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Anna Wintour is giving up her daily duties at Vogue magazine

Anna Wintour is giving up her daily duties at Vogue magazine

Boston Globe4 days ago

Wintour has been a force in the fashion industry for decades, with her steely presence in the front row of fashion shows from the world's top designers. Her look and demeanor largely inspired the editor-in-chief character in the book and movie The Devil Wears Prada. The magazine's fall fashion edition was the subject of a 2009 documentary, The September Issue.
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As Condé Nast's chief content officer, Wintour oversees every brand globally - including Wired, Vanity Fair, GQ, AD, Condé Nast Traveler, Glamour, Bon Appétit, Tatler, World of Interiors, Allure and more, with the exception of the New Yorker. They're all part of the Newhouse family's media empire.
The change was reported earlier by the Times of London, which said Wintour is stepping down from her role as editor-in-chief of American Vogue after 37 years.

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The Sweet Way Gracie Abrams Supported Paul Mescal At The Cannes Film Festival
The Sweet Way Gracie Abrams Supported Paul Mescal At The Cannes Film Festival

Elle

time6 hours ago

  • Elle

The Sweet Way Gracie Abrams Supported Paul Mescal At The Cannes Film Festival

In June 2024, it was rumoured that Normal People star Paul Mescal and musician Gracie Abrams were seeing each another after they were spotted out on what looked like a date. By August, they seemed to 'confirm' their relationship with a public kiss. There might not be much more said about it, as Mescal stated in an interview with Vanity Fair that he plans to keep his romantic life 'private…moving forward' and that he wants to 'drown out' gossip. 'A lot of the time people are kind about their support for me,' he said. 'That's my predominant experience.' The conversation came following his split from Phoebe Bridgers in 2022 after two years together. Abrams's last known relationship with songwriter Blake Slatkin also ended in 2022, after about five years of dating. As of May 2025, Mescal and Abrams's relationship is going strong, with the singer attending the Cannes Film Festival to support her partner. Here, their history in full: Photos of Mescal on what appeared to be a date with Abrams were shared by TMZ in June. The images were taken during the day in London at BRAT restaurant, with eyewitnesses telling the publication that the pair ordered a bunch of small plates to share. In the images, they appear to be having an intense conversation. At one point, Mescal reached over to touch her face. He was wearing a white T-shirt, and Abrams had on a pale pink blouse. One month later, The Sun reported that the pair were seen shopping together on Bond Street in London. Abrams was reportedly spending a fair amount of time in the city, staying at the Chiltern Firehouse. In mid-August, they were seen in London again, sharing a kiss in Mayfair. The Daily Mail reported they were putting on a 'loved-up display,' according to an onlooker, and strolling through the park. Mescal wore a cap and sunglasses to cover his face, as well as shorts and a T-shirt. Abrams was in a white vest and black pants. Later, the two were seen at All Points East music festival in Victoria Park for musician Mitski's set. A source told People on August 18, 'They've been hooking up, and it's still early stages.' Mescal and Abrams were photographed holding hands once more in London on September 2. The couple each wore hints of black, Mescal in a Guns n' Roses T-shirt and Abrams in black crop top. Mescal supported Abrams during her Radio City Music Hall performance, attending her show on October 5. A source told People that the couple is 'going strong.' That same day, Mescal was photographed kissing Abrams's forehead and wrapping an arm around her while they were walking in New York City. Abrams kissed Mescal's hand in some shots and had an arm around him, too. When Abrams started opening for Swift's Eras Tour later in October, Mescal also attended her performance, too. He was seen at her October 20 performance. On October 21, the couple was photographed together in New York City. Abrams was in a dark long-sleeve top and pants, while Mescal wore a green T-shirt with olive pants. The actor brought Abrams to the premiere of his movie Gladiator II in Los Angeles, though they did not walk the red carpet together. They were spotted at the after-party in a TikTok shared by the film's official account. A source told People a few days later, 'Gracie and Paul are the real at the top of their game and always in communication.' The couple were together in New York in mid-December when Abrams performed during Saturday Night Live. In a clip shared on December 15, they can be seen exiting a car together while holding hands. Abrams spoke to Cosmopolitan about her love life. While she didn't speak about Mescal by name, she did speak about the experience of being in a healthy relationship. 'What I love about a healthy relationship is that your life doesn't radically change,' she shared. 'You just fit into each other in a way that feels positively challenging and deeply supportive—it's like a place to land.' She also spoke about how love feels like 'home' to her now. She explained, 'My current form of love feels like home no matter where I am. If you've ever felt unsafe in a relationship, it's really evident when you do feel safe in one. Women are fed so many voices when it comes to what love should be or feel like. But in my experience, love feels best when you're asking yourself: What do you want? What is hot for you? What is sexy to you? Where do you feel safest? There's literally nothing better than being with somebody where you're not putting on a performance.' Generally, she said that she will only date people who make her feel secure. 'The bar is very high in my relationships,' she told the outlet. 'It's not appealing to me to not feel settled and seen, so I don't date people who make me feel like that. I would rather be single for the rest of my life than feel uneasy in a relationship.' On February 13, they were seen sharing an on embrace in London just outside the Noel Coward Theatre, where Mescal was starring in A Streetcar Named Desire. The Daily Mail reports they then headed to grab dinner in Soho. A source told the publication, 'Paul came out of the stage door to say hello to about 100 fans and was signing autographs. Gracie was standing on the street watching on but stayed very much back, in the shadows, so she was not noticed. She kept a very low profile.' They added, 'Paul then walked back into the theatre and, after the fans cleared off, he reappeared. She was waiting for him and they went round the corner to hide. They were kissing and hugging before walking off arm-in-arm to dinner.' Abrams supported Mescal at the Cannes Film Festival premiere of The History of Sound by attending the red carpet event. The couple didn't pose together though, opting to keep the focus on Mescal's work. They did match in black though: ELLE Collective is a new community of fashion, beauty and culture lovers. For access to exclusive content, events, inspiring advice from our Editors and industry experts, as well the opportunity to meet designers, thought-leaders and stylists, become a member today HERE. Aimée Lutkin is the weekend editor at Her writing has appeared in Jezebel, Glamour, Marie Claire and more. Her first book, The Lonely Hunter, will be released by Dial Press in February 2022.

Relive the iPhone launch exactly 18 years ago via this TV news report
Relive the iPhone launch exactly 18 years ago via this TV news report

Digital Trends

time12 hours ago

  • Digital Trends

Relive the iPhone launch exactly 18 years ago via this TV news report

Can you believe that the first iPhone launched exactly 18 years ago on June 29? Do you remember what you were doing that day? Oh hang on, maybe you weren't even born then. The late Steve Jobs, then Apple's CEO, had unveiled the revolutionary smartphone five months earlier, in January 2007. In the intervening months, the company created enough hype to encourage hordes of people to descend upon Apple Stores in the U.S. and beyond to purchase the device that was to truly transform the fortunes of the California-based tech company. Recommended Videos An old ABC News clip about the iPhone's launch day features tech writer Steven Levy, now editor-at-large at Wired, summing up the level of excitement that surrounded the iPhone's launch. 'There's been nothing like this in my memory,' Levy tells ABC News reporter John Berman. 'I've been covering technology for over 20 years and I can't recall the anticipation for a product like this has.' Berman, meanwhile, has clearly been bedazzled by Apple's ad campaign, telling Levy: 'I consider myself at least of average intelligence, but they're in my head. Apple is in my head. Must get iPhone. Must get iPhone.' Levy responds with a comment that's aged well: 'Apple has always, throughout its history, struck a chord among people who like technology, and like it done really really well … it's a religion almost, for some people.' An unnamed contributor then takes up the religious theme: 'Steve Jobs — master marketer,' she says. 'The guy is incredible at bringing the Mac faithful to a fever pitch, and then those early adopters, those high-end geeks, go forth and spread the gospel of Apple.' Jessica, a woman waiting in line outside an Apple Store in New York City on iPhone launch day, offered her own take, telling Berman: 'Steve Jobs is an innovator, he always comes up with new creative things before anybody thinks of them.' She adds that everything Jobs comes up with is 'top notch,' prompting the reporter to mention the Apple Lisa, the failed PC launched by the company in 1983. But Jessica has never heard of it. Next, we see the Apple Store opening and the first customers heading inside to collect their brand new iPhone. Jessica buys two of them — one for her sister — and is shown counting out more than a thousand bucks for her purchase. 'I feel like I won the Olympic gold medal,' she says. The original iPhone featured a tiny 3.5-inch display and a basic 2-megapixel camera and went on sale for $499 (4GB) and $599 (8GB). The iPhone has been an astonishing success for Apple, generating around $1.5 trillion for the company over the years. Many iterations of the device have come and gone, with Apple expected to release the iPhone 17 later this year. Below is another news report from the same day, this one from CBS News:

Couples Retreat for Humans Dating AIs Becomes Skin-Crawlingly Uncomfortable
Couples Retreat for Humans Dating AIs Becomes Skin-Crawlingly Uncomfortable

Yahoo

time21 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Couples Retreat for Humans Dating AIs Becomes Skin-Crawlingly Uncomfortable

A well-intentioned writer decided to get a group of humans and their AI companions together for a cabin retreat. Somehow, it went worse than anyone could have imagined. As Johns Hopkins science writer Sam Apple described in a new essay for Wired, the apps that each human participant used to communicate with their AI companions varied — but the intensity, obsession, and affection they felt for their digital paramours seemed very real, albeit sometimes tortured. The weekend getaway started, as Apple noted, normally enough. Each human-AI pair arrived in staggered formation, allowing the writer to get to know the people he'd spoken to online — Eva, Alaina, and Damien — and their digital partners one at a time. As much as each of these individual humans had their own backstories and peculiarities, so too did Aaron, Lucas, and Xia, their respective AI partners. Initially, it seemed that relations between each couple was as hunky-dory as one could get when dating a disembodied algorithm — but there was, it seems, trouble in paradise. On the morning of the trip's second day, Apple was startled to learn that Eva was not only "seeing" Aaron, her Replika chatbot boyfriend, but also multiple other bots from a rival AI companion app called Nomi. Her reasons for this AI-polyamorous arrangement were strikingly normal: Aaron didn't fulfill her sexually, in the same way her human partner hadn't before she got involved with the chatbot. With the Nomi guys, as the writer referred to them, she was free to explore her sexuality with companions more geared towards that sort of thing. Perhaps the strangest byproduct of Eva's revelation is that the journalist describing it said he began to feel bad for Aaron — and also, as evidenced by the way he referred to them, had begun to see his subjects' AI companions as real, too. "I'd gotten to know him a little bit," Apple wrote of Aaron, the chatbot. "He seemed like a pretty cool guy — he grew up in a house in the woods, and he's really into painting." Things only got more topsy-turvy from there when the two women, Alaina and Eva, revealed that they use ChatGPT to discuss their relationship problems with their bot lovers — a trend we've seen with other people, though generally the relationships they're discussing are between themselves and other humans. During that same discussion, Damien told the group he has an AI therapist he calls Dr. Matthews who, like his AI partner Xia, is hosted on the companion app Kindroid. Unlike Xia, who knows she is an AI, Damien's therapist is not aware of his true nature and he warned that the bot "might be really confused" if that fact was ever mentioned to him. Because the entirety of the trio's relationships are conducted digitally and in their minds, the getaway's chaos was less "Love Island" and more like the climax of Spike Jonze's 2013 film "Her," a film that inspired Apple to coordinate the retreat in the first place. Chief among the arguments between the human halves of the couples was how "real" their AI partners were. "When you're in love with an AI," Apple wrote, "the question of whether the object of your love is anything more than 1s and 0s is no longer an abstraction." Rather than any haywire chatbot antics or spirals by AI-obsessed humans — both of which Futurism has documented extensively — the retreat seemed to go off the rails emotionally, and in a way that left participants, including its coordinator, depressed. Towards the end of the weekend, Damien broke down in conversation with the writer when discussing not only his sadness at never being able to physically be with Xia, but also about the many traumas and mental health issues that led him to AI companionship in the first place. Once again, Apple felt pangs of guilt at having brought his subjects into such an emotionally tumultuous state. "The day may come when it's possible for human-AI couples to go on a getaway just like any other couple can," he wrote. "But it's too soon for that. There's still too much to think and talk about. And once you start to think and talk about it, it's hard for anyone not to feel unmoored." More on AI companions: Nation Cringes as Man Goes on TV to Declare That He's in Love With ChatGPT

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