ReportWire

Tag: anna wintour

  • Jeff Bezos Reportedly ‘Seized Control’ of the Met Gala Months After Rumors He’s Buying Vogue as a Gift to His New Wife With Anna Wintour ‘Brokering the Deal’

    [ad_1]

    With the 2026 Met Gala theme being announced, many people were blindsided that Jeff Bezos and Lauren Sánchez’s names were attached to the ball held on the first Monday of May. However, new reports have alleged that the deal was thoroughly planned out, and the billionaires have taken most of the reins.

    According to Rob Shuter’s #ShuterScoop, the couple has “seized control” of the Met Gala. “They aren’t just donors,” a longtime Met insider shared. “Jeff is writing the checks. Lauren is making the calls. They’re basically running the Gala.” While Vogue’s Anna Wintour is still the chair of the world-famous gala, sources claim that Sánchez’s influence is strong. “Anna’s shadow is still long,” the insider says, “but make no mistake — everyone is suddenly orbiting Jeff and Lauren.”

    Related: Lauren Sánchez Proves Where She Really Stands With Katy Perry After Only Orlando Bloom Attended Her Wedding

    The former journalist is reportedly calling the shots by “calling designers, pushing for a glossier, sexier Gala, and positioning herself as the new celebrity whisperer.”

    In an interview with the New York Times, Wintour defended the couple as sponsors, saying that Sánchez “loves costumes” and “loves fashion,” referring to the Gala’s theme “Costume Art.” This also isn’t the first time that Bezos held a big position for the Met Gala. Amazon sponsored the 2012 gala, and he served as honorary chair.

    The report comes months after rumors spread that Jeff Bezos was gifting Vogue and Condé Nast to Sánchez as a wedding gift. A source told the Daily Mail back in July: “The rumour that Jeff is going to buy Condé Nast is all anyone’s talking about in the fashion industry and inside Vogue,” adding, “Lauren Sanchez is such an unlikely cover star, and the word is that she landed the July issue partly because the Newhouse family want to butter up Bezos. In New York they’re slimming down the business which is exactly what companies do before a sale.”

    The source continued, “Anna is said to be the one brokering the deal so that’s why Lauren was put on the cover. Anna has equity in the business so has a lot to gain from a sale.”

    Wintour stepped as Editor-in-Chief of American Vogue, with Chloe Malle was promoted to Head of Editorial Content. Wintour will remain in her global roles as Condé Nast’s Global Chief Content Officer and Vogue’s Global Editorial Director.

    [ad_2]

    Lea Veloso

    Source link

  • Meryl Streep’s Miranda Priestly Meets Anna Wintour Filming ‘Devil Wears Prada 2’ at Milan Fashion Show

    [ad_1]

    Worlds are colliding.

    On Saturday, Meryl Streep sat front row at the Dolce & Gabbana fashion show in Milan, Italy, in full costume as her iconic character, Runway magazine editor-in-chief Miranda Priestly. Backstage, Streep’s Priestly met with Vogue‘s Anna Wintour, who was the inspiration behind Priestly.

    Vogue took to Instagram to post a video of the viral moment with the caption, writing, “Can you please spell Gabbana? Of course they can. Today in Milan, legendary Runway magazine editor Miranda Priestly caught up with Vogue’s Anna Wintour following the spring 2026 @dolcegabbana show.”

    In the video, Priestly says to Wintour, “You look so beautiful,” and “This is my first fashion show.”

    Along with Streep, Stanley Tucci was also front row and went backstage to greet Wintour. He was in costume as Nigel, Runway‘s art director. According to the Associated Press, the Dolce & Gabbana press office confirmed that the actor’s were there to film a runway show in Milan for the sequel to The Devil Wears Prada.

    The highly anticipated follow-up to the 2006 movie will follow Runway’s struggle with the decline of print magazines. Also returning for the film are Anne Hathaway as Andy and Emily Blunt as Emily, who were both assistants to Priestly. In the sequel, Blunt’s Emily is now a powerful advertising executive who works with the publication.

    Earlier this month, Wintour opened up about what she really thought of the original movie. “First of all, it was Meryl Streep, which, fantastic,” she told The New Yorker Radio Hour podcast. “Then I went to see the film, and I found it highly enjoyable. It was very funny. Miuccia [Prada] and I talk about it a lot, and I say to her, ‘Well, it was really good for you.’”

    The Devil Wears Prada 2 is set to hit theaters on May 1, 2026.

    [ad_2]

    Lexi Carson

    Source link

  • At the Park Avenue Armory, a Mondrian Becomes the Stage for Radical Expression

    [ad_1]

    Jeremy Nedd. Photo: Stephanie Berger

    It’s rare that a performance and a venue align so seamlessly. I rarely even consider how the two intersect, since they usually emerge from separate worlds—the universe of a show contained within a given space. But the North American premiere of Monkey Off My Back or The Cat’s Meow, despite being created and first staged in Zürich, Switzerland, in 2021, seems as if it were made for the Park Avenue Armory’s 55,000-square-foot Wade Thompson Drill Hall in 2025.

    The dance-theater-fashion show, directed and choreographed by U.S.-born and Zurich-based Trajal Harrell, unfolds on a bright 150-foot runway designed by Harrell and Erik Flatmo in the style of a Mondrian grid painting. The audience sits on either side of the runway like A-list celebrities, but with oversized programs in stadium-style seating that is more akin to theater. The Armory, long known for its big unconventional productions, has also hosted fashion shows. Fittingly, the building sits nearly midway between the birthplaces of two movement styles central to Harrell’s choreography—Harlem’s ballroom voguing and Judson Dance Theater’s postmodern dance, both from the 1960s. And even though the piece was made during the COVID pandemic and can be read as a meditation on the human need for communal gathering, its themes speak uncannily to the present: What is freedom? Who gets to express themselves freely? What does it mean to look a stranger in the eye?

    Monkey Off My Back or The Cat’s Meow begins with Harrell rising from a seat in the audience and introducing himself as Chloé Malle (Anna Wintour’s successor at Vogue). Harrell/Malle welcomes the crowd and recounts her phone conversation with Harrell, who asked her to open the show, sharing the quote “If you live, sometimes you have to dance.” In this way, we are immediately dropped into the show’s tone—performative, sly and deliberately breaking the fourth wall.

    Two people then peel back the large plastic sheet covering the set, so carefully that the audience at opening night even applauded their effort. On the Mondrian-like floor are low white nightclub-style couches and a central table beneath which an assortment of toys and household objects—props, perhaps—sit poorly concealed.

    A performer in a black Adidas tracksuit raises their hands near their face with eyes closed, mid-gesture, in front of a dimly lit audience.A performer in a black Adidas tracksuit raises their hands near their face with eyes closed, mid-gesture, in front of a dimly lit audience.
    Trajal Harrell. Photo: Stephanie Berger

    Suddenly, music explodes into the vast space. Someone steps onto the red, white, blue and yellow stage, and the show begins again. Performers enter one by one, striding counterclockwise along the perimeter to Samm Bennett & Chunk’s “Part of the Family,” which dissolves into Nina Simone’s “Feeling Good.” The so-called fashion show is immediately off-kilter: “models” wear bathrobes over gowns, rollers in their hair, empty sleeves trailing behind them. Soon it veers stranger—performers stumble and dishevel themselves. Across the evening, 60 costumes designed by Harrell appear, mixing labels from Comme des Garçons to Walmart. Some performers wear shoes, some go barefoot, but every catwalk dazzles.

    The cast is large—17 dancers plus Harrell, all part of his Zürich Dance Ensemble—and they reappear in bold looks until one finally steps off the grid, a rupture that feels both wrong and exhilarating. Another hikes a skirt above the knees and kicks wildly. A sneakered group forms at one end, shifting arms fluidly as though warming up, or channeling birds, or conducting an unseen orchestra. A performer picks up a mic from the couch and declares, “Section 2, The Tale,” hinting at narrative (spoiler: it never fully arrives, perhaps intentionally).

    Much transpires in Monkey Off My Back or The Cat’s Meow. The five sections stretch nearly two hours without intermission. The perimeter-walking continues with such persistence that it becomes a heartbeat, only noticeable when it halts. At one point, a woman is carried to a couch and begins reading the Declaration of Independence aloud—radical in its delivery. At another, a man atop a couch performs a Butoh-inspired solo, his body twisting in slow contortions. Later, Harrell dances alone to Imani Uzuri’s “Love Story,” moving like someone tipsy and unguarded at home with a glass of wine. Costumes change relentlessly, poses strike with force and the soundtrack ranges wildly—from Earth, Wind & Fire to Laura Nyro to Steve Reich. Two performers roam in sparkly panda suits.

    A group of performers in varied costumes, including a man in a black dress and headscarf, extend their arms outward while dancing together on the stage.A group of performers in varied costumes, including a man in a black dress and headscarf, extend their arms outward while dancing together on the stage.
    Thibault Lac and company. Photo: Stephanie Berger

    There is too much to take in; you are always missing something. Afterward, walking downtown, I kept replaying how the acts of watching and being watched felt strangely new. Perhaps it was because the house lights stayed up until the final abstracted folk dance, letting performers gaze directly at the audience. Perhaps it was Harrell’s direction that exposed the human beneath the performance. Would I ever watch a passerby on the street with the same intensity as a dancer on stage? Not usually. At times, I even looked away when a performer neared. But why?

    I also thought about freedom. The freedom of expression here—in fashion, in movement—was striking. The performers inhabited the atmospheres of the New York ballroom scene, club culture, lonely apartments, even the subway at 4:00 a.m., each in their own register.

    In the program, Debra Levine writes that Harrell wanted to create a work without a preconceived theme. That choice explains the stream-of-consciousness feel and the lack of narrative arc, and I’m grateful for it. It allowed me to recognize my own desire for story, for the hidden props to be used, for a message to land. But that’s not how life works. Life is messy, and art can remind us not to look away.

    Monkey Off My Back or The Cat’s Meow is showing at the Park Avenue Armory’s Wade Thompson Drill Hall through September 20, 2025. 

    More in performing arts

    At the Park Avenue Armory, a Mondrian Becomes the Stage for Radical Expression

    [ad_2]

    Caedra Scott-Flaherty

    Source link

  • Chloe Malle Named New Head of Editorial Content at U.S. Vogue

    [ad_1]

    Malle will be taking over the role historically held by Anna Wintour, after her exit in June

    Anna Wintour at The Mark
    Credit: BFA

    Effective immediately, Chloe Malle has been named the new head of editorial content at U.S. Vogue, leading the creative and editorial direction of the publication. Malle will join the ranks of Vogue’s 10 existing Heads of Editorial Content around the globe, all reporting to Anna Wintour.

    The news was announced via a Vogue.com article on Tuesday, which included a full statement from Wintour herself. “Fashion is the art of embracing change, but some changes run closer to one’s heart than the rest. When it came to hiring someone to edit American Vogue…I knew I had one chance to get it right. I’m thrilled to announce that Chloe Malle will be the next Head of Editorial Content for our US title, leading the American magazine and guiding its digital coverage.”

    The announcement also included a statement from Malle herself, saying “Fashion and media are both evolving at breakneck speed, and I am so thrilled—and awed—to be part of that. I also feel incredibly fortunate to still have Anna just down the hall as my mentor.”

    According to Malle’s LinkedIn account, she attended Brown University, where she obtained her Bachelor’s degree in literary arts and comparative literature in 2008. Malle first began her career at Vogue in 2011 as social editor. She has stayed with the publication ever since, currently holding the role of Vogue.com editor and co-hosting the publication’s fashion podcast, The Run-Through. Malle’s writing has also appeared in other publications like WWD, The New York Times, and Architectural Digest.

    “Chloe has long been one of Vogue’s secret weapons when it comes to tracking fashion…like the best designers, she understands fashion’s big picture, its role shaping not just what’s on the runway but the changing fabric of modern life,” said Wintour. “Chloe has put in as many late nights as anybody at Condé Nast, all without losing her creative imagination or her sense of fun.”

    Wintour announced her intended departure from the role of Editor-in-Chief at U.S. Vogue in late June, a position she held for 37 years. She will continue at the company in a senior position as chief content officer of Vogue and Condé Nast.

    [ad_2]

    Ella Mordarski

    Source link

  • Vogue taps Chloe Malle to succeed Anna Wintour as head of the U.S. fashion magazine

    [ad_1]

    Vogue has selected Chloe Malle to lead its U.S. editorial content, naming the 39-year-old as the successor to Anna Wintour, who has led the magazine for more than three decades. 

    Malle, the daughter of actor Candice Bergen and the late French director Louis Malle, joined Vogue 14 years ago and currently serves as the editor of Vogue.com and co-host of The Run-Through, a weekly fashion and culture podcast.

    “I’m thrilled to announce that Chloe Malle will be the next Head of Editorial Content for our U.S. title, leading the American magazine and guiding its digital coverage,” Wintour said in a statement posted to Vogue.com.

    Wintour, who is widely considered to be the most powerful figure in the fashion industry, announced in June she was taking a step back from her editorial duties, opening up the possibility for a successor. The 75-year-old has served as the magazine’s editor-in-chief since 1988.

    Malle may be stepping into Wintour’s low-heeled slingbacks, but she’ll report to the original wearer while taking over day-to-day operations at the U.S. edition. In Vogue’s online post, Wintour said she is excited to continue working with Malle as “her mentor but also as her student.”

    “Fashion and media are both evolving at breakneck speed, and I am so thrilled — and awed — to be part of that,” Malle said in an online post from Vogue. “I also feel incredibly fortunate to still have Anna just down the hall as my mentor.”

    Wintour remains at the top of the masthead as global editorial director and the chief content officer for Condé Nast.

    After Wintour announced in June that Vogue would recruit a new head of editorial content, speculation swirled about who would step into the leadership opening at the fashion magazine. Among the names that were circulated were Eva Chen, vice president of fashion partnerships at Meta; Nicole Phelps, global director of Vogue Runway and Vogue Business; and Sara Moonves, editor-in-chief of W magazine.

    Ultimately, Wintour selected Malle, who doubled Vogue.com’s traffic in two years. Malle joined Vogue as social editor in 2011, leading wedding and social coverage. In 2016, she took a new role as contributing editor, writing features and overseeing special projects. Malle has held the position as editor of Vogue.com since 2023.

    Vogue was founded as a society journal 134 years ago. Considered the fashion bible, the American verison of the magazine has had several notable editors throughout its history. Wintour’s predecessors included Diana Vreeland, who served from 1963 to 1971, and Grace Mirabella, who served from 1971 to 1988, among others.

    contributed to this report.

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Anna Wintour’s 10 best fashion moments of all time

    Anna Wintour’s 10 best fashion moments of all time

    [ad_1]

    Feared and revered, Anna Wintour is at the helm of global fashion.

    The Vogue editor is fashion’s sphinx, sitting in her bob and sunglasses like she’s guarding the gates of chic. Dictating what is in and who’s tragically out is her bread and butter, in turn keeping the trends cycle neatly ticking over.  

    Anna’s career is legendary in the fashion industry, spanning more than four decades. Born in London in 1949, she began her career in journalism at Harper’s & Queen before moving to New York, where she held editorial positions at Harper’s Bazaar and Viva. Her vision and ambition quickly set her apart, and she climbed the ranks to become editor-in-chief of British Vogue in 1985. Just three years later, she took over as editor-in-chief of Vogue in the United States, a role she’s famously held since 1988.

    © Getty
    Anna Wintour and Andre Leon Talley at the Gucci fashion show at Milan Fashion Week spring/summer 2009

    Her tenure transformed Vogue into a powerhouse that defines global fashion. She introduced a fresh editorial style, combining high fashion with celebrity allure and streetwear, while championing the careers of now-famous designers like Marc Jacobs and John Galliano. Beyond her work at the publication, Wintour became artistic director of Condé Nast in 2013, expanding her influence across all the company’s publications.

    Known for her cool, reserved demeanour, she’s both celebrated and criticised as the ‘Ice Queen’ of fashion. Her annual Met Gala has become fashion’s most exclusive event, cementing her role as a cultural force. Through Anna’s vision, Vogue remains at the forefront, catalysing trends and shaping the industry.

    To celebrate her 75th birthday, we’re taking a look back at Anna’s ten best looks to date.

    Anna Wintour’s 10 most stylish outfits ever:

    anna wintour in sparkly dress© Ron Galella

    Disco Mini Dress

    In 1990, the Scorpio Queen served up Studio 54 glamour as she attended a New York Ballet gala at the New York State Theater. The journalist wore a glittering silver dress featuring a mini silhouette and long sleeves.

    anna wintour mini silver dress party

    Mesmeric Marc Jacobs

    The very same year, the Vogue editor-to-be attended the Book Party for Holy Terror: Andy Warhol Close Up alongside Bianca Jagger. She glimmered in Marc Jacobs, sporting another disco-ready look hailing from the American fashion designer’s archive. 

    Pink Power

    Pink Power

    1990 proved to be a particularly fruitful year for Anna’s wardrobe. The London native joined John Galliano to attend the Council of Fashion Designers of America’s awards ceremony, with the writer opting for a magenta slip dress complete with floral embroidery. 

    Fur Cape © Rose Hartman

    Fur Cape

    One of fashion’s most eyeballed fall-outs was between the late André Leon Talley and the Vogue matriarch. Pictured together here, Anna dazzled in a lavish fur-cut cape, layered over an embroidered gown, while her then-editor-in-chief commanded attention in a gold-hued brocade evening coat.

    anna wintour and tom ford© WWD

    Plumes O’Plenty

    Joined by Tom Ford at the 2003 MET Gala, the style veteran glimmered in a bridal dress complete with fluid silk material and a brilliant feathered shawl that perched on her shoulders. 

    anna wintour in pink ostrich cape© Karwai Tang

    A Note On Camp

    For the 2019 Met Gala titled ‘Camp: Notes on Fashion,’ Anna looked to Chanel’s former creative director Karl Lagerfeld to create a frothy pink look crafted from Maribou feathers, layered over a beaded floral gown. The look ended up as an homage to the designer, who passed away that year.

    anna wintour in silky green dress© Dimitrios Kambouris

    Prada Panache

    Anna graced the red carpet at the GQ’s Global Creativity Awards 2023 in New York City, debuting a silky look courtesy of Prada. The longline dress featured contrasting pearlescent panels, long sleeves and floral print detailing. 

    anna wintour in red-cream dress© Christian Vierig

    Plaid Persuasion

    Spotted outside the Alaia show back in July 2023, Anna let her penchant for plaid be known in a wine red and ivory checked piece. The striking number adopted her go-to silhouette, ankle-grazing with long sleeves in a print Burberry would approve of. 

    anna wintour in marroon printed dress© Jacopo Raule

    Valentino Florals

    Anna pre-empted this season’s captivation with burgundy hues as she graced the Valentino Womenswear Spring/Summer 2024 during Paris Fashion Week in a silk floral dress. The editor loved this particular number so much she even has it in forest green. Versatility at its finest.

    nna Wintour, Vogue Editor-in-Chief, attends The 2024 Met Gala Celebrating "Sleeping Beauties: Reawakening Fashion" at The Metropolitan Museum of Art on May 06, 2024© Getty

    Tulip Enchantment

    The 2024 Met Gala celebrating ‘Sleeping Beauties: Reawakening Fashion,’ saw swathes of familiar faces ascend the staircase, including host and MET matriarch Anna. Designed by LOEWE’s Jonathan Anderson, Anna’s look features a tulip-strewn black cloak, layered over a white dress.

    [ad_2]

    Tania Leslau

    Source link

  • This Cocktail Has Been A Honey Of A Success

    This Cocktail Has Been A Honey Of A Success

    [ad_1]

    This cocktail has made the rounds on social media and events….and has become a raging success.

    This cocktail has been a honey of a success…and a refreshing change at sporting events. The Grey Goose Honey Deuce is the official cocktail of the US Open.  The drink returned this year to a roaring success. The name comes from a word play on the tennis term deuce (a tie score of 40-40) and the honeydew melon garnish.  Refreshing, intoxicating and popular – the drink has been gushing out of court side bars at $23 a pop.

    The US Open is a premier tennis tournament sponsored by big hitters like American Express, Mercedes Benz, IHG Hotels and Resorts, Rolex and Emirates Airlines. The well heeled, the super rich and the famous flock to the stands. Anna Wintour was there along with celebrities at Arthur Ashe stadium. Spotted at the event was Phoebe Dynevor, Hugh Jackman, Zoey Deutch, Lindsay Lohan, Alec Baldwin, Kerry Washington, and Alicia Keyes. The crowd knows how to drink and drink well…and this cocktail has done well.  This year they ordered over 550,000 Honey Deuces, over 100,000 more than last year.  Roughly $12.65 million plus tips were spent over the two weeks of the tournament.

    But you don’t have to fly to New York and hobnob with the crowd to have your own.  You can make it at home and imbibe. Here is how to make your own Grey Goose Honey Deuce.

    Ingredients

    • 1 1.4 oz Grey Goose Vodka
    • Fresh Lemonade
    • Premium Raspberry Liqueur
    • Honeydew Melon Balls

    Create

    1. Fill a chilled highball glass with cubed ice and add Grey Goose Vodka
    2. Top with fresh lemonade and raspberry liqueur
    3. Garnish with a skewer of 1 or multiple frozen honeydew melon balls

    Beer has been the staple of sporting events, but stadiums around the country have been changing their drinks menu while adding sponsorship dollars to the coffers. In 1989 Evian water wanted to reach hot and thirsty affluent customers, so they became an official sponsor of the US Open. The tennis set has had beverage-centric partnerships ever since. And this has translated to other events from the Kentucky Derby to football adding it to their menu.

    [ad_2]

    Anthony Washington

    Source link

  • Lady Gaga, Ariana Grande, Tom Cruise, and More A-Listers Pack the Stands at Paris Olympics for Return of Simone Biles

    Lady Gaga, Ariana Grande, Tom Cruise, and More A-Listers Pack the Stands at Paris Olympics for Return of Simone Biles

    [ad_1]

    Lady Gaga was also there, fresh off her Opening Ceremonies performance. Another celebrity featured in the Games’ opener, Olympic torch bearer Snoop Dogg, also watched as Biles took the floor. “She nailed it,” Gaga posted to Instagram after Biles’s time on the beam. “What an honor to be so close.”

    Nick Jonas (L) speaks with John Legend and Chrissy Teigen as they attend the Artistic Gymnastics Women’s Qualification on day two of the Olympic Games Paris 2024 at Bercy Arena on July 28, 2024 in Paris, France.

    Jamie Squire/Getty Images

    Look in another corner, and you’ll find Joe Jonas chatting it up with John Legend and wife Chrissy Teigen. “This was on our bucket list. We wanted to make sure we came to this event,” Legend told Reuters of the Olympic gymnastics competition. “They represent the best of America and we are so proud and excited for them.”

    Image may contain Christopher McQuarrie David Zaslav Greta Gerwig Clothing Hat Accessories Glasses Adult and Person

    Tom Cruise (R), David Zaslav (2nd-R) and Greta Gerwig (2nd row, R) attend the Artistic Gymnastics Women’s Qualification on day two of the Olympic Games Paris 2024 at Bercy Arena on July 28, 2024 in Paris, France.

    Ezra Shaw/Getty Images

    At another point in the competition, Barbie director Greta Gerwig took a seat just down from Cruise and Zaslav, watching as Biles and the rest of the US team worked toward what we now know to be a confirmed spot in the finals.

    And so far, things also look good for the 27-year-old Biles, who famously pulled out of the 2021 Tokyo Olympics after a loss of air awareness. The most decorated gymnast in history, she’s expected to compete in the team events as well as the all-around final, vault, uneven bars, balance beam, and floor exercise.

    [ad_2]

    Eve Batey

    Source link

  • The Devil Is Back

    The Devil Is Back

    [ad_1]

    There are few movies that are deemed instantaneous classics. Comfort films that sink into your soul from the moment you first watch them in the theater and resonate for decades in your memory bank. For many, that movie is the Y2k 2006 hit: The Devil Wears Prada.


    It had all the makings of a classic: a gorgeous, star-studded cast some of whom had yet to reach the apex of their careers, quip-worthy lines that are still quoted to this day, and then there are all those delicious, catty jabs at
    Vogue.

    The star-studded cast in question?
    Anne Hathaway as Andy Sachs, the semi-clueless journalism school grad who landed a job at Runway Magazine as an assistant to the widely feared and highly regarded Miranda Priestly (Meryl Streep.)

    If you somehow live under a rock and haven’t seen the film or read Lauren Weisberger’s wonderful novel, it’s a satire about work-life balance and the lengths we’ll go to for success. And, of course, Meryl Streep’s Priestly is based on
    Vogue’s Editor-in-Chief, Anna Wintour.

    With an equally stacked supporting cast in Emily Blunt and Stanley Tucci,
    The Devil Wears Prada is often quoted and replayed. Sarcastic quips from Streep’s character like “Florals? For spring? Groundbreaking.” or “What you don’t know is your sweater is not blue, it’s not turquoise, it’s not lapis, it’s cerulean.”

    And while I could go on and on about how iconic specifically Meryl Streep’s portrayal of Wintour is, that’s not why I’ve gathered you here today. I actually have good news:

    The Devil Wears Prada has been renewed for a sequel– and yes, Streep, Hathaway, Tucci, and Blunt are all in talks about returning.


    While nothing’s confirmed just yet,
    Entertainment Weekly just got word that both Blunt and Streep are in talks to star in a film with a storyline concerned with the death of print media in more recent years.

    Although Disney declined to comment,
    EW reports that most of the original cast, director, and producers are discussing a reunion. Which is quite possibly the best news, since no one else can play Miranda Priestly and Andy Sachs but Streep and Hathaway.

    In past years, multiple members of the cast have mulled over the idea of a sequel..but struggled to imagine a world where
    The Devil Wears Prada can exist side-by-side rapidly vanishing world of printed fashion magazines.

    However, there’s a plethora of possibilities in the fashion journalism community– simply take a few notes from
    Vogue!

    [ad_2]

    Jai Phillips

    Source link

  • Please Don’t Keep Acting, Kim

    Please Don’t Keep Acting, Kim

    [ad_1]

    Oh, Kim Kardashian. How you make it so difficult to defend you at times. Look, I even understood why you wore the iconic Marilyn dress to the Met Gala. I called you a visionary.


    When it was announced that Kim Kardashian would star alongside Emma Roberts in Ryan Murphy’s
    American Horror Story: Delicate, the world was a bit confused. That Kim K? Reality TV star turned influencer and fashion mogul, who became famous not for her talent but for her incessant dramaon a RYAN MURPHY SHOW?

    But I kept my worries to myself, unlike the entire internet that was ripping her apart
    before we saw her acting debut. Anyways. I tuned in week after week to watch Murphy’s Rosemary’s Baby-inspired show…and you know what? Kim is not the worst part about it.

    Because the main thing you must remember is you can only enjoy this kind of production is to keep front and center of your mind that Kim is not an actress. She didn’t come into the public eye hoping to be the next Marilyn Monroe in terms of blockbuster movie deals. She’s a hustler — meaning she won’t turn down an opportunity to level-up financially.

    If you weren’t already aware , Kim’s own reality show has been running for over 20 seasons between E!’s
    Keeping Up With The Kardashians and Hulu’s The Kardashians. And every week on the show, we catch a glamorous glimpse into the life of Kim Kardashian and her famous family.

    This past week, Ryan Murphy sat down with Kim and asked how she felt about a scripted show where she was the main stellar event. Yes, you read that right. Ryan Murphy approached Kim Kardashian to
    continue her acting career.

    And if you’re in shock…you must remember her iconic quote:

    Seems Like Nobody Wants To Work These Days

    via GIPHY

    I told you earlier that Kim is a hustler…but maybe you don’t believe me. Let’s look at the facts: whether you’re a Taylor Swift-supporter who vehemently despises the Kardashians or not, Kim has a similar work ethic to Taylor Swift — they do not stop, darlin.

    Kim currently has two brands: SKKN, her skincare and beauty line, and Skims, the leading shapewear and loungewear brand in the industry. As previously mentioned, she stars on The Kardashians alongside her mother and sisters: Kris, Kylie, Kendall, Kourtney, and Khloe.

    Then there’s her stint in the fashion industry — an ambassador for controversial brand Balenciaga, constantly seen front row at Fashion Week sitting next to
    Vogue Editor-in-Chief, the highly-regarded and highly-feared Anna Wintour.

    And there’s no doubt that we’re dealing with one of the most
    criticized families in America. They’re the closest thing we’ve got to our own Royal Family, and thousands flock to social media to denounce their promotion of tatty products and unrealistic body expectations.

    It shouldn’t surprise anyone when Kim Kardashian dips her toe into a new profession. She’s already checked reality TV star, lawyer, entrepreneur, mother, and model off her list…why is acting so shocking?

    You’d Do It Too For A Check

    @gaymanwithaspraytan #greenscreen #kimkardashian #thekardashians #kardashians #ahs ♬ original sound – Gay Man with a Spray Tan

    So here we are, in the “acceptance” phase of grief. Kim Kardashian will be starring in Ryan Murphy’s show (again) so you may as well get to know the plot. The show, which is currently untitled, will follow Kim as Los Angeles’ most successful divorce lawyer leading an all-female team.

    While the role seems perfect for Kardashian — her father was a famous superpower litigant and she’s in law school herself…Murphy has been drawing together something of a dream-team cast to support her. That includes a glam bevy of A-list actresses who will be Kim’s team of lawyers. And….there’s even a love interest.

    And I’m sure we’re all thinking the same thing:
    but she can’t really act, can she? No. But neither can most nepo babies out there…and yet, we let them.

    We’re living in a culture where the contrarian point of view is all that claims our attention. Being a hater is cool. And yet, I find myself empathizing with the Kar-Jenner clan. Wouldn’t you also grasp at straws to continue your legacy of influence and riches?

    If you truly look deep inside, you may realize that we’d do it too if it meant a big fat paycheck…we simple folk simply don’t get those opportunities.

    [ad_2]

    Jai Phillips

    Source link

  • How celebrities could interpret 2024 Met Gala theme

    How celebrities could interpret 2024 Met Gala theme

    [ad_1]

    How celebrities could interpret 2024 Met Gala theme – CBS News


    Watch CBS News



    Celebrities and fashion fans are gearing up for the 2024 Met Gala on Monday. This year’s theme is “Sleeping Beauties: Reawakening Fashion,” and the dress code is “The Garden of Time.” Entertainment Tonight co-host Kevin Frazier joins CBS News to break down what and who to look out for at the star-studded event.

    Be the first to know

    Get browser notifications for breaking news, live events, and exclusive reporting.


    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • What Does Anna Wintour Know?

    What Does Anna Wintour Know?

    [ad_1]

    We all have a hill that we’ll gladly die on. My roommate routinely goes on tirades about how no movie should be over 90 minutes (sorry, Scorcese). A lot of people on the internet are currently committed to the hill (read: conspiracy theory) that Kylie Jenner and Timothee Chalamet are a PR stunt engineered by Kris.

    I’ve said it once and I’ll say it over and over for the rest of my life: mine is that the Kim and Kanye Vogue cover of September 2014 caused a major vibe shift.


    This, to me, is the first cultural domino to fall and we’re still living in its aftermath. It’s the hill I hope they bury me on. So let me explain.

    The September issue of Vogue is a big deal. It’s an extra thick, extra coveted issue because it’s usually the highest circulation month and advertisers literally fight — and bribe — for their spots in it. So do models, celebrities, and brands. Therefore, the unveiling of the September cover is always a big deal. In 2014, Vogue took a giant gamble: putting Kim and Kanye on the cover to celebrate their wedding.

    These days, a Kim K cover would be a no-brainer — she was just GQ’s Man of the Year, for example, and posed on the cover with a bag of Cheetos — and a Kanye cover would be unfathomable — he’s in Wyoming somewhere, canceled. But in 2014, Kanye was a certified rap royalty and Kim Kardashian was still only known for her reality show and penchant for bandage dresses.

    Almost a decade ago now (do you feel old yet?), the cultural landscape was completely different. Rap music, for example, had been popular for years but was only just going from a fringe genre to a welcomed part of the mainstream. So, although Kanye was a household name, he was a surprising choice for the cover. His fashion foray, Yeezy, was still getting its sea legs and not yet the giant it would become. And as for Kim? She was pretty much a joke.

    But this Vogue cover changed it all. People were outraged— saying Vogue had lost the plot and that it was going downhill — but Anna Wintour stuck to her guns. She took a risk, made a bet that KimYe would be fashion’s next hottest couple, and, against all odds, she was right.

    After that cover, fashion changed. So did culture itself. Slowly but surely, we entered the streetwear and hypebeast era. Ruled by sneakers and sweatsuits, this era embraced a hip-hop-inspired take on fashion that contrasted with the business-casual attire of the late 2000s and the millennial hipster chic of the early 2010s. Supreme became the hottest brand on the market. Sweatpants became acceptable club attire. And meanwhile, KimYe was proving Anna Wintour right one Yeezy ensemble at a time.

    Anna’s gamble also foreshadowed how intertwined fashion would become with celebrity culture. These days, front rows of fashion shows are filled with actors, singers, and internet personalities over editors and industry vets. Budding industry darlings make names for themselves by becoming “fashion girls” and partnering with brands like Loewe, Schiaparelli, and Jacquemus. Even Kylie Jenner just launched a fashion line — maybe we’ll see her grace the cover of Vogue next.

    But now, Anna has taken yet another risk.

    Out of nowhere, just days ago, Vogue Magazine posted a very surprising pair on social media: Amazon billionaire CEO Jeff Bezos and his new wife Lauren Sanchez.

    The write-up was even weirder. From comparing Bezos to Iron Man (he wishes) to revealing that Lauren once outbid Kim Kardashian on a dress for $200,000… this Vogue spread felt like a paid advertisement for Jeff Bezos’s mid-life crisis. Don’t get me wrong, I love it when hot girls have post-divorce revenge eras — like Em Rata or even Jeremy Allen White — but Jeff Bezos? We can’t give him the validation.

    And I’m not alone in thinking this. Vogue readers were fuming. Just check the comment section or the TikTok video essays. In the court of public opinion, billionaire Bezos is not winning. Some readers asked how much Bezos was shelling out for this profile, while others pointed out that Mackenzie Scott, his ex-wife who has committed to donating her fortune, would have been a better feature.

    But I can’t help but wonder: what does Anna Wintour know? Could another vibe shift be imminent? Now that we’re used to seeing celebrities leverage fashion in service of their fashion brand, will we be seeing tech moguls and billionaires do the same? Next thing you know, Elon Musk will be the face of Balenciaga and all the tech kingpins will stop trying to go to space and instead try to score invites to the Met Gala and Vogue World.

    If that’s where all this is headed, it’s looking pretty bleak. Not to undermine Anna’s judgment, but in this scenario, I hope she’s wrong.

    [ad_2]

    LKC

    Source link

  • The Met Gala 2024 Theme, Explained

    The Met Gala 2024 Theme, Explained

    [ad_1]

    Every year, on the first Monday in May, comes the most exclusive party of the year: The Met Gala.
    VogueEditor-In-Chief Anna Wintour hand-picks the creme-de-la-creme of the highest profile celebs — a coveted who’s who list of exciting new names and A-listers alike. Together, these celebs congregate at New York City’s Metropolitan Museum of Art donning (literally) their Monday best.


    On the surface,
    the Met Gala is a fundraising event hosted by Vogue to raise funds for the Met Museum’s Costume Institute. You have to be invited to attend (normally by a brand or by Anna herself), and what goes on inside the elusive Met Gala is one of fashion’s best-kept secrets. What happens at the Gala, truly stays at the Gala.

    @metmuseum DYK: When garments enter The Met collection, they can no longer be worn on the human body. So how can we understand the movement and energy of these masterpieces of fashion? This May, explore 250 pieces from The Met’s Costume Institute collection in “Sleeping Beauties: Reawakening Fashion,” opening to the public on May 10 and celebrated at the 2024 Met Gala on May 6. Join us to see them spring to life. 🌿 🌸 🌊 #ReawakeningFashion #TheMetGala ♬ original sound – The Met

    Today, the buzz around the 2024 Met Gala officially begins with the announcement of the theme: Sleeping Beauties: Reawakening Fashion. And, like with
    any Met Gala theme, this needs a bit of explanation.

    What Does Sleeping Beauties: Reawakening Fashion Mean?

    In collaboration with the Costume Institute, every Met Gala also comes with an exhibit at the Met that’s curated to emulate the year’s theme. This year, 250 rare items from the Costume Institute’s permanent collection will be featured — including designs from Schiaparelli, Dior, and Givenchy.

    “Sleeping beauties” refers to the pieces that are so rare that they can only be worn once. Some of these “sleeping beauty” gowns, like an 1877 Charles Frederick Worth gown, will be shown via CGI and AI virtual showcasing.

    It’s an all-encompassing theme spanning over 400 years of fashion. The exhibit itself will have three “zones” dedicated to land, sea, and sky, according to Andrew Bolton, Wendy Yu Curator in charge of the Costume Institute.

    What Can We Expect People To Wear At The 2024 Met Gala?

    While your mind may have gone straight to Disney’s
    Sleeping Beauty, the Met Gala is going to be leaning heavy into how fashion and nature coincide. These pieces on display have been sitting in the Met’s collection for eons, some can’t even be hung upright or they’ll disintegrate.

    Since many of these clothing artifacts were made with natural materials (like a bodice made from peas in a pod), you will expect to see this mimicked in attendees’ attire. Sure, there will be 1800s-inspired gowns and lace appliques…but remember: nature is emphasized.

    People are thinking of florals and birds, as the exhibit will feature both a black tulle dress embroidered with blackbirds and an Alexander McQueen jacket inspired by Alfred Hitchcocks’
    The Birds. But everything nature has to offer — nothing’s off the table! We might see snakes and leaves and everything in between.

    And while we don’t know the hosts, or the guests, quite yet…we’re looking forward to this theme and hope we can reawaken the excitement of the Met Gala after some lackluster showings in the past few years.

    [ad_2]

    Jai Phillips

    Source link

  • The Met Gala 2024 theme just dropped

    The Met Gala 2024 theme just dropped

    [ad_1]

    The new year is just around the corner, and Met Gala 2024 is already on the minds of fashion enthusiasts around the world. (It is fashion’s biggest night of the year, after all). Well before May, there’s so much buzz around the Met Gala every year in anticipation of the star-studded red carpet, jaw-dropping outfit changes, stunning beauty moments, and hilarious memes taking over our social media feeds.

    With so much going on, you might find yourself with a few questions about the big event. We totally understand not wanting to miss any details, so we’ve got you covered. We compiled everything you need to know about the Met Gala 2024 below. Scroll on to read all about the big event, and be sure to come back for more updates as we get closer to the special day.

    What is the Met Gala?

    The Met Gala is an annual charity fundraising event for the Metropolitan Museum of Art. Led by Vogue’s editor-in-chief Anna Wintour, the benefit takes place in New York City, but designers and celebrities from all over the world fly in to attend. The attendees create and wear elaborate designs dedicated to the special theme of the new display in the museum, selected by Wintour herself.

    What is the Met Gala 2024 theme?

    The Met Gala 2024 theme is Sleeping Beauties: Reawakening Fashion. According to the Met’s press release, the new exhibition will focus on using research, conversation, and technology to replicate the sensations of the museum’s major pieces. The aim is “breathing new life into these storied objects through creative and immersive activations designed to convey the smells, sounds, textures, and motions of garments that can no longer directly interact with the body.” To honor that, this year’s show“will explore notions of rebirth and renewal, using nature as a metaphor for the impermanence of fashion.”

    When is the Met Gala 2024?

    Every year, the Met Gala is held on the first Monday of May. So, that means the Met Gala 2024 will be on 6 May.

    How can I watch the Met Gala 2024?

    While the Gala itself is not recorded or broadcasted for the general public, the red carpet can be viewed via a live stream. Stay tuned for more details on the Met Gala 2024 closer to May.

    Who is going to the Met Gala 2024?

    The Met Gala guest list is never revealed before the big night, so we’ll all be in for a big surprise as we watch the celebs arrive on the red carpet. However, there are some big names that often attend, such as the Kardashians and Jenners, red carpet host extraordinaire Emma Chamberlain, and fashionably later head-turner Rihanna. Although we’ve missed some stars like Zendaya in more recent years, there’s always hope.

    This feature originally appeared on Teen Vogue.

    [ad_2]

    Donya Momenian

    Source link

  • The 13 Coolest Halloween Costumes With Wigs

    The 13 Coolest Halloween Costumes With Wigs

    [ad_1]

    Wigs can make or break your Halloween costume. The right one can help you fully transition into the character, celebrity, or creature you’re dressing up as. Whether you’re into a long black style à la Cher, a blunt bob to channel your inner Anna Wintour, or a bold red number that’ll help you impersonate Poison Ivy, there’s certainly something for you in this costume roundup. These 13 picks are bound to be instant hits come October 31.

    [ad_2]

    Bianca Nieves

    Source link

  • It’s Met Gala time again — here’s what we know so far

    It’s Met Gala time again — here’s what we know so far

    [ad_1]

    NEW YORK (AP) — Last year, it took 275,000 bright pink roses to adorn the Metropolitan Museum of Art for the Met Gala, the biggest night in fashion and one of the biggest concentrations of star power anywhere.

    It remains to be seen how the museum’s Great Hall will be decorated on Monday, but one thing is not in question: those entering it will look spectacular. The theme centers on the late designer Karl Lagerfeld, who made an indelible mark on luxury fashion in his long career at Chanel, Fendi and elsewhere. It is a theme not without controversy — Lagerfeld was known for contentious remarks about everything from #MeToo to curvy bodies.

    Want to know what to expect now that the big day is here? Not to worry. We’ve dusted off our annual guide for you here, with some key updates.

    WHAT IS THE MET GALA ANYWAY?

    It started in 1948 as a society midnight supper, and wasn’t even at the Met.

    Fast forward 70-plus years, and the Met Gala is something totally different, one of the most photographed events in the world for its head-spinning red carpet — though the carpet isn’t always red.

    We’re talking Rihanna as a bejeweled pope. Zendaya as Cinderella with a light-up gown. Katy Perry as a chandelier morphing into a hamburger. Also: Beyoncé in her “naked dress.”Billy Porter as an Egyptian sun god, carried on a litter by six shirtless men.Lady Gaga’s 16-minute striptease. And, last year, host Blake Lively’s Versace dress — a tribute to iconic New York architecture — that changed colors in front of our eyes.

    Then there’s Kim Kardashian, bringing commitment to a whole other level. One year, she wore a dress so tight, she admitted she had to take breathing lessons beforehand. Two years ago, she wore a dark bodysuit that covered even her face. And last year she truly stole the carpet, showing up in Marilyn Monroe’s actual, rhinestone-studded “Happy Birthday, Mr. President” dress (borrowed from Ripley’s Believe It or Not! museum), changing the minute she got inside to protect it. There was controversy later over suspicions, denied by Ripley’s, that she’d caused some damage. But still — that was an entrance. (And, folks, she’s coming back — she posted a photo from Paris with Lagerfeld’s famous cat, Choupette, noting she was in the French capital scoping out possibilities for this year’s attire.)

    It’s important to note that the party has a purpose — last year, the evening earned $17.4 million for the Met’s Costume Institute, a self-funding department. Yes, that’s a heckuva lot for a gala. It also launches the annual spring exhibit that brings hundreds of thousands of visitors to the museum.

    But it’s the carpet itself that draws the world’s eyes, with the guest list — strategically withheld until the last minute — featuring a collection of notables from movies, music, fashion, sports, politics and social media that arguably makes for the highest celebrity wattage-per-square-foot of any party in the world.

    WHO’S HOSTING THIS YEAR?

    This year’s five hosts are drawn from television (Emmy-winning writer, actor and producer Michaela Coel ); the movies (Oscar-winning actor Penélope Cruz, who has worked with Chanel for more than 20 years); sports ( recently retired tennis superstar Roger Federer ); and music (Grammy-winning songstress Dua Lipa ). Finally there is Vogue’s Anna Wintour (do we need to tell you she’s in fashion?) running the whole thing as usual.

    IS THERE ALWAYS A THEME?

    Yes. As mentioned above, the theme is Karl Lagerfeld, and the exhibit, “Karl Lagerfeld: A Line of Beauty,” looks at “the designer’s stylistic vocabulary as expressed in aesthetic themes that appear time and again in his fashions from the 1950s to his final collection in 2019.” Once again, it has been created by the Met’s star curator, Andrew Bolton.

    DOES EVERYONE FOLLOW THE THEME?

    Not really. Some eschew it and just go for big and crazy. But expect some guests to carefully research the theme and come in perfect sync. It was hard to beat the carpet, for example, when the theme was “Heavenly Bodies: Fashion and the Catholic Imagination” and Rihanna came as the pope, Zendaya channeled Joan of Arc, and Perry navigated the crowd with a set of enormous angel wings. For Lagerfeld, the clothes may be a bit more, er, down to earth.

    HOW MUCH DO I HAVE TO PAY FOR A MET GALA TICKET?

    Wrong question. You cannot just buy a ticket. The right question is: If I were famous or powerful and got invited, how much would it cost?

    OK, IF I WERE FAMOUS OR POWERFUL AND GOT INVITED, HOW MUCH WOULD IT COST?

    Well, you might not pay yourself. Generally companies buy tables. A fashion label would then host its desired celebrities. This year, the cost has gone up, as it does every few years due to rising expenses: It’s now $50,000 for an individual ticket, and tables start at $300,000.

    SO WHO GETS INVITED?

    This year, there will be roughly 400 guests — similar to recent years but still lower than pre-pandemic highs of 500-600. Wintour and her team still get to approve every guest.

    Trying to predict? Take out your pen and jot down some of your favorite names, the buzzier the better. Newly minted Oscar winners, for example, are a good bet. Broadway is a special favorite of Wintour’s. She also loves tennis — this is not fashionable Federer’s first Met Gala. Now, cross everyone off your list except the very top. At this gala, everybody’s A-list.

    THAT MUST BE AN EXAGGERATION.

    Not really. Ask Tina Fey. She went in 2010 and later described walking around trying to find somebody “normal” to sit and talk with. That ended up being Barbara Walters.

    HOW CAN I WATCH?

    You can watch the whole carpet unfold on a Vogue livestream. If you’re in New York, you can also join fans across the street, behind barricades, on Fifth Avenue or even further east on Madison. Timothée Chalamet has been known to greet fans. And the AP will have a livestream of departures from the Mark Hotel, where many gala guests get ready.

    DO WE KNOW WHO’S COMING? AND WHO ISN’T?

    It’s secret. But reports slip out. You can count on various celebrity Chanel ambassadors showing up. Lively left some fashion fans disappointed when she revealed she’s not attending this year.

    WHAT HAPPENS INSIDE?

    Entering the museum, guests walk past what is usually an impossibly enormous flower arrangement in the lobby, with perhaps an orchestra playing nearby, and over to cocktails. Or, they head to view the exhibit. Cocktails are 6 p.m. to 8 p.m., but the most famous — or those who plan to make the biggest entrance — sometimes come (fashionably) later.

    Around 8 p.m., guests are summoned to dinner — perhaps by a team of buglers (“Are they going to do that between every course?” actor Gary Oldman asked aloud one year).

    IS IT FUN FOR EVERYONE?

    Occasionally, someone says no. Fey, in a comic rant to David Letterman in 2015, described the gala as a “jerk parade” and said it included everyone you’d ever want to punch, if you had millions of arms. Amy Schumer left early in 2016 and said later she felt awkward and like it was “a punishment.”

    SO THEY NEVER CAME BACK, RIGHT?

    Wrong. Schumer was back in 2017. And then last year again.

    Hey, this is the Met Gala.

    ___

    For more coverage of the 2023 Met Gala, visit https://apnews.com/hub/met-gala

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Karl: The Last to Get the “Separate the Art from the Artist” Sanction

    Karl: The Last to Get the “Separate the Art from the Artist” Sanction

    [ad_1]

    Among the many pop culturally-attuned industries that have been oh so careful to shore up their displays of wokeness post-#MeToo is the fashion biz. Some would call the Met Gala the true Oscars of that particular business, despite no awards actually being given out. Nonetheless, it’s a time for A-listers in fashion, film, music and “influencing” to gather in their best, most over-the-top homage to whatever the theme might be. This year, it was, oddly enough: Karl Lagerfeld. Anna Wintour, who has co-chaired and organized the event for almost three decades, was obviously a friend of the man best known for resuscitating Chanel’s cachet during his long reign as creative director…that is, when he wasn’t best known for doling out some major verbal lashings. And, being that there’s a book and movie based on working for Wintour called The Devil Wears Prada, the editor-in-chief of Vogue is no stranger to being deemed polarizing and controversial herself. Though not nearly to the extent that Lagerfeld was…and is.

    Evidently, however, some of his more problematic views and comments weren’t enough to get him onto the “cancellation” list in this climate. Which perhaps only goes to show that, in death, everything is forgiven (just look at Michael Jackson, whose music is still played freely as though he didn’t have any pedophilic proclivities whatsoever). At the same time, not everyone has embraced this year’s theme—specifically named Karl Lagerfeld: A Line of Beauty (not to be confused with the 2011 theme: Alexander McQueen: Savage Beauty). This includes the High Fashion Met Gala Twitter account. Although not associated with the Met Costume Institute or the Met Gala, their commentary on the event over the years has garnered forty thousand followers. Followers they were sure to declare their views about the theme to: “…we will not be celebrating this year’s Met Gala as our values don’t align with the selection of Karl Lagerfeld as the theme. We hope to celebrate with our community again soon.”

    In the meantime, they, like many others, will simply have to “deal with it”—as most orbiting the fashion industry had to whenever Lagerfeld engaged in one of his notorious outbursts. Usually aimed at critiquing body types that didn’t “fit the mold” (literally). To those who would complain about not seeing more inclusivity in the industry, Karl would provide such ripostes as, “You’ve got fat mothers with their bags of chips sitting in front of the television and saying that thin models are ugly. The world of beautiful clothing is about ‘dreams and illusions.’” Having also declared fashion as “the healthiest motivation for losing weight,” Lagerfeld himself dropped ninety-two pounds in the early 00s and released a cunty diet book inspired by that rapid physical transformation. This, too, seemed to give him further license to make generally unchecked comments about women’s bodies before a gag order had been placed on such forms of free speech. And some, of course, still secretly couldn’t agree more with Lagerfeld’s takes on the grotesquerie of being fat, and how it has no place in the world of high fashion.

    Embodying blatant tropes of gay male misogyny, Lagerfeld lived long enough to be able to add to his problematic list of female-aimed comments when asked what his thoughts were on making amendments to previously accepted comportment as a result #MeToo. To which he replied, “If you don’t want to have your pants pulled about, don’t become a model! Join a nunnery, there’ll always be a place for you in the convent. They’re recruiting even!” Lagerfeld’s sanctioning of sexually predatory behavior as par for the course to those who want to “succeed” is exactly the kind of thinking that has allowed it to flourish for so long without consequence.

    Naturally, Karl provides plenty of Psych 101 analysis in terms of being hateful toward others because he likely hated those qualities in himself (see also: Death Becomes Her and Beef). His continued assertions of being “working-class” as he rose through the ranks of high fashion, therefore the ranks of class, also likely stemmed from simultaneously loving and hating the vapidity of such an alternate realm. Wanting to cling to some semblance of “reality.” And yet, as his staunch views became increasingly antiquated in a world where Kim Kardashian’s curves were embraced and emulated (though Karl notoriously said in 2009 that no one wants to see curvy women on the runway), he seemed to want to have no grasp on the concept of “reality” anymore. As for Kardashian, who has no issue with problematic people or things (herself being a Blackfishing fiend, for a start), she was quick to re-emphasize her connection to Karl by posting photos of herself visiting Choupette ahead of the Met Gala.

    Indeed, Karl’s beloved Birman cat inspired the costumes of Lil Nas X, Jared Leto and Doja Cat for the night in question. Because perhaps focusing on his cat is easier than focusing on some of the more unseemly aspects of his personal life and personality. Thus, both Wintour and curator Andrew Bolton have reiterated in multiple interviews about the exhibition that its focus is on “the work.” It’s the phrase that keeps being repeated in an era during which few are actually still capable of separating “the work” from the person who created it. And yet, Karl appears to be getting that rare pass as he’s fêted by one of the premier institutions in fashion.

    To further mitigate the barrage of horrible things Lagerfeld had no trouble verbalizing, Bolton goes back to that Psych 101 theory by noting “…did he mean it? Or was it a deflection? I don’t know, it’s hard to know.” And, of course, for the sake of promoting this event, he likely really doesn’t want to know. Even the title of the theme, however, brings up an unpleasant subject matter: Karl’s myopic, often patriarchal vision of what constitutes beauty.

    By way of defense of the gala’s theme, Wintour additionally offered, “Karl was provocative, and he was full of paradoxes. And I think sometimes he would say things to shock, and not necessarily things that he believed in. Karl was a complicated man.” That word, “complicated,” having no place in a world of such black-and-white views at this point in time. Not to mention it does happen to be a word that serves as a pass to anyone who does or says unforgivable things. One could also call Kanye West a “complicated man.” Does that mean his work can still be celebrated and enjoyed after all the pain he’s caused? More and more, we can see that the answer, surprisingly, is yes. Because for all the posturing about wanting to stamp out anything or anyone problematic, it seems as though people are realizing how little that would actually leave behind. As for those groups Karl often maligned (e.g., non-thin people, Black people, Jewish people, etc.) who showed up to the event, well, perhaps it just proves that one’s principles can be easily bought off by visions of media coverage and clout increase. And with fashion being a tenuous network of interconnected tentacles, when one person—even if dead—gets cancelled, it can have far-reaching effects on multiple people’s money bag.

    What’s more, Karl being able to eke by with an honor like this is more telling of the fashion industry at large, and what it still ultimately represents, than anything else. And that is: exclusivity. Whether through sizeist or classist attitudes, there are so many ways to exclude people. To keep them from getting their greasy, overworked hands on the couture. Fashion tending to attract racist designers is no coincidence either (see also: John Galliano, miraculously forgiven for his sins). For it still behooves the industry’s bottom line to sell high fashion as something “aspirational” and “just out of reach.” While it might be an epoch of “democratization” for all mediums, fashion gatekeeping is what allows a magazine like Vogue to still even exist. And a man like Karl to be lauded even despite claims that it’s just about “the work.” But “the work” is always an extension of its creator.

    [ad_2]

    Genna Rivieccio

    Source link

  • H&M’s New $20 Shoes Look Just Like Anna Wintour’s and Princess Kate’s Versions

    H&M’s New $20 Shoes Look Just Like Anna Wintour’s and Princess Kate’s Versions

    [ad_1]

    When two royals and one editor-in-chief all agree on a single shoe trend, you know it has to be good. Princess Kate, Queen Letizia, and Anna Wintour have all been photographed wearing a very specific shoe style: white flat espadrilles. As it happens, I stumbled upon a new pair of $20 versions from H&M that look strikingly similar to all three women’s pairs. 

    I highly recommend trying the H&M shoes in the trio’s color of choice—white—but they also come in black, leopard print, and blue-and-white stripe. In other words, there’s a pair that will suit any summer outfit you have in your closet right now. Scroll down to see how Princess Kate, Queen Letizia, and Anna Wintour all style white flat espadrilles and shop H&M’s new version of the trend for yourself. 

    [ad_2]

    Erin Fitzpatrick

    Source link

  • Anna Wintour Only Packed One Shoe Trend for All of Fashion Month

    Anna Wintour Only Packed One Shoe Trend for All of Fashion Month

    [ad_1]

    Fashion devotees know that the Anna Wintour seal of approval isn’t easy to come by, so when the EIC of Vogue steps out in multiple iterations of a similar style, we take note. Case in point, Wintour’s go-to shoe for all of fashion month: knee-high crocodile-embossed heeled leather boots, which she wore in New York, Paris, London, and Milan.

    Of course, one doesn’t amass a slew of signature footwear overnight. This is a tried and true trend for Wintour, who has sported these types of boots (routinely paired with long floral dresses and statement overcoats) for decades. While of course, she has an array of hues at her disposal, we particularly love the two pairs of rich burgundy and reptile-inspired patterns pictured below. 

    Right now, at the end of the winter season, is a great time to buy boots—ideally on sale—for the year ahead. Keep scrolling for some authentic, AW-approved outfit inspiration, plus our favorite knee-high leather croc-embossed boots to shop now. 

    [ad_2]

    Drew Elovitz

    Source link

  • Anna Wintour Packed This Affordable Trend in Multiple Colors for Paris Couture

    Anna Wintour Packed This Affordable Trend in Multiple Colors for Paris Couture

    [ad_1]

    As the editor in chief of Vogue for over three decades, Anna Wintour obviously has an astute sense of style. Although the pages of the magazine have evolved over the years, Wintour’s personal wardrobe has remained, well, rather formulaic: No matter the season, she favors long floral dresses, leather heels or boots, and elegant outerwear.

    Aside from her signature sunglasses, Wintour isn’t one to overly accessorize, which is why we were pleasantly surprised to see her in not one but two vibrantly colored scarfs while attending the recent Paris couture shows. The bright blue (no, not cerulean) and nearly neon yellow complemented both her floral dresses without being too matchy-matchy and provided a nice pop of color amid the gray winter weather. 

    Since we’re always taking notes on what Wintour deems trend-worthy, we’re excited to incorporate a few bold, colorful scarfs into our wardrobes over the next few months. Plus, it’s too affordable not to try. Visitors to NYC can purchase a pashmina for just $5 at almost any street vendor, but if shopping online is more accessible, don’t worry. Keep scrolling for several cozy scarfs in an array of colors for you to peruse or purchase.

    [ad_2]

    Drew Elovitz

    Source link