Emmy Nominations 2018: Who Won and Who Lost Before the Awards
TV critic Sonia Saraiya and senior writer Joanna Robinson on the pleasant surprises of this year’s Emmy nominations—and the shows that were cruelly overlooked.
TV critic Sonia Saraiya and senior writer Joanna Robinson on the pleasant surprises of this year’s Emmy nominations—and the shows that were cruelly overlooked.
Weinstein’s lawyer called his client’s sit-down with The Spectator columnist “a social meeting between old friends” and “not an interview.”
Scarlett Johansson drops out of Rub & Tug. “I’ve learned a lot,” Johansson says, of backlash to her casting as a trans man.
To kick off his trip to the U.K., the president engaged in some good, old-fashioned dog-whistling. “I think you are losing your culture,” he told a British tabloid. “Allowing millions of people to come into Europe is very, very sad.”
The singer braved an all-leather look on a warm New York day.
The president’s three-country European tour has been NATO’s worst nightmare, weakening the alliance and empowering Russia. “This meeting confirmed that Trump barely knows the politics, if even the geography, of Europe,” one foreign diplomat said. “Diplomacy has become a sadly hilarious affair with him.”
Thank you, Russia and Facebook, for gaslighting a century of transatlantic peace and hegemony.
Gaming out the latest SCOTUS hijinks and pre-summit jitters on the latest episode of V.F. Hive on Cheddar.
Marc Smerling and Zac Stuart-Pontier, the team behind Crimetown and The Jinx, explain how Kennedy’s death changed the shape of America forever.
The monarch has met 11 of the 12 U.S. presidents who have served during her reign.
The Little Gold Men team gathers to dissect the surprises, snubs, and thrilling inclusions.
Talks with China have “broken down,” and the administration has no strategy for resolving the disaster of its own making.
Nothing but the best for Bieber’s gal.
Trump is set to meet Putin alone, with no agenda, no talking points, and no constraints. Diplomats expect disaster.
Facebook says it can’t get rid of a conspiracy-theory site, but will penalize it by showing its posts to a smaller audience. That doesn’t seem to align with its philosophy of community.
An infusion of joy—and Bruce Willis’s sleeveless undershirt—keep this action classic going hard, even after 30 years.
Blake Lively’s in menswear, Anna Kendrick’s a mommy blogger, and Paul Feig’s tapping into his dark side.
And yes, we will see Jack in Vietnam—as well as Jack and Rebecca’s first date.
V.F.’s Rebecca Keegan's HWD Weekly newsletter.
Sarah Palin, Dick Cheney, Joe Arpaio, Roy Moore, and more of the irrepressible prankster’s Who Is America? targets.
The balloon made its presence known over Parliament Square this morning.
The First Lady is really coming into herself far away, across the ocean.
The movie will begin shooting this summer—and yes, even Maggie Smith will be there.
The Mission: Impossible star came under fire for saying that he’s scared to approach women for fear of “being called a rapist or something” in light of the ongoing sexual misconduct reckoning.
After spending hundreds of hours watching kids on YouTube, Bo Burnham created a female protagonist with the film’s star, Elsie Fisher.