Despite the shot that's on the front, Chris is fully clothed inside, so maybe it's just a month where a man gets to flash the flesh on the cover, instead of the usual semi-dressed starlet.
I'm looking at the UK version, which is 122 pgs. There's a gatefold Gucci ad behind the cover (with tigers), plus 4 pgs Chanel with Arizona, the Bottega Veneta ad with Lauren Hutton, Prada with Jessica Chastain - but it's mostly ads for watches and the suchlike.
The Vanities girl is Matilda Lutz, I see Erik Madigan Heck is releasing a book of his work, and there's a short look at the media circus that was coverage of the US election, before diving into the Trump articles proper. "Trump's reality-distortion field made Steve Jobs's look like a modest test-drive."
One article is about the hunt for discrediting material about Trump, such as out-takes from The Apprentice. The next piece is about someone seeing young people's reaction to the election result, and how Trump's life could be re-imagined as a game of consequences (or lack of them, in some cases). Apparently there really was a Trump edition of Monopoly.
The Chris Pratt feature looks like it has no substance whatsoever. There's a profile of sisters Ivanka and Tiffany Trump, and what they've both done so far in life, then an article about Donald Trump Jr and his brother Eric. Then there's a look back at how Trump got his hands on the Palm Beach mansion, Mar-a-Lago, which feels more like a classic VF article about the rich and famous, rather than the magazine grinding a political axe.
Leaving Trump behind for a few pages, we move on to the tussle over Peggy Guggenheim's Venetian art collection, an elitist bookshop in London, and the last interview with society columnist "Suzy", or Aileen Mehle, who "was about to turn 96 when we embarked on this article, three years older than Wikipedia had her".
So a slim issue, but still with enough (non-Trump) articles to make me look forward to reading my subscription copy.