
‘Thomas the Tank Engine clung to me like a disease': the film about the choo-choo's global grownup superfans
It is curious to hear these words spoken at the outset of a disarmingly sweet documentary. What kind of perversion, or even crime, is twentysomething Michaud confessing to in his own living room? A glimpse behind him provides a clue to his obsession and anxiety: displayed on a table is a collection of toy locomotives and model railway books. And the centrepiece is a model of Thomas the Tank Engine.
In one of his letters to the Corinthians, St Paul wrote that when he became a man he put away childish things. Brannon Carty's documentary, called An Unlikely Fandom: The Impact of Thomas the Tank Engine, is a rebuke to that philosophy. It celebrates the men (and the fans Carty interviews are overwhelmingly male) who have found friendship, community and creativity in what, as far as I can judge, is the most wholesome of subcultures.
Yet a sense of shame pervades Thomas the Tank Engine fandom. 'Aside from a handful of people,' says Carty, 'no one's really out and proud about it – because it's socially unacceptable, especially here in the States.' Why? 'I think Thomas gets looped in with Sesame Street and other preschool TV shows over here, whereas in the UK it's seen more as a children's show.'
Such nuances of a multiplatform global brand – whose merchandising spans pasta shapes and duvet covers, and whose fans number devotees in Japan and Australia – were not, you would think, on the mind of Reverend Wilbert Vere Awdry in 1943. It was then that Thomas was born, on a fictional island called Sodor.
Awdry's son Christopher needed cheering up from measles. And the reverend thought his tales of anthropomorphised steam locomotives, operating on the Fat Controller's North Western Railway, would be just the ticket. Two years later, the first illustrated books appeared, colourful antidotes to postwar austerity Britain.
When I was a child, in the 1960s and 70s, I borrowed the illustrated adventures of Thomas and his pals from my local library. For later generations, though, Thomas means something else. His name evokes nostalgia not for the books but for all the TV series, in particular Thomas & Friends, which first aired in 1984 in the UK, written by the late Britt Allcroft and narrated first by Ringo Starr, then later by Michael Angelis and others including, in one spinoff, the silken-voiced ex-007 Pierce Brosnan.
Many of the twenty- and thirtysomething Thomas fans whom Carty interviews, and Carty himself, watched these shows as kids, and nostalgia for the plucky locomotive has haunted them into adulthood. Carty and his older brother watched the show as preschoolers in North Carolina, and would play with Thomas toys, but then their paths diverged. 'He lost interest,' says Carty. 'I didn't.' Why? 'I can't explain it. My parents can't explain it. They thought it was weird. I remember my 10th birthday: I was still asking for Thomas toys. I don't know – it just clung to me like a disease. I'm happy that it clung to me, though. Now I'm a year shy of 30 and it's still my thing.'
What's the appeal of Thomas in the US? 'You don't see a lot of steam engines over here. People see the Thomas engines and think, 'Well those are just made up. Those aren't real.''
As US versions of the TV series started appearing in the late 1980s and early 1990s, Thomas got a makeover. The Fat Controller became Mr Controller. After Starr's stint as narrator ended, he was replaced in the US first by countercultural comedian George Carlin, and then by Alec Baldwin.
How did An Unlikely Fandom come about? 'I was studying film at the University of Northern Carolina,' says Carty. 'My professor said, 'Just go shoot a documentary. I don't care how long it is. Just find something you care about.' So I decided to film the adult Thomas fans who I knew. I made that film and graduated – then I realised there's a bunch of fans in the UK that needed to be in this. A ton in Australia. A whole scene in Japan.'
The fact that many of the interviewees are in their 20s and 30s suggests that much of the TV shows' enduring appeal lies in nostalgia for childhoods dating from when the shows were first broadcast. But there's more to it than that. Thomas has long held an appeal for people with autism. Indeed a 2001 survey found that children with autism and Asperger syndrome enjoy and identify with Thomas more than any other children's character. Why? Respondents cited Thomas & Friends' straightforward stories, overt narrative resolution, bold colours and clear facial features.
That said, anyone really can identify with the scamp. For example, in Down the Mine, Thomas gets his comeuppance after teasing Gordon the big engine for smelling of ditchwater after an unfortunate incident. When Thomas later tumbles into a mine, he is rescued by Gordon, who indulges in no tit-for-tat sneering whatsoever. Thomas learns two lessons: don't ignore warning signs and don't be a jerk to your mates.
Carty sometimes struggled to get interviewees to appear in his film. 'A handful were nervous about being on screen and having their identity out there. I said, 'Trust me. No one's going to look stupid. This is going to be very honest, but it's also going to be sincere. So as long as you are honest and sincere, the film will reflect that.''
An Unlikely Fandom does more than that: we watch devotees expressing themselves articulately, detailing how they learned film-making, or other creative pursuits, through fashioning fan fictions. Matt Michaud recalls how he took a video class at school and, inspired by a teacher to make his own movie, went home, got out his Thomas toys, put up a sheet for a backdrop, assembled rudimentary lighting and made his debut film. 'That summer,' he says, 'I made 13 episodes and started to build a following on YouTube.'
Indeed, the life expectancy of Thomas has been extended by two things Awdry could never have foreseen. Without the internet, forums instantly connecting fans worldwide might not have existed; and without YouTube, the rich world of fan films – such as Carty's own 2012 short Snow Trouble – might not have been seen so widely. 'I don't think that happens as much with other cartoon characters. I'm sure there are Star Wars fans who make fan films, but I don't think Bob the Builder or Fireman Sam fans do.'
Carty's next project could not be more different. 'It's about these Italians who came to Florida in the 1990s and made Jaws 5.' That's its unofficial title: Bruno Mattei's film is also known as Cruel Jaws. 'They wound up getting sued and their film was banned in the US. It spoke to me because Jaws and Thomas are my childhood.' Why was it banned? 'They stole footage from the first three Jaws movies and the main theme is lifted from Star Wars. It's horrible, but I love it. It's cheesy and streaming free everywhere. I would recommend it.'
Before he finishes that documentary, provisionally entitled Twilight Jaws, Carty will next month attend the UK premiere of An Unlikely Fandom. Much of the film's sweetness comes from Carty's footage of fans at conventions, making podcasts or – having been initiated into the world of steam railways through Thomas and his friends – working happily with like-minded souls as volunteers on narrow gauge heritage railways.
What I most enjoyed about his film is the complete lack of snarkiness about grownups who are essentially playing with toys. 'That was just the thing I wanted to get out to the world. I faced a lot of hardship for it. Other people faced a lot of hardship for it. Even fans gave other fans a hard time. They didn't know how to process it, right? A lot of people said to me, 'I wish I had this film when I was growing up because I would have realised I was not alone.' When you're growing up, parents are like, 'Why aren't you making friends? You need to find your crowd.' A lot of Thomas fans did just that in later life. It's such a healthy, positive thing.'
Carty tells me he and his girlfriend, also a Thomas fan, don't yet have children. 'Whenever kids come into the picture, it's going to be a Thomas household,' he says. Then, with the hint of a sigh, he adds: 'If they don't like it, we'll reconsider.'
Brannon Carty will take part in a Q&A following the UK premiere of An Unlikely Fandom at Alstom's Litchurch Lane Works, Derby, on 2 August.
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The Independent
19 minutes ago
- The Independent
Celebrity birthdays for the week of Aug. 3-9
Celebrity birthdays for the week of Aug. 3-9: Aug. 3: Actor Martin Sheen is 85. Singer Beverly Lee of The Shirelles is 84. Lifestyle guru Martha Stewart is 84. Movie director John Landis is 75. Actor Jo Marie Payton ('Family Matters') is 75. Actor Philip Casnoff ('Oz,' 'Strong Medicine') is 71. Actor John C. McGinley ('Scrubs') is 66. Bassist Lee Rocker (Stray Cats) is 64. Actor Lisa Ann Walter ('Abbott Elementary') is 64. Singer-guitarist James Hetfield of Metallica is 62. Singer Ed Roland of Collective Soul is 62. Actor Isaiah Washington ('Grey's Anatomy,' ″Soul Food') is 62. Keyboardist Dean Sams of Lonestar is 59. Guitarist Stephen Carpenter of Deftones is 55. Musician Spinderella of Salt-N-Pepa is 54. Actor Brigid Brannagh ('CSI,' 'Army Wives') is 53. Actor Michael Ealy ('Think Like a Man,' ″Barbershop') is 52. Violinist Jimmy De Martini of Zac Brown Band is 49. Actor Evangeline Lilly ('Lost') is 46. Actor Mamie Gummer ('The Good Wife') is 42. Singer Holly Arnstein of Dream is 40. Actor Georgina Haig ('Once Upon a Time') is 40. Bassist Brent Kutzle of OneRepublic is 40. Rapper D.R.A.M. is 37. Aug. 4: Actor Tina Cole ('My Three Sons') is 82. Actor Billy Bob Thornton is 70. Actor Kym Karath ('The Sound of Music') is 67. Actor Lauren Tom ('Joy Luck Club,' ″Men in Trees') is 66. Producer Michael Gelman ('Live with Kelly and Ryan') is 64. Actor Crystal Chappell ('Guiding Light') is 60. Drummer Rob Cieka of Boo Radleys is 57. Actor Daniel Dae Kim ('Hawaii Five-O,' ″Lost') is 57. Actor Michael Deluise ('Gilmore Girls,' 'NYPD Blue') is 56. Rapper Yo-Yo ('Miss Rap Supreme') is 54. Singer-actor Marques Houston of Immature is 44. Actor-turned-princess Meghan Markle ('Suits') is 44. Actor-director Greta Gerwig is 42. 'American Idol' runner-up Crystal Bowersox is 40. Actors Dylan and Cole Sprouse ('The Suite Life of Zack and Cody,' ″Grace Under Fire') are 33. 'American Idol' runner-up Jessica Sanchez is 30. Aug. 5: Actor Loni Anderson is 80. Actor Erika Slezak ('One Life To Live') is 79. Actor-turned-journalist Holly Palance ('Under Fire,' 'The Omen') is 75. Singer Samantha Sang is 74. Guitarist Eddie Ojeda of Twisted Sister is 70. Actor Maureen McCormick ('The Brady Bunch') is 69. Guitarist Pat Smear of Foo Fighters is 66. Country fiddler Mark O'Connor is 64. Actor Mark Strong ('The Imitation Game') is 62. Director James Gunn ('Guardians of the Galaxy') is 59. Actor Jonathan Silverman ('The Single Guy') is 59. Country singer Terri Clark is 57. Actor Stephanie Szostak ('A Million Little Things') is 54. Cellist Eicca Toppinen of Apocalyptica is 50. Drummer Whit Sellers of Old Dominion is 47. Actor Jesse Williams ('Grey's Anatomy') is 45. Actor Albert Tsai ('Dr. Ken') is 21. Actor Devin Trey Campbell ('Single Parents') is 17. Aug. 6: Actor-director Peter Bonerz is 87. Actor Louise Sorel ('Days of Our Lives') is 85. Actor Ray Buktenica ('Rhoda') is 82. Actor Dorian Harewood is 75. Actor Catherine Hicks ('Seventh Heaven') is 74. Singer Pat MacDonald of Timbuk 3 is 73. Actor Stepfanie Kramer ('Hunter') is 69. Actor Faith Prince is 68. Singer Randy DeBarge of DeBarge is 67. Actor Leland Orser ('ER') is 66. Actor Michelle Yeoh ('Everything Everywhere All at Once,' 'Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon') is 63. Country singers Peggy and Patsy Lynn of The Lynns are 61. Actor Jeremy Ratchford ('Cold Case') is 60. Actor Benito Martinez ('American Crime,' 'The Shield') is 57. Country singer Lisa Stewart is 57. Writer-director M. Night Shyamalan ('The Sixth Sense') is 55. Actor Merrin Dungey ('Summerland,' ″Alias') is 54. Singer Geri Halliwell Horner of Spice Girls is 53. Actor Jason O'Mara ('Life on Mars') is 53. Actor Vera Farmiga ('Up in the Air,' ″The Departed') is 52. Actor Soleil Moon Frye ('Sabrina The Teenage Witch,' ″Punky Brewster') is 49. Actor Melissa George ('Alias,' ″Grey's Anatomy') is 49. Singer Travis 'Travie' McCoy of Gym Class Heroes is 44. Actor Leslie Odom Jr. (stage: 'Hamilton,' TV: 'Smash') is 44. Bassist Eric Roberts of Gym Class Heroes is 41. Aug. 7: Humorist Garrison Keillor is 83. Actor John Glover ('Smallville') is 81. Actor David Rasche ('Sledge Hammer!') is 81. Country singer Rodney Crowell is 75. Actor Caroline Aaron ('The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel') is 73. Actor Wayne Knight ('Seinfeld') is 70. Singer Bruce Dickinson of Iron Maiden is 67. Actor David Duchovny ('Californication,' ″The X-Files') is 65. Actor Delane Matthews ('Dave's World') is 64. Actor Harold Perrineau ('Lost,' ″Oz') is 62. Jazz pianist Marcus Roberts is 62. Country singer Raul Malo of The Mavericks is 60. Actor David Mann ('Madea' films) is 59. Actor Sydney Penny ('The Thorn Birds,' ″All My Children') is 54. Actor Greg Serano ('Power') is 53. Actor Michael Shannon ('George and Tammy,' 'The Flash') is 51. Actor Charlize Theron is 50. Drummer Barry Kerch of Shinedown is 49. Actor Eric Johnson ('Fifty Shades Darker,' ″Smallville') is 46. Actor Liam James (TV's 'Psych,' film's 'The Way, Way Back') is 29. Aug. 8: Actor Nita Talbot is 95. Actor Dustin Hoffman is 88. Actor Connie Stevens is 87. Country singer Phil Balsley of The Statler Brothers is 86. Actor Larry Wilcox ('CHiPS') is 78. Actor Keith Carradine ('Madam Secretary') is 76. Drummer Anton Fig ('Late Show With David Letterman') is 72. Actor Donny Most ('Happy Days') is 72. Keyboardist Dennis Drew of 10,000 Maniacs is 68. Actor-turned-investment banker Harry Crosby ('Friday the 13th') is 67. News anchor Deborah Norville is 67. Guitarist The Edge of U2 is 64. Drummer Rikki Rockett of Poison is 64. Rapper Kool Moe Dee is 63. Singer Scott Stapp of Creed is 52. Country singer Mark Wills is 52. Actor Kohl Sudduth (TV's 'Jesse Stone' movies) is 51. Guitarist Tom Linton of Jimmy Eat World is 50. Singer J.C. Chasez of 'N Sync is 49. Actor Tawny Cypress ('Heroes') is 49. Singer Drew Lachey of 98 Degrees is 49. Singer Marsha Ambrosius (Floetry) is 48. Actor Lindsay Sloane ('Sabrina the Teenage Witch') is 48. Actor Countess Vaughn ('The Parkers,' ″Moesha') is 47. Actor Michael Urie ('Ugly Betty') is 45. Actor Meagan Good ('Think Like a Man') is 44. Guitarist Eric Howk of Portugal. The Man is 44. Actor Jackie Cruz ('Orange Is the New Black') is 41. Actor Ken Baumann ('The Secret Life of the American Teenager') is 36. Singer Shawn Mendes is 27. Actor Bebe Wood ('The Real O'Neals') is 24. Aug. 9: Jazz drummer Jack DeJohnette is 83. Comedian David Steinberg is 83. Actor Sam Elliott is 81. Singer Barbara Mason is 78. Actor Melanie Griffith is 68. Actor Amanda Bearse ('Married... With Children') is 67. Rapper Kurtis Blow is 66. Former 'Today' co-host Hoda Kotb is 61. Actor Pat Petersen ('Knots Landing') is 59. Actor Gillian Anderson ('The X-Files') is 57. Actor Eric Bana ('Star Trek,' ″The Hulk') is 57. News correspondent Chris Cuomo is 55. Actor Thomas Lennon (″Reno 911!') is 55. Bassist Arion Salazar (Third Eye Blind) is 55. Rapper Mack 10 is 54. Singer Juanes is 53. Actor Liz Vassey ('CSI,' ″All My Children') is 53. Actor Kevin McKidd ('Grey's Anatomy') is 52. Actor Rhona Mitra ('Nip/Tuck,' 'Boston Legal') is 50. Actor Jessica Capshaw ('Grey's Anatomy,' 'The Practice') is 49. Actor Ashley Johnson ('The Help') is 42. Actor Anna Kendrick ('Pitch Perfect,' ″Twilight') is 40.


Daily Mail
20 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Melania Trump's fashion favorites: First lady's most and LEAST expensive wardrobe pieces revealed
Long before she became the First Lady, Melania Trump was known around New York for her timeless style - and it's only evolved since she's stepped into the White House. When she first married Donald Trump, she seemed to have a penchant for silky, colorful dresses as she attended some of Manhattan's most exclusive events, like the short, slinky, bright pink dress she Breast Cancer Research Foundation's hot pink party in 2005. But now, times have changed, and Melania seems to be all business, donning elegant dresses and pantsuits, as well as expensive yet elevated accessories. As the First Lady, 55, she's been known to be a fan of certain designers like Dolce & Gabbana, Alexander McQueen and Ralph Lauren. During President Trump's inauguration into his first term in 2017, she donned a powder blue, cashmere dress with a wrap overcoat and matching gloves made by Ralph Lauren. In 2016, she spoke to Elle Magazine about the various challenges of dressing for a campaign, telling the outlet over email that she doesn't find it to be hard at all. 'I don't find it to be challenging,' she said at the time. 'I style myself and choose what to wear based on what I feel good in it.' Now, FEMAIL has rounded up all of Melania's fashion favorites since being in The White House, from most expensive to least expensive. When she first married Donald Trump, she seemed to have a penchant for silky, colorful dresses as she attended some of Manhattan's most exclusive events, like the short, slinky, bright pink dress she Breast Cancer Research Foundation's hot pink party in 2005 MOST EXPENSIVE Hermès Matte Niloticus Crocodile Birkin 25 Black Bag: $50,000 One of, if not the most, expensive pieces in Melania's closet appears to be the Hermès Matte Niloticus Crocodile Birkin 25 in Black. The bag is a rarity, as it's made of one of the brand's most coveted materials: crocodile skin. According to Fashionphile, a high-end consignment boutique, their bags made with crocodile skin typically go for more than three times the traditional leather ones that are for sale. Online, these bags can be priced on secondhand websites for over $100,000. It seems to be a staple in Melania's closet, too, as she has been seen wearing it multiple times over the past few years. She famously sported the purse when she and Trump departed the White House on inauguration day in January 2021, as Joe Biden entered his presidency. Melania paired the bag with a black, knee-length skirt and cropped tweed jacket, along with a pair of black gloves and sky-high black Christian Louboutin heels. It seems to be a staple in Melania's closet, too, as she has been seen wearing it multiple times over the past few years She also wore the bag in 2019, when she and her husband joined then-prime minister Theresa May and her husband Philip for a meeting in London At the time, the couple were headed off to Mar-a-Lago, where they stayed when their days in The White House were over. She also wore the bag in 2019, when she and her husband joined then-prime minister Theresa May and her husband Philip for a meeting in London. She paired it with her favorite Celine trench coat, but it was the bag, which has gold detail on it, that really made a statement. Floral Dolce & Gabbana jacket: $51,500 In 2017, Melania pulled out all the stops as she donned a dramatic coat by Dolce & Gabbana that was covered in silk, 3D floral appliques. Oh, and did we mention that it cost $51,500? According to Business Insider, just purchasing the jacket cost a deposit of $25,750. She wore the colorful jacket while visiting Sicily, Italy, during the 2017 G7 Summit, which convenes leaders from Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, the United Kingdom and the United States. She wore the colorful jacket while visiting Sicily, Italy, during the 2017 G7 Summit, which convenes leaders from Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, the United Kingdom and the United States Melania sported the fancy coat, which featured bold red, purple, green, white and blue florals when sightseeing around the city with the other spouses of world leaders. The jacket also featured bedazzled, embroidered flowers on it. She paired the coat with a matching clutch bag that had the same exact florals sewn onto it. At the time, the expensive jacket sparked a lot of controversy, as many pointed out that it was worth more than the monthly salary of many Americans. J. Mendel gown she wore to a 2018 visit to Great Britain: $6,990 During husband Donald Trump's official visit to Britain in 2018, Melania donned a Grecian-style, lemon yellow $6,990 gown by designer to a state dinner at Blenheim Palace. The whimsical gown featured a long, off-the-shoulder cape, and knotted detailing at the waist. It appeared to be made of chiffon, and Melania matched the look with a pair of yellow Manolo Blahnik heels. Per Today, she chose the color yellow in honor of Queen Elizabeth, whose favorite color was reportedly yellow. Of course, she accessorized with her $4 million engagement ring and a pair of sparkling diamond studs in her ears. LEAST EXPENSIVE Controversial 'I really don't care, do u?' jacket from Zara: $39.99 In 2018, Melania made headlines and sparked outrage across the world as she donned a $39 jacket from Zara that read, 'I really don't care, do u?' on its back while on her way to visit children separated from their families at the Mexico border. The jacket was a military-green, army-style jacket, and the crass words were spray painted on the back in white. The first lady's surprise visit to a children's shelter - where a handful of the 55 children it houses had been taken from their parents - was intended to underline her compassion for children, and came after she lobbied Trump to end separations. But instead, it was overshadowed by the former model's choice of jacket. At the time, her husband claimed that the message was really one that was for the 'fake news media.' In 2018, Melania made headlines and sparked outrage across the world as she donned a $39 jacket from Zara that read, 'I really don't care, do u?' on its back while on her way to visit children separated from their families at the Mexico border ''I REALLY DON'T CARE, DO YOU?' written on the back of Melania's jacket, refers to the Fake News Media. Melania has learned how dishonest they are, and she truly no longer cares,' he tweeted at the time. However, in her 2024 self-titled memoir, Melania, claimed it that the jacket was meant to protest against 'anonymously sourced reporting.' 'I was determined… not to let the media's false narratives affect my mission to help the children and families at the border,' she wrote. 'In fact, I decided to let them know that their criticism would never stop me from doing what I feel is right. To make the point, I wore a particular jacket as I boarded the plane, a jacket that quickly became famous,' she added. Melania recounts how when the plane door closed, her press secretary's inbox was 'flooded with urgent emails from top-tier media outlets regarding the jacket.' 'It's a message for the media,' I said, 'to let them know I was unconcerned with their opinions of me' [but] she told me I couldn't say that. 'Why not? It is the truth.'' Melania wrote about their exchange. 'I disagreed with her insistence that I couldn't say that,' the First Lady wrote. 'Ignoring my comments, she told a CNN reporter she was friendly with that it was simply a jacket, a fashion choice with no underlying message.' The mom-of-one wrote that the frenzy over the jacket 'overshadowed the importance of the children, the border, and the policy change.' She called it 'just another example of the media's irresponsible behavior.' Converse Chuck Taylor All Star sneakers: $50 Although Melania owns her fair share of designer heels, when it's time to get comfy, she's been proven to be a fan of Converse shoes, which typically range from around $50 to $100, depending on the style. She's been known to wear low-top Converse Chuck Taylor All-Stars, which typically are priced anywhere from $50 to $60. The First Lady appears to own the sneakers in all different colors, too - white, gray and black. Most recently, she sported a pair of gray Chuck Taylors when she accompanied her husband to Texas to visit devastation from the flash floods. She matched the shoes with a pair of army-green pants and light khaki coat by Dolce and Gabbana. In 2017, she wore her white pair of low-top Converse as she visited those who had been impacted by Hurricane Irma. She paired the shoes with a casual, green button-up shirt and white skinny jeans. FLOTUS hat: $20 In 2017, Melania stepped out in perhaps the least expensive item she's ever worn - a black baseball cap that simply read, 'FLOTUS' on it, short for First Lady of the United States, of course. At the time, she was stepping off of Air Force One with her husband, and paired the hat with a pair of aviator sunglasses and crisp white button down. It's unclear exactly where she bought her hat, but there are now tons of websites that sell extremely similar versions, some for even less than $20. You could even customize your own for $12 on Amazon.


Daily Mail
20 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Take the near-impossible quiz that was used to determine if applicants at Vogue were fit for the job
Vogue magazine is the cream of the crop in the fashion world, and many dream of working at elite publication - but could you have hacked working at Vogue during its prime? Luckily for the fashion forward amongst us there's a way to see how you'd fare working the fashion bible. The New York Times recently released an interactive quiz to determine where your strengths - and weaknesses - lie. As per the Times, to work for famed Vogue editor Anna Wintour in Vogue's glory days, you had to know a little bit of everything. The quiz, which was created by Wintour's top editors, is based on a real exam that was given to those applying for an assistant position at the publication in the '90s. It would test the applicants elite cultural literacy and quiz them on a 'declaration of what mattered to Vogue.' The original '90s exam consisted of a whopping four pages full of 178 notable people, places, books and films - all of which had to be identified on the spot by the applicant. However, The Times' quiz - which you can take here - made it a tad easier than the original, with a multiple-choice format instead. The interactive quiz uses names and cultural references on the original exam - although the publication noted that applicants in the '90s didn't have the luxury of multiple-choice. It consists of eight different sections, with each section focusing on a different area of knowledge - and the results have been mixed. Questions in the quiz are mainly New York focused, for example, you're asked to name a 'Seventh Avenue Fashion House' (DKNY) or a 'See-and-to-be seen disco popular with the fashion crowd' (Studio 54). Eager quiz-takers flocked to the comments section to share their results - with many claiming despite the quiz deeming them a great fit, they still wouldn't have stood a chance in the illustrious Vogue offices of the '90s. '32/32 but as a somewhat short person of color who won't wear heels and will never fit into a size four dress, it could have been 1000/1000 and I still would not have gotten the job,' one user commented. '32/32 so passed the test but I would not have fit in during the '90s - overweight, pimply, leftist, who wore plaid and jeans,' wrote someone else. 'In the early 2000s I was the subject of an article in Vogue for my profession. They used my words and not my picture. I think if Wintour saw what I looked like she would have cancelled the article. '32/32. I had a career In fashion. At my first interview at 23, my soon to be boss asked, "Can you lie and be deceitful?" to which I promptly answered 'yes' and got the job,' recalled someone else, jokingly adding: 'Ah the '80s.' The original '90s exam consisted of four pages full of 178 notable people, places, books and films - all of which had to be identified on the spot by the applicant. Wintour is seen in 2019 Others found the quiz difficult, admitting they 'could not have done it without multiple choice.' The results either informed the quiz taker they didn't pass if they didn't do well, their resume would be kept on file if they scored somewhere in the middle, or, for those who score high enough, they passed. Then '90s era of Vogue has long been a fascination by fashion lovers and culture critics alike, with former British editor-in-chief Edward Enninful declaring that the '90s turned the fashion industry 'upside down.' In 2024, Hulu released a six-part series titled In Vogue: The 90s, which delved into the decade's most defining moments. In 2023, a former assistant of famous editor Wintour, Lily Stav Gildor, 31, shared what it was really like to work for her. Gildor worked as one of three assistants to the Editor-in-Chief of US Vogue from January 2014 to May 2015 and has gone viral on TikTok sharing her experiences at the magazine - and what she learned. Gildor revealed London-born Wintour taught her 'connections are the most important thing.' 'I learned, so so much from her. I learned about business I learned about fashion I learned about media. And in the last year I started my own business as a textile designer and it's still use the information today,' she gushed. Questions in the quiz are mainly New York focused, for example, you have to name a 'See-and-to-be seen disco popular with the fashion crowd' (Studio 54) In her book, Anna: The Biography, author Amy Odel interviewed several of Wintour's former assistants to get the rundown on how a typical day of Wintours' looked Anna's staff reportedly started preparing for her arrival at the officer at 7:30am. One of the interns begins to respond to Anna's emails, listens to her voicemails, writes out messages for her, sets out the daily newspapers, and get Anna's coffee and breakfast, according to Back Row. One of her former assistants, who chose to remain anonymous, compared some of their actual work moments to the movie The Devil Wears Prada. 'Whenever she wasn't in the office, was when you were able to get those things done. Then she'd come into the office. It was very much like in The Devil Wears Prada when they're all like, "She's coming!" the ex-assistant said. 'I was always scrambling to get ready. You're literally putting things away, making sure everything looks great.' The book also claimed that just like in the movie, one former assistant was advised to not go to the restroom until another was present. Wintour first became editor in chief of Vogue in 1988 and is credited with completely transforming the famed fashion magazine. She is also behind making the Met Gala what it is today - a red carpet event attended by the fashion elite, as she handpicks the celebrities and makes sure to greet them personally. In June, Wintour told staffers that she will be stepping down from her role as Vogue's editor-in-chief. She will continue to hold her position as Condé Nast's global chief content officer and global editorial director at Vogue, and the new head of editorial content will report directly to her. As chief content officer, Wintour oversees every brand globally, including Wired, Vanity Fair, GQ, AD, Condé Nast Traveler, Glamour, Bon Appetit, Tatler, World of Interiors and Allure.