In the doc, Robson's mother says Jackson would tell her son he would call him and Wade would wait by the phone after school but Jackson would never call. She says she began to notice a pattern.

Macaulay Culkin Michael Jackson Kevin Kane WireImage Getty"Every 12 months there was a new boy in his life," she says.

Safechuck, who says Jackson began to sexually abuse him after they starred in a Pepsi commercial together, noticed Jackson hanging out with Barnes around the same time. Safechuck says in the doc that Jackson told him he couldn't go on tour for the album "Dangerous" because Jackson wasn't allowed to bring kids. But Safechuck then saw Barnes with Jackson in news reports about the tour.

Read more: Inside the making of the 4-hour HBO Michael Jackson documentary, "Leaving Neverland," which contains harrowing allegations of child sexual abuse

"You're no longer special," Safechuck says in the movie about how he felt after realizing Jackson was focused on someone else.

The movie says Culkin and Barnes "categorically deny any sexual contact with Michael Jackson." (Culkin's representative declined to comment for this story.)

But did Reed ever consider trying to interview Culkin or Barnes for the movie to get their perspectives on being with Jackson at that time?

"I gave it some serious thought," Reed told Business Insider. "In the end I knew that Macaulay and Brett had made statements consistently rebutting allegations that were made. I'm not in the business of outing anyone. I think we make it very clear in the film that they deny to this day that anything sexual happened and I'm not about to try to change their minds about that."

But did Reed consider that their perspective might have changed recently?

"I don't want to push Macaulay or Brett to admit anything they don't want to admit, or confront anything they don't want to confront right now," he said. "If at any point Wade said, 'Yeah, Macaulay was in the corner of the bedroom when Michael did X or Y with me,' of course I would have gone to Macaulay and asked if he remembered that. That would have been vital. But that didn't happen. At no point was Macaulay or Brett or any other little boy an eyewitness to acts of child sexual molestation other than Wade or James."

Barnes, Culkin, and Robson were witnesses for Jackson at his child-molestation trial in 2005, in which Jackson was acquitted (the singer denied molesting anyone throughout his life). Culkin was seen beside Jackson at the 30th-anniversary concert event celebrating Jackson's solo career in 2001 at New York's Madison Square Garden.

Part 2 of "Leaving Neverland" airs on HBO on Monday.

SEE ALSO: The 8 movies coming to Netflix in March that are worth watching

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: The difference between Record, Song, and Album of the Year at the Grammys

5 ways to look and feel healthier in one week, according to a nutritionist — and 5 things you should never do

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woman working out

  • Dietitian and nutritionist Andy Bellatti has five pieces of advice to start feeling like your best self in just one one.
  • To curb bloating, dehydration and discomfort, drink lots of water, cut sodium and down fiber.
  • Don't resort to a juice cleanse, powders or pills. Those aren't healthy or sustainable ways to keep the weight off.

As winter winds down, it's a great time to lean into your New Years resolutions and become your healthiest, most fit self.

But what's the best way to start?

Registered dietition and nutritionist Andy Bellatti reveals all the things you should — and should never — do to get you feeling your best in under a week and on the right track. 

SEE ALSO: The best way to build muscle may not be lifting the heaviest weights

DON'T MISS: 11 surprising things your physical appearance says about you

DO: Drink lots of water.

Water is essential — it regulates the shape of every cell inside our bodies. If we don't get enough, in fact, these cells begin to shrivel up. The CDC recommends choosing water instead of sugar-sweetened beverages to "help with weight management."

Swapping a cold glass of H2O for a single 20-ounce soda will save you about 240 calories.

So hydrate, Bellatti told Business Insider, "ideally with water." 



DON'T: Go on a juice cleanse.

If you're considering a "detox" or "juice cleanse," you might want to reconsider. Drinking just water, juice, or any other liquefied concoction for more than a few days can set you up for unhealthy eating behaviors, and can often lead to spikes and drops in blood sugar levels, which can spawn cravings and mood swings.

"This is a recipe for 'hangriness,'" Bellatti said, "that also inaccurately paints all solid food as problematic."



DO: Cut back on sodium.

Most of us — 89% of US adults, according to the CDC— eat too much sodium, and that's not including any salt added at the table. Too much salt in your diet can cause puffiness and bloating, so cutting back can help you avoid that.

"Sodium retains water," Bellatti said, "so lowering sodium intake also reduces puffiness."



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

How to get 2 free months of a CLEAR membership and bypass long airport security lines

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CLEAR

  • Airport security can be one of the most frustrating parts of any trip — especially with the busy holiday travel period coming up.
  • CLEAR is a service that lets you skip the security line — it uses biometric scans to confirm your identity, and allows you to keep your ID and travel documents tucked away as you bypass the queue.
  • Business Insider readers can get two free months of CLEAR by using the code "INSIDER" when applying.

The hassle of getting through security is one of the most stressful things about holiday travel, but it doesn't have to be. Imagine if you knew exactly how long it would take to go through security — about two minutes — and if you could keep your hands free, instead of fumbling with IDs, boarding passes, and your clear plastic bag full of travel-size toiletries?

Thanks to a service called CLEAR, that's actually possible.

Rather than having to wait in line to show an ID and boarding pass to a TSA officer, CLEAR members can head over to a kiosk, where they'll confirm their identity by scanning either their fingerprints or retina. It takes a few seconds, and once confirmed, the passenger can head past the stop-point and go through the X-ray machine — there's no line, no fumbling with documents, and no wait.

CLEAR applies whether or not you also have TSA PreCheck. If you do, you'll skip to the front of the PreCheck line and still not have to bother with your travel documents — as usual, with PreCheck, you can leave your shoes, belts, and light jackets on, and leave liquids and often laptops in your bag. If you don't have PreCheck, you'll skip to the front of the regular security line and go through the normal process from there.

TSA PreCheck coupled with CLEAR means that in most cases, you can get through the airport security checkpoint in minutes, if not seconds, with virtually no hassle.

The process of applying for PreCheck is fairly easy, but involves an interview that may not be possible to complete before Thanksgiving travel — if you're interested in applying for PreCheck, take a look at this article on how to get a credit to cover the application fee from your credit card.

CLEAR, on the other hand, is quick and easy to apply for, and you can complete the application and scan your biometrics at the airport on your way to a flight — that process can easily be quicker than the regular security line.

While CLEAR isn't available at every airport and terminal yet, its availability is expanding rapidly at major airports — you can see a full list here. 

Most recently, CLEAR announced that it's arriving at JFK's busy Terminal 4 before Thanksgiving, making now an ideal time to apply if you expect to transit through New York with Delta, Virgin Atlantic, or any of a number of other major carriers.

Best of all, Business Insider readers can get two free months of CLEAR — enough to cover the whole holiday period — when they apply and use promo code INSIDER. Readers can also choose a $30 discount on their first year, instead — that's $149 for the first year instead of the usual $179 — by using code INSIDER149.

If you're interested in learning more about how CLEAR works, check out our in-depth article here.

Click here to learn more about CLEAR and sign up with our exclusive discounts.

DON'T MISS: 26 packing essentials we never travel without — from a $150 mobile WiFi hotspot to a $6 pack of face wipes

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Drugs that cost as much as a house are on the way to treat rare and devastating diseases. The US is scrambling to figure out how to pay for them. (BIIB, NVS, ONCE)

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expensive drug pill medication

  • New medications that treat disease at the genetic level, called gene therapies, are incredibly promising. They could also come with million-dollar price tags.
  • With many more expected to become available in the coming years, experts say that the US health system isn't prepared. 
  • New gene therapies could present a tremendous financial strain on private health insurers and government programs and inhibit access for patients, especially as products for more common conditions like hemophilia start getting approved.
  • "We as a society better be prepared" as we approach 2021, Dr. Steve Miller, chief clinical officer of the $66 billion health insurer Cigna Corp., told Business Insider.

A new medical treatment with tremendous potential to treat babies born with a rare disease called spinal muscular atrophy could be coming this year.

Spinal muscular atrophy is a genetic disorder marked by severe muscle weakness, affecting a patient's ability to breathe, speak and move. Most babies born with a common form of it die by age 2.

Right now, there is no cure and just one treatment for the disease, which affects an estimated 10,000 to 25,000 individuals in the US.

There's just one problem with the new drug. The one-time treatment, called Zolgensma, could cost up to $4 million or $5 million, according to the Swiss drugmaker that owns it, leaving the US scrambling to figure out how to pay for it.

When Dr. Michael Sherman, chief medical officer at the nonprofit health insurer Harvard Pilgrim, first started running the numbers on Zolgensma with his team, they had two reactions: "Oh my god" and "Wow." The insurer monitors its financials closely, and the calculation suggested an expensive surprise was coming. 

It turns out that the drug will likely only be given to newborns at first, resulting in very few people being treated with it. Still, in the coming years, the entire US healthcare system could well be having its own "oh my god" moment, with up to 30 similar million-dollar drugs expected to launch in the next five years, experts warn.

America has the highest drug prices in the world, but the US government has little control over the matter, unlike in other countries. That has fed into an ongoing debate about who is to blame and how things can change. In Europe, where drug prices are closely regulated, the first gene therapy was a commercial failure, at least in part because of its high price tag.

“It’s not a problem if you’ve only got a few of these. It is a problem if you’ve got a lot of these, and it is a problem if they’re charging a high price,” Sherman said.

Drugs like Zolgensma are called gene therapies. They make changes at the genetic level to treat disease, so the effect lasts longer than a typical drug would, potentially for years.  The drug companies that are working on gene therapies say their seven-figure price tags are justified by the value that they bring patients, because they could cure devastating rare diseases. And they point out that caring for these patients would otherwise be costly, too.

But experts say the cost of new gene therapies will put an enormous financial strain on the US health system. As the products become available to treat more common diseases, like hemophilia, affording them could turn into a crisis. Hemophilia is an inherited bleeding disorder that affects an estimated 20,000 people in the US.

"When we start getting into 2021, you could have hemophilia products out there," Dr. Steve Miller, chief clinical officer of health insurer Cigna Corp., told Business Insider. "We as a society better be prepared."

Pharma giants are pouring billions into the promising space. In the last week alone, Swiss drug giant Roche spent nearly $5 billion to acquire the biotech Spark Therapeutics, which sells a gene therapy that cures a type of blindness, and is researching others, including treatments for hemophilia; the rare disease biotech Sarepta Therapeutics bought gene therapy start-up Myonexus Therapeutics for $165 million, and biopharma Biogen bought gene therapy biotech Nightstar Therapeutics for about $800 million. 

Read more: A revolutionary drug that could treat a rare and devastating disease is prohibitively expensive. But one state has a plan to pay for its potential $5 million price tag.

Million-dollar drugs

In late 2017, the FDA gave the go-ahead to a trailblazing new medicine.

Luxturna, made by Spark, was the first gene therapy approved for an inherited disease in the US, specifically for a rare form of blindness.

The one-time treatment is thought to significantly improve patients’ eyesight, and has been available in the US for about a year. It also comes with a high price tag: $425,000 per eye, or $850,000 total. In spite of the cost, Luxturna hasn’t challenged the US health system, because only about 1,000 to 2,000 people in the US are likely eligible for the treatment. 

Gene therapy

Spark is now working on developing gene therapies for hemophilia. Hemophilia comes up a lot when you talk about the US being able to afford new gene therapies, because it’s relatively common. So does sickle cell disease, a group of inherited rare blood disorders that affect about 100,000 Americans and for which gene therapies are also being developed.

There are also gene therapies in the works for even more common conditions, like age-related macular degeneration, an eye disorder tied to aging that is expected to affect nearly three million Americans in 2020.

By 2025, the FDA expects to be approving 10 to 20 new gene therapies each year, a surge in new products that the regulator attributes to new innovations in the field. 

What a crisis looks like

Individual patients won’t pay for these costly medicines by themselves. Government programs and private health insurance plans are set to shoulder the burden. Those costs will, ultimately, be borne by every person in the US, because we pay for those health plans through our insurance premiums and taxes.

Yet very few people in the healthcare industry are thinking particularly proactively about these massive costs, and how to handle them, Harvard Pilgrim’s Sherman and Cigna’s Miller said.

"The problem is, it’s been said that rare diseases are rare," Sherman said. "Collectively, they’re not all that rare. So when you start to put them all together, you end up with significant expenses." 

This isn’t just a theoretical issue. The cost of a new medical advance has overwhelmed the US health system before. When the first effective cure for hepatitis C was approved in 2013, health insurers and government programs restricted access to the treatment, which had a list price of $84,000 for a course of treatment.

That could happen again with gene therapies, especially if health insurers and government programs aren’t prepared.

When health insurers consider what to cover, “the more expensive it is, the more likely it might get limited to those patients who are sickest,” Leora Schiff, principal at Altius Strategy Consulting, which works with biopharmaceutical and other healthcare companies, told Business Insider. 

Giving the hepatitis C treatment Sovaldi as an example, she said that health insurers were "scarred by their experience with Sovaldi."

In gene therapy, a delay in care could mean that the treatment doesn't work as well, or that it becomes entirely unavailable to patients. Zolgensma, the spinal spinal muscular atrophy treatment, may only be approved to be given to newborns, for example.

New financial models

To prevent treatment delays, one effort out of Massachusetts is aiming to get the state's health insurers on board to cover Zolgensma before it is approved.

As part of that, they've been working to figure out a big question about gene therapies: how payment should work. 

When you get prescribed a drug today, you and your health insurer pay for a set amount, say 30 days worth of pills. If it isn’t working, you stop taking it, and thus stop paying.

Gene therapies can’t work that way because they are one-time treatments. Though gene therapies are being compared to a cure, and priced like one, no one knows if that's entirely true. Their effects might fade over time, and it's also not clear if they'll work for every patient.

That’s given rise to the idea of using a payment plan like one for a car or house, with at least some of the payment contingent on how well a gene therapy works.

Read:A biotech is proposing a plan to pay for its pricey rare-disease treatment the same way you'd buy a TV or dishwasher

In the US health system, that’s very new — and challenging. It’s “just not how the healthcare system has operated in the past,” said Dr. Greg Daniel, the deputy director of The Duke-Margolis Center for Health Policy, told Business Insider.

Gene therapy hereditary blindness eye exam

To hash out the problems, groups like a consortium organized by Duke-Margolis and, in Massachusetts, the NEWDIGS program out of the MIT Center for Biomedical Innovation have sought to bring all the relevant players together. 

Miller has been an active participant in the Duke-Margolis consortium, first while working at pharmacy-benefit manager Express Scripts and then at Cigna, after the health insurer acquired Express Scripts merger in late 2018.

Progress has been made over the years, but as of yet no conclusion has quite been reached, he said. 

“The clock is really ticking,” he said. More products that challenge the system will likely come this year, and “we’ve got to do this while the market is still small.”

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: There are serious health reasons why you shouldn't eat your boogers


5 animals that have the most extreme sex in the animal kingdom

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  • The male brown antechinus mates with as many females as possible for up to 14 hours at a time. Unfortunately, the effort usually crashes his immune system and ultimately kills him.
  • Meanwhile, when honey bees mate, the drone's reproductive organs get ripped off, and his testicales explode.
  • Male echidnas have a four-headed penis, so during sex, they alternate between spent pairs as each fire their semen.

Following is a transcript of the video.

The average couple has sex for anywhere from 30 seconds to about 45 minutes. Now, 45 minutes sounds long, until you consider the brown antechinus.

1. Brown antechinus

For two weeks every mating season, a male will mate as much as physically possible, sometimes having sex for up to 14 hours at a time, flitting from one female to the next. And all that testosterone revs up his stress hormone production into overdrive, crashing his immune system.

That in turn crashes his immune system, making him extremely vulnerable to disease and infection. Often times, he dies before his young are even born. Scientists call this kamikaze mating technique "suicidal reproduction."

It turns out that for many species, sex kills.

2. Honeybee

Take the male honeybee. His primary job? Mate with the Queen. But sadly for him, he only gets to mate once because during the act, his reproductive organs are ripped off and his testicles explode. In the process, his semen shoots through her oviduct, where she stores it for later use.

3. Anglerfish

Hey, at least it's a quick death, especially compared to some deep-sea anglerfish, like the triplewart seadevil. This one's a female. And you see that tiny parasite on her side? That's the male. It would be like if a human male only came up to a woman's ankle. Instead of hunting for his own food, the male bites into the female, fusing his body with hers and living off the nutrients in her blood In return, he provides the one thing he has to offer: sperm.

But there's a catch. In the process, his body shrivels up. He loses his eyes, fins, and most internal organs, until, ultimately, he becomes just a portable sperm bank for the female.

4. Short-beaked echidna

Fortunately, not all males have it that rough. The short-beaked echidna survives mating. But his sex life is anything but ordinary. He'll line up with around nine other males and follow a single female for up to a month during mating season. But here's the interesting part. Females have a forked reproductive tract. But that doesn't deter the males, because they have a 4-headed penis.

So during sex, the male alternates, swapping out spent pairs as each fires its semen. And that semen is supercharged. Hundreds of sperm glom together into bundles, which can swim faster than individual sperm, increasing their chance of fertilization. If that's not impressive enough, his penis reaches nearly a quarter of his body length when erect.

5. Barnacle

But that's nothing compared to a barnacle's. That little crustacean has proportionally the longest penis of any animal on earth spanning up to 10 times his body size. That's like a human's reaching the length of a bowling lane. And the barnacle needs it because he can't move around very easily. So he casts out his giant penis like a fishing line to find a mate. It waves about in the current, reaching to touch, and fertilize, the female organs of its neighbor.

Bee or barnacle, reproduction finds creative ways to continue on.

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This online startup makes shopping and caring for beautiful house plants convenient and easy — even for people who don't think they have a green thumb

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leonandgeorge magenta triostar

  • What sounds like it could be a recipe for disaster — an indoor house plant you never see in person that is packed into a cardboard box and shipped across the country to your door — is something online startup Léon & George pulls off surprisingly well. 
  • Its collection is full of indoor house plants ($79+) that are easy to care for and each order comes potted in a stylish ceramic planter. 
  • I tried the service with some initial hesitance, but found it lived up to its mission of making shopping for beautiful plants convenient and enjoyable.

Home and interior design magazines frequently espouse this simple trick for refreshing your space: add a house plant. It's not only a strategic aesthetic move — research has found exposure to nature improves emotional well-being, making you happier and even more creative.

I'm no scientist, but plenty of anecdotal evidence has also confirmed that shopping for and taking care of these beneficial house plants isn't as easy as the magazines make it out to be. After hearing similar feedback from friends, plant enthusiasts Ron Radu and Nico Bartoli wanted to show people that owning plants can actually be hassle-free and thus created Léon & George, a full-service online startup that delivers potted, responsibly sourced plants right to your door.

Radu and Bartoli started in 2016 by partnering with local growers who were looking for a change from big box stores and nurseries, which often placed unrealistic demands on crop growth or didn't store plants in optimal growing environments. Though the company has now scaled to a point where the founders don't need to turn their own homes into mini greenhouses, the level of care and attention remains: they source the highest-quality greenery from US growers, and all plants are stored under conditions that imitate their native climates. 

leon and george plant care

Customers can choose from a collection of attractive plants, like the dense Little Hope philodendron or the summery Parlor Palm, then pair their selection with a simple and stylish ceramic planter. You can also shop by "Benefits" (easy care, air purifiers, safe for pets) and "Light" (medium-to-bright, low). Everything is included in the price: the plant, pot, wood stand, care instructions, and shipping. 

I ordered the Zanzibar Gem, namely because the website told me it's "near indestructible" and can "handle long periods of neglect"  — music to the ears of traditionally terrible plant owners like myself. It can also handle low-light environments, so I could plan to keep it right at my office desk instead of a distant window sill. 

The potted plant arrived upright in a box, and thanks to layers of cardboard support and bubble wrap, it emerged from the shipping journey fresh and unscathed. 

my leon and george plant

Caring for my Zanzibar Gem has been a breeze. I basically water it whenever I think to (which is really not often) and it's still thriving a couple weeks after it first arrived. If you're worried about plant care falling by the wayside, Léon & George sends Weekly Plant Care Reminder emails to nudge you to pay a little more attention to your plant. 

My experience with the service couldn't have been easier. Since I live in a big city, it's inconvenient and tiring to visit a nursery and haul a large plant onto the subway, so having it delivered (the company delivers nationwide) instead was a major boon. The potting was already done for me, and the site offers a lot of support if you run into any trouble while caring for your plant. Buying greenery from Léon & George is also an investment back into the Earth because the company plants one tree in a US National Forest through the National Forest Foundation for every plant sold. 

Léon & George's selection of high-quality plants will appease plant parents of all types. If you're new to plant care, the site offers guidance and low-maintenance options, and if your room is already filled with greenery, Léon & George's all-in-one service makes it that much more convenient to add to your collection. 

Shop plants at Léon & George here.

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The best vegan protein powders you can buy

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best vegan protein powders

  • High-quality vegan protein powders have a respectable taste, provide the protein you need without the additives you don’t, and blend well into your favorite beverage.
  • The Vegansmart Plant-Based Vegan Protein Powder is our top pick because it blends smoothly, tastes great, and offers an array of nutrients.

Whey protein is by far the most popular form of protein powder. Compared to the vegan options, whey protein tends to be more affordable and better tasting. But, what if you are vegan, allergic to dairy, or just want to cut down on your use of animal products? This is where vegan protein powders are helpful.

You may be well aware that just because you eat a vegan diet, it doesn’t necessarily mean you aren’t getting enough protein. There are plenty of natural sources, but if you can’t stomach legumes, it’s probably a good idea to supplement your diet with protein.

For protein, the recommended daily allowance (RDA) is one gram for every three pounds of body weight. So, someone who weighs 180 pounds would need 60 grams of protein per day. According to experts, you can experience benefits with up to twice that amount. Though, before going full bore, it’s a good idea to check with your doctor.

You can save up to 15% with Amazon’s “Subscribe & Save” program so you might consider joining this program when ordering your protein powders. You can cancel your subscription at any time. A perk with this program is that your protein powder is automatically replenished on a regular basis without you having to remember to go online to reorder it.

We use the current price of the most popular size and flavor of each powder to calculate the price per serving and per gram of protein. Since prices change quickly and often on Amazon, our calculations may no longer be accurate when you read this.

If you’d like to do your own comparison shopping, we have you covered. Divide the powder’s price by the number of servings in the container to get the cost per serving. You may find it useful to also calculate the cost per gram of protein since the amount of protein per serving varies from brand to brand. To get this, take the cost per serving you calculated above and divide it by the number of grams of protein in each serving.

While researching the best vegan protein powders, we examined hundreds of buyer and expert ratings and reviews of dozens of brands. Our guide features powders that have a high protein content, an acceptable taste and texture, and minimal calories, carbs, and fat.

Here are the best vegan protein powders you can buy:

Read on in the slides below to check out our top picks.

The best vegan protein powder overall

Why you’ll love it: If you are looking for a protein powder that provides more than just protein, the Vegansmart Plant-Based Vegan Protein Powder is your best bet.

The Vegansmart Plant-Based Vegan Protein Powderis outstanding because of how much it packs into each 46-gram serving. In addition to 20 grams of protein, you get at least half of your RDA of 20 vitamins and minerals.

The blend also has nine whole foods, 3.5 grams BCAAs, and 7 grams of dietary fiber. Organic stevia and 5 grams of sugar give the powder its sweetness. Each serving has 6 grams of fat and 170 calories for a well-rounded meal replacement or supplement.

Though it is pricey at about $1.87 per serving and $0.093 per gram of protein, the powder is certified vegan, non-GMO, low glycemic certified, and soy- and gluten-free.

Minimalist Baker recommends the Vegansmart Plant-Based Vegan Protein Powder because of all of the added nutrients. The reviewer also found the texture and sweetness were spot on, even though the flavor wasn’t perfect. The powder also blended easily.

The reviewer at Vegan Crunk uses the powder to make smoothies. She recommends this brand because her concoctions were so tasty that she scraped out the last remnants from the bottom of the glass.

More than 1,100 people left positive reviews of the Vegansmart Plant-Based Vegan Protein Powder on Amazon. The most helpful reviewer uses protein supplements because she has an autoimmune disease that makes nutrient absorption difficult. After trying nearly 100 different shake options, she determined that Vegansmart is the best because it doesn’t have artificial ingredients and tastes great.

Several of the buyers mention that they mix the powder with almond milk. And, one reviewer noted that the stevia taste wasn’t noticeable.

Pros: Excellent taste, blends easily, at least half the RDA of 20 vitamins and minerals, 7 grams of dietary fiber per serving

Cons: Expensive

Buy the Vegansmart Plant-Based Vegan Protein Powder on Amazon for $24.90 to 27.99 (available in five flavors)



The best affordable vegan protein powder

Why you’ll love it: The Orgain Organic Plant-Based Protein Powder is flavorful, cost-effective, and easy to blend into your beverage of choice.

At $1.35 per serving ($0.064 per gram of protein), the Orgain Organic Plant-Based Protein Powderhas the lowest per-serving price on our list. In addition to being vegan, this powder is gluten- and soy-free, non-GMO, and certified USDA organic.

The main ingredients are pea protein, brown rice protein, and chia seeds. There are zero grams of sugar. Instead, it gets its sweetness from stevia. In each 46-gram serving, there are 21 grams of protein, 4 grams of fat, 5 grams of dietary fiber, and 150 calories. There are eight flavors to choose from, including vanilla, natural unsweetened, and iced matcha latte.

The Wirecutter recommends the Orgain Organic Plant-Based Protein Powder because it rated high among vegans in their taste tests. The texture was the best overall, and the reviewer adds that the sweetness of the powder helped cover the earthy flavor commonly found in vegan proteins. The only negative she notes is the strong aftertaste.

The reviewer at Very Well Fit found this protein powder was very filling and appreciated the high-quality ingredients. They recommend it despite describing the taste of the chocolate powder as chalky and gritty.

Nearly 4,000 Amazon buyers have left four- or five-star reviews of the Orgain Organic Plant-Based Protein Powder. Reviewers are particularly impressed with how good this powder tastes, especially the chocolate and vanilla varieties. The price is another benefit mentioned frequently. And, one buyer who uses this protein powder exclusively for meal replacement has lost 60 pounds in 18 months. The most helpful reviewer had to stop taking the powder because the guar gum, erythritol, and acacia gum caused stomach pain and bloating.

Pros: Affordable, sweet and flavorful, terrific texture, sugar-free

Cons: Has ingredients that may irritate some users

Buy the Orgain Organic Plant-Based Protein Powder on Amazon for $26.99 to $40.13

Buy the Orgain Organic Plant-Based Protein Powder from GNC for $36.99



The best low-calorie vegan protein powder

Why you’ll love it: If you are looking for a powder with a high protein concentration and low calorie content, the Garden of Life Raw Organic Protein Powder is a smart solution.

What sets the Garden of Life Raw Organic Protein Powder apart from the other powders on this list is its no-nonsense ingredients. They pack 22 grams of protein into each 28-gram serving. There’s no sugar, only 2.5 grams of fat, and 110 calories. The powder is certified organic, vegan, and GMO- and gluten-free.

Garden of Life is a certified B Corp, which basically means they engage in ethical and sustainable business practices. At $1.65 per serving and $0.075 per gram of protein, this brand is in the middle of the pack price-wise.

Reviews.com recommends the Garden of Life Raw Organic Protein Powder as the best vegan powder because it came out on top in their taste tests and rated high for nutritional value in third-party lab tests. Still, tasters commented on the unusual thickness.

Minimalist Baker recommends this as one of her favorites because she found the sweetness is perfectly balanced, the vanilla flavor is neutral, and the texture is spot on. The reviewer at Women’s Health recommends it because the probiotic properties and travel-size pouches were lifesavers on her trip to Africa.

Over 2,100 Amazon buyers left five-star reviews of the Garden of Life Raw Organic Protein Powder. The most helpful reviews are from two-and-a-half years ago, and they are mainly complaints about deceit from the Garden of Life company. In 2016, the company rolled out new packaging and claimed 30% more protein. The new canister was larger but actually had less powder. And, the increase in protein was due to an increase in serving size.

More recent reviews are positive for the most part with many buyers either loving or hating the taste.

Pros: High concentration of protein, zero sugar, low-calorie, available in grab-and-go pouches

Cons: Several complaints about a 2016 packaging update

Buy the Garden of Life Raw Organic Protein Powder on Amazon for $28.99 to 39.99

Buy the Garden of Life Raw Organic Protein Powder from GNC for $45.99



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5 ways to look and feel healthier in one week, according to a nutritionist — and 5 things you should never do

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woman working out

  • Dietitian and nutritionist Andy Bellatti has five pieces of advice to start feeling like your best self and to get on the right track toward losing weight (safely!) in just one week.
  • To curb bloating, dehydration and discomfort, drink lots of water, cut sodium and down fiber.
  • Don't resort to a juice cleanse, powders or pills. Those aren't healthy or sustainable ways to keep the weight off.

As winter winds down, it's a great time to lean into your New Years resolutions and become your healthiest, most fit self.

But what's the best way to start?

Registered dietition and nutritionist Andy Bellatti reveals all the things you should — and should never — do to get you feeling your best in under a week and on the right track. 

DO: Drink lots of water.

Water is essential — it regulates the shape of every cell inside our bodies. If we don't get enough, in fact, these cells begin to shrivel up. The CDC recommends choosing water instead of sugar-sweetened beverages to "help with weight management."

Swapping a cold glass of H2O for a single 20-ounce soda will save you about 240 calories.

So hydrate, Bellatti told Business Insider, "ideally with water." 



DON'T: Go on a juice cleanse.

If you're considering a "detox" or "juice cleanse," you might want to reconsider. Drinking just water, juice, or any other liquefied concoction for more than a few days can set you up for unhealthy eating behaviors, and can often lead to spikes and drops in blood sugar levels, which can spawn cravings and mood swings.

"This is a recipe for 'hangriness,'" Bellatti said, "that also inaccurately paints all solid food as problematic."



DO: Cut back on sodium.

Most of us — 89% of US adults, according to the CDC— eat too much sodium, and that's not including any salt added at the table. Too much salt in your diet can cause puffiness and bloating, so cutting back can help you avoid that.

"Sodium retains water," Bellatti said, "so lowering sodium intake also reduces puffiness."



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The best makeup primers you can buy

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the best makeup primers

  • Makeup primer is one of those steps you might be tempted to skip, but you'll be happier with your foundation application if you don't.
  • Hourglass Mineral Veil Primer is our top pick because it gives skin a velvety smooth finish to help base products glide on and stay in place all day long.

Primer for your face sounds like a gimmick, but I promise it isn't. The step adds a cumulative 30 seconds to your routine but makes a world of difference in your makeup application whether you wear foundation or not.

But there are so many options out there. Choosing a primer can quickly become overwhelming if you're wandering around Sephora unprepared. There are mattifying primers, hydrating primers, illuminating primers, and pore-blurring primers. How can you ever pick just one? 

There are two important things to keep in mind when shopping for a primer: your skin type and your base makeup preferences. People with oily skin might gravitate toward mattifying or pore-blurring primers, while those with dry skin will likely prefer hydrating or radiant primers. Even those who don't wear foundation can benefit from primer to keep your other products in place, especially if you struggle with Melty Makeup Syndrome.

This breakdown of the best makeup primers I've personally tested will help you narrow down the sea of options to find your one perfect pick.

Here are the best makeup primers you can buy:

Read on in the slides below to check out our top picks.

The best makeup primer overall

Why you'll love it: Hourglass Mineral Veil Primer is a blockbuster beauty product that blurs imperfections and helps you achieve a smooth, long-lasting makeup application.

Have you ever started to blend in your makeup only to find that it is just not sitting right on your face that day? I can't stand when products I normally love pill up because of something I applied underneath, and the cult-favorite Hourglass Mineral Veil Primer is designed to prevent exactly that scenario.

It's a silky smooth white liquid that quickly becomes transparent as you work it into the skin. This primer creates an even base on which to blend your foundation and concealer by minimizing the appearance of redness, pores, and imperfections. The formula contains broad spectrum SPF 15 for some added sun protection, though I and your dermatologist, most likely would caution against using makeup as your primary sunscreen.

My skin feels super soft after applying Hourglass Mineral Veil Primer and I find that my makeup lasts all day without settling into fine lines. It's oil-free, fragrance-free, made without parabens or sulfates, so the formula is not irritating or greasy on my sensitive skin. Thanks to the airy texture, I find it leaves me matte without that dehydrated effect. Hourglass is one of my all-time favorite beauty brands, and every single product I've tried, including this one, blends seamlessly and leaves me looking better but not "makeup-y."

This is one of the most universally beloved primers on the market. It's been mentioned by countless publications including Rank and Style, Allure, and Byrdie, and has more than 6,000 reviews and a 4.4 rating on the platform Influenster and 3,800+ 5-star reviews on Sephora.

Pros: Oil and fragrance-free, suitable for all skin types

Cons: Expensive

Buy Hourglass Mineral Veil Primer at Sephora for $54



The best radiant primer

Why you'll love it: Don't let the intense luminosity scare you off — Becca Backlight Priming Filter gives you a gorgeous, natural glow that shines through foundation.

I don't know what kind of fairy dust they're working with at Becca Cosmetics HQ but these people know about glow. The Becca Backlight Priming Filter is the first primer I ever wanted to write poetry about. It makes my complexion look healthy and bright, whether worn alone or under foundation or tinted moisturizer.

I tend to gravitate toward this primer in the winter when my skin is feeling dull or on occasions when I'm wearing fuller coverage foundation. Just one pump blurs imperfections and imparts the most natural champagne-colored luminosity to the skin.

The radiance comes from Filtering Luminescent Pearls that diffuse light and add subtle shimmer — not glitter. The formula also contains nourishing vitamin E.

With a 4.2 star rating on Sephora based on 1,000+ reviews, this is a fan-favorite primer that has been featured in Best Products, Cosmopolitan UK, Vogue UK, and Women's Health, among other publications.

Pros: Beautiful natural glow, can be worn alone or with foundation, cruelty-free, paraben-free

Cons: Has a strong scent, doesn't extend foundation wear time

Buy Becca Backlight Priming Filter at Sephora for $39



The best moisturizing primer

Why you'll love it: Quench your thirst with the hydrating, coconut water-infused Too Faced Hangover Rx Replenishing Face Primer.

Dry patches and overall dehydration are the bane of any makeup lover's existence. Enter: Too Faced Hangover Rx Replenishing Face Primer— a super light moisturizing primer that plumps skin and keeps makeup looking fresh all day.

I reach for this when I'm doing my makeup several hours after applying skin-care products to give my skin an extra shot of moisture. But if you have dry skin, you'll probably want to use it on the daily. It's hydrating without being greasy, so you can use it under matte base products without disrupting the finish.

Another plus is the travel-friendly packaging. The primer is housed in a flexible tube with a pump on the end. The design prevents spillage in transit and also makes it very difficult to accidentally dispense too much, thus cutting down on waste. The cruelty-free, silicone-free formula is packed with coconut water and probiotics to keep your complexion happy.

"New favorite face primer!" writes one Sephora reviewer. “It is the smoothest thing I have ever put on my skin, feels amazing. It is super hydrating and my makeup goes on beautifully and prolongs it so well!” Still not convinced? There are nearly 3,000 other reviews and mentions in Women's Health, Cosmopolitan UK, Women's World, and Best Products.  

Pros: Moisturizing, silicone-free, cruelty-free, travel-friendly pump packaging

Cons: Strong coconut scent, not ideal for oily skin

Buy the Too Faced Hangover Replenishing Face Primer at Sephora for $34



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