On the Shelf
Empire of the Elite: The Media Dynasty That Reshaped America
By Michael M. GrynbaumSimon & Schuster: 345 pages, $30If you purchase books linked on our website, The Occasions could earn a fee from Bookshop.org, whose charges help impartial bookstores.
“The means of glamour production were brought to the masses,” Grynbaum tells The Occasions in an interview happening after Wintour’s announcement. “If you look at TikTok and Instagram, a lot of people are re-creating the status fantasies that Condé Nast was notorious for: the real estate tours of somebody’s mansion that are right out of Architectural Digest, or the fit check and outfit of the day that ascended from GQ, Vogue and Glamour.”
When Si took over as chairman of Condé Nast in 1975 — after which purchased the New Yorker in 1985 — he set about to change into a form of outsider’s insider, obsessive about standing and the nice life and decided to form a group of magazines that represented aspirational dwelling. And he insisted that his most dear staff stroll the stroll. To work on the firm at its peak was to dwell extravagantly by a journalist’s requirements.
Grynbaum, who writes about media, politics and tradition for the New York Occasions and grew up studying Condé Nast magazines, was struck arduous by that extravagance. “I was writing about magazine editors who had 24-hour town car service, limousines that would drive them around to their appointments, wait outside at the sidewalk while they ate a giant lunch at the Four Seasons restaurant, and it all got expensed back to Condé Nast,” he says. “Empire of the Elite” is laden with comical examples of privilege. Certainly one of my favorites: the Vogue editor who “charged her assistant with the less than exalted task of removing the blueberries from her morning muffin; the editor preferred the essence of blueberries, she explained, but not the berries themselves.”
Writer Michael M. Grynbaum, who writes about media for the New York Occasions, was struck by extravagant expense account spending at Condé Nast.
(Gary He)
The Condé Nast glory period actually kicked off within the Eighties, as conspicuous consumption swept by the land. “The idealism of the 1960s was yielding to the materialism of the 1980s, a new preoccupation with the navel-gazing, ego-stroking life,” Grynbaum writes. However a lot of Newhouse’s method now looks as if customary working process. When he purchased the New Yorker, a set-in-its-ways journal with a restricted readership and articles that would take up half a difficulty, it had largely turned up its nostril on the thought of soliciting new subscribers. He tapped Tina Brown, a brash Brit then serving as Self-importance Truthful editor, to run the journal in 1992. This set off tradition clashes that resonated all through the business — and yielded some piquant anecdotes.
For instance: Some on the journal have been aghast when Brown assigned Jeffrey Toobin to cowl the O.J. Simpson homicide trial, a topic they noticed as beneath the journal’s requirements. Critic George W.S. Trow truly resigned, accusing Brown of kissing “the ass of celebrity culture.” Brown responded that she was distraught, “but since you never actually write anything, I should say I am notionally distraught.”
Newhouse, who died in 2017, made FOMO enjoyable. It ought to be famous that he additionally helped create Donald Trump. GQ featured him on its cowl when he was, as Grynbaum writes, “a provincial curiosity”; of extra consequence, Newhouse, because the proprietor of Random Home, got here up with the thought for “The Art of the Deal,” the 1987 Trump enterprise manifesto ghostwritten by journal journalist Tony Schwartz.
Wintour has been a strong power within the Condé Nast machine; her turning over the day by day reins of U.S. Vogue indicators much more change for an organization that has seen loads of it. “I think it is an acknowledgment on her part that she won’t be around forever, and that there needs to be some kind of succession plan in place,” Grynbaum says. “It’s amazing how much the influence and power of Vogue is predicated on this one individual and her relationships and her sway.”
Condé Nast isn’t what it was once, as a result of print isn’t what it was once. Like so many legacy media corporations, it hemorrhaged cash because it proved sluggish to regulate to the digital revolution. At instances “Empire of the Elite” reads like an ode to the sensuous expertise of studying a high-quality shiny journal, and questioning who may be on subsequent month’s cowl and what (or who) they’ll be sporting. Condé Nast nonetheless means high quality. However the age of empire is usually over.