| MATTHEW LYNCH, EXECUTIVE EDITOR |
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As previously noted in this space, the 2025 New York City mayor's race between Zohran Mamdani, Andrew Cuomo, and a field of 10s has served as something of a fusion reactor for the take economy. One opinion we hadn't yet heard was that of longtime Cuomo antagonist Eliot Spitzer. Chris Smith spoke with the former New York governor recently to get his take on the race, Trump, and the changing standards to which we hold our public officials.
Elsewhere today, Prince William and Kate Middleton are on the move; Laura Loomer flexes her influence yet again; and Kathryn Hahn on life before and after The Studio. More tomorrow… |
Director Richard Linklater's latest film, Nouvelle Vague, is based on the making of another movie, the French New Wave standard-bearer Breathless. In order to play its female lead, Zoey Deutch had to confront Jean Seberg's experience in the business—and her own. The actor's turn as Seberg was a decade in the making and it's helped give her acting life a second wind. |
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| VF's Joy Press gets personal with the Disney channel alum: "There's different elements of why I'm lucky to be—that term everyone loves—a nepo baby." |
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This past spring, when other reporters called, wanting Spitzer to weigh in on the New York City mayoral race—especially because his longtime antagonist Andrew Cuomo seemed headed for an improbable comeback win—the ex-governor said no. When VF called last week, though, Spitzer talked. |
In conversation with VF, the Emmy nominee also talks David O. Russell's headline-grabbing new movie, "chomping at the bit" for More Agatha All Along, and her next chapter. |
The former Republican governor said hasta la vista to the Golden State alliance as he prepares to battle the Democratic governor over California's redistricting plans. | |
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Jay Pritzker quietly built a $15 billion empire of more than 200 companies, including Hyatt Hotels Corp., and a network of 1,000 family trusts. But one of the patriarch's final deals before his 1999 death, designed to bind his heirs closer, unleashed a torrent of anger, greed, and betrayal, culminating last fall in a $6 billion lawsuit by his 19-year-old niece, Liesel.
For the May 2003 issue, Suzanna Andrews charted the destruction of a great American fortune. |
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