Hudson Williams' Runway Debut for Dsquared2 at Milan Fashion Week

Hudson William is back on the ice!

The Heated Rivalry star made his official runway debut at Milan Fashion Week, stepping onto one of fashion’s biggest stages for the first time with Dsquared2.

Known primarily for his on-screen presence, his appearance marked a clear shift into the fashion world, showing confidence and ease as he opened the show. The moment felt significant — not just as a celebrity cameo, but as a true introduction to runway modeling, signaling a new chapter in his career.

The debut came during Dsquared2’s Fall/Winter presentation, where the energy of the show matched Hudson’s bold entrance. His look reflected the brand’s signature mix of rugged attitude and high-fashion edge, immediately setting the tone for the collection and drawing attention from both fashion insiders and fans.

Together, Hudson’s debut and Dsquared2’s striking collection created one of the standout moments of the season — a meeting of rising star power and a brand that thrives on confidence, performance, and bold self-expression.

Check out our favourite menswear looks below:


The Song That Keeps Coming Back: ‘All the Things She Said’ Surges Again Thanks to Heated Rivalry

When t.A.T.u.’s “All the Things She Said” first exploded onto the global stage in 2002, it wasn’t just a pop hit — it became an unforgettable cultural moment.

Released as the lead single from their English-language debut 200 km/h in the Wrong Lane, the song topped charts across Europe and cracked the U.S. Top 20, marking an unusual breakthrough for a Russian act at the time. Its provocative music video — featuring the duo in school uniforms and kissing in the rain — ignited controversy while cementing the track as a touchstone of early-2000s queer visibility in mainstream pop.

Fast forward to 2025, and “All the Things She Said” is riding a second wave of success thanks to its powerful placement in the HBO Max/Crave series Heated Rivalry. The show’s episode four used both the original and a striking cover by British artist Harrison to underscore a pivotal emotional scene, helping the song surge by roughly 135% in official Spotify streams in the U.S. alone — now counting over **700 million total plays — and drawing a new generation of listeners to the track.

The renewed spotlight has sparked wide online chatter and rediscovery, with Gen Z fans resharing the song, analyzing its lyrics, and exploring its legacy through social platforms. Its reemergence speaks to the timeless power of pop music to resonate across eras, especially when tied to storytelling that reflects queer desire, longing, and identity.

Though the original duo’s relationship to LGBTQ+ identity was complex — with accusations of queerbaiting shadowing parts of t.A.T.u.’s image — both old and new listeners continue to find meaning in the track’s raw emotional edge. Today, its presence in Heated Rivalry doesn’t just bring back nostalgia — it reframes the song as a soundtrack for contemporary queer narratives and cultural conversations around representation, desire, and authenticity in pop culture.