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From the Archives: David Bouley’s Thanksgiving 1994 Menu
Fashion

From the Archives: David Bouley’s Thanksgiving 1994 Menu

by jummy84 November 23, 2025
written by jummy84

“Haute for the Holidays,” by Jeffrey Steingarten, was originally published in the November 1994 issue of Vogue.

For more of the best from Vogue’s archive, sign up for our Nostalgia newsletter here.

Today we celebrate the two hundredth anniversary of the most famous turkey in Franco American culinary history. I refer, of course, to the bird shot in October 1794 in the wilds of Connecticut by the great French gastronome and magistrate Jean-Anthelme Brillat-Savarin. For three years Brillat-Savarin had taken refuge from the French Revolution in an America of Edenic plenty, of sweet corn, squash, persimmons, and pumpkins, of lobsters and oysters and inexhaustible game—venison and turkeys, quail and geese, canvasback ducks and passenger pigeons, whose flocks covered the rivers and darkened the autumn skies.

“While I was in Hartford, in Connecticut, I had the good luck to kill a wild turkey,” he writes in his immortal Physiology of Taste (M.F.K. Fisher’s translation). “This deed deserves to go down in history, and I shall recount it all the more eagerly since I myself am its hero.” He and a friend, Mr. King, rode out from Hartford on two hired nags and by nightfall arrived for dinner at their host’s farm, five leagues—15 or 20 miles—away. Brillat-Savarin, Mr. King, and their host dined on stewed goose, a handsome piece of corned beef, a magnificent leg of mutton, and root vegetables of all kinds. At each end of the table were enormous jugs of excellent cider, and their host had four fine and radiantly healthy daughters, aged 16 to 20, whom Brillat-Savarin admired at every turn.

The next morning, Brillat-Savarin and Mr. King set out for the hunt. “I found myself for the first time in my life in virgin forest, where the sound of the axe had never been heard.” He wandered about with delight. “First of all we killed some of those pretty little grey partridges which are so plump and so tender. Then we knocked down six or seven grey squirrels, highly thought of in [America]; and finally our lucky start led us into the midst of a flock of wild turkeys.” As the turkeys rose into the sky, Mr. King fired first, missing entirely and scattering the rest. But one laggard turkey, lazier than the others, took flight just ten paces from Brillat-Savarin. “I fired at it through a break in the woods, and it fell, stone dead.” Mr. King claimed to have hit a turkey too, but even his dog, leading them deep into boundless woods and impenetrable thickets, could not find it. Hopelessly lost, they were finally rescued by the silvery voices of their host’s young daughters.

November 23, 2025 0 comments
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From the Archives: The Gorgeous Miss Piggy
Fashion

From the Archives: The Gorgeous Miss Piggy

by jummy84 November 9, 2025
written by jummy84

“The Gorgeous Miss Piggy,” by Leo Lerman, was originally published in the March 1978 issue of Vogue.

For more of the best from Vogue’s archive, sign up for our Nostalgia newsletter here.

Watch out Barbra, Liza, Divine Miss M., Ann-Margret. Here’s Miss Piggy. Her game: world show-biz center stage take-over. “All these men,” she smolders, “they want me…” And women and children—they all want her to sing, dance quip, flip her glorious hair., and lust after hr unrequited passion, Kermit the Frog, on Jim Henson’s The Muppet Show: probably the most-viewed TV show in the world. They’re even bonkers about it in Iron Curtain Yugoslavia. When onscreen time in Britain was scheduled for early Friday evening (weekend shopping, pub, commuting), the populace near-rioted until it was switched to Sunday evening (everybody ‘round the “telly” and cheering). “I know,” murmurs Miss Piggy throatily, lowering her heavily lashed, lavender-painted eyelids coyly over her burning eyes and settling her snout demurely. “Thank you. But, after all, I’ve always believed that I was destined to become a superstar.”

Miss Piggy’s obviously lived a great deal, and although Kermit the Frog’s her “love of my life,” she’s had, reveals Frank Oz, “Well, not affairs but dalliances. When she recently danced, sang, and shared a steam bath with Rudolf Nureyev on a Muppet Show, she went bananas over him. She calls him ‘Rudi-baby.’ Well, she wouldn’t mind having a dalliance with him. Ringo Starr sent her roses. Elton John didn’t want to get involved with her, but he was really involved.”

In the onscreen-this-month TV-er Julie Andrews: One Step into Spring, Miss Piggy hogs the show. “I wouldn’t have minded so much,” says Miss A., “except that throughout the show Miss Piggy kept telling me I was singing flat.” “Well, she does go on forever with her songs,” says The Piggy, “and, frankly, she needed help. I merely offered to replace her.” Miss Piggy loves to help. Her advice to other girls: “I’m strong as an ox, but I’m not a relative. I do have a health regime, and the basis of it is: whatever exercises I can do on high heels. Beauty? I think I’m a natural blond, and I would suggest very strongly that you think so, too. My eyes are so beautiful—it’s a curse. My fashion advice? Wear what suits you. Luckily, everything suits me. I happen to be very fortunate. Everything I put on looks beautiful. But don’t ever try to look prettier than me—it’s futile.”

November 9, 2025 0 comments
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Albania Propaganda Archives Reveal a Passion for the Cinematic
TV & Streaming

Albania Propaganda Archives Reveal a Passion for the Cinematic

by jummy84 November 2, 2025
written by jummy84

Roland Sejko’s doc “A State Film,” culled from a vast archive of official footage made under the regime of Albanian strongman Enver Hoxha, is a fascinating study in the power of image and myth.

Screened in the main competition at the Czech Republic’s primary annual nonfiction film event, the Ji.hlava Intl. Documentary Film Festival, the compilation of carefully constructed images for the masses contains much to unpack, says Sejko.

“I’ve been working for several years with propaganda film archives — first with Istituto Luce Cinecitta, and also with the archives of the Albanian communist regime,” Sejko says. “Both contain thousands of films created to construct a political narrative, often with striking cinematic ambition.”

The genre is one Sejko explored in his previous film, “The Image Machine of Alfredo C.,” screened in 2021 at the Venice film fest. That film tells the true story of an Istituto Luce cameraman who filmed Mussolini and fascist propaganda, and, eventually, the head of communist Albania.

“It was a hybrid film, but during its making I realized that the vast Albanian film archive — and the central figure of Enver Hoxha — had never been narrated exclusively through their own images.”

So Sejko, as a professional archivist and head of the editorial department for Italy’s Cinecitta Luce, set about analyzing and curating from the decades of state propaganda films.

“The Albanian propaganda newsreels and documentaries clearly bear the mark of Eastern Bloc cinematography,” Sejko says. “The first Albanian camera operators were trained by Soviet masters — starting with Roman Karmen, the legendary chronicler of revolutions and wars.”

“There was never a manual for the propaganda cameraman, no written rulebook for how to film a regime. Yet something invisible governed their images. A First of May parade filmed in communist Albania looks strikingly similar to one filmed in Moscow or Bucharest or Sofia in the same years.”

Indeed, the images of cheering worker heroes and dancing girls in traditional folk garb seen in “A State Film” are hauntingly familiar.

Spanning the post-WWII years, with Albanians urged to “obey and execute the laws of the government” while honoring heroes’ bloody sacrifices, the footage makes clear Hoxha’s devotion to Stalin and Yugoslavian dictator Josip Broz Tito.

Outsize portraits of all three are hauled down endless streets as crowds of obligatory fans parade their wheelbarrows, shovels and carbines. Praises are sung for industry while defensive bunkers, of which Hoxha build hundreds of thousands, withstand test blasts, proving their readiness to stand up to decadent imperialist forces from the West.

Dogs and guinea pigs are sacrificed, presumably to test exposure to potential gas attacks.

And all the while, there’s always another rousing patriotic song for the peasants to sing.

“It is not just the cameraman’s technique that creates this resemblance,” Sejko says. “It is the vision of the world being shown: always the same choreography of collective joy.”

That said, as audiences take in “A State Film,” they begin to perceive that the images have been somehow distilled. Then they may notice the soundtrack, with the original heavy-handed narration replace by the sounds of the breeze in trees, birds chirping and feet tramping unpaved roads.

“In official propaganda films — newsreels, documentaries, parades — the narrator’s voice was not descriptive but prescriptive: it told viewers what to think. Replacing it with another commentary, even a critical one, would have meant repeating the same mechanism.”

“So I removed not only the voice but the whole original soundtrack, keeping only what was real — applause, songs, speeches. I built a new, realistic soundscape with footsteps, murmurs, creaks, silences, as if the scenes had been recorded live. This new texture restores the images’ physicality and opens a space where sound itself becomes a narrative tool.”

Add to this the intercutting of footage from Hoxha’s personal archive, showing moments away from the cheering masses, invariably featuring drives in the dictator’s favorite black Mercedes, and a striking contrast emerges.

These motifs take on a symbolic value, according to Sejko, and suggest the loneliness and isolation of power. “A State Film” raises the question of how forms of propaganda have changed, while also forcing uncomfortable realizations as to how many of the classic tropes are still being rolled out today.

“A State Film” has been described as demonstrating “how the archive is not just a repository of images, but a tool for interpreting and rewriting history.”

Indeed, the chilling parade of carefully staged scenes does seem to transcend the framework of national history, and, as the director says, explore the function of the image in the political sphere, and its ability to create collective memory.

November 2, 2025 0 comments
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From the Archives: The Fast—and Fashionable—Florence Griffith Joyner
Fashion

From the Archives: The Fast—and Fashionable—Florence Griffith Joyner

by jummy84 November 2, 2025
written by jummy84

“Go with the Flo,” by Stephanie Mansfield, was originally published in the April 1989 issue of Vogue.

For more of the best from Vogue’s archive, sign up for our Nostalgia newsletter here.

She streaked across our television screens in fuchsia and lime, all hair and lips and eyes with those nails; you would swear you were watching a Solid Gold dancer, not the winner of three gold medals in last summer’s Olympic games.

She is Flo-Jo, the fastest and flashiest ever to come out of the starting block. She can outrun O. J. Simpson, do three thousand sit-ups at a time, as well as partial squats holding 320 pounds, all without disturbing her ladylike pearl stud earrings, and still find time to stencil tiny palm trees and sparkling things on her fingernails. Blessed with speed and style and defiant sexuality, Florence Griffith Joyner has broken down the barrier between vanity and athletic prowess and is living proof that one needn’t cancel out the other.

“You can sweat and still look nice doing it,” says Griffith Joyner, taking time out from packing for a trip to Europe to talk about her eccentric fashion sense on the track and field, an arena where she sprints into home-stretch in a grape spandex one-legger under patterned bikini bottoms, her lips glossed a high raspberry sheen. “I love bright colors,” she says. “There’s a lot of energy there. The color fires me up.”

At twenty-nine, Griffith Joyner is disciplined and direct, with a girlish laugh and a voice currently undergoing diction lessons, the promise of lucrative film and TV offers looming in her future. (There are also acting and dialogue coaches.) Her hair is often a massive tangle of black curls, her nails are expertly polished, her huge brown eyes peer out from spidery lashes, and her skin is cocoa-butter smooth. On her left hand is a diamond ring on which Brian Boitano could do figure eights. And those legs! She has thigh muscles to rival the best in the NFL, and arms like two pump-action carbines. G.I. Flo.

As a child, growing up in the projects of Los Angeles, Griffith A Joyner liked to wear hair ribbons and play dress-up. Appearance was always important. Her mother insisted her hair be combed, her face washed, tier clothes pressed. She also became devoted to a succession of Barbie dolls. “We don’t just play with those dolls,” she reflects. “They have something to do with how we feel about life and how we look at other women.” Young Dee Dee, as her family called her, escaped the pain of poverty with a fantasy world of beauty and cosmetics. “I remember doing a lot of dolls’ hair. I destroyed a lot of dolls putting my mom’s hot curlers on them. I burned up so many of them.”

November 2, 2025 0 comments
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13 New Albums You Should Listen to Now: Tame Impala, Sudan Archives, and More
Music

13 New Albums You Should Listen to Now: Tame Impala, Sudan Archives, and More

by jummy84 October 19, 2025
written by jummy84

With so much good music being released all the time, it can be hard to determine what to listen to first. Every week, Pitchfork offers a run-down of significant new releases available on streaming services. This week’s batch includes new projects from Tame Impala, Sudan Archives, They Are Gutting a Body of Water, Silvana Estrada, Monaleo, Bar Italia, Ty Dolla $ign, Militarie Gun, Destiny Bond, Elias Rønnenfelt, Cusp, Jane Inc., and Suzie True. Subscribe to Pitchfork’s New Music Friday newsletter to get our recommendations in your inbox every week. (All releases featured here are independently selected by our editors. When you buy something through our affiliate links, however, Pitchfork earns an affiliate commission.)


Tame Impala: Deadbeat [Columbia]

October 19, 2025 0 comments
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Sudan Archives: The BPM Album Review
Music

Sudan Archives: The BPM Album Review

by jummy84 October 17, 2025
written by jummy84

The technology Sudan uses is scrappy, not cutting-edge—she employs a vintage toolkit of a Roland SP-404 and DAWs emulating the drum machines that defined 1980s Chicago house and ’90s Detroit techno. Collaborators include her twin sister, her cousins, and several friends from the Midwest. For all of its post-human imagination—Sudan’s alter-ago this time is “Gadget Girl,” a tech-augmented avatar—The BPM reaches deep into personal and cultural histories. Every few seconds, Sudan and her intimate cadre of producers jolt us from a 3 a.m. hypnosis with some acoustic or makeshift percussion over pounding kicks, a verse sliced with a breakbeat, or wordless, chopped-up backing vocals. The result is far more in touch with its feelings than its debaucherous veneer might suggest.

In the three years since her last album, Sudan broke up with a long-time partner. Having left behind both their shared house and the incense-scented bedroom atmospheres of her earlier oeuvre, Sudan reclaims herself and dance music’s confessional potential, merging Great Lakes hominess and booming arrangements that push toward the red. With the opening “Dead” and aching closer “Heaven Knows,” this is a breakup record that bleeds into the rebound period, smuggling liminality and angst inside a collection of bangers.

If The BPM sounds like the sort of album that might actually win over the mainstream, it’s also Sudan’s grittiest release, less pristine than the widescreen Natural Brown Prom Queen. And if that opus was sun-drenched, this is a wintry mix—all the more for its lyrical fantasies of fleeing to Costa Rica and Dubai. The bass is tectonic, the juxtapositions between short-lived melodies stark. Sudan’s violin parts are as rousing as ever, given breadth and texture by members of the Chicago string quartet D-Composed.

Yet she often tucks these accompaniments into the bridges, intros, and outros of songs, meaning they don’t provide the reckless release that they did in the past. Even an unexpected Irish jig in the center of “She’s Got Pain” only fuels The BPM’s pummelling energy, and later, “Ms. Pac Man” and the showstopping “Noire,” pull us into danker terrain. This dense, claustrophobic album is discomfitingly of the moment: Sudan’s characters sprint through these songs as though movement is a survival tactic, a way to push forward as the world presses down harder than ever.

All products featured on Pitchfork are independently selected by our editors. However, when you buy something through our retail links, we may earn an affiliate commission.

October 17, 2025 0 comments
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From the Archives: Victoria Beckham on Finding Her Life’s Passion
Fashion

From the Archives: Victoria Beckham on Finding Her Life’s Passion

by jummy84 October 12, 2025
written by jummy84

Like many women designers, Victoria approaches her work in a way that’s uniquely personal and subjective. “I’ve always had to make the best of what I’ve got,” she tells me. “I’ve never been a six-foot-tall, skinny model [she is five feet four], so therefore I want to create an illusion. People always think I’m taller than I am—not just because of the shoes I wear but because of the way I dress. It’s all relatively streamlined.”

When Victoria conceived her brand, “I wanted clothes—whether a pair of jeans or an evening dress—that I would wear myself. That’s the final test. Would I wear it? If I would, I put it out there, and if I wouldn’t, I don’t.” Her “sucky-sucky” dress is a case in point. “It gives [my customers] a little waist. It’s great on the boobs, it’s great on the bottom,” says Victoria, whose polished collections rap—if at times bordering on an infomercial—is worlds apart from those of designers who present inspiration boards and blind you with arcane references. “We spend a lot of time perfecting our fit,” she continues. “We spend hours obsessing over a shoulder. My aim is to create the perfect dress!”

Above all, Victoria’s approach is strictly pragmatic. “When a season goes well,” she says, “the first thing I think is, Oh, great, I can do another season. I’m very realistic. I’m creative—but women need to want to buy the dresses.”

During fittings (on the day I visit, for fashion, shoes, and handbags), Victoria is all-seeing. “I take opinions on board and digest it all. Think about it and then make the final decision,” she tells me. “I’ve got to believe in it. Otherwise, how can I expect other people to believe in it?” She can also be droll. During the shoe meeting, Victoria is judging the exact placement of straps on unfitted ankle boots that Christian Louboutin has made for her runway show. “I think it’s chicer with just the two. I think it looks a bit Puss in Boots with three,” she says, “a bit Mary Poppins. And if they’re going to do the cuff, it should be around the top—or they’re going to look like they’ve got cankles!”

October 12, 2025 0 comments
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The NY Archive's Gianna Corvino on Vintage Shopping Secrets and Designing Tate McRae’s Go-To Baby Tee
Hollywood

The NY Archive’s Gianna Corvino on Vintage Shopping Secrets and Designing Tate McRae’s Go-To Baby Tee

by jummy84 September 30, 2025
written by jummy84

Tate McRae might just be the coolest woman you know — and part of that is thanks to Gianna Corvino, founder of The NY Archive.

The vintage collector and designer is behind McRae’s coveted pony hair zebra Fendi heels, as well as the singer’s go-to baby tee. Now, she’s telling ET how she does it all.

“Growing up on the Upper East Side in New York City, girls had Chanel backpacks at age 16 and luxury goods were everywhere. Instead of giving in to that pressure, my mom kept me grounded and let me borrow from her closet. I didn’t even realize I was wearing vintage at the time, I just knew I felt amazing slipping into her old BCBG dresses or my dad’s leather jackets,” she explains.

Tate McRae/Instagram

What started as raiding her parents’ wardrobes evolved into a global treasure hunt. Today, Corvino scours everything from Paris flea markets to Upstate New York estate sales, sourcing standout pieces for herself, McRae, Lily Rabe, and more.

“The right piece doesn’t just complete an outfit, it helps you stand apart, whether it’s on a red carpet or just on your way to work. … It’s part intuition, part obsession. I’m constantly looking for pieces that spark something in me,” she says.

Among her personal favorites: Manolo heels, embroidered Christian Lacroix gowns, crochet Blumarine separates, colorful Dior tops, and beaded Fendi baguettes.

John Nacion/Variety via Getty Images

For anyone embarking on their own vintage mission, Corvino suggests starting with a strong sense of personal style.

“Once you know yourself, finding the right pieces becomes effortless. It takes a little trial and error but drawing inspiration from things you love like old movies, magazines, or even art can really help,” she notes.

If you want an extra hand, Corvino offers one-on-one appointments at her curated showroom in New York City.

Tate McRae/Instagram

“I love doing private sourcing and styling sessions at The NY Archive HQ. … I wanted the vibe to be the opposite of a retail store and more like an elevated version of playing dress-up or walking into your most stylish friend’s apartment. It’s a fun, intimate, and nostalgic space.”

Staples you can’t leave without? Worn-in Levi’s, a leather bomber jacket, cowboy boots, ballet flats, and a pre-loved watch. To level things up, Corvino says it’s all about adding the right graphic tee.

“A baby tee is such a simple piece, but the right one can completely shift your look, like wearing your personality on your sleeve, literally. … The NY Archive designs are funny, playful, cheeky, and a little girly. … They land somewhere between the nostalgia of the Justice tees we all grew up with, Rachel McAdams‘ iconic graphic tank while playing Regina George in Mean Girls, and Dior tops from the early 2000s.”

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September 30, 2025 0 comments
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From the Archives: The Early Days of Andre Agassi and Steffi Graf
Fashion

From the Archives: The Early Days of Andre Agassi and Steffi Graf

by jummy84 September 7, 2025
written by jummy84

“Meeting Your Match,” by Dodie Kazanjian, was originally published in the August 2004 issue of Vogue.

For more of the best from Vogue’s archive, sign up for our Nostalgia newsletter here.

From their hilltop estate in Tiburon, Andre Agassi and Steffi Graf can look across the bay and see San Francisco preening itself in the sun, while one tower of the Golden Gate Bridge rises magically above a puffy cloud bank. The tennis world’s royal couple—the most spectacular example of a marital merger between two number-one athletes—have spent the whole morning being photographed for Vogue. In their mid-30s, tanned and fit, they both project the silky, contained energy of great athletes, athletes who, though blissfully young by ordinary standards, are already considered old in their chosen profession.

The most dominant woman player of her time, Steffi won 22 Grand Slam titles before she retired in 1999, at the age of 30. This July, she was inducted into the International Tennis Hall of Fame in Newport, Rhode Island. Andre has won eight Grand Slams so far, but at the astonishingly advanced age (for tennis) of 34, he could yet win another. Tennis is increasingly a young man’s game these days, and the odds against Agassi are daunting, but it’s still too early to count him out. His phenomenal comeback is already a tennis legend. In 1997, having slipped to 141 in the rankings, he remade himself through an all-out regimen of rigorous physical training; by 1999, he was number one in the world, and he’s been at or near the top ever since, winning the Australian Open last year and more than holding his own against the newest generation of power hitters. “I have an insane amount of respect for him,” Andy Roddick said recently. “The way he competes—he treats every match like it’s Armageddon.”

Andre, his coach Darren Cahill, his lawyer and close friend Todd Wilson, and Gene Marshall, a Las Vegas friend who is also helping him train, are barreling over the Golden Gate Bridge in Andre’s Lincoln Navigator, with me following anxiously in my rented Pontiac, trying to keep them in sight. Andre, who drives with the same speed and confidence he brings to the court, is headed for the Olympic Club in San Francisco. He’s getting ready for the French Open, which starts in two weeks, and he needs to practice on a clay surface like the ones at Roland Garros. His own court in Tiburon has a hard surface, and there aren’t any clay courts in Las Vegas, his real home, in good enough shape. We park on the road above the tennis courts at this famous club, whose golf course has often been host to the U.S. Open. For the next hour and a half, Darren feeds him backhands and forehands, and Andre rockets them back, clipping the lines in the corners, grunting vigorously on every shot. “That’s great tennis,” Darren says more than once. (Not great enough, apparently; in the weeks after my visit, Agassi got knocked out in the first round at the French Open and two other European tournaments—the first time since August 1997 he’s lost three straight opening-round matches—and then withdrew from Wimbledon, citing a hip injury.) But Andre is not entirely happy with his game today. His rhythm is a little off, he says, and the surface is too powdery.

September 7, 2025 0 comments
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