{"id":3727,"date":"2025-04-22T18:59:13","date_gmt":"2025-04-22T18:59:13","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/pilotshopworld.com\/?p=3727"},"modified":"2025-04-30T10:21:06","modified_gmt":"2025-04-30T10:21:06","slug":"the-coachella-week-2-looks-worth-talking-about","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"http:\/\/pilotshopworld.com\/index.php\/2025\/04\/22\/the-coachella-week-2-looks-worth-talking-about\/","title":{"rendered":"The Coachella Week 2 Looks Worth Talking About"},"content":{"rendered":"
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At last, the influencers and reality show contestants can hang up their bedazzled bodysuits and cowboy hats and Instax Minis, because Coachella is over! With the summer festival circuit just around the corner, however, I suggest they keep them in an easily accessible location, at least until Stagecoach, or wherever they\u2019ve been flown off to next by the “Coca-Cola CREATE Lab in partnership with Frito Lays and Nerds Ropes\u2122: ‘Stretch Your Imaginations.'”<\/p>\n
As that merry band of misfits jets off into the sunset on their comped, 30-minute private plane excursions, stylists across LA are packing up pulls and yelling at assistants and brand reps on the phone, wondering if their next energy healing session is a better deal than the offer code they got for cupping at a strip mall in Century City. While the art of putting celebrities on clothes might feel like an eternal hamster wheel, the looks themselves have never been more ephemeral. Each year, dozens upon dozens of lists like this are published, each touting the very best and very worst seen at awards shows, festivals, charity galas and more. <\/p>\n
But this is PAPER<\/em>, and we do it a bit differently. Rather than arbitrarily sorting the looks seen on Weekend 2 of Coachella, we\u2019re going to discuss those worth discussing at all. As it was the quieter of the weekends (and certain artists have given exclusive image rights to publications other than this magazine) I\u2019ve rounded up the pressing conversations everyone missed over the weekend. Shall we?<\/p>\n Tyla<\/strong><\/p>\n Might as well start with the biggest hubbub from the weekend. Global sensation Tyla wore a look reminiscent of Britney Spears\u2019 now legendary \u201cI\u2019m a Slave 4 U\u201d performance with the snake at the 2001 VMAs, which was correctly pointed out by observers on social media. Tyla, surprisingly, then responded to one of the posts drawing a connection between the two. <\/p>\n <\/p>\n \u2014 (@) It was just about the funniest thing she could have done, short of bringing out a printed copy of the post on a morning talk show and defending herself and her team against it. I appreciate a messy bent from pop stars amongst their fanbases, especially at her current station in the industry, if only because it gives us vultures something to chat about. <\/p>\n There\u2019s an interesting disconnect at work between Tyla\u2019s perception of her image and creative team and the fashion commentariat. It\u2019s come up before, when the singer wore a look directly cited as being \u201cinspired<\/u><\/a>\u201d by Dilara Dindikoglu for the \u201cArt\u201d music video. Since it was credited as being based on Dilara\u2019s designs, I think both sides of the debate had merits to their argument. But there\u2019s likely a reality where somebody was \u201cinspired\u201d upstream, and that inspiration was not communicated to someone who did not grow up with American pop culture. Worse yet for my Botox bills, she was born after that performance. <\/p>\n If anything, the look got the girls talking. The same could not be said for the following fashions.<\/p>\n <\/p>\n<\/h3>\n
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