Vanity Fair December 2015 : Bill Murray by Bruce Weber

This is a great cover, and so very Vanity Fair.
Not sure why some people here seem to lump this magazine in, with commercial high fashion titles. Vanity Fair is not, and has never been a fashion magazine.
People actually buy this magazine to read it cover to cover. Not flip through endlessly boring fashion editorials, featuring models no one gives a crap about.

I love VF, and have been subscribing to it for years. My biggest complaint with them lately, is Annie (one note) Leibowitz. She needs to go away.
 
Appealing to the hipsters I guess, don't really get why it's so cool to like Bill Murray righ tnow.
 
Given that I got my subscription copy yesterday... the UK version has 186 pgs, seemingly no supplement this month, the ads are mainly for jewellery and perfume.

The Vanities girl is Stephanie Sigman. Pieces about Donald Trump (there'll probably be one of those in every issue until the end of time), Carly Fiorina, whether it's wise to overdevelop Miami Beach, the dangers of airlines outsourcing major maintenance work, Bill Murray, a scandal at Stanford, an interview with Burt Reynolds as he's selling his possessions and properties, a jazz portfolio, and Annabel Astor.

If I judge the success of an issue of Vanity Fair by how inferior it makes me feel about my achievements in life, this one isn't working so well.
 
Given that I got my subscription copy yesterday... the UK version has 186 pgs, seemingly no supplement this month, the ads are mainly for jewellery and perfume.

The Vanities girl is Stephanie Sigman. Pieces about Donald Trump (there'll probably be one of those in every issue until the end of time), Carly Fiorina, whether it's wise to overdevelop Miami Beach, the dangers of airlines outsourcing major maintenance work, Bill Murray, a scandal at Stanford, an interview with Burt Reynolds as he's selling his possessions and properties, a jazz portfolio, and Annabel Astor.

If I judge the success of an issue of Vanity Fair by how inferior it makes me feel about my achievements in life, this one isn't working so well.

Finally!! Reviews for Vanity Fair as well. :flower:
I've not seen it on the newsstands yet, but even if I did this cover certainly makes me a bit hesitant. Just knew they'd go crazy with the amount of jewellery ads (it normally carries over to January as well).
 
I wish the Burt Reynolds piece was more in-depth, although it does contain a few shots from when he was in his prime, including the famous Cosmo one. This is from the BBC in 2012 (bbc.co.uk:(

Burt Reynolds nude: 10 facts about the Cosmo centrefold

It's 40 years since a nude Cosmopolitan centrefold of actor Burt Reynolds broke a taboo and launched a new era of women's magazine publishing.

"At last a male nude centrefold - the naked truth about guess who!!" screamed a banner on the front page. Cosmopolitan editor Helen Gurley Brown saw it as a victory for women whose "visual appetites" had been ignored by male magazine editors and proprietors.

It also boosted Cosmopolitan's circulation and turned Burt Reynolds into a 1970s sex icon. So what was the story behind the photograph?

1. It began on a TV show. Burt Reynolds was standing in for Johnny Carson as presenter of the Tonight show on NBC, and Helen Gurley Brown was his guest. "He was handsome, humorous, wonderful body, frisky," she told James Landers, author of a book on the first 100 years of Cosmopolitan . "During our conversation I asked him if he would pose for us." He agreed.

2. It could have been Paul Newman. Gurley Brown had approached him, before putting the question to Burt Reynolds, but he had refused.

3. It made Burt Reynolds into a celeb. The day after the magazine hit news-stands, he was mobbed by women asking him to sign their copy. Reynolds also noticed a change in the behaviour of theatre audiences from "polite to boisterous". "Standing ovations turned into burlesque show hoots and catcalls. They cared more about my pubes than they did about the play," he wrote in his 1994 autobiography, My Life. Gurley Brown said: "He had been a movie star, now he was a celebrity."

4. It made Cosmopolitan notorious. "At the time, you know, men liked to look at women naked. Well, nobody talked about it, but women liked to look at men naked. I did," Gurley Brown told Landers, who noted that the photograph pushed Cosmopolitan across a threshold, in the public mind, from a mainstream magazine "to a sex magazine".

5. It spawned Playgirl magazine. Douglas Lambert, owner of the Playgirl Club, decided to launch the magazine after seeing what a "winner" the Burt Reynolds centrefold was. "It came to me, that's what women want. If a woman says she wants to see a man's smile, his eyes, I say 'Don't lie to me,'" he was quoted as saying.

6. Reynolds chose the picture. A number of shots were taken. The choice of which would be published was left to the model.

7. The bearskin was a humorous touch. "I think that's probably a joke," says New York-based fashion portrait photographer Max Vadukul. "This is a very macho statement, a real bloke, full on, and totally confident," he says. He reckons Reynolds would have been happy going further, and removing the artfully placed arm from his lap.

8. You won't see this in 2012. It would be a tough photograph to take in 2012, Vadukul says, because of the "commodity factor" - the actor's publicists would be concerned about damage to his brand, among some members of the public. "It's a very modern picture, it would still be a very talkative picture. Who would be the equivalent of this guy - George Clooney? It's very far ahead of its time, from that period when anything goes, people swinging partners non-stop..."

9. The photographer was the celebrated Francesco Scavullo. Scavullo shot most Cosmopolitan covers over a 30-year period, and was involved in controversy again when he took photographs of a young Brooke Shields that some considered too sexual. He died in 2004, on the day he was due to photograph CNN anchor Anderson Cooper.

10. Arnold Schwarzenegger was the next but one centrefold. Cosmopolitan did not do these very often. It took two years for the next to appear, and Schwarzenegger made his appearance in 1977 . Another man to grace the centre pages was Scott Brown, now a Massachusetts senator, but in June 1982 a law student who had entered and won the magazine's America's Sexiest Man contest. He posed for the cameras days before his final exams.

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