All posts tagged: Yasmin

‘Industry’s’ Marisa Abela Is Rooting for Yasmin and Robert

[ad_1] Industry, the red-hot HBO show about investment bankers making bad life choices, has kicked into high gear in season three. This is in no small part to a plot that foregrounds Yasmin Kara-Hanani, resident rich girl with daddy issues, played masterfully by Marisa Abela. Industry season three finds Yasmin broke and said father supposedly on the run, after he was exposed for being a major embezzler. She’s being hounded by the paps, pursuing a relationship with the emotionally-stunted green energy CEO Henry Muck (Game of Thrones’s Kit Harrington), and forever and always toying with the emotions of Robert (Harry Lawtey), the sweet working class colleague who’s not-so-secretly pining away for her. Episode five is an introspective one for Yaz. Things between her and Henry blow up spectacularly, she learns that her missing father—or at least, his body—has been found, and shares some moody, atmospheric final moments with Robert in bed. Here, Marisa Abela talks to GQ about whether Yasmin is good at her job and who the real villain of Industry is, and helped …

Exclusive: Yasmin Le Bon shares refreshing approach to ageing and best midlife beauty tips

[ad_1] Rising to prominence as one of the leading supermodels of the 1980s, Yasmin Le Bon continues to enjoy a high-profile modelling career, with her youthful looks and natural radiance still in demand by leading fashion brands across the world.  And now she is celebrating a new role and the concept of ageless beauty as the face of Gold Collagen’s latest supplement Forte Ageless, for which none of the campaign imagery has been retouched. Created using a pioneering new collagen formula to optimise wellbeing in midlife and beyond, Yasmin, 59, is the perfect choice. Yasmin shares her exciting new career move Take our poll: Yasmin will mark 40 years in her relationship with Simon Le Bon, lead singer of Duran Duran, this year. She is a proud mother to daughters Amber, Tallulah and Saffron, and a grandmother to Skye and Taro who call her “Zsa Zsa, like Gabor”. She continues to turn heads with her striking brown eyes, glossy shoulder-length hair and fresh-faced beauty. When questioned on what it means to be ageless, Yasmin replies …

One pot, one pan: Yasmin Fahr’s easy suppers – recipes | Food

[ad_1] Like any cook, I love it when people enjoy my food, and I get even greater pleasure when it’s also easy for me to make (and with minimal washing-up). I often turn to these one-pot recipes, which empty the pantry and make something comforting – a hearty, vegetable-filled soup and a speedy, miso- and ginger-coated chicken. One-pot lemony spinach and farro soup (pictured top) The lemon and grated cheese stirred in at the end are the things that tie this up, so don’t be alarmed if the soup tastes a little underwhelming while it’s simmering. If you have a parmesan rind lingering in the fridge, add it along with the farro. Prep 10 minCook 50 minServes 4 2 tbsp olive oil1 large carrot, unpeeled and cut into thin coinsSalt and black pepper2 tbsp tomato paste1 tsp dried oregano1 tsp ground turmeric1½ litres (about 6 cups) vegetable stock, or water200g (about 1 cup) pearled farro, or pearl barley140g (about 1 cup) fresh or frozen peas150g (about 5oz) baby spinach140g (about ¾ cup) grated parmesan, plus …

Even prisons serve regular meals – yet in our camp, Rohingyas go hungry | Yasmin Ara

[ad_1] For a Rohingya refugee, food rations are everything. We are not allowed to work. We are surrounded by a barbed-wire fence that stops us moving; goods are hard to bring in for trading and the few jobs there were have been lost. So food is the resource we depend on the most. Now rations are being cut for the second time in a few months. Our dependence has only increased now we cannot work. Before, close to half the refugees could make money in some way – working for NGOs, as daily labourers or traders – but that is no longer allowed by the Bangladesh authorities. So we have to rely on aid given by the World Food Programme (WFP). A person lives on limited rations – $12 (£10) for a month. This is not life, just survival. Since 1 March we have been asked to live on even less – $10 – and, now again, we are told from June that our rations will be cut to $8. The reduction of $2 brought …