Vanity Fair

Vanity Fair

Internet Publishing

New York, New York 75,972 followers

About us

Vanity Fair is home to muscular long-form journalism, stunning photography, insightful essays, and superb design. Across daily digital articles, a monthly print magazine, and multiple social platforms, Vanity Fair consistently delivers crucial reporting on business and finance, domestic politics and world affairs, even as it covers the very best in arts and entertainment. To stay in touch, sign up for a VF newsletter, download a podcast, or follow us on Twitter, Instagram, or TikTok.

Website
http://www.vanityfair.com
Industry
Internet Publishing
Company size
51-200 employees
Headquarters
New York, New York
Type
Privately Held
Founded
1913
Specialties
Media, Hollywood, News, Politics, Style, Culture, Tech, Entertainment, Film, and TV

Locations

Employees at Vanity Fair

Updates

  • View organization page for Vanity Fair, graphic

    75,972 followers

    A shocking photograph. Blowback from a Trump meeting. Alleged sexual assault. The Kennedys have voiced support for Joe Biden, but certain aspects of Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s character are only just now coming to light. Long before he entered the 2024 presidential race with a wagon train of conspiracy theories, the wider Kennedy family was intimately familiar with Kennedy Jr.’s problematic personality—the outsized confidence masquerading as expertise, the “savior complex” (as one family member called it) that drives him to take up quixotic causes and cast himself as a lone hero against established powers, and, above all, as one old friend calls it, his “pathological need for attention.” In a special report, VF’s Joe Hagan reveals disturbing new allegations about the 2024 presidential candidate—and speaks to Kennedy family members, close friends, and people familiar with RFK Jr. about his troubling history. Read the full story: https://lnkd.in/eAPB9KDg Photo: Rowland Scherman Collection, Special Collections and University Archives, University of Massachusetts Libraries.

    • No alternative text description for this image
  • View organization page for Vanity Fair, graphic

    75,972 followers

    Prepare to be entertained. Your first look at ‘Gladiator II,’ starring Paul Mescal, Pedro Pascal, Denzel Washington, Connie Nielsen, Joseph Quinn, Fred Hechinger, and more, has arrived. From director Ridley Scott, the sequel to the 2002 film picks up in the years after Russell Crowe’s Maximus gave his life upending the leadership of the Roman Empire. Mescal plays Lucius, last seen as the young son of Lucilla, Nielsen’s noblewoman from the original movie. Scott decided to pursue the Oscar-nominee for ‘Gladiator II’ after his performance in ‘Normal People’: “Watching a TV show that's not really my kind of TV show almost four years ago I said, ‘Who's this guy?’” Take an extended first look at the highly-anticipated film—including more must-see images: https://lnkd.in/ezZEEWSm

    • No alternative text description for this image
  • View organization page for Vanity Fair, graphic

    75,972 followers

    Professor Stephanie Burt taught Harvard’s highly sought-after class on Grammy-award-winning musician Taylor Swift. Students sang along to the hits as they cracked open Easter eggs, studied her rhythms, and compared her lyrics to those of 18th-century poets. Meeting in a concert hall on campus, with a grand piano at center stage, Burt gave engaging lectures, with pauses for questions, and stage props: a melodica, or a cuddly stuffed snake (for the snake motifs on Reputation). What did Burt and her students learn from their findings about the pop superstar? Swift has excelled as a songwriter and as a performer by staying both aspirational and relatable. Like any great writer in any medium, she has a talent for framing common emotions, for crystallizing nostalgia, lust, and regret. If we’ve felt them, she lets us feel them anew. For VF’s July/August issue, the educator shares her takeaways from the course—and whether she’d teach it again: https://trib.al/5w1KDmd

    • No alternative text description for this image
  • View organization page for Vanity Fair, graphic

    75,972 followers

    Few voices in American life are more recognizable than the one belonging to legendary sports announcer Al Michaels. So when NBC approached him with an idea to recreate his voice using artificial intelligence for its coverage of this summer’s Olympics, Michaels had a few reservations. “What would I sound like?” Michaels tells VF. “Would I sound like a guy who just spews clichés? Would my voice be different?” The announcer was “very skeptical” of the proposal—until he heard the AI for himself. “Frankly, it was astonishing. It was amazing,” he says. “And it was a little bit frightening.” He was left in awe of the nuance—the way it captured his intonations and verbal subtleties. “It was not only close, it was almost 2% off perfect.” His voice—or at least a highly convincing replica of it—will now be lent to a feature on the network’s streaming platform, Peacock, offering users daily recaps from the Summer Games in Paris tailored to their favorite events and narrated by the AI. NBC says it trained the AI to match Michaels’s delivery using his past appearances on the network. Rick Cordella, the president of NBC Sports, says Michaels was the “perfect choice” for the feature. “Al deserves credit for leaning into this technology so enthusiastically.” Read more about the network's AI-centered Olympics coverage: https://trib.al/M5qmxV4

    • No alternative text description for this image
  • View organization page for Vanity Fair, graphic

    75,972 followers

    Just nine months after King Charles’s coronation, the monarch and Catherine, Princess of Wales, were both diagnosed with cancer. For once, the palace did not have a game plan. The House of Windsor, which not long ago had the world’s longest-reigning monarch at its helm, suddenly seemed very vulnerable. “Without Catherine, it all seems rather flat. The future of the monarchy is William and Catherine,” Patrick Jephson, the former private secretary to Diana, Princess of Wales, tells VF. “So how fragile is the monarchy? Well, it’s as fragile as Catherine is, and at the moment, we don’t know.” For VF’s July/August issue, Katie Nicholl looks back at the royal family’s challenging year, speaks to sources about how Prince William and Princess Catherine are keeping their marriage and family strong, and assesses the future of the monarchy. Read the full cover story: https://trib.al/sMOVs7z

    • No alternative text description for this image
  • View organization page for Vanity Fair, graphic

    75,972 followers

    When the Titan submersible disappeared beneath the Atlantic, mission specialists issued a distress call that initiated an extraordinary multinational search effort, across four days, five nations, and six time zones. The world was transfixed, as the lives of those on board the missing sub seemed to hang in the balance. The incident also trained an unforgiving spotlight on the close-knit world of subsea exploration in an era of high-dollar, high-stakes investment. The details of the search—pieced together from interviews, emails, and call logs—illustrate an urgent need for government responsiveness and rescue protocols for the challenges created by the continued expansion of a niche industry. Read the full investigation: https://trib.al/AnQtFJY

    • No alternative text description for this image
  • Vanity Fair reposted this

    View profile for Katherine Eban, graphic

    Special Correspondent, Vanity Fair

    Pleased to share my latest Vanity Fair story: about critically endangered bears struggling to survive the war in in #Ukraine. As Speaker Mike Johnson waffled on a vital aid package, Chada -- a rare Himalayan bear at Kyiv's White Rock bear sanctuary -- hibernated, then awoke to a homeland in crisis. You can read more about her journey here:

    A Bear’s-Eye View of Mike Johnson’s Ukraine-Aid Stall Tactics

    A Bear’s-Eye View of Mike Johnson’s Ukraine-Aid Stall Tactics

    vanityfair.com

  • View organization page for Vanity Fair, graphic

    75,972 followers

    Rachel Maddow is back with another history lesson about the fight against authoritarianism and fascism in the United States. The first season of her ‘Ultra’ podcast, about the little-known Great Sedition Trial of 1944, was a smash hit that Steven Spielberg optioned to make into a feature film. She's now returning to the series with a second installment. Season two tells another little-known story about the American ultraright, taking listeners back to the postwar 1950s, in which, as Maddow put it, “a bunch of totally crazy shit happens.” The story includes “an American fascist who ends up becoming a mole inside the war-crimes trials, working for the Nazis” and “becoming essentially the godfather of American Holocaust denial,” she explains. It also involves two senators—one perpetrating a Nazi propaganda hoax in the Senate, the other trying to stop them—who become mortal enemies. “By the end of it, one of them blackmails the other, and the guy who’s getting blackmailed kills himself, and the other one almost becomes president—and it’s not the good guy,” says Maddow. The MSNBC star speaks to VF about the point of doing historical deep dives, what she’s learned from this work, and what she thinks is the most important factor in the 2024 election. Read the full story: https://trib.al/2pBADOk

    • No alternative text description for this image
  • View organization page for Vanity Fair, graphic

    75,972 followers

    A Scottish lawyer named Fiona Harvey—who has identified herself as the woman on whom the ‘Baby Reindeer’ character of twice-convicted stalker Martha is based—is suing #Netflix for $170 million, alleging defamation, intentional infliction of emotional distress, negligence, and violations of her right of publicity. Read the full story: https://trib.al/07v7qE7 Photo: Netflix

    • No alternative text description for this image
  • View organization page for Vanity Fair, graphic

    75,972 followers

    Until recently, Novo Nordisk was a sleepy century-old insulin manufacturer. Then, its diabetes treatment Ozempic swept the world. Frenzied demand for the weight-loss miracle drug sparked global shortages—and opened the door to life-threatening fakes. On December 21, 2023, the FDA blasted out an alert: Counterfeit Ozempic had been detected in the legitimate drug supply. Now, VF can confirm that the counterfeiting was on an industrial scale–at least 10,000 to 20,000 units landed in the US drug supply. The agency warned that no one should sell, distribute, or use any Ozempic pens labeled with lot number NAR0074 and serial number 430834149057. But figuring out where lot NAR0074 counterfeits originated required solving a complex puzzle with pieces potentially strewn all over the globe. Through extensive reporting and interviews with pharmacists, doctors, security experts, law enforcement officials, private investigators, and attorneys, VF special correspondent Katherine Eban tracks a major shipment of fake Ozempic—and exposes a globe-spanning pharmaceutical underground. Read the full story: https://trib.al/FJX1iya

    • No alternative text description for this image

Similar pages

Browse jobs