Plus: Inside the Making of Jared Kushner
View in your browser | Update your preferences
A daily digest of things to discuss over drinks
June 08, 2020
Documents show that health officials have spent weeks scrambling to salvage the relationship—along with global programs to combat everything from polio to Ebola.
Meghan Markle's old day job Suits is just one of many series moving into the great streaming library in the sky. To all of them, V.F. says: Thank you for your service, and see you in the good place.
After a botched response to two national crises, Trump's polls are cratering, and "no one is telling him what he wants to hear," says a source, igniting a new round of grumbling about Kushner.
Cash tips, complimentary cappuccinos, and plush reception areas are gone. Amid a pandemic and widespread protesting, the city's stylists and colorists navigate a perpetually shifting normal.
Aaron Rahsaan Thomas, who co-created S.W.A.T. for CBS, on Hollywood's history of "copaganda"—and the hard work ahead.
Following clashes with Mayor de Blasio over citywide protests and reports of police misconduct, sources say the police commissioner and chief of department could both be headed for the door.
When his powerful father went to prison, in 2005, 24-year-old Jared Kushner suddenly found himself with the keys to the family real-estate kingdom, amid a cloud of disgrace. His next moves—the purchases of the New York Observer and 666 Fifth Avenue, marriage to Ivanka Trump, taking a plum office in his father-in-law's White House—were all about trading money for status and getting back what his father had lost. Rich Cohen reported in 2017.
No comments:
Post a Comment