Gabriel Sherman
Special Correspondent
Gabriel Sherman is a special correspondent at Vanity Fair. He is the author of the New York Times best seller The Loudest Voice in the Room, which he adapted into the Golden Globe–winning Showtime series starring Russell Crowe. You can follow him on Twitter.
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Featured Articles
“I’ll Let the Chips Fall Where They May”: The Life and Confessions of Mob Chef David Ruggerio
In the 1980s and 1990s David Ruggerio was a rising star of French cooking in New York—and a proto–celebrity chef with cookbooks and TV shows to his name. But all that success in the kitchen belied the double life he was leading as a rank-and-file member of the Mob. Decades after his fall from grace and mysterious disappearance from the food world, Ruggerio is coming clean.Inside Jerry Falwell Jr.’s Unlikely Rise and Precipitous Fall at Liberty University
Jerry Falwell Jr. was the Trump-anointing dark prince of the Christian right. Then a sex scandal rocked his marriage and ended his lucrative stewardship of the evangelical education empire founded by his father. In a series of exclusive interviews, Falwell—accompanied by his wife, Becki—describes the events that led to his ouster, their fallout, and why he’s finally ready to admit he never had much use for his father’s church anyway.“2016 on Steroids”: The Race to Inherit Trump’s MAGA Base Is Already On—And the Knives Are Out
With the 2024 election in sight, Republican presidential contenders such as Ron DeSantis, Ted Cruz, and Mike Pompeo have begun racing each other to the bottom to claim the party’s base. That is, unless his MAGA-ness himself gets in the ring.The Mogul and the Monster: Inside Jeffrey Epstein’s Decades-Long Relationship With His Biggest Client
Of the many mysteries that still surround the life and crimes of the notorious financier, the source of his wealth, and thus his power, might be the greatest. His long-standing business ties with his most prominent client, billionaire retail magnate Leslie Wexner, hold the key.Confessions of a Clintonworld Exile
Doug Band worked alongside Bill Clinton every day for nearly two decades, first as a body man and then as one of the primary architects of his lucrative and often-fraught post-presidency. Then came a seismic falling out with accusations of self-dealing and soap-opera-level psychodrama. Now, for the first time since leaving Clinton’s orbit, Band goes on the record about his days in Clintonworld.
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2024 Election
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