
Inside the lavish Condé Nast life: Mirrors to make staffers look slimmer, competing for free Hugo Boss suits — and Anna Wintour's wasteful lunch
While the new location was only two blocks from the former headquarters, there were concerns that Times Square was seedy — and too far from a beloved upscale Italian restaurant, Mangia, from which staffers liked to order pricey grilled eggplant. There were also worries about whether the closet space in the new offices would be large enough to contain everyone's designer coats.
11 Anna Wintour and SI Newhouse attend a book party in 1990.
Getty Images
Advertisement
To boost enthusiasm for the move, Newhouse and Condé's then editorial director James Truman had an idea: They would build an elaborate cafeteria for employees.
The resulting dining area wasn't your standard feeding frenzy space. Newhouse hired star architect Frank Gehry to design it. The venue, rumored to cost as much as $30 million, featured 39 cozy banquettes — the better for gossiping. Seventy-six panels of Venetian glass glittered from the ceiling. And the pièce de résistance? The distorted mirrors on the columns were specially designed by Gehry — to make employees look thinner
11 The legendary Condé Nast cafeteria featured mirrors that made employees appear thinner.
Brian Zak/NY Post
Advertisement
'It was a very witty architectural gesture … that encouraged performance, and made people look and feel good,' Truman says in the new book, 'Empire of the Elite: Inside Condé Nast, the Media Dynasty that Reshaped America,' by Michael M. Grynbaum (Simon & Schuster; out today).
Grynbaum portrays the lavish spending at Condé Nast during its magazines heydays in the '80s, '90s and early aughts — and the jaw-dropping displays of excess enjoyed by editors including Vogue's Anna Wintour and Vanity Fair's Graydon Carter.
'[Newhouse] empowered his editors to fuel his new American fantasyland, urging experimentation and extravagance that competing publishers balked at and could not compete with,' he writes. '[His] billions funded an operation where sizzle and status often mattered more than breaking even.'
In 1989, famed photographer Annie Leibovitz was supposedly hesitant about renewing her contract with Vanity Fair and asked for a $250,000 raise. Newhouse told the magazine's then editor-in-chief, Tina Brown, to go along with it, saying 'Don't nickel and dime her.'
Advertisement
11 Staffers initially weren't enthused about the headquarters moving to 4 Times Square.
New York Post
Alan Richman, a writer who started covering food for GQ in 1986, recalls going to Tokyo for two weeks in 2008 for the magazine. Upon returning, he filed an expense report for $14,000, prompting an editor to ask: 'Is that all?'
Even more over-the-top, the magazine paid for Richman to travel to Milan and Florence for the Italian menswear shows, even though he didn't cover fashion. His role? To select wine that would suit GQ's editor, the late Art Cooper, when he entertained Italian advertisers.
In NYC, Cooper was known to spend lunch holding court in his dedicated booth at the Grill Room of the Four Seasons, where he would enjoy a martini and a very pricey bottle of Italian wine. It wasn't uncommon for the tab to more than $500, but no matter, it was charged straight to Condé.
Advertisement
'[Newhouse] liked his editors to live the upper-class-lifestyle they pedaled,' Grynbaum writes. 'He didn't have to tell Art Cooper twice.'
11 A new book looks at Condé Nast's heyday and the lavish life top editors enjoyed.
Cooper even borrowed a million bucks from Condé to buy a second home in Connecticut, where he'd host staffers for summer getaways, sometimes pitting them against each other on the tennis court. One winner was awarded a Hugo Boss suit.
Other top editors, including Carter and Wintour, also got favorable loans from the company to buy homes.
Spending lavishly was the norm. Editors jetted to Europe on the Concorde and stayed at five-star hotels. Those who booked cheaper lodging were chastised.
Staffers also dipped into petty cash and took limos all around town on the company dime.
Grynbaum writes of editors, some of whom had dedicated drivers, using company cars to pick up Chinese takeout or go to the chiropractor — and 'at least one' assistant who made use of the tony transportation for a drug run.
11 Arthur Cooper, the late former Editor-in-Chief at GQ, was known for his extravagant taste in wine and $500 lunches at the Four Seasons.
FilmMagic
Advertisement
'As Si explained it,' he asserts, 'Condé did not have to answer to shareholder, and it was important to keep valued employees happy.'
And the big spenders had the smallest details of their lives catered to.
Carter, who served as Vanity Fair's editor-in-chief for 25 years, had an assistant meet his car each morning and carry his briefcase to his office, so that he could stroll through the lobby unencumbered. At the end of the day, the assistant would transport the briefcase to the car, after the editor asked, 'Will you do the honors?'
Another key task for Carter's assistants was traveling ahead of him to prepare his suite at lavish hotels, stocking the desk with the same pencils and ashtray that the had in the NYC office.
Advertisement
Wintour, who recently shifted from Vogue's editor-in-chief to global editorial directorial, had to have her daily cappuccino perfectly timed. She had a standing lunch reservation at the Royalton, where a restaurant staffer would start making the drink 10 minutes ahead of her planned arrival, in case she was early. If the drink sat out for more than two minutes, it was tossed out, and a new one prepared.
11 Graydon Carter would have an assistant carry his briefcase from his town car to his office so he could walk through the lobby unencumbered.
Corbis via Getty Images
Sometimes Wintour ran so late that, a former employee at the Royalton told Grynbaum, as many as 12 cappuccinos might be made to get the timing just right.
Wannabes looking to work at Condé, meanwhile, had to clear a high society bar for entry.
Advertisement
In the mid-1990s, those applying for an assistant job at Vogue faced an oral exam where they had to identify, on the spot, various people, places and elements of culture high and low, from a typed list of 178 entries.
'The ideal candidate would recognize Fassbinder as the New German Cinema director, Evan Dando as the lead singer of the Lemonheads, the Connaught as the luxury London hotel, and the opening sentence of Proust's 'Swann's Way,'' Grynbaum writes.
Once in, those from common backgrounds sometimes had to be schooled to behave more like privileged WASPs and British aristocrats.
11 Photographer Annie Leibovitz (pictured with Carter) was known for her extravagant, expensive shoots.
Getty Images for Vanity Fair
Advertisement
'I had to learn how to speak like a Condé Nast person,' Jennifer Barnett, a Navy brat-turned-Teen Vogue editor, told Grynbaum. 'You never say anything to anyone directly.'
When Carolyne Volpe arrive as a beauty assistant at Vogue in her early 20s, her boss told her there was already a Caroline at the magazine — and said she should go by her given first name, Lynden, instead, though no one in her life had ever called her that.
'She thought it was a chicer, more unique name, which it probably is,' Volpe says in the book.
When employees were fired, it was handled with upper crust stealth.
Alex Liberman, the publishing company's legendary editorial director, had a strategy where he would pop into someone's office just before going home time, gently touch their arm or shoulder and say something like, 'May I be frank, they're going to fire you tomorrow.' He'd then make a point of telling the person he wanted to keep in touch and arrange a lunch date, on the spot, for a few weeks out — somewhere fancy but public.
11 Anna Wintour with Newhouse (left) and designer Karl Lagerfeld attend the 'Seventh on Sale' event in 1990.
Getty Images
Photo shoots could be especially over-the-top and wasteful.
Numerous samples of pricey baubles from Cartier were smashed for Irving Penn to get the shot just right. In the 1960s, Vogue editor-in-chief Diane Vreeland had Irving Penn reshoot an elaborate fashion spread not once but twice because the shade of green wasn't just right.
In 1988, a Vogue team spent weeks in Kenya for a disastrous shoot featuring Kim Basinger in safari garb. Twenty-three trunks of clothes had to be shipped to Africa, and falcon was hired for the actress to hold — as her designer heels sunk into the mud and she feared it would attack her face.
The following year, Tina Brown, then the editor-in-chief of Vanity Fair, had Leibovitz shoot 2,500 rolls film and fly 41,000 miles around the world— in first class, of course — to create a high-wattage portfolio of stars of the decade.
11 Wintour looked glam at a Fashion Week event in 1990 with designers Gianna Versace (from left), Karl Lagerfeld and Christian Lacroix.
Getty Images
Eventually, the purse strings had to be tightened.
In 1996, the Wall Street Journal reported that nine of Condé's 14 magazines were unprofitable, and that the company had lost some $20 million in the fiscal year ending in 1994.
Still, there was optimism.
In 2007, Condé launched Portfolio magazine, with a reported $100 million behind it. Tom Wolfe was reportedly paid a whopping $12 per word to write a 7,400-word story for the new project.
Its first sentence, which would have netted Wolfe more than $200? 'Not bam bam bam bam bam bam, but bama bampa barama bam bammity bam bam bammity barampa.'
11 Anna Wintour became co-chair of the Met Gala in 1995 and transformed the event into one of fashion's biggest nights.
Getty Images
'We are the top-end publisher and it has served us well and I believe it will stand the test,' Charles Townsend, the CEO of Condé, said at the time. But, as Grynbaum notes, 'it didn't.'
The final nail in the coffin was when Portfolio editors rented a live elephant for a photo shoot. A threatening pachyderm standing over a banker at a desk was meant to convey that credit derivatives were the 'elephant in the room' in the banking world. The magazine abruptly folded in 2009, in the depths of the recession, after two profitless years.
Newhouse passed away in 2017 at age 89. That same year, the company was reported to have lost more than $120 million.
11 An elaborate photoshoot for Portfolio magazine put a real elephant in a financial office environment to illustrate the idea that credit derivatives are the 'elephant in the room.'
Condé Nast Portfolio
Two years prior, Condé Nast had left Times Square for 1 World Trade Center, where Self, Glamour, Teen Vogue and Allure were all reduced to online-only editions. Details and Lucky were shuttered.
As Carter wrote earlier in his own book, 'When the Going Was Good,' earlier this year, 'You never know when you're in a golden age. You only realize it was a golden age when it's gone.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


New York Post
2 hours ago
- New York Post
Chris Russo reveals police were called on him during international travel meltdown: ‘What a disgrace!'
Everyone's got some nightmare travel stories, and for Chris Russo, he aired out his most recent disaster for more than 10 minutes straight during his 'What Are You Mad About?' segment of ESPN's 'First Take' on Wednesday. The man known as 'Mad Dog' took a recent vacation to Europe, which included a few fiascos, including one in which he had police called on him while he threw a rage fit in London. Russo's trip began with a JetBlue flight out of JFK en route to Edinburgh. 'You want to fly to Scranton, P.a.? Jet Blue is for you!' Russo yelled. 'You want to fly to something a little more elaborate like to freakin' Edinburgh? What a disgrace! They kept people on that plane 'til 1:44 in the morning and threw them the hell out of there!' Russo was headed to Dornach, Scotland, for some father-son golfing. Russo's son, Tim, had to go from Phoenix to Dallas to London to Inverness — and then drive to Dornach, Switzerland. Tim's golf clubs got a bit lost in the shuffle. 'It took me two and a half hours to locate the clubs at Heathrow. They didn't know where they were!' Russo ranted. 'My son needs the golf clubs for crying out loud! Couldn't find them. We finally found the golf clubs. I had the ticket stub, I put Timmy on FaceTime. 'Timmy, will you tell the people here that the golf clubs are yours and your father, who paid for them, wants to take them out of the airport so I can get you your clubs the next day?' They wouldn't let me take the clubs out of Heathrow! 3 Chris Russo's trip began with a canceled flight. First Take/ESPN 'So Timmy's clubs had to stay at Heathrow overnight and he didn't have his golf clubs on Saturday because British Airways…wouldn't give it to his father!' Russo continued. 'Here's their answer, 'It's protocol, sir.' I'm not interested in protocol! I'm interested in the 5 iron! I am not interested in that! And they called the police on me! I'm a loud American! 'We're gonna get the authorities.' I don't give a crap about authorities, get the golf clubs where they're supposed to be!' 3 Chris Russo's travels continued to get worse. First Take/ESPN 3 Chris Russo ranted for more than 10 minutes about his international travel troubles. First Take/ESPN Russo managed to avoid any sort of arrest or detainment, playing his cards right when they arrived. 'Almost,' he said when asked if he got arrested. 'The cops came, I said, 'I'll be okay, calm down.''
Yahoo
4 hours ago
- Yahoo
Emma Watson Banned From Driving for 6 Months. Here's Why
Beloved actress Emma Watson took a lenghty break form the public eye before making a surprise appearance at Cannes earlier this year. In a social media post from 2023, Watson explained her decision to break away from Hollywood life. 'Going into my 30s, I was in this moment of real change and [thinking] 'What is going on?',' she told Vogue in a 2023 interview. 'And it was someone else who said to me, 'Oh, this is normal. You're going through your Saturn return.' [I was] like, 'What is that and why has no one warned me?!' I've spoken to so many women and so many of my friends who said, 'Oh, yeah, between 28 and, like, 30, 31, 32, that kind of age, everything shifted.'' She hasn't acted in a film since 2019's Little Women and doesn't seem to have a problem with stepping away. 'Because I'm in a career that moves very quickly, the decision to take time to do these things felt like a very big decision,' she admitted. '[Choosing] to go back and write and study and get behind the camera was terrifying for me because I'd never done it before. I had always been in front of the camera; I'd always been an actor.' While she's moved away from the public eye, her life is still very much in the headlines. On Wednesday, July 16 news broke that Watson was banned from driving in the United Kingdom for six months because of a relatively minor driving error. The Harry Potter star received the six-month driving ban nearly a year after being caught going 38 mph in a 30 mph zone in Oxford, England, on July 31, 2024. According to the BBC, Watson, 35, already had nine points on her driver's license before the incident, and was ordered to pay a fine of £1,044 ($1,396) at High Wycombe Magistrates' Court Wednesday. Watson reportedly didn't attend the court session, but her lawyer, Mark Haslam, told the court that she is a student, adding: "She is in a position to pay the fine." Watson is currently working on her master's degree in creative writing at Oxford Watson Banned From Driving for 6 Months. Here's Why first appeared on Men's Journal on Jul 16, 2025 Solve the daily Crossword

Miami Herald
5 hours ago
- Miami Herald
Iconic restaurant chain turns to TV in comeback attempt
Every classic American sitcom has a signature hangout spot seen in multiple episodes. Whether a coffee shop or a diner, these places have a nostalgic air and familiarity that remind us of our own lives. Founded in 1965 in New York City, this restaurant became that real-life go-to staple where families could gather, share a meal, and connect after a hectic day. Don't miss the move: Subscribe to TheStreet's free daily newsletter TGI Fridays was that beloved place - even its name stands for everything it represented. But in 2024, the chain quietly began closing locations nationwide, citing a desire to boost growth by shedding underperforming restaurants. Related: Bankrupt restaurant chain offers new deal, stiff drink However, there was more to this move than meets the eye, because the company filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy in November of that year. TGI Fridays was $37 million in debt but secured financing, which allowed the remaining 85 restaurants to proceed with regular operations. Image Source: TheThe restaurant chain is now looking for new ways to boost business after losing market share to its rivals, and it's hoping a beloved TV network will entice customers. TGI Fridays has partnered with Warner Bros. Discovery's (WBD) Turner Broadcasting System (TBS) to launch "The Flavor Show," a new limited-time promotion at participating locations nationwide. More Food News: Popular chicken chain is begging customers to give it another chanceChick-fil-A offers free food to game-playing fansAfter big cuts, Starbucks' menu gets 'secret' new additions TBS manages nostalgic networks including TBS, TNT, and Turner Classic Movies. To capitalize on that vibe, the TBS Trio is a massive platter of tots, boneless wings, and sliders (or TBS - get it?) served over fries, all for $15. This new offering is big enough to share. But that's not all. TGI Fridays is also releasing a new summer menu with exciting additions focusing on innovation and trends. Specialty drinks have become all the rage in the food industry due to the massive traction they have gained among younger generations. This has prompted major food chains to expand their offerings by launching new beverage options to remain relevant in a challenging market. TGI Fridays refuses to fall behind its competitors again, so it's expanding its beverage menu by introducing Dirty Sodas. These non-alcoholic beverages blend a soda base, like Coca-Cola or Dr. Pepper, with syrups, fruit, and cream. The restaurant chain is making these unique sodas even more fun and earning extra revenue by suggesting liquor shot pairings for $3 more. The new Dirty Soda pairings are Cherry Cream Cola with Jack Daniel's, Strawberry SZN with Malibu, Dr. Vibe with Hennessy, and Dirty Sunshine with Tito's Vodka. Related: Bankrupt restaurant chain makes bold comeback in surprise market Additionally, TGI Fridays is unveiling two more menu items in unexpected categories. The new Whiskey Buffalo Sauce, which mixes Whiskey-Glaze and buffalo sauces, was made for those who enjoy an extra kick in their food. For those with a sweet tooth, the Celebration Sundae features vanilla ice cream, butter cake, brownies, and strawberries, finished with whipped cream and topped with chocolate and caramel drizzle, sprinkles, and cherries. Related: Veteran fund manager unveils eye-popping S&P 500 forecast The Arena Media Brands, LLC THESTREET is a registered trademark of TheStreet, Inc.