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Is There Room for Fashion Criticism in a Racist Industry?
AS A BLACK GIRL growing up in Wisconsin, I papered my bedroom walls with a collage of images cut out of the pages of Vogue, Essence, Teen Vogue, and Ebony magazines.
The Devil Wears Allbirds
Silicon Valley companies are sucking up all the fashion editors.
Planet Knausgaard
Norway’s most famous self-exile debarks for a new frontier: genre fiction.
The RED-PILLING OF Kitson
It was the ULTIMATE AUGHTS shop—PARIS and LINDSAY and VON DUTCH HATS and JUICY SWEAT SUITS. Now its owner, FRASER ROSS, is PUSHING something even MORE popular: CONSPIRACIES.
The Roys Summer in Italy
On location with the cast of ‘Succession,’ the most interestingly terrible billionaires on TV.
THE HIGH PRIEST OF CRYPTOPIA REGRETS NOTHING
Ian Freeman could have been a bitcoin billionaire. Instead, he built a renegade society in a small New Hampshire town—and could go to prison for the rest of his life.
The Visible Man
Penn Badgley is famous for his roles as a gossip and a stalker—and he’s a little disturbed by what fans see in him.
MODEL MOGUL Mother
NAOMI CAMPBELL, at 51, is discovering what comes after GLOBAL ICON.
My Endless SEARCH for American FASHION
When I started my career, I saw the potential for an American style that was beautiful, uncomplicated, and singular. Where has it gone?
Relearn How to Look
Ten fall shows to train your eye.
The Girlboss Is Dead. Long Live the Girlboss.
The trope was infantilizing, sexist, and embodied every pitfall of corporate feminism. But for many women, it was also essential.
The Group Portrait: The U.S. Open's Tenure Track
At court with the most senior ball-lobbers and towel-profferers in tennis.
SPOTTING PETER DO
The YOUNG DESIGNER and his friends-cum-partners BORROWED AND SCRAPED to create a label—and Fashion Week’s most anticipated NEW RUNWAY SHOW.
Cooking With Paris Is Anti-Aspirational Food Television
Paris Hilton rattles the very foundations of cooking shows.
Anthony Veasna – Infinite Self
Anthony Veasna so died unexpectedly last winter, before his debut short-story collection, Afterparties, was released. Everyone remembers him differently.
Who's Pulling the Strings?
A celebration of the puppets that have always lived among us.
Can face-to-face meetings between a victim and an abuser—a form of restorative justice—help a society overwhelmed with bad behavior?
What Set You Off? Didn’t You Care About Me? What Did I Do to Make This Happen? Have You Learned Anything From This? Will You Ever Change?
A Return to Company
Stephen Sondheim and orchestrator Jonathan Tunick revisit the making of the iconic cast album—and Elaine Stritch’s beautiful meltdown.
TV's White Guys Are in Crisis
They’re no longer the main characters, but they’re still around. So what happens to them?
How Andrew Cuomo Lost The Governorship
In 2001, as he set out on his first, disastrous campaign for public office, Andrew Cuomo invited a columnist for this magazine to join him for a car ride through New York City.
Barbecue Bliss in the Bronx
Hudson Smokehouse is worth a trip from any borough.
Meet My Multiple MEs
Decades after Hollywood sensationalized the diagnosis, some people with dissociative identity disorder are presenting their selves on YouTube to rapturous fans.
She Lost a View But Gained a Gallery
Construction of a hotel next door to Han Feng’s loft covered her east-facing windows, so she came up with a plan.
The Spine COLLECTOR
FOR THE PAST FIVE YEARS, A mysterious figure HAS BEEN STEALING BOOKS BEFORE THEIR RELEASE. IS IT espionage? REVENGE? A trap? OR A COMPLETE waste OF TIME?
They Call Him Loop Daddy
Marc Rebillet livestreams improvised music to millions of fans, often in just his boxer briefs.
More Like Tragicomic
Revisiting Cathy, neurotic of the funny pages.
From Townhouse To Bauhaus
After years in a Greenwich Village brownstone, Alexandra Pappas wanted to live her modernist dream. To a point.
Everyone In San Francisco Has Something To Say About Chesa
Chesa Boudin, the son of Weathermen radicals, is the nation’s most progressive prosecutor in one of the country’s most liberal cities. And now, 18 months into his term, many residents are trying to throw him out.
86 minutes with … Kathryn Garcia
The bureaucrat enters a new phase of life: political celebrity.
And Not a Drop to Drink
A neo-noir set in an even thirstier Hollywood.