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What Are Your Holy Grail Skincare Products?

Our editors, clockwise: Christine Pride, Alison Piepmeyer, Kaitlyn Teer, Joanna Goddard, Jannelle Sanchez, and Kelsey Miller

Are you a skincare fan? I absolutely love it — and I love hearing the little details of people’s routines. It’s such a fun peek into someone’s daily life. Our team of editors has a varied mix of skin types and challenges. Today, we figured we’d share our daily skincare rituals (and we’d love to hear yours)…

How would you describe your skin type?

Alison: Acne-prone. From age 12 to 34, I dealt with painful breakouts and tried almost every treatment. I felt so insecure when it flared up, especially because it was hard to hide. I had a few clear stretches over the years (like during pregnancy or after Accutane), but it was only a few years ago that I finally figured out my acne triggers and a routine that works for me. (Basically, cut out dairy; more on that below.)

Christine: In magazine parlance, “normal-to-dry.” In the parlance of my girlfriends and me: “Black don’t crack.” Melanin does as much work as any expensive serum to keep my skin fairly wrinkle-free.

Jannelle: Combination. I always have some shine on my forehead and nose by the afternoon. I don’t really mind, but if I’m going out for a special occasion, I’ll bring setting powder in my purse.

Joanna: Very fair and ruddy. I’m always blotchy when I wake up in the morning. Also, with perimenopause, my skin is shifting a lot right now, so my skincare routine has been shifting, too.

Kaitlyn: Dry, especially in the colder months.

Kelsey: Reactive. She reddens, she clogs, she scars if you even look at her funny. Frankly, my skin is a total diva.

What’s your morning skincare routine?

Alison: I have a special skincare plan that my esthetician from Acne Clinic NYC created for me six years ago! In the morning, it’s simple: exfoliating serum and hydrating gel.

Christine: Nothing, really — it’s a miracle if I remember to wash my face. That’s a hazard of working from home; there’s so little motivation.  

Jannelle: I have three kids under five, so personal time is limited. On busy mornings, all I do is rinse my face with cold water and dab on CeraVe cream — it’s my go-to moisturizer because it’s hydrating, fragrance-free, and cheap!

Joanna: This winter, my skin got dry and blotchy, so much so that I’d wake up with little red bumps, almost like a rash. My dermatologist’s theory was that my cleanser was stripping my face, so she suggested switching to the very simple Vanicream. It cleared up my skin right away, and my boys now use it, too. After cleansing, I use INNBeauty Extreme Cream, which is super creamy and hydrating. I started using it a few months ago, and it’s working really well for me. My skin finally feels glowy again!

Kaitlyn: I typically cleanse during my morning shower. A couple times a week, I also apply a clay mask to my T-zone and let it do its thing while I get dressed and make coffee. After rinsing it off, my skin feels extra fresh and clean.

Kelsey: Every night, I rinse my face and dry with a clean towel. If my skin feels cranky, I’ll soothe it with Summer Friday’s Jet Lag mask/moisturizer. That stuff zaps redness like nobody’s business. I finish with a thin layer of polyglutamic acid serum. It’s incredible and has an instant smoothing effect on skin texture (see: scars). It’s a million times better than any primer I’ve tried, and I use it even on no-makeup days because it also keeps me hydrated, with zero stickiness or shine.

Our Team's Skincare Routines

What do you use for sun protection? 

Alison: On my face, I use this tinted mineral sunscreen. For my body, I like this sport one. Both are acne-safe! I’m really careful about the ingredients in my beauty products and run everything through a pore-clogging checker before buying.

Christine: I’m very bad at sunscreen. Very bad. As in…I never use it, ever. (The shame!)

Jannelle: I used to be a SuperGoop gal, but it made my skin feel oily. I switched to Beauty Pie two years ago, and I really like its matte finish. Also: hats!

Joanna: I like lots of different sunscreens, but one I always go back to is Vacation because I LOVE the scent. Another favorite is EltaMD, which never irritates my sensitive skin.

Kaitlyn: I spend a ton of time outdoors and reach for Trader Joe’s daily facial sunscreen every day. It’s clear, unbelievably lightweight, absorbs easily, and has a subtle-but-nice scent. Skin cancer runs in my family, and I’ve had a few scares myself, so I keep this sunscreen in our bathroom, in my purse, and in the car.

Kelsey: Most sunscreens make me break out horribly. In the winter, I use Ilia’s Skin Tint with SPF 40. But summer is coming, and I need the hardcore stuff that’ll stay put through sweaty commutes and beach days. Any recs?

Our Team's Skincare Routines

What’s your personal hero product?

Alison: I don’t really believe in hero products! I’ve seen the best results from sticking to a consistent, boring routine. I’m not very fun to talk beauty with; if someone recommends something new, I’m like, ‘No, I already know what works for me.’ I’ve got my system.

Christine: I’ve recommended these exfoliating pads so many times, I deserve a spokeswoman gig: M-61 PowerGlow Peel. Years ago, when I first tried them, my skin got a noticeable glow. Instant results? Sold! 

Jannelle: Mario Badescu Drying Lotion. I get blemishes during my period, but I can’t use most acne products because I’m allergic to some of the common ingredients. This stuff always takes care of stubborn pimples without causing a reaction.

Joanna: I know I’m a broken record, but Vacation sunscreen doubles as a fragrance, and I get so many compliments on it. My whole family is obsessed with the scent. We even bought the Vacation air freshener for our car because we love it so much.

Kaitlyn: My friend gave me a jar of calendula salve after my daughter was born, saying it was good for diaper rash. My kids are now (thankfully) out of diapers, but that salve is so great that I still keep it on hand for kitchen burns, dry skin, etc. My whole family has a cold right now, and it’s healing all our red, tissue-chapped noses.

Kelsey: Indie Lee Brightening Cleanser. It’s an excellent exfoliator, and the longer you leave it on, the more it works (in the shower, I’ll let it sit on my face for a couple minutes while washing the rest of my body). I use it a couple times a week, because as with most “brightening” products (and it is genuinely brightening), it can make me a little pink if I overdo it.

Our Team's Skincare Routines

What does your evening routine look like?

Alison: I usually shower before bed and use this body wash. Then I’ll wash my face with an oil-free cleanser, do a quick second cleanse with micellar water, use a hydrating gel, and finish with Vaseline on my lips. I also wash my pillowcases every two or three days so I’m not sleeping on anything dirty (especially since I only wash my hair once or twice a week!).

Christine: I try not to overthink skincare, so I stick to a three-step routine: wash (Aveeno Positively Radiant Cleanser), tone (Mario Badescu Cucumber Cleansing Lotion), and moisturize (Sunday Riley Vitamin C Cream). This combo (plus the PowerGlow pads a couple times a week) keeps my skin in balance — and I like that it’s a mix of high and low. Aveeno is a solid drugstore brand, while Sunday Riley is a splurge for me — but that’s kind of the point. It’s a treat for my skin, and I love the luxurious texture and scent.

Jannelle: If I’m wearing makeup, I’ll remove it with micellar water. (I started using it after reading Chloe Hall’s beauty uniform, and I now I can’t NOT use it.) I feel a difference when I skip this step, and the difference is not good! Then I use my ride-or-die Cetaphil cleanser, which I’ve been devoted to since I was a teenager. It makes my skin feel squeaky clean but never dried out. After that, I’ll put on a nice layer of CeraVe moisturizer, drink a glass of water, and call it a night.

Joanna: I wash with Vanicream cleanser again (I keep one bottle in the shower and one by the sink). Once a week I’ll use a Korean exfoliator, which I love because I can actually feel the dead skin sloughing off. My skin is SO smooth after. Then I finish with the same INNBeauty moisturizer, and that’s that.

Kaitlyn: Every night, I like to press a warm, wet washcloth to my face for a few seconds. Holding the heat over my closed eyes is such a comfort, especially if I’ve had a long day. If I’m feeling responsible, I’ll follow it up with a night cream, which is formulated for mature skin, as they say.

Kelsey: I wash my face in the shower, alternating my beloved Indie Lee with La Roche-Posay’s Foaming Cleansing Oil (I know foaming ≠ cleansing, but I need the foam). I use a glycolic acid toner a few times a week. SkinCeuticals CE Ferulic serum is my favorite treatment product (it does everything — fades sun damage, evens tone, makes me look more awake), but it’s pricey, so I don’t always have it. Moisturizers are my splurge. I love Caudalie’s Premier Cru Cream and Summer Fridays Rich Cushion Cream, which are both super hydrating but never clog or irritate my skin.

What’s the biggest skincare lesson you’ve learned?

Alison: What I eat really affects my skin. Years ago, I spent four months working with an esthetician to figure out my personal acne triggers. For me, dairy products cause breakouts, and I can almost always tell within a few days if I’ve accidentally eaten some.

Christine: I hate facials! It took two of them before I realized that, for me, they aren’t relaxing at all, and I don’t enjoy people touching my face. I’ve also learned to accept that I’m just not a product fiend. I like the stuff I like, and I’ll probably be using it until I die — the same way my mom’s been using her Noxema for 65+ years.

Jannelle: Sleep makes a HUGE difference. If I haven’t had a good night’s rest, my skin feels so dry and flaky. Of course, we can’t always control how much sleep we get (I’m currently waking up to breastfeed three times a night), but if I have an event where I want to feel my best, I try to go to bed early for a few nights leading up to it. I swear, getting those extra hours makes my skin brighter.

Joanna: As a teenager, I’d sunbathe on my dad’s back deck in Michigan (it was the ’90s!), and I’d sometimes get sunburned. My twin sister was the opposite: she’d douse herself in sunscreen and wear long sleeves to the beach! Decades later, you can see the difference. Her skin is like cream. Now I tell every teenager I know to wear sunscreen.

Kaitlyn: Not to sound like a habit-stacking bro, but what works for me is keeping my cleanser and face scrub in the shower. Seeing the scrub in the shower helps me remember to use it once a week.

Kelsey: Dehydrated is not the same as dry. You can pile on the moisturizer, but if you don’t exfoliate and get the dead skin and makeup residue off your face, it’s not going to do anything but sit there and build up. That is the recipe for upset skin. Oh, and everything they told us about drinking water is true.

What does your own routine look like these days? Any hero-products we should check out?

P.S. 8 readers share photos of when they felt beautiful, and one beauty product we always finish.

Note: If you buy something through our links, we may earn an affiliate commission or have a sponsored relationship with the brand, at no cost to you. We recommend only products we genuinely like. Thank you so much.

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Using Claude Fable 5 means your data will be collected. It’s not optional.

Anthropic just released its most powerful public model yet — Claude Fable 5. However, along with the model’s release, the AI giant also made a significant update to its data retention policies.

Fable 5 was released to the public on Tuesday. Fable 5 is a “safe for general use” version of Anthropic’s most powerful model, Mythos, which has been restricted from public use due to its potentially dangerous cybersecurity capabilities. Anthropic created a set of safety guardrails for Fable 5, and its benchmarks blow away much of the competition, per Anthropic.

But it looks like Anthropic has also blown away its data retention policies for Fable 5.

“To ensure we’re responsibly deploying Mythos-class models, we are requiring limited data retention and review as part of our safety work,” reads an update on Anthropic’s official Claude support page. “Prompts submitted to, and outputs generated by, Mythos-class models are retained for 30 days for trust and safety purposes, on every platform where these models are offered.”

The update was first noticed by Jun Park, the CEO of AI training company hillclimb.

“New policy from Anthropic: if you use Fable/Mythos, they collect your data. No exceptions. Not even for enterprise partners,” Park posted on X.

This change is significant for Anthropic’s enterprise and API customers, says Jessica Eaves Mathews, a lawyer who specializes in copyright, trademark, and AI law.

In a post on Mathews’ Substack (as highlighted by CyberNews), the lawyer explains how Anthropic already retains user data for 30 days under its free and paid consumer plans. However, Matthews says this change nullifies part of any agreement Anthropic has with its enterprise and API partners. 

“Every other Claude model available through the API, including Opus 4.8, Sonnet 4.6, and Haiku 4.5, can operate under Zero Data Retention (ZDR) agreements,” Mathews writes. “Fable 5 cannot. If your organization previously had a ZDR agreement with Anthropic, that agreement does not apply to Fable 5 traffic. This is a policy change that overrides existing enterprise commitments for this specific model class.”

Mathews says that any organization that believed that their data would not be stored by Anthropic should know that there is now a “mandatory exception” for Fable 5 and all future Mythos models.

While Mythos-class models seem to be quite powerful, companies should know about the change in Anthropic’s data retention policies and make adjustments where necessary.


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Tons of Fitbits are on sale ahead of Prime Day

Best early Prime Day Fitbit deals at a glance:


Fitbit Charge 6


Fitbit Versa 4


Fitbit Inspire 3

Amazon’s Prime Day sales event is right around the corner (I can’t believe it’s that time of year again!), and I’m genuinely shocked by the deals we’re seeing this early in the game.

Usually, Amazon doesn’t put Fitbits on sale until the very last minute, and then they’re gone. (And some years, they don’t go on sale at all.) But right now, we’re seeing all-time lows on select Fitbit models, including the Charge 6.

Here are the best early Prime Day Fitbit deals you can shop right now:

Best deal overall

$99.95
at Amazon

$159.95
Save $60.00

 

Why we like it

The Fitbit Charge 6 isn’t the newest Fitbit on the market, but it still has (almost) everything you’d need in a smart wearable. (I say almost because the Fitbit Charge 6 doesn’t have an altimeter, but if you’re not a trail runner, this probably isn’t a deal breaker.)

The Charge 6 tracks your calories, steps, sleep, heart rate, and more. It also has built-in GPS, 40+ exercise modes, a seven-day battery life, and includes a three-month Google Health Premium (formerly Fitbit Premium) membership. Once the three months are up, you’ll need to either cancel or renew for $9.99 per month or $99.99 annually.

Right now, you can get the Fitbit Charge 6 for $99.95 at Amazon. This is the lowest price we’ve tracked on this model since its release in 2023.

Best runner-up deal

Why we like it

If you’re willing to spend a little bit more, the Fitbit Versa 4 is on sale for $149.95. This isn’t the lowest price we’ve seen (it was $104.96 in April 2024), but it’s still a pretty good deal.

Unlike the Charge 6, the Versa 4 has an altimeter and Bluetooth wrist calling. So, if you’re looking for a wearable that acts more like a smartwatch, the Versa 4 might be the better buy. That said, it doesn’t have the more “serious” health sensor that the Charge 6 does (e.g., ECG and EDA).

The Versa 4 also comes with three months of Google Health Premium.

Best budget deal

$79.95
at Walmart

$89.95
Save $10

 

Why we like it

If you’re just looking for something that’s affordable and efficient, the Fitbit Inspire 3 is your best option at $79.95.

It’s a no-frills fitness tracker that’ll give you the basic features you need to stay on top of your health. It can track your heart rate, steps, and stress levels. (It also offers menstrual health tracking, which is nice.)

You’ll also get 10 full days of battery life and, like the other models mentioned above, three free months of Google Health Premium.

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20+ book deals Im sending to the group chat before Prime Day even begins

Table of Contents

The best early Prime Day book deals at a glance:


"Crux" by Gabriel Tallent


"The Girl Who Was Taken" by Charlie Donlea


"Kill For Me Kill For You" by Steve Cavanagh

It’s nearly Amazon Prime Day, which officially runs from June 23 through 26, but if you don’t feel like waiting, there’s already plenty of live deals to shop.

Besides offering three free months of both Kindle Unlimited and Audible to new subscribers, Amazon also has some pretty great discounts on books themselves. I’m not usually one to recommend purchasing physical books via Amazon (support local book stores!), but it’s pretty hard to pass up a 50% price drop on a book you’ve had on your TBR.

I’m tracking some of the best deals on physical books and e-books at Amazon ahead of the official Prime Day kick off, but remember to check back for more once things start ramping up.

Best early Prime Day hardcover book deal

$14.67
at Amazon

$30
Save $15.33

with on-page coupon

Why we like it

Named one of the best books of 2026 so far by Amazon Book Editors, Crux is an “exhilarating, tender novel about an unlikely friendship forged through a shared love of rock climbing,” according to Amazon Editor Abby Abell. Thanks to an on-page coupon at Amazon, you can add the hardcover version to your home library for less than half its usual cost.

More hardcover book deals

Best early Prime Day paperback book deal

$7.50
at Amazon

$19.95
Save $12.45

 

Why we like it

A classic trope of two abducted girls, only one returns and one doesn’t, The Girl Who Was Taken is a psychological thriller by Charlie Donlea where nothing is as it seems. Typically around $20, you can pick up the paperback version for only $7.50 at Amazon ahead of Prime Day. That’s just a few cents away from its lowest price ever.

More paperback book deals

Best early Prime Day Kindle book deal

$2.99
at Amazon

$18.99
Save $16.00

 

Why we like it

I highly recommend grabbing this twisty psychological thriller from internationally best-selling author Steve Cavanagh while the Kindle version is only $2.99. Kill For Me Kill For You follows two women seeking revenge against the men who killed their daughters. Over drinks one night, they decide to swap murders, but things don’t go exactly as planned.

More Kindle book deals

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