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Emily Hutchinson

women.comUSA
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Celebrity StyleHair & BeautyEntertainment NewsLifestyle Trends
About

Emily Hutchinson covers fashion-led lifestyle stories within a broader showbiz beat, using celebrity culture and television as a way into everyday style, hair, and beauty decisions. Her work sits at the intersection of entertainment news and practical guidance, with pieces that turn red-carpet looks and on-screen transformations into concrete ideas readers can apply to their own appearance and routines. She writes and sub-edits across digital entertainment outlets, keeping a consistent focus on accessible, pop culture–driven storytelling about how people look, dress, and live.

Showbiz-rooted fashion and beauty coverage

At Women, Hutchinson’s fashion and beauty coverage is firmly rooted in showbiz, tying style advice to the faces and personalities readers already know from television and celebrity news. In stories like “The 2026 Hair Trends That Will Help You Transition To Gray,” she treats hairstyle changes as both a trend story and a practical guide, framing fashion-forward cuts and colors as tools to manage a major shift in personal appearance. She writes about hair not in isolation, but as part of how readers present themselves as they age and evolve, positioning style decisions as a way to maintain confidence while embracing change.

Her entertainment-first fashion lens is clear in celebrity hair pieces, including a Women article on HGTV star Christina Haack. In that story she walks through Haack’s signature voluminous, long blond look, noting how central extensions are to the reality star’s current image. She contrasts that with Haack’s different appearance when “Flip or Flop” first began, using the before-and-after shift to show how a public figure’s hair strategy evolves over time alongside their career. The coverage is detailed but approachable, focusing on textures, length, and color in a way that helps readers understand how a recognizable television personality constructs her look.

Across these fashion and beauty pieces, Hutchinson keeps her tone service-driven while anchored in entertainment. Celebrity examples supply the visual reference points, but the underlying subject is how readers can navigate their own style decisions—from going gray to experimenting with extensions—using the same techniques they see on screen. That combination of showbiz storytelling and practical grooming advice is the core of her fashion beat.

Entertainment and lifestyle writing across digital outlets

Hutchinson’s fashion coverage sits within a broader portfolio of entertainment and lifestyle writing across multiple digital outlets. She has worked as a freelance journalist since college before moving into full-time writing and sub-editing roles, consistently focused on showbiz and lifestyle content. Her author biographies describe her as working on “all things showbiz,” “entertainment and lifestyle,” and “stories about celebrities, TV shows, movies, and lifestyle,” underlining that her primary frame of reference is popular culture.

She writes for several entertainment and lifestyle sites, including Grunge, The List, Nicki Swift, and Digital Spy, where she contributes and polishes stories about celebrities, television series, films, and everyday living. That cross-masthead presence means her fashion and beauty work is informed by a wide view of how audiences engage with culture: she is regularly handling pieces that track reality TV careers, film releases, and fan reactions as well as lighter lifestyle features. The result is fashion coverage that feels plugged into the entertainment cycle, aware of how trends move from screen to street.

Because she both writes and sub-edits, Hutchinson’s pieces tend to be tightly structured and clear, with straightforward headlines and a clean, explanatory style. Whether she is unpacking a celebrity’s changing look or outlining a set of emerging hair trends for a new year, she keeps the prose direct and focused, favoring simple descriptions over jargon. Her entertainment and lifestyle background keeps the emphasis on what readers already recognize—shows they watch, stars they follow—then connects those touchpoints to broader questions about taste, image, and everyday style.

Service-led tone and accessible framing

A consistent thread in Hutchinson’s work is a service-led tone that treats fashion and beauty as decisions readers can make, not just images to admire from a distance. The phrasing of pieces like “The 2026 Hair Trends That Will Help You Transition To Gray” signals that her goal is to help, positioning trends as practical tools rather than abstract runway concepts. Even when the focus is firmly on a celebrity, as in her Christina Haack hair coverage, she breaks down the elements of the look—extensions, volume, color—in ways that a non-famous reader could adopt or adapt.

Her entertainment remit gives her an eye for narrative, and she often frames style in terms of change over time: how a television host’s hair has shifted across seasons, or how a new trend can mark a transition in someone’s life. That narrative approach makes her fashion beat particularly useful for stories that involve transformation, whether it is a brand talking about helping consumers navigate aging, or a campaign built around embracing a new stage of life through appearance. She writes about these transitions with plain language and short sentences, keeping the focus on concrete, manageable steps.

Across Women and her other outlets, Hutchinson’s distinguishing feature is this blend of pop culture fluency with practical style advice. She understands celebrities, TV shows, and movies as shared reference points, then uses them to explain trends in hair, beauty, and lifestyle that feel attainable rather than aspirational. For any story that sits at the crossroads of entertainment and everyday fashion—especially around hair, aging, and personal reinvention—her coverage is tailored to speak to those themes directly.

Also covering this beat

4 more fashion journalists.

AR

Aaron Royce

thezoereport.com

Aaron Royce turns runway moments and celebrity event dressing into clear, wearable stories that show readers how trends move from the red carpet to real life. He is a fashion news writer at The Zoe Report, where he covers fashion, trends, celebrity style, and related news across the site. He also works in a fashion news editing role at The Daily Front Row, extending his reporting into the industry’s front row and party circuit. As a contributing and freelance journalist, he writes for fashion and lifestyle magazines including People, InStyle, Marie Claire, and other outlets, with a focus on shopping, beauty, and culture. His reporting centers on fashion’s visual language, celebrity influence, and shoppable outcomes across fashion, beauty, fragrance, jewelry, skincare, menswear, wellness, accessories, shoes, pop culture, and celebrity news.

USA·Fashion
AC

Abigail Connolly

yahoo.com

Abigail Connolly stands out for covering celebrity culture and fashion as a visual story about outfits, images, and online reaction. She writes for Yahoo and SheFinds, where she covers celebrity news, fashion, and related lifestyle topics. Her beat focuses on stars, royals, and political figures, with stories on red carpet looks, runway trends, state-visit wardrobes, and social media posts that shape public image. She has written about Oprah Winfrey’s all-white Cannes look, Paris Fashion Week fur, Anya Taylor-Joy’s Dior dress, Melania Trump’s style, and royal figures such as Queen Camilla and Prince William. Her reporting is short, tightly focused, and descriptive, using fan comments, captions, and sourced claims to show how a single look or post drives conversation online.

USA·Fashion
AM

Aemilia Madden

vogue.com

Aemilia Madden writes about how people actually live in their clothes, blending disciplined wardrobe editing with specific shopping recommendations and a clear point of view on taste and restraint. A fashion and lifestyle journalist, former senior fashion writer at Vogue, and now a freelance writer, editor, and consultant, she focuses on service-driven fashion and lifestyle stories grounded in personal testing, long-term wear, and real scenarios. Her work connects shopping lists, trend coverage, and essays into a focus on more intentional choices about what to buy and how to wear it. She reports through first-person experiments, practical shopping guides, sale roundups, and trend explainers, and her portfolio spans Vogue, Harper’s Bazaar, Elle, T Magazine, The Cut, The Wall Street Journal, and her newsletter Taeste Bud, where she extends her interest in archival references, obsessions, and inside-the-closet cleanses.

USA·Fashion
AM

Air Mail

airmail.news

Batsheva Hay writes fashion and culture pieces for Air Mail with the sensibility of a working designer rather than a conventional style reporter. She is the founder of the cult label Batsheva, known for prairie dresses and vintage-inflected, modest silhouettes that rethink traditions of feminine dress. At Air Mail she sits inside style and lifestyle coverage, writing about fashion and shopping from the point of view of someone who designs the kinds of clothes she describes. Her background as a former lawyer shapes a structured, argumentative way of taking apart dress codes and conventions. She focuses on vintage clothing, modesty, subversion, and how old styles gain new meaning. In guides such as her Upper West Side piece, she treats locations as mood boards and supporting characters, using sensory detail and lived-in references to map the cultural influences behind her clothes and the world her label inhabits.

USA·Fashion
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