VF Hive editor Jon Kelly begins his conversation with Graydon asking how he got his start at Vanity Fair. They discuss Carter's early days at Spy magazine and The New York Observer, and the initial offer from S.I. Newhouse to come to Vanity Fair.
Carter describes the challenges he faced in the first two years at the magazine, and how he worked to align with the staff.
He reveals the techniques he used to reinvent the magazine, despite the lack of any real plan out the outset. Carter also talks about the origins of Vanity's Fair's famous Oscar parties, as well as the magazine's iconic Hollywood issue. He describes how the parties grew over the years, and how they and the Hollywood issue became embedded in the culture.
It's Day 6 of a painstaking effort to find survivors after after the collapse of a beachfront Florida condominium.
Hannah Everhart, a Maryland tattoo artist, is among those professionals rocked by the pandemic, but now the industry is seeing incredibly high demand. She has seen so much interest that she's booked until October.
Some minor relief coming to the Pacific Northwest, new info on the Miami condo collapse and that building's state of disrepair, Facebook gets a big win in court, stunners at Wimbledon and the Euro and being a mom vs. being an Olympian. Can you be both?
Christina Radigan, chief marketing officer of the Out of Home Advertising Association of America, joined Cheddar News' Michelle Castillo to talk about its new study on consumer travel trends and the push to get people to do things outdoors.
Electronic cigarette giant Juul Labs Inc. will pay $40 million to North Carolina and take more action to prevent underage use and sales.
Jill's back with Carlo to bring you up to speed on the latest from the weekend as the search for survivors of that Miami condo collapse enters its 5th day. Records fall left and right in the Pacific Northwest amid an historic and unrelenting heat wave. And the search for the woman who ruined the Tour de France.
Former Minneapolis police Officer Derek Chauvin has been sentenced to 22 1/2 years in prison for the murder of George Floyd, whose dying gasps under Chauvin’s knee led to the biggest outcry against racial injustice in the U.S. in generations.
Danish toymaker Lego has presented its first building bricks made from recycled drinks bottles — an experimental project that if successful could eventually go into production.
Officials say there are still 159 people unaccounted for after the partial collapse of a beachside building in Florida.
Baker and Carlo have the latest on the catastrophic building collapse in Miami, a major breakthrough on infrastructure in Washington, Instagram morphing into Facebook and Love, Hate, Ate -- Pride Edition!
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