I’ve subscribed to Vanity Fair for years. Years. Maybe twenty years. I had a roommate in college who subbed to it, and she described to me its wonderfulness, with pictorial spreads of Giorgio Armani clothing (I had to say, “Who’s that?” because I was so out of it) and gushing suck-up articles on celebrities, balanced with really wonderful and intelligent in-depth political and global work that was clearly being paid for by the pictorial spreads and gushing suck-ups. So be it.
During the oh-so-crucial shopping season of September through December, during which glossy magazines swell like so many Octomoms with their endless advertisements, Vanity Fair led me to invent a new verb, “to vanityfair,” which means, “to rip out the gigantic quantity of ads from the magazines, sometimes reducing its thickness by over a third.”
Every so often I’d say, “God, this magazine sucks, I have to stop getting it,” but then they’d have another article that was totally wonderful and unexpected and I’d start liking it again.
But they’ve done it. They’ve finally managed to get me off my ass and cancel my subscription.
Last month, they had Jessica Simpson on the cover. Why? I don’t know. The story was all about how she’s not fat, she’s gorgeous. I don’t know that much about her, and I knew when I first heard the “Jessica Simpson is fat” stories that they were all an attempt to get some attention and sympathy. To have Vanity Fair waste my time with that story made me go, “Oh, please, do we really not have any celebrities any more?”
(In fact, we don’t, not really. The reason we have Brad and Angelina on the checkout stand every week—well, maybe you do; thankfully, my supermarket does not have checkout tabloids, yay Lunardi’s—is that they are recognizable to a vast audience and have great crossover appeal. The great expansion of the entertainment infosphere through hundreds of channels and the internet and iPods and such has led to inevitable schisms of domain—now there are tons and tons of celebrities, all of whom are known to a smaller and smaller audience. Movies are targeted to extremely narrow audiences: the likelihood that anyone over the age of 35 knows the name Shia LaBeouf, let alone what he looks like or how to spell his name, is pretty damn low, which is why he was in that stupid Indiana Jones movie last summer.)
But no, it wasn’t even Jessica Simpson that did me in. It was their 87 millionth article in a row on the great travails caused by Bernie Madoff.
They could not say any louder that they are New York-centric; they couldn’t be any clearer that the magazine is designed to be read by people that range from the Upper West Side to the Long Island Expressway. They have lots of New York things and nothing else. It’s tiresome and incestuous, it really is.
I know Bernie Madoff did a very bad thing. But it’s really not Topic #1 everywhere in the country. It’s really not the most interesting thing to happen ever, you know?
No, apparently Vanity Fair doesn’t know, because in this month’s issue (possibly my last), there’s another goddamn Bernie Madoff article.
The obvious criticism, of course, is that Bernie Madoff is exactly the kind of uber-successful, high-flying financier that Vanity Fair has extolled and sucked up to for years. Their endless investigations of the criminality of the Bush years does not make up for their continual praise of the Bush gang while things were good. (Really bugged me at the time too.)
Anyhow, in case VF is wondering why they lost another subscriber, that’s why!
Nina says
hahaha so it is it a good thing or a bad thing that I don’t even know who Bernie Madoff is?
GO CA! we are not NY and damn proud of it!
Tamar says
Wait, people are living on the Long Island Expressway? Has housing really gotten that bad?
*ducking*
FWIW, I have a FB friend who’s always commenting on Madoff. She lives in West Hollywood. I don’t know if it’s NY-centric, though maybe it is. But it’s certainly rich-people centric.
Michele says
Hurricane Bernie has ripped thru LA. I’ve seen staff cuts of 50% at charities I’ve been associated with and program cuts to go along with it. And good, hard-working people have had to beg for financial aid from their kid’s school for the first time.
I have to confess, though, I haven’t heard anyone complain from Nebraska or Montana. Maybe Bernie was a geogracist.
Juventas says
I enjoyed the image of someone literally ripping ads out of a magazine and then continuing to read. Somehow I have managed to slowly and purposely remove most advertising that was in my life. I would never go back.
The television service was first, and easy. If I really want to watch a series or movie, I buy it on DVD. Other bits (like news events or interviews) I watch online. Unless you average more than an hour a day (who wants to?), it costs no more than the monthly subscription. It’s better than TiVo!
Radio was easy too. Music on the mp3 player, talk and news on public (commercial-free) stations. Internet, choose your favorite Firefox ad-blocking extension. Magazines, as you’ve mentioned, are trash anyway. I have yet to find a way to stop the billboards on the daily commute.
judybrowni says
Wow! Someone else who shared my (former) Vanity Fair addiction (right down to tearing out the ads, so that the damn thing wasn’t so glossy, bulky spenderific in my purse for public transportation.)
Insightful political pieces side-by-side with society murders of the past — yum.
And yup, the ongoing Bernie Madoff crap was the last straw for me, too.
You must be my evil twin or vice versa. Now that I’ve found your blog I will return.
Diane says
I actually manage to block most advertising out — at least, I think I do, at any rate. I am amazed that Google ads apparently work so well: I am never aware of them on the page. Maybe they’re working subliminally, but to the best of my knowledge, I’ve never clicked on one!
Oh noes! An evil twin! Welcome.