Category Archives: Headline Shooter

What does Men’s Vogue have to do with anything?

Men who tuck things in

This, for starters. Cathy Horyn in the Times, on who might be reading this fun-sounding if rather unfortunately titled new magazine:

The articles Fielden commissioned—a number of them from New Yorker writers such as John Seabrook, Nick Paumgarten and Michael Specter—suggest a robust appetite for a literate, adventuresome life. There is a profile of the painter Walton Ford, who each summer takes a 250-mile walk from his New England front porch to his printer’s; a feature called “Life Studies” that opens with a photographic portrait of John Currin in his studio; an article and fashion spreads about the English obsession with weekend shooting parties; a look at Roger Federer and the contents of his tennis bag; and a feature on the New York town house that the architect David Chipperfield designed for Nathaniel Rothschild. There are front-of-the-book pieces on wine, cell phones equipped with GPS tracking systems and a quirky piece by Jeffrey Steingarten about his favorite meat slicer.

Seriously, I want you to find one man in the world who’ll say the words “Men’s Vogue” neither campily nor homophobically nor ironically. Still, I’m all for hearty metrosexuality, passé though it may already be. Give a man a haircut and a decent sweater, I’ve always said, and fish will suddenly remember how much they enjoy bicycling.

W! a-s-h! i-n-g! t-o-n, baby, D.C.! surmises

Steve Coll, future staffer?
The busy Steve Coll.

This Washingtonian news flash is courtesy of Jossip; all two links are mine:

Washington Post Newsroom Abuzz With Rumor of Coll’s Departure for New Yorker

The DC thermometer was in the nineties all week, but what was really heating up the Washington Post newsroom was talk that former managing editor Steve Coll is packing up his files and moving to the New Yorker.

Comments ranged from “done deal” to “working out the details” to “the Post is fighting to keep him.”

Coll was in Saudi Arabia to cover the king’s death and the transition. Executive editor Leonard Downie Jr. did not return a call for comment.

The decibel level inside the Post newsroom gave the rumor credence far beyond idle chatter. Most Posties think Coll is out the door.

If true, it’s a big and surprising loss.

A two-time Pulitzer Prize–winning reporter, Coll rose quickly to become managing editor and probable heir to Downie’s job as the paper’s top editor. Downie chose Coll as his lieutenant in 1998; Coll stepped down from the number-two job last year to devote himself to writing.

During his 6 1/2 years as managing editor, Coll seemed more passionate about writing than about managing. He crusaded for better writing on page one; he encouraged writers to produce narratives. He had a large hand in meshing the operations of the newsroom with those of Washingtonpost.com.

But he never seemed to warm up to spending the hours in meetings that are required to run a bureaucracy as large as the Post’s. Reporters respected his abilities as a writer and editor, but many say he also never took the time to connect with the rank and file.

Downie is said to be disappointed by the prospect of Coll’s departure. Downie chose Coll as a partner, and he did not want Coll to step down last year.

Coll came to the Post in 1985. He covered Wall Street and the Securities and Exchange Commission in the late 1980s, during the era of corporate takeovers and junk-bond titans. He shared a Pulitzer in 1990 for his coverage of the SEC.

In 1989 Coll became the Post’s South Asia correspondent. He covered India, Pakistan, Afghanistan, Nepal, and Sri Lanka from New Delhi. He returned to Washington and edited the Post’s Sunday magazine before moving up to managing editor.

Coll won the 2005 Pulitzer in nonfiction for his book Ghost Wars, a “secret” history of the CIA in Afghanistan. Shortly after winning the prize, he shocked the newsroom by stepping down as managing editor.

He took the post of associate editor and began working on more long-term writing projects.

Coll is expected to return to Washington next week, when the details of his departure likely will be confirmed.

The New Yorker plans to open new offices in downtown DC in September. Coll would join Jeffrey Goldberg, who writes the Letter from Washington, investigative reporter Seymour Hersh, Margaret Talbot, Jane Mayer, and Elsa Walsh in the magazine’s Washington bureau.

Unless, of course, the Coll move turns out to be just an overheated rumor.

Steve Coll: In Shadow of Terror, a Year of Decisions: Essays on Election-Year Ties in Afghanistan, Pakistan and the U.S. [NPR; audio from Coll’s three-part series on All Things Considered and Ghost Wars excerpt]

Chicken?

If Michael Specter’s February story on avian flu and the accompanying online Q. & A. scared the feathers off you, Lawrence K. Altman reorts a provisional breakthrough in today’s Times: Avian Flu Vaccine Called Effective in Human Testing. Only thing:

The director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, Dr. Anthony S. Fauci, said that although the vaccine that had undergone preliminary tests could be used on an emergency basis if a pandemic developed, it would still be several months before that vaccine was tested further and, if licensed, offered to the public.

“It’s good news,” Dr. Fauci said. “We have a vaccine.”

But he cautioned: “We don’t have all the vaccine we need to meet the possible demand. The critical issue now is, can we make enough vaccine, given the well-known inability of the vaccine industry to make enough vaccine?”

Say what you will about bake sales and bombers; I’d like to see the amount of money spent worldwide on developing ways to kill and injure people vs. what’s being spent trying to save them. I have no idea how it’d compare. I’m just wondering.

To Create a Vaccine, a Virus is Tweaked, Then Replanted [Altman’s sidebar, NYT]

You might as well live

From a Llewellyn Journal profile:

Migene González-Wippler is a cultural anthropologist and has worked as a science editor for the American Museum of Natural History, The American Institute of Physics, and the United Nations in Vienna. She has written over 20 books about religion and mysticism, the latest being Keys to the Kingdom: Jesus & The Mystic Kabbalah, which reveals the interrelationship between kabbalah and Christianity. For instance, Spain was the birthplace of the first kabbalists, as well as many noted Jewish mystics and theologians; the body of Jesus’s teachings is essentially kabbalistic; and the structure of the Lord’s Prayer uncannily reflects that of the Tree of Life, a central kabbalah concept. Devout and skeptical readers alike will find much food for thought in Gonzalez-Wippler’s clear-eyed yet sensitive analysis.

[LJ:] Why do you love to write?

[MGW:] I don’t love to write. Writing is one of the most agonizing experiences a human being can have. It’s like giving birth. I write because I must. It is a compulsion, a driving need. I’m only at peace when I am writing. And like Dorothy Parker, I love having written.

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He’s on fire

Twenty-first-century role model Hugo posts an engaging interview with Bruce Springsteen in the Guardian, in which interviewer Nick Hornby writes:

A Long Way Down was fuelled by coffee, Silk Cuts and Bruce (specifically, a 1978 live bootleg recording of ‘Prove it all Night’, which I listened to a lot on the walk to my office as I was finishing the book). And Springsteen is one of the people who made me want to write in the first place, and one of the people who has, through words and deeds, helped me to think about the career I have had since that initial impulse. It seems to me that his ability to keep his working life fresh and compelling while working within the mainstream is an object lesson to just about anyone whose work has any sort of popular audience.

I can’t imagine this piece running in an American newspaper. Why is that?

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Dad: John Roberts, dangerously quiet

A judicious warning about Supreme Court nominee John Roberts from my esteemed father, in TPMCafe’s Supreme Court Watch:

All the indications are that he will become another vote to expand presidential power in national-security affairs, to limit the federal government’s authority to regulate business and the environment and protect civil rights, to make it harder for women, minorities, labor and the disabled to pursue practical remedies in the courts, and to favor a larger role for religion in public life and as object of public subsidy. He is most likely to do this incrementally, case-by-case, rather than by sweeping new doctrines…. Roberts will be very hard to challenge, because all Bush’s choices were bound to be bad and this one could have been much worse. More.

Roberts Was Involved in Florida Recount (not in a good way) [Eric Umansky]

The Round Table’s round numbers

From the Rocky Mountain News via the NY Post (they say; I can’t find the link):

ON THE BLOCK: The Denver real estate investment firm Miller Global Properties has put New York City’s famed Algonquin Hotel up for sale, according to an item in the New York Post. Miller Global, headed by Myron “Micky” Miller, one-time partner of former Denver oilman Marvin Davis, is asking “in the neighborhood of $60 million to $70 million,” according to the Post.

The Algonquin was the home of the historic round table that hosted the likes of Dorothy Parker, George S. Kaufman and Robert Benchley.

A phone call to Miller Global was not returned on Monday.

A $10,000 Martini at the Algonquin Hotel [John Ridley for NPR; text and audio]