When I think of Ibiza, I think of bohemian paradise and all-night discos—crocheted bikinis, and also ecstasy. I had never really thought of it as an island that might have a titan of industry, until Max Marshall called up and explained Yann Pissenem to me. Would we run an interview with the king of all clubs, who hauls in millions each night, but who never partakes of the bacchanals he fuels? Yes, we would, and we did. Read it here. And when you’re done, check out Max’s excellent 2023 book, Among the Bros, about a drug ring in a Deep South fraternity.
Speaking of the Deep South, VF’s Kase Wickman has the exclusive on a forthcoming biography of Lane Kiffin, probably the most hated coach in college football, who is now leading LSU. Journalist John Talty spoke to Kase about why he picked Kiffin as a subject—click here for that, and click here for Chris Smith’s bombshell profile of the man himself.
And speaking of most hated, something even Trump’s allies don’t like is his continued delusion that he won the 2020 election. He didn’t! But that didn’t stop him from hitting up prime time for some Big Lie riffing last night. Washington correspondent Aidan McLaughlin has an analysis, including the post-speech revelation of new allegations that Russian election interference helped…Trump.
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CLAIRE HOWORTH,
DEPUTY EDITOR
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Yann Pissenem, the owner of Ushuaïa, Hï, and [UNVRS], tells Vanity Fair what it’s like to rule the island of partying (while he’s always sober).
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In a speech Thursday night, the president—“your president”—announced the declassification of intelligence while pushing wild claims of election interference. The intelligence showed that Russia helped propel Trump in 2020.
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Vanity Fair has the first look at journalist John Talty’s upcoming book, Lane Being Lane: The Story of Lane Kiffin, College Football’s Agent of Chaos, along with the cover.
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Damian and Avigail Collins have styled the likes of Rihanna and Kim Kardashian, but their summer has been devoted to selling rare World Cup kits and high-fashion soccer pieces. The duo tells VF about their archival holy grails and how to style a kit to look more like you’re heading to Paris than the pub.
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Golden Age screen goddess Olivia de Havilland entered the pantheon as Melanie Hamilton in Gone with the Wind, won two best-actress Oscars, then decamped to Paris in 1955. What made her walk out on Hollywood?
In the May 2016 issue, de Havilland opens up to William Stadiem about that enduring mystery, and about her side of the most notorious sibling rivalry in film history—with her sister, Joan Fontaine.
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