Tag Archives: vanity-fair

Time Magazine: ‘Is Rangel Simply Guilty of Business As Usual?’

But everybody’s doing it! That excuse may not have gotten you out of hot water with your parents, but it seems to hold some sway with Time magazine, at least when it comes to ethically-challenged former House Ways and Means Chairman Charlie Rangel (D-N.Y.). Staffer Michael Scherer apparently drew the short straw for the August 13 assignment , in which he focused on just one of the numerous allegations of impropriety against Rangel: that he misused his congressional office to solicit contributions to the Charles B. Rangel Center for Public Service. Of course, there are other serious charges against Rangel — who used to chair the House committee responsible for federal tax policy — namely that he avoided paying taxes on property that he owns. From the July 29 Washington Times: The charges, detailed in a 40-page “Statement of Alleged Violation,” break down into four categories: that he solicited money for the Rangel Center from those doing business before his committee; that he made errors and omissions on his financial disclosure forms; that he was given use of a rent-subsidized apartment for an office; and that he failed to report rental income and and pay federal taxes on it. Curiously, Scherer failed to mention those three other categories in his blog post. 

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Time Magazine: ‘Is Rangel Simply Guilty of Business As Usual?’

Henry Rollins Knows What’s Wrong with American Education – and Guess Who’s to Blame

On the heels of a new College Board report that the United States is struggling to compete with other countries when it comes to college completion rates, Vanity Fair’s resident straight talker, Henry Rollins, has figured out the problem.  The education system isn’t struggling because of possible factors contained within the report, such as: Inadequate funding of preschool programs Poor college counseling programs for middle and high school aged children High school dropout rates A lack of international standardization for curriculum Skyrocketing costs of education No, Henry has stumbled onto the real, super secret reason why students are failing to finish their college work:  Sarah Palin and George Bush .  To be accurate, it’s not so much the direct fault of Palin and Bush – rather, it is those of you who support them, their stupid comments, and their intellectually uninterested ways.  Their fans see them as real people and because of that, they feel comfort in an unchallenging environment. Rollins explains why ‘America doesn’t seem to value a college education the way it used to’: “…in America the educated person is often seen as some sissified, fragile know-it-all who looks down at the common man. Every time Sarah Palin says something stupid, she gets more fans. To them, she is “real.” It’s the same reason why so many Americans loved George Bush. They saw themselves in this intellectually uninterested man and found comfort in such an unchallenging environment.” Worse, Rollins somehow manages to immediately transition into a Hitler reference.  In explaining that Americans seem to express disdain for the educated person (via leaders such as Palin and Bush), he then goes on to say: “What leaders had contempt for educated people?  Hitler, Stalin, Pol Pot, to name a few.” And “Funny how the very idea of increased education opportunities threatens some Americans.  They will tell you that education is stupid.” And “America’s abysmal report card, appalling treatment of teachers, and hostile contempt for its young people should be our national shame, the sub-literate albatross swinging from our collective neck.  America No. 1?  Not even close.” Now, before you go accusing Mr. Rollins of being a liar, a liar, a liar, a liar , it is important to note that Henry speaks from experience, having come from a very thorough, college-educated background himself.  However, in this case anyway, it is apparent that Palin and Bush weren’t the cause of at least one American quitting college.   Rollins dropped out of American University following a very brief stint (one semester) in the late ‘70’s.  Citing reasons such as boredom, and the fact that his classmates would rather study beer and bongs than read books, Rollins instead pursued his musical career. Seems he is partially correct.  There are some individuals out there who look at college experience with contempt, threatened by education because it is, in a word, stupid.  By way of contrast, Sarah Palin earned a Bachelor’s degree in journalism from the University of Idaho.  Oh, and that intellectually uninterested guy we mentioned earlier?  He earned a history degree from Yale University in 1968, and is the only President to have ever earned a Masters Degree in Business Administration from Harvard Business School. Make no mistake, Henry Rollins is an incredibly intelligent, well-read, real-world educated person, and Vanity Fair is wise in giving him an outlet.  But traipsing into the world of liberal lunacy (Palin and Bush Derangement Syndrome) clouds any argument one can make.  In this case, Rollins opines that education suffers because of uneducated people who have a better education than himself.  The result is intellectually dishonest and hypocritical. In other words, he is the Wrong Man for this debate. – Rusty welcomes comments/feedback at Weiss.Rusty@gmail.com .

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Henry Rollins Knows What’s Wrong with American Education – and Guess Who’s to Blame

Lauren London, Naturi Naughton, More Help Launch Fearless New Mag

‘Class of 2010’ issue is the answer to Vanity Fair ‘s controversial ‘New Hollywood’ picks. By Shaheem Reid Fearless Magazine Photo: Arian Simone Enterprises The new magazine Fearless launches this month by answering Vanity Fair ‘s “New Hollywood” issue with its ” Fearless Class of 2010.” While Vanity Fair was criticized for featuring only white actresses on the cover, Fearless showcases only black actresses. Getting the front-page stamp for the mag’s maiden voyage are Tia Mowry, Naturi Naughton, Monique Coleman, Jennifer Freeman, Kyla Pratt, Tiffany Hines, Chyna Layne and Lauren London. London, who has a child with Lil Wayne, revealed that she will star in the VH1 movie “Single Ladies,” which Queen Latifah is spearheading, and she also explained her spirituality. “I’m always a fighter. With God, no person can stop you,” she told the mag. Meanwhile, Mowry, who stars in the “The Game,” said she lives her life like the name of the magazine. “Success comes with risk,” she said. “Being fearless is important.” “The idea to put a group of young women on the cover was thought of long before the year’s Vanity Fair controversy, but after it happened, our Editorial Board thought it was a great opportunity to celebrate women of color who are actresses in Young Hollywood,” said Arian Simone, the magazine’s editorial director. Simone described the ” Fearless woman” as fashion-forward, free-spirited and forever young. “Takers” actor Lance Cross and athletes Andre Verto and Dwight Freeny are also featured in the issue. What do you think about the magazine’s “Class of 2010”? Let us know in the comments!

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Lauren London, Naturi Naughton, More Help Launch Fearless New Mag

Top Obama Adviser Valerie Jarrett, Vanity Fair Editor Pine for Days of ‘Responsible’ Media

Vanity Fair’s national editor Todd Purdum has a long piece in the most recent issue (in the print edition only, as far as I can tell) bemoaning what he argues are the new and unique challenges facing the Obama administration, including the state of the news media. Purdum’s opinions on the state of the news business boil down to a call for the press’s continuing political uniformity. He offers a quote from White House adviser Valerie Jarrett that also captures the author’s opinions on the issue. Purdum writes: Obama’s senior adviser Valerie Jarrett looks back wistfully to a time when credible people could put a stamp of reliability on information and opinion: “Walter Cronkite would get on and say the truth, and people believed the media,” she says. Today, no single media figure or outlet has that power to end debate, and in pursuit of “objectivity,” most honest news outlets draw the line at saying flatly that something or other is untrue, even when it plainly is. Purdum’s and Jarrett’s statements are comprised of one part revisionist nostalgia, and one part liberal elitism. “Objectivity” was never really present. What they’re longing for is the reliable white-collar liberalism of the 20th century news media. The uniformity of political views among the media and governing elite feeds a longing for an era of objectivity that was never really there. Jarrett’s comment about Cronkite – and Purdum’s endorsement of that comment – demonstrate the insularity of the elite liberal worldview. Cronkite was hardly the paragon of “objectivity” that so many journalists and academics make him out to be. As NewsBusters has documented, Cronkite had an agenda, and occasionally used his massive soapbox to promote it. His occasional activism included, FBI files recently revealed , aiding Vietnam war protesters – hardly a sign of political objectivity for the man who, according to media lore, set in motion events that turned public support against the war effort. Purdum seems aggravated that journalists “draw the line at saying flatly that something or other is untrue, even when it plainly is.” If Cronkite is a model of journalistic objectivity, yet famously opined against the war effort, it stands to reason that he believes what Cronkite was reporting (that the war was not winnable) was simple fact. But as we now know, Cronkite was not weighing in from a position of objectivity. He was politically inclined to oppose the war, as demonstrated by his aid to protestors. So what Purdum is advocating in waxing nostalgic about Cronkite is in fact journalistic activism – injecting political opinion into ostensibly “straight-news” reporting. That Purdum is also concerned about the liberal elite’s loss of control over the news cycle – that he longs for a “responsible” party to “control” the news – demonstrates that he is only comfortable with the Legacy Media having the power to use their pulpit to weigh in on political issues. Purdum obviously considers some facts to be “plainly” correct, and therefore worthy of an on-air opinion or two. But surely Cronkite thought his view of the futility of the Vietnam war was “correct.” His longing for Cronkite’s era of journalism has nothing to do with contemporary citizen-reporters expressing opinions. It has to do with them expressing the wrong opinions. He and Jarrett, given the chance, would return the United States to a media environment in which a small group of liberal elites retained a strangle-hold on the news cycle and used it to promote the correct opinions. And who has the correct opinions? Why the 20th century New York/DC media gatekeepers, of course. Purdum writes that “the capacity to assert, allege, and comment is now infinite, and subject to little responsible control.” This is where the element of liberal elitism comes in: Purdum is concerned that modern media gatekeepers have not satisfied the prerequisites for traditional purveyors of information. Increasing numbers do not have Ivy League degrees, did not attend journalism school, and have not been privy to the upper-middle class, urbane lifestyle that pervaded and defined the 20th century newsroom. “Responsible control” in this context means control wielded by professionals who have the proper credentials, and share the homogenous values and experiences of the intelligentsia. Purdum and his ilk are concerned that the great unwashed masses are gaining influence over the national dialogue. In fact, those masses can define the conversation. And that, by Purdum’s account, is the problem. A single blogger can upload an iPhone video of a congressman saying something stupid, the Drudge Report can pick it up, and almost instantaneously the entire country can be talking about it. All without aid from traditional media outlets! It’s a frightening loss of control for those who dominated the news cycle for so long – and determined what was and was not news. Journalists have always been keen on telling Americans that the Republic could not survive without the media elite. That’s a convenient position for people with such power. Now that they stand to lose that power, it’s full court press on their respective soapboxes to convince Americans that they, the traditionally-defined media, are needed. Hence, Purdum’s dire tone. Is journalism-by-the-masses less polished? Certainly. Does it spell the downfall of traditional news outlets? Maybe. Would the demise of a news cycle dominated by individuals with a uniform worldview and the consequent homogeneity of their left-of-center politics be a total disaster for the nation and its government? Only if you’re a member of that declining elite. Purdum clearly is, and worries that the “wrong” opinions are making inroads into the national political dialogue through new media, talk radio, and the Fox News Channel. The latter, by Purdum’s account, “is waging a fiercely partisan war against the administration.” The partisanship, though, is nothing new. What is new, and Purdum fairly notes this fact, is the omnipresence of an unprecedentedly large number of opinions, many of them very strong, some of them hostile. Writes Purdum: The world is so constantly with us that the White House press office no longer even tries to hold a daily morning “gaggle,” when beat reporters used to ask press secretaries about the expected news of the day, because it will almost certainly be overtaken by events. Under the 20th century, Old Media conception of the news cycle, the White House did not need to respond to events in real time. Barring some major event, it could hold one press briefing every 24 hours covering the day’s events, and providing comment for the following day’s print edition or the evening news broadcast. The proliferation of citizen journalism demands that official respond to more people, and face questions of a broader nature and variety. In that sense, it does not change the essential nature of the news cycle, but only broadens it. But the “hyperkinetic” news cycle, as Purdum dubs it, changes the means by which officials must respond to reporters and handle information. There are changes to which governing officials and reporters must adapt. Purdum is wrong to wish for a return to the 20th century model, where the opinions of elites were more worthy than those of the “the masses.” A diversity of opinions among the gatekeepers of information enhances, not diminishes, the national dialogue. That is a change all Americans should welcome.

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Top Obama Adviser Valerie Jarrett, Vanity Fair Editor Pine for Days of ‘Responsible’ Media

It’s Time for Lady Gaga to Go Away [Overexposure]

The onslaught of Lady Gaga has been fast and ubiquitous, and her Vanity Fair cover has the publicity machine working overtime. We love you, Gaga, but if you want to keep the love alive, you need to take a break. More

Angelina Jolie new tattoo picture

Angelina got a tattoo on her inner thigh just for Brad? For her uterus#39; sake, let#39;s hope it says “Wear a condom.” Seriously, that thing needs a rest. No, this is not a repeat of last week#39;s story. From the New York Daily News: The 35-year-old actress flashed a new tattoo on her inner thigh in the August issue of Vanity Fair, a week after premiering some new swirls on her arm at the Mexican premiere of “Salt.” Jolie’s new ink was exposed when she posed in short shorts for the fashion

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Angelina Jolie new tattoo picture

Vanity Fair’s World Architecture Survey: Where’s The Green?

28 votes: Frank Gehry, Guggenheim, Bilbao When I entered architecture school, a charming and brilliant Wayne Lawson taught a wonderful survey course on culture and communication. It was a hot couple of years at the University of Toronto (now John Daniels) school of architecture, and almost everyone passed through. Professor George Baird and Chairman Peter Prangnell snagged the likes of Peter Eisenman, Charles Jencks, Rem Koolhaus, Kenneth Frampton, Leon Krier, Tony Vidler and I think, Joseph Rykwert. Now, almost four decades later, Wayne Lawson is Executive Literary Editor of

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Vanity Fair’s World Architecture Survey: Where’s The Green?

No, Erin Andrews Will Not Discuss Constipation With You

I wasn’t going to tell you this, but some of Movieline’s toughest questions for ESPN sideliner/ DWTS finalist Erin Andrews went unasked because of time constraints. Thank goodness, then, for Vanity Fair ‘s fearless, slightly crazy George Wayne , who picked up where we left off with all the pertinent stuff about Andrews’ convicted stalker, her “faux romance” with DWTS partner Maksim Chmerkovskiy, and the sensitive subject of… well, you know.

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No, Erin Andrews Will Not Discuss Constipation With You

Angelina Jolie Vanity Fair 2010

Asked if she and Pitt want a seventh child, Angelina Jolie, 35, tells Vanity Fair: “We#39;re not opposed to it. But we want to make sure we can give everybody special time.” Angelina Jolie and Brad Pitt have built a large family, and despite the rumors, it#39;s not likely to get too much bigger – as the actress is concerned about having enough time for each child as they grow up. It#39;s easy when they#39;re small, she says, and don#39;t require much emotional support. But as they get older, “

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Angelina Jolie Vanity Fair 2010

Buzz Break: Marilyn Monroe’s X-Ray Centerfold