Plus: Paul Fortune's Legendary 1980s Fake Club
View in your browser | Update your preferences
A daily digest of things to discuss over drinks
June 23, 2020
Screenwriter and director Daniel Minahan remembers the legendary interior designer as a friend who "connected people from all different worlds, disciplines, and interests."
In elite poker circles, "proposition" bets aren't uncommon—which is how Maria Konnikova found herself watching a poker star with more than $28 million in earnings doing push-ups in a bathrobe while Kevin Hart timed him.
From our iconic photo shoot with k.d. lang and Cindy Crawford to the latest issue with Janelle Monáe, V.F. takes a trip through our archive to celebrate some of the LGBTQ+ heroes who have graced our cover.
Ri-Karlo Handy was just trying to help Black film professionals find each other. Instead, he watched as his effort was derailed by outraged white film editors.
Mitch Landrieu, former mayor of New Orleans, toppled a statue of Robert E. Lee. But that was only the beginning. In the wake of the recent hopeful upwelling, the mayor talks about small increments of progress—and how much still has to be done.
The police conspiracy theory quickly fell apart last week, and now the New York Post has debunked it even further.
Paul Fortune's 1980s Fake Club was the stuff of legend—stars, drugs, all-night dancing in a bus station—Hollywood, Cinderella-style. And it was, the designer told Lili Anolik, the real deal.
No comments:
Post a Comment