| MATTHEW LYNCH, EXECUTIVE EDITOR |
|
|
Have you ever found yourself wondering what would happen if we cross-pollinated the British aristocracy with full-on wear-the-hat (actually collect-the-autographed-hats) MAGA? Let us introduce you to Lady Victoria Hervey, the 1990s vintage British socialite who has gone all in on Donald Trump. Erin Vanderhoof today profiles Hervey for our ongoing series All the President's People, and the daughter of the sixth Marquess of Bristol does not disappoint. An example at random: "I'd seen [Elon Musk] at Mar-a-Lago, and he actually looks a lot better in person, actually. He's quite hunky in real life, like, tall."
Elsewhere today, Olivia Empson checks in on a new podcast from The Conservateur, the lifestyle publication that's been called Vogue for Trumpers; the Zach Bryan–versus–ICE saga takes another turn; and our own Rebecca Ford talks to actor Rebecca Ferguson about the prospect of nuclear annihilation. More tomorrow… |
Dubbed "the most ridiculous person in Britain" by the Daily Mail, British-born socialite Lady Victoria Hervey spent more than 20 years in Los Angeles, but she never felt compelled to visit Washington, DC, until one very special invitation: to the second inauguration of President Donald Trump. Now her MAGA hats—at least six, arranged in transparent plastic boxes—decorate her Knightsbridge apartment. This spring, she said it was time to get one that says "Make England Great Again." |
|
| In conversation with VF's Erin Vanderhoof, Hervey shares how a pandemic-era political awakening turned her into a MAGA-hat-collecting Trump booster. |
|
|
After conservatives lashed out at the singer's new single, "Bad News," he states the lyrics were taken out of context. |
The actor spoke with VF about her new film A House of Dynamite, the terrifying possibility of nuclear war, and her anger at the state of the world right now: "It's fucking horrific." |
As this season's shows come to an end, a look back on all the celebrities who sat front row—and what they wore, of course. | |
|
Best friends who met in the first Trump administration, Jayme Franklin and Camryn Kinsey are well aware that their new podcast enters a saturated media market, but they respond to potential competition with a kind of girlish insouciance. They believe they have a new and unique product: a platform to talk about lifestyle, fashion, beauty, and politics, but for women with more traditional leanings—or even those who might just be trad-curious. Think of it as something like a complementary female force to the bros who get Theo Von and Joe Rogan.
VF's Olivia Empson reports on the expanding Conservateur media brand looking to find a sweet spot between right-wing politics and best-friend gabfest. |
|
|
This e-mail was sent to you by VANITY FAIR. To ensure delivery to your inbox (not bulk or junk folders), please add our e-mail address, vanityfair@newsletter.vf.com, to your address book.
View our Privacy Policy Unsubscribe Copyright © Condé Nast 2025. One World Trade Center, New York, NY 10007. All rights reserved.
|
|
|
|
No comments:
Post a Comment