| MATTHEW LYNCH, EXECUTIVE EDITOR |
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True story: At one of his sketchier summer jobs, an employer once asked your newsletter correspondent whether he could pass a drug test. There was an awkward pause as it slowly dawned on your newsletter correspondent that said employer was looking for a clean sample to use—not a narcotic-free employee. (After a lot of blinking, neither party ever brought it up again.) Why are you reading about this? Elon Musk recently passed a drug test and was proud enough of his achievement to post about it on the social media platform he owns. Thanks for the excuse to stroll down memory lane, Elon.
Elsewhere today, an interview with director Eva Orner about making her HBO documentary on the Ohio State abuse scandal; your primer for the upcoming Bezos-Sánchez wedding, and Kate Hudson reminds us all why her mother is a national treasure. More tomorrow! |
"If there's one thing OSU is good at, other than football, it's deceit," Ilann Maazel, a lawyer involved in ongoing civil litigation against Ohio State University, says in Surviving Ohio State.
The documentary, released today on HBO, explores sports medicine doctor Richard Strauss's decades-long sexual predation of male OSU students—which began in the late 1970s and ended in the late 1990s. He targeted young men in every corner of the "Buckeye Nation"—from football, tennis, and hockey players to gymnasts and nonathletes—as the university turned a blind eye. It said that Strauss's behavior was an open secret to more than 50 staffers in the OSU athletic department, including 22 coaches.
VF's Lisa Liebman speaks with director Eva Orner about her film: "They knew that there had been complaints made. They weren't investigated, and nothing was done for a very long time." |
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The couple is reportedly set to get married in late June. Here's everything we know about the hush-hush nuptials. |
Taking to X at 3:44 a.m. on Tuesday, Musk posted the results of a test for a variety of drugs, including ketamine, ecstasy, cocaine, amphetamines, benzodiazepines, and PCP. |
Although JD Vance made a cheap jab at musical theater, his boss has a well-documented history of loving the art form, specifically the works of Andrew Lloyd Webber. | |
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In Netflix's Running Point, Kate Hudson stars as Isla Gordon, an ex-party-girl who is suddenly put in charge of her family's pro basketball team. Accordingly, VF's Rebecca Ford had to ask the actor about her own real-life family business: comedy.
VF: You're so great at this sort of comedy. Where does your comedy inspiration come from? Is it actors you watched growing up?
Kate Hudson: Like this woman I know named Goldie Hawn? The great master class of my life. My mother is one of the great physical comedians of all time. It's so subtle, but her physicality is so insanely funny. I mean, even in life, how her body manifests—her comedy is so hilarious. Same with my brother Oliver. We have a very silly family. It might be a DNA thing—my daughter is so physical, her physicality is so profoundly funny, and she's only six. |
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