Latest news with #RadhikaJones


Forbes
23-06-2025
- Entertainment
- Forbes
Lisa Ties Her Career-Best Showing With Her Latest Collaboration
Lisa and Maroon 5's 'Priceless' spends a sixth week on the Adult Pop Airplay chart, tying her ... More personal longevity record and holding strong at No. 11. BEVERLY HILLS, CALIFORNIA - MARCH 02: Lisa attends the 2025 Vanity Fair Oscar Party Hosted By Radhika Jones at Wallis Annenberg Center for the Performing Arts on March 02, 2025 in Beverly Hills, California. (Photo byfor Vanity Fair) Blackpink singer and rapper Lisa made a smart move when she teamed up with Maroon 5, as the two musical acts joined forces to release "Priceless" earlier this year. While the track didn't linger long on the Hot 100, it has become a fixture at pop radio in the months since its release, as "Priceless" continues to chart. Lisa now matches her own longevity record on one tally, and she's likely to best it soon. Lisa Ties Her Own Longevity Record "Priceless" holds at No. 11 on the Adult Pop Airplay chart this week. That's the tune's all-time peak, as it has yet to crack the top 10, though it's come very close to doing so. The Lisa/Maroon 5 collaboration has now spent six weeks somewhere on Billboard's ranking of the most successful tunes across adult pop radio stations — those that focus on a style of pop music known as adult pop. As "Priceless" reaches half a dozen frames on the Adult Pop Airplay chart, it ties with another track by Lisa as her longest-running hit on the list. Earlier this year, in January, she debuted her solo track "Moonlit Floor." That tune also lived on the tally for six frames, eventually peaking at No. 38. 'Priceless' is Lisa's Highest-Rising Hit Before "Priceless" arrived, No. 38 marked Lisa's high point. That's not a very lofty position on a 40-space roster, but both "Moonlit Floor" and "Born Again,' her collaboration with Doja Cat and Raye, only lifted to that mark. While "Moonlit Floor" stayed on the ranking for six weeks, "Born Again" only managed to hang around for half that length of time. 'Priceless' Drops Slightly and Returns As "Priceless" holds at its all-time high on the Adult Pop Airplay chart, the single reverses course on the Pop Airplay tally, dipping from No. 18 — its peak — to No. 20. At the same time, it reappears on the Adult Contemporary ranking in last place, at No. 30, after previously topping out just a few spaces above.


Daily Mail
11-06-2025
- Entertainment
- Daily Mail
Uproar as Anna Wintour appoints her daughter's nepo-baby best friend to run Vanity Fair
Anna Wintour has appointed her daughter's close pal to run Vanity Fair, despite reports that he's despised by staff at the magazine's publisher. Mark Guiducci, 36, was tapped by Wintour on Tuesday to lead the Conde Nast-owned glossy after a high-profile search for the publication's next leader. Guiducci has worked at both Vanity Fair and Vogue, where Wintour is editor-in-chief, and is a friend of her 37-year-old daughter, Bee Shaffer, sources told Showbiz 411. 'He's the most disliked person in the Conde Nast building,' a source told the publication Tuesday, hours after the news of Guiducci's hiring broke. 'Staffers went to Anna begging her not to hire him,' an insider added The hesitance stems from the Princeton grad's inexperience, as well as a poor reputation earned during his time at Vogue, Showbiz 411 reported. The search for a new leader launched in April, when Vanity Fair's former editor-in-chief, Radhika Jones, resigned after seven years. She assumed the role from longtime editor Graydon Carter, who held the job for 25 years. At the time, Wintour told staff that Jones would help with the transition 'as we start the search for a new editor.' Now tasked with filling that void is Guiducci, who started his post-college career in 2010 at Vanity Fair as an assistant. In 2017, he was named editor-in-chief the art publication GARAGE Magazine, owned by VICE Media. It went out of print four years ago, a year after Guiducci left in 2020. That same year, he took on the role of creative editorial director Vogue and helped launch Vogue World, an annual fashion and cultural show. He's now tasked with filling the void left by Jones, after she oversaw years of declining revenue. Guiducci will be Vanity Fair's first 'global editorial director' rather than the editor-in-chief title held by his predecessors, including the legendary Tina Brown. Wintour's search was advised by longtime New Yorker editor David Remnick. Figures like Carter have since expressed faith in Guiducci as a successor, despite working with him many years ago. 'Having worked with Mark, I know that he has so many of the skills necessary for the job at hand - and many that I did not have,' the iconic editor told Breaker. 'He's the perfect editor for the new Vanity Fair.' 'Congrats to Mark Guiducci, the new editor of Vanity Fair,' Brown separately tweeted. 'He's a fabulous, fresh appointment with bags of flair and fun ideas.' In a statement to the New York Times, the 75-year-old Wintour sang a similar tune, describing how great editors 'inspire their colleagues to move with speed, dexterity and thrilling derring-do.' 'That's the magic of Mark,' she said. 'An energetic and creative editor at the center of his generation and a leader under whom Vanity Fair will grow in ways I can foresee and, no doubt, many ways I can't.' Guiducci also expressed excitement at taking on the job. 'We're going to have fun,' Guiducci said of his plans for the magazine. 'I think that's something we're going to need in our culture right now' 'There are all these old-school tools that can be used in new ways,' Guiducci told the Times. 'Cover stars, long lead ambitious investigations, sophisticated visuals - those are all things you can't do on Substack. The difference today is we create them for and publish them on modern platforms.' His friendship with Wintour's only daughter has spanned years. The two have been photographed together frequently, often at high-profile parties. 'Beyond proud,' Shaffer wrote on Instagram Tuesday in a story celebrating Guiducci's appointment. 'We're going to have fun,' he told the Times separately, when asked about his plans for the magazine. 'I think that's something we're going to need in our culture right now.'


Fashion Network
11-06-2025
- Entertainment
- Fashion Network
Mark Guiducci new global editorial director of Vanity Fair
Lateral shifts in the world of glossy publishing: Vanity Fair has found its new editorial director within the same Condé Nast group in Mark Guiducci, hitherto creative editorial director of Vogue. Guiducci, 36, will take over the helm of the prestigious culture magazine later this month, picking up the baton from Radhika Jones, who ran the magazine for seven years. "There's never been a better time for Vanity Fair than now," said the incoming editor. "Every morning you read news that reads like operas, large-scale dramas, like a co-production between Marcel Proust and Michael Bay." Unlike his predecessors, Guiducci will be global editorial director: that is, he will have oversight over Vanity Fair's editions around the world, including those in Britain, France, Italy and Spain. Despite the difficulties in publishing in recent decades, Vanity Fair remains one of Condé Nast's flagship titles, and its editorship is still considered one of the most coveted roles in American journalism. Founded in the Jazz Age and relaunched in 1983, the magazine has had iconic editors such as Tina Brown and Graydon Carter shining the spotlight on the issues of luxury, Hollywood and power elites. Radhika Jones, who had taken over as editor of Vanity Fair after the end of Graydon Carter's 25-year tenure, had announced her resignation on April 3, stating that she felt "the call of new goals in life" and "horror at the idea of staying at the party too long."


Fashion Network
11-06-2025
- Entertainment
- Fashion Network
Mark Guiducci new global editorial director of Vanity Fair
Lateral shifts in the world of glossy publishing: Vanity Fair has found its new editorial director within the same Condé Nast group in Mark Guiducci, hitherto creative editorial director of Vogue. Guiducci, 36, will take over the helm of the prestigious culture magazine later this month, picking up the baton from Radhika Jones, who ran the magazine for seven years. "There's never been a better time for Vanity Fair than now," said the incoming editor. "Every morning you read news that reads like operas, large-scale dramas, like a co-production between Marcel Proust and Michael Bay." Unlike his predecessors, Guiducci will be global editorial director: that is, he will have oversight over Vanity Fair's editions around the world, including those in Britain, France, Italy and Spain. Despite the difficulties in publishing in recent decades, Vanity Fair remains one of Condé Nast's flagship titles, and its editorship is still considered one of the most coveted roles in American journalism. Founded in the Jazz Age and relaunched in 1983, the magazine has had iconic editors such as Tina Brown and Graydon Carter shining the spotlight on the issues of luxury, Hollywood and power elites. Radhika Jones, who had taken over as editor of Vanity Fair after the end of Graydon Carter's 25-year tenure, had announced her resignation on April 3, stating that she felt "the call of new goals in life" and "horror at the idea of staying at the party too long."


Fashion Network
11-06-2025
- Entertainment
- Fashion Network
Mark Guiducci new global editorial director of Vanity Fair
Lateral shifts in the world of glossy publishing: Vanity Fair has found its new editorial director within the same Condé Nast group in Mark Guiducci, hitherto creative editorial director of Vogue. Guiducci, 36, will take over the helm of the prestigious culture magazine later this month, picking up the baton from Radhika Jones, who ran the magazine for seven years. "There's never been a better time for Vanity Fair than now," said the incoming editor. "Every morning you read news that reads like operas, large-scale dramas, like a co-production between Marcel Proust and Michael Bay." Unlike his predecessors, Guiducci will be global editorial director: that is, he will have oversight over Vanity Fair's editions around the world, including those in Britain, France, Italy and Spain. Despite the difficulties in publishing in recent decades, Vanity Fair remains one of Condé Nast's flagship titles, and its editorship is still considered one of the most coveted roles in American journalism. Founded in the Jazz Age and relaunched in 1983, the magazine has had iconic editors such as Tina Brown and Graydon Carter shining the spotlight on the issues of luxury, Hollywood and power elites. Radhika Jones, who had taken over as editor of Vanity Fair after the end of Graydon Carter's 25-year tenure, had announced her resignation on April 3, stating that she felt "the call of new goals in life" and "horror at the idea of staying at the party too long."