The Red Carpet Highlights of... The 77th Annual Cannes Film Festival 2024!
I think there must be a typo somewhere along the line. T&C is certainly not selling 903,122 copies, I’d guess closer to 203,122. Still higher than I’d have thought. I agree Esquire isn’t doing so hot, though. With the name recognition and built in respect, with a better team, there’s no reason they couldn’t be closer to VF’s numbers than T&C’s.
He was an amazing style director for WSJ.David Thielebeule is editor of Grazia USA.
Fair play to Edward, that magazine went out in print every month this year when so many others didn't, and he's no slouch at overseeing a magazine which works hard to keep advertising revenue coming in. Whatever we might think of the current content, the print issues still have a heft to them that inspires more confidence than those 100-page pamphlets masquerading as magazines.A letter came with my British Vogue subscription and it states the magazine will continue to publish twelve monthly issues a year - just thought I'd mention with the news of Vogue Poland and Vogue Germany cutting frequency in 2021.
Oh that’s sad. She was only there for a couple of years right?Vogue Spain EIC steps down. Everyone is jumping from the sinking ship, it seems.
Dylan Howard, a key figure in the National Enquirer’s infamous catch-and-kill scandal, has caught himself an editor-in-chief in his new role as the publisher and CEO of the US edition of the Italian fashion bible Grazia
Howard rose at AMI to run the Enquirer and become a key lieutenant to CEO David Pecker in the shady but lucrative business at the intersection of celebrity and infamy. In 2017, he was revealed by Ronan Farrow in The New Yorker to be Weinstein's accomplice, conspiring to dig up dirt on the mogul's actress accusers. Later, he was named in The Wall Street Journal as a Trump secret-squasher, with Farrow subsequently reporting in his book Catch and Kill that Howard shredded documents incriminating the president that the Enquirer had amassed but never printed. And in February 2019, Bezos made public Howard's emails that threatened to publish compromising pictures of the Amazon founder and girlfriend Lauren Sanchez — unless Bezos' Washington Post stood down on what he characterized as the paper's critical coverage of Saudi Arabia's business relationship with AMI.
During this period, Howard was personally accused in an Associated Press story of sexually harassing employees at AMI's Los Angeles offices in the 2010s. AMI claimed that the company conducted an internal review at the time that did not find serious wrongdoing. However, Howard subsequently departed the company for 15 months to run Celebuzz, where he would face similar allegations. THR has obtained an April 2013 memo from Celebuzz's outsourced human resources firm, which concluded that Howard had violated its sexual harassment policy. Among the claims filed against him were that he'd made lewd comments about his dating history and specifically retaliated against workers who didn't "engage in his sexual banter" by "embarrassing them or downgrading their work efforts." Howard resigned shortly before HR made its final determination, citing "the unfounded allegations against me." AMI has said it didn't know about the Celebuzz harassment complaint when it rehired Howard to a promoted position overseeing the Enquirer and all of its newsrooms out of its New York office. (Pecker didn't respond to questions for this story.)