Sports
Behind the Scenes With Caitlin Clark on WNBA Draft Day: “I Definitely Know There’s Eyeballs on Me”
Vanity Fair catches Caitlin Clark in the eye of a media storm, as she gets primped before taking the stage Monday night. The women’s hoops phenom talks about going pro and driving unprecedented interest to the sport. “I feel like I’m relatable,” she says.
By Tom Kludt
Adam Moss Is Seeking Inspiration
Since leaving New York, the acclaimed editor has traded his red pen for a paintbrush, and in his new book, The Work of Art, he probes practitioners across mediums to get to the bottom of the creative process. “Some people really enjoy being put on the couch this way,” he tells VF.
By Charlotte Klein
California Dreamin'
“California Forever,” the Billionaire-Backed City No One Asked For
Jan Sramek wants to “deliver a big solution” to the state’s housing crisis by building a new town from scratch. He may have considered every detail, but that doesn’t mean he’s been very considerate.
By Jon Skolnik
Media
Why ‘Serial’ Turned to Guantánamo: “This Place Is Crazy and Nobody Knows About It”
In the podcast’s fourth season, cohosts Sarah Koenig and Dana Chivvis set their sights on Guantánamo Bay, telling the story of the prison camp through the personal experiences of those on the ground. “We don’t really talk about this as a country anymore, and we have never had any truth and reconciliation,” says Koenig.
By Charlotte Klein
Media
“Complacency, It Really Frightens Me”: Inside Politico’s Ambitious, Anxious Drive to Stay on Top
Since the last Biden-Trump face-off, the media company has a new owner and global mandate, as well as increased competition in DC from Politico alums. Managers are mobilizing accordingly, pressuring staff to up their game—and leaving some “demoralized and frustrated” in the process.
By Charlotte Klein
Play Ball!
“We’re Going to Surprise People”: Steve Cohen’s Mets Turn the Page on a Not-So-Amazin’ Season
The once free-spending owner, alongside new president David Stearns, is changing course in search of sustained success that’s long eluded the team from Queens. Whether in business or baseball, says outfielder Brandon Nimmo, you either “adapt or die.”
By Tom Kludt
Politics
Donald Trump Should Probably File for Bankruptcy, but Likely Won’t Because He’s Worried It Would Make Him Look Like a Loser: Report
He’d apparently rather have his assets seized by the New York attorney general.
By Bess Levin
Why FOMO Is Fueling Nvidia Stock
The investment frenzy around AI is driving valuation so much that some investors are wondering when the bubble might burst.
By Nick Bilton
Sports
How Formula 1 Finally Made Inroads in America
Joshua Robinson and Jonathan Clegg, the authors of a new book on the “world’s fastest-growing sport,” discuss F1’s stateside rise, a brewing scandal, and the chances of a Saudi takeover of the circuit.
By Tom Kludt
2024 Election
Donald Trump Is Poised to Pocket Billions in a Meme Stock Media Merger
The former president has kept his finances in the dark. But now he’s pressed for cash and Truth Social could be the answer.
By Scott Nover
Media
New York Times Launches Leak Investigation Over Report on Its Israel-Gaza Coverage
Management has questioned staffers, including Daily producers, after The Intercept revealed internal debate over a yet-to-air episode on Hamas weaponizing sexual violence. Such a probe is highly unusual, say staffers, one of whom dubbed it a “witch hunt.”
By Charlotte Klein
Media
“Rupert Murdoch Is in My Book, and He’s Not the Villain”: Tricia Romano Revisits the Storied Past and Tragic Demise of The Village Voice
The author and Voice veteran chats with Vanity Fair about her acclaimed new oral history of America’s OG alternative newsweekly. “It had a hold on political and cultural movements that other publications didn’t,” she says.
By Joe Pompeo
Media
How Jimmy Finkelstein Wooed Me to The Messenger—And Left Me High and Dry
I have yet to receive a promised severance following the media start-up’s abrupt collapse, which left hundreds of us without jobs.
By Amie Parnes
Media
“A New Voice for the Times”: Is “The Morning” the Future?
The New York Times’ flagship newsletter is hugely popular with readers, a source of tension among some reporters, and, for top leaders, more of what the traditional paper needs.
By Charlotte Klein
Sports Media
“The Taylor Swift Season”: How Football Writers Made Peace With Covering Travis Kelce’s Love Life
Chiefs scribes entered the season expecting the team’s defense of a Super Bowl title to dominate headlines; instead, they found themselves swept up by a modern-day version of DiMaggio and Monroe. “You have to cater to what the public craves and wants,” says one.
By Tom Kludt
Media
Washington Post Newsroom Is Rattled by Buyouts
Top reporters have urged executive editor Sally Buzbee and publisher Will Lewis to address the gutted research department, a casualty of the paper’s roughly 10% staff reduction. The buyouts, they say, have “left us at a real disadvantage both in experience and sheer numbers.”
By Charlotte Klein
LEVIN REPORT
Mark Cuban Explains to Elon Musk Why Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion Is Not “Racism”
It’s not clear if Cuban has changed hearts and minds.
By Bess Levin
Media
“The Worst That It’s Ever Been”: Inside Sports Illustrated’s Winter of Discontent
Staffers are eyeing the exits after a year that began with layoffs and is closing with an AI scandal and the firing of top executives. Can the iconic magazine regain its footing?
By Tom Kludt
Media
The Year in Media: 7 Cliff-Hangers as We Close out 2023
What will the New Year bring for CNN, Fox, The Washington Post, Paramount, The Telegraph, and more?
By Joe Pompeo
On The Scene
Walter Isaacson: Elon Musk Is a Genius When It Comes to Engineering, Not Human Emotion
The storied biographer sat down with Richard Stengel at the Perelman Performing Arts Center in New York to discuss his time with one of the most divisive people for his latest book, Elon Musk.
By Charlotte Klein