Anna Wintour Doesn't Look Back
Briefly

Anna Wintour Doesn't Look Back
"On the morning after Labor Day, Anna Wintour, who has been the editor-in-chief of American Vogue for the past thirty-seven years, gathered her staff and, with a sense of occasion and pride, handed over the job to a sharp, funny, and independent-minded protégé named Chloe Malle. Not that Wintour was retiring: she remains the editorial director of all the Vogue editions throughout the world—and there are twenty-eight of them—and the chief content officer of Condé Nast, which owns both Vogue and The New Yorker."
"At a time when most people cannot name the editor of a major metropolitan newspaper any more reliably than they can name the king of Belgium, Wintour has iconic status well beyond the realms of fashion or journalism. At Wimbledon or the U.S. Open, when the camera cuts to her between points, viewers know who she is. No chyron needed."
Anna Wintour transferred the day-to-day editorship of American Vogue to Chloe Malle after thirty-seven years leading the magazine. Wintour retained the role of editorial director for twenty-eight international Vogue editions and serves as chief content officer of Condé Nast. Wintour maintains a high public profile that extends beyond fashion and journalism, recognized at major public events without need for identification. Wintour values decisiveness and a clear editorial vision, and she approached the leadership transition with pride and a sense of occasion. The change signals continued evolution at Vogue under established global oversight.
Read at The New Yorker
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