Monday's Global Media Round-Up: 12/4

Hope everyone enjoyed their weekend! But now that it's Monday its time to kick this week into gear. Here at TTG we are starting the week off strong and we hope you all are doing the same. Here are some of top stories to get you through this work week and bring you right into the weekend. Enjoy xo 



Billboard Women in Music 2017: Honorees Stress the Importance of Female Empowerment 


Billboard Women in Music 2017 has come to an end, but not without making incredibly inspiring mark on another amazing year in the industry. As Camila Cabello, Mary J Blige, Kelly Clarkson, Kehliani, Solnage, Grace VanderWaal, Selena Gomez, and Atlantic Records COO Julie Greenwale accepted their awards, they acknowledged that this year has been a meaningful one for women in the music business, as females young and old have continued to pave the way for progress.
Read Article: Billboard

The Goods: 10 Travel Accessories You Need for Any Trip 

Traveling is equal parts fun and frustrating. You're going to a cool place and experiencing new things! But you're also flying economy and sitting in the middle seat! Or you're driving for hours in a rental car that makes weird noises when you go above 50 mph! Cant do much about that middle seat or questionable rental, but at least these 10 travel accessories will help make the getting-there part of your vacation suck less so you can enjoy your actual trip way more.
Read Article: Marie Claire 

Could a Restored 60s Classic Be the Most Romantic Movie of the Year?

When Women in Love, Ken Russell's erotically-charged adaption of D.H. Lawrence's 1920 novel premiere in 1969, it caused a sensation. The film captivated audiences with then-revoluntionary depictions of sex and subtext belong the heteronormative, and became a box-office hit and awards contender that propelled both its director and its leading lady (Glenda Jackson) into the spotlight. Continuing the tale of Ursula and Gundrun Brangwen, the Midlands-bred sisters first introduced in Lawrence's earlier work, The Rainbow, the film serves as an exploration of English society post-World War I as views through the lens of the latest '60s free love, with themes that extend into the universal, including the progression through womanhood and complex, emotionally challenging relationships that follow suit. 
Read Article: Vogue


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