Vanity Fair How do you think Lost will end?
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From world affairs to entertainment, business to fashion, crime to society, Vanity Fair is a cultural catalyst that drives the popular dialogue globally.
Vanity Fair Proof that it IS possible to look good on St. Patrick's Day! (Photos of Angelina Jolie, Cameron Diaz, January Jones, Mary J. Blige, and other fabulous females looking resplendent in green.)
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What is it about St. Patrick’s Day that prompts the most stylish among us to forget good taste and pull on an old chartreuse polo? Or clip on a Kelly-green tie? (Could it be an early-morning green beer?) Despite all the evidence on Ireland’s proudest day, it is possible to wear the color well. ...
Vanity Fair Would you pay to watch an Iraq war movie at your local theater?
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From world affairs to entertainment, business to fashion, crime to society, Vanity Fair is a cultural catalyst that drives the popular dialogue globally.
Vanity Fair Congratulations to Christopher Hitchens, whose November 2007 column - about a fallen soldier whose decision to enlist had been influenced in part by Hitchens's own writings - has been nominated for a slot on NYU's Top Ten Works of Journalism of the Decade.
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Having volunteered for Iraq, Mark Daily was killed in January by an I.E.D. Dismayed to learn that his pro-war articles helped persuade Daily to enlist, the author measures his words against a family's grief and a young man's sacrifice.
Vanity Fair
Should soldiers be allowed to drink in combat as a means of stress relief?
http://www.vanityfair.com/online/daily/2 010/03/drinking-in-combat-zones-a-bad-id ea.html
www.vanityfair.com
From world affairs to entertainment, business to fashion, crime to society, Vanity Fair is a cultural catalyst that drives the popular dialogue globally.
Vanity Fair Congratulations to Mark Seal, Bryan Burrough, Michael Lewis, and the VF editors and staff for earning five National Magazine Award nominations. Here is Mark Seal's nominated article "The Man in the Rockefeller Suit."
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By snatching his seven-year-old daughter from her mother’s custody, after a bitter divorce, the man calling himself Clark Rockefeller blew the lid off a lifelong con game which had culminated with his posing as a scion of the famous dynasty. ...
Vanity Fair
Ingrid Sischy remembers Alexander McQueen.
http://www.vanityfair.com/style/features /2010/04/mcqueen-201004
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The suicide last month of designer Alexander McQueen was as confounding as many of the wunderkind’s couture shows. Was it prompted by drugs, health problems, or the death of his mother? Speaking to insiders, Ingrid Sischy learns that McQueen’s restless talent came with a price.
Vanity Fair Guests arriving at the 2010 Vanity Fair Oscar Party give us their best Oscar predictions.
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