Latest news with #VanityFair
Yahoo
6 hours ago
- Entertainment
- Yahoo
Variety.com Ranks as Top Entertainment Business News Site for Three Years in a Row
has ranked as the top entertainment business news site for 36 consecutive months. The online home of the weekly entertainment business magazine Variety has claimed the No. 1 spot every month so far this year through May. The website has held the top position since June 2022. More from Variety Variety's 'Actors on Actors' Season 22 Breaks Emmys Season Franchise Record With Nearly 100 Million Social Video Views Paul Mescal, Diane Kruger and More Toast to Rising Talent at Variety and Golden Globes' Cannes Breakthrough Artist Party Variety Wins Four 2025 Webby Awards, Including for Social Presence and Actors on Actors Series Variety reached a larger digital audience than consumer news publications Vanity Fair and Entertainment Weekly for the past three years, according to unique visitor data from Comscore. Variety's 2025 traffic to date has also surpassed all other trade news sites, making it the most-read publication in its category. 'This is a tremendous winning streak,' said Ramin Setoodeh and Cynthia Littleton, Variety's co-Editors-in-Chief. 'We are so proud of our newsroom for producing the best journalism — a wide range of stories that includes breaking news, industry scoops, longform profiles, criticism and franchises such as Power of Women and Actors on Actors. With our award-winning print magazine, aggressive social media strategy and hit video series, Variety has become the largest multi-platform publication of its kind.' Variety's 2025 coverage has featured blockbuster stories, including Noah Wyle's return to medical dramas with 'The Pitt'; Walton Goggins and Aimee Lou Wood addressing 'White Lotus' feud rumors; a father-son interview with Arnold and Patrick Schwarzenegger as part of Variety's 'Actors on Actors'; and a conversation between Apple CEO Tim Cook and Formula 1 driver Lewis Hamilton about teaming up for 'F1 the Movie,' starring Brad Pitt. Variety also landed groundbreaking numbers for the 22nd season of Variety's 'Actors on Actors' series across its social media channels. The latest season of 'Actors on Actors' — featuring Parker Posey, Kathryn Hahn, Colin Farrell, Amanda Seyfried, Diego Luna, Dave Chapelle, the Schwarzeneggers and more 2025 Emmy contenders — generated over 40.9 million views on TikTok. On YouTube, Season 22 has racked up more than 2.8 million views. Best of Variety New Movies Out Now in Theaters: What to See This Week 'Harry Potter' TV Show Cast Guide: Who's Who in Hogwarts? 25 Hollywood Legends Who Deserve an Honorary Oscar


UPI
9 hours ago
- Entertainment
- UPI
Watch: Jessica Alba joins Katseye in 'Gabriela' music video
1 of 3 | Jessica Alba arrives for the Vanity Fair Oscar party in 2020. She stars in Katseye's latest music video. File Photo by Chris Chew/UPI | License Photo June 20 (UPI) -- Actress Jessica Alba joins girl group Katseye in their new music video. Katseye released a single and video Friday for "Gabriela," which will appear on their upcoming EP, Beautiful Chaos, due June 27. The music video for the song shows Alba, 44, play the CEO of the fictional Gabriela Enterprises. She stands at the head of a conference table, with the members of Katseye in attendance. "I've built and sustained this empire over the last 20 years," Alba says before the music starts. "A miracle truly. No thanks to any of you. I would love to say that my legacy is in capable hands. But alas, the talent in this room is quite disappointing." "However, one of you must succeed me, and claim my name as the next CEO of Gabriela Enterprises," she continues. The members of Katseye -- Daniela, Manon, Lara, Megan, Sophia and Yoonchae -- then fight over who will replace Alba. Beautiful Chaos will mark the group's second EP. "We are so excited to invite you into this beautiful and chaotic world that we have built," the group captioned an Instagram post promoting the upcoming release. "Thank you for being here." Katseye is also set to take the stage during the Nickelodeon Kids' Choice Awards Saturday.


Daily Mail
14 hours ago
- Entertainment
- Daily Mail
EXCLUSIVE Vanity Fair staff 'blindsided and devastated' after Anna Wintour appoints an 'unqualified' nepo-baby to run magazine
Vanity Fair staff were 'blindsided' and are fiercely unhappy with Anna Wintour 's decision to appoint her daughter's nepo-baby best friend to run the magazine, a source has claimed. News hit the web last week that the longtime Vogue editor, 75, had picked her daughter, Bee Shaffer's close pal Mark Guiducci, 36, to run Vanity Fair following a high-profile search for the publication's next leader.

Grazia USA
17 hours ago
- Entertainment
- Grazia USA
Emily Ratajkowski Is Demonstrating How To Decentre Men
Emily Ratajkowski is seen on the Croisette filming a commercial during day nine of the 78th Cannes Film Festival on May 21, 2025, in Cannes, France. (Photo by Arnold Jerocki/GC Images) From literature to TikTok discourse, the phrase 'decentring men' has been impossible to miss, weaving its way into the zeitgeist and taking off at full speed. Now, Emily Ratajkowski is demonstrating how to thrive from it. Coined by writer Sherese (Charlie) Taylor, 'decentring men', in short, refers to the practice of examining 'the conscious and subconscious ways you place men above your needs and fullness.' These ways may include orienting life plans around securing a relationship, maintaining it, and generally holding back on feeling 'whole' until 'chosen' by a man. (L-R) Adwoa Aboah, Emily Ratajkowski, Irina Shayk, Ziwe Fumudoh and Charli XCX attend the 2024 Vanity Fair Oscar Party Hosted By Radhika Jones on March 10, 2024 in Beverly Hills, California. (Photo by Dave Benett/VF24/WireImage for Vanity Fair) Ratajkowski, 34, like a growing number of modern women, has instead opted to prioritise her family, friends and community. '[Men are] pleasure and fun, but not a part of my core,' she told Elle UK earlier this week. 'The rest of my life is community with other women and queer people and being a mum.' Finding fulfilment and joy in friendships outside of romantic love has growingly become a mainstream topic of conversation, with many women aiming to make their communities the centre of their universe, not as a consolation, but as an equally—if not more —desirable direction in life. Emily Ratajkowski, Ariana Grande, Charli XCX, Paloma Elsesser at the WSJ Innovator Awards held at the Museum of Modern Art on October 29, 2024 in New York, New York. (Photo by Nina Westervelt/WWD via Getty Images) Ratajkowski, a mother to four-year-old Sylvester Apollo Bear, explains how she feels that 'there's so much opportunity in her current stage of her life .' Not just in terms of her sense of self, but also her work, motherhood, and her politics. 'My mum had me at 39, and I remember she always romanticised her thirties as a time of self-exploration and power as a woman,' she said. 'I'm in the midst of it and really feel that way too.' She spoke to the outlet about how this time has solidified her perception of self, and how her primary concerns will always be her son's perception of her as a mother, growing and learning each year, and feeling more in control of her work, both acting and writing. Sounds pretty commedable to us! Emily Ratajkowski and her son Sly / Image: Instagram/emrata


Times
a day ago
- Entertainment
- Times
Corny, clichéd, lazy — James Frey's eat-the-rich novel is cynical tosh
James Frey boasts that it took him a mere 57 days to write Next to Heaven, a trashy murder-mystery set among the bored ultra-rich in Connecticut. This I can believe. There are books that gain a kinetic force from being composed in a feverish sprint and then there are books where you wonder if some hapless editor has sent the wrong draft to the printer. Next to Heaven feels less like a novel than notes for a novel, prompts even, almost as if Frey tossed together a few reference points — Bret Easton Ellis, Jackie Collins,Couples by John Updike — and asked a a certain large-language model to come up with the goods, although he swears blind he didn't use AI to write it. OK, he conceded to Vanity Fair magazine that he used ChatGPT to help with brand names; and it's impossible to avoid Google's AI these days. But on the creativity point he defended his integrity emphatically: 'I don't use generative AI to write ever, just so we're clear,' he said. I suppose we'll just have to take the author of A Million Little Pieces (2003) at his word. It's just that it reads almost uncannily like a cynical remix of any number of super-rich satires or thrillers we've been treated to in recent years. Like Liane Moriarty's novel Big Little Lies, the story is set in a 'picture perfect' small town. It features a gossipy Greek chorus narration and a heavily foreshadowed murder. There are frustrated cops, themes of domestic abuse and rape and an unlikely sisterhood, which given the tone of Frey's previous book, Katerina ('Cum inside me. Cum inside me. Cum inside me'), seems unlikely to have been born from any native feminist instinct. Then, like the recent TV drama Your Friends and Neighbors starring Jon Hamm, it features a Connecticut fund manager who gets fired, can't bring himself to tell his family and maintains his lavish lifestyle by pinching Patek Philippe watches from his neighbours. But, whatever. Aren't all these eat-the-rich stories about sex, divorce and murder merging into one anyway? And isn't shamelessness the quality Frey, 55, is best known for? He claims he dreamt of becoming 'the most controversial writer on the planet' — not the best, the most controversial. He shot to fame after his drugs memoir A Million Little Pieces was championed by Oprah Winfrey. It then emerged that he had invented large chunks of it. It brought controversy, a South Park parody, millions of sales and precisely zero contrition (as one of the characters in Next to Heaven thinks after she has duped everyone: 'Hahaha. It worked. Hahaha. Hahaha.') 'I grew up with a f*** you attitude,' this maverick has said in interviews, a phrase he puts in the mouth of many of his risk-taking, self-destructive characters. Katerina (2018) won a bad sex award and was described by one critic as 'an impressive attempt at career suicide'. And yet Frey seems to have failed even in this attempt because here he still is. Next to Heaven centres on a drug-fuelled sex party dreamt up by Devon and Belle, the richest two wives in chichi New Bethlehem (a name taken from The Handmaid's Tale by Margaret Atwood). Devon, an art dealer who comes from old money, is looking to escape her marriage of convenience to Billy, a sadistic bitcoin billionaire with a portrait of Eric Trump on the wall. Belle, who hails from a family of rich criminals in Texas, lives in a property that's 'staffed the f*** up' with nannies, housekeepers and stable hands. Her gentle husband, Teddy, is impotent — unable to achieve 'a coconut-cream explosion'. • What we're reading this week — by the Times books team Devon craves sex with Alex, a former NFL quarterback who has lost his banking job but hasn't told his wholesome wife, Grace. Meanwhile, Belle wants to bed Charlie, a hockey coach, who is dating Katy, a maths teacher with a tragic backstory. All the women are beautiful with olive skin. Devon's beloved housekeeper, Ana, has particularly beautiful olive skin and must sleep with her boss to send money back to her husband and child in Costa Rica. So all the ingredients are here for another titillating tale of rape and retribution among the 1-per-centers complete with Chanel dresses, Boca do Lobo sofas, limited-edition Yeezys, Ode à la Rose orchids, Roche Bobois chairs etc. Next to Heaven confirms that Frey is a very, very lazy writer. His sentences read like schoolboy attempts at hardboiled style — 'He had it all. And he had always had it all' — and contain some of the corniest lines I've read in fiction ('promises are like glass and they break just as easily'). Then there are the parts where he takes flight: 'Oh the night! Oh the dark! Where promises are made and kisses exchanged, where secrets are born and shared, where hearts entwine and passions ignite.' Frey doesn't let editors touch a word of his — this I can also believe. What's particularly strange, given that he's such a 'bad boy', is that he completely fluffs the wife-swapping soirée. After one paragraph in which the men all size each other up, the characters slope off to have very tame (or depressing) heterosexual intercourse. James, goddammit, it's an orgy! He takes more care describing the party invitations. • Read more book reviews and interviews — and see what's top of the Sunday Times Bestsellers List For a book about bad behaviour, the characters behave in remarkably boring and predictable ways. They have no foibles or contradictions. No one in the novel feels remotely real. The characters are dead, the language is dead and it says terrible things about publishing that this ever saw the light of day. It's also coming to a TV near you because Frey sold the screen rights before the manuscript — 'Hahaha. It worked. Hahaha. Hahaha.'Next to Heaven by James Frey (Swift £18.99 pp336). To order a copy go to Free UK standard P&P on orders over £25. Special discount available for Times+ members