Before ending its print edition,Watch Sex (1994) Part 1 Teen Vogue got in one last dream editor under the wire.
Hillary Clinton guest-edited the latest issue of the magazine, set to hit newsstands Dec. 5.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
"Have you ever noticed that whenever a teenage girl takes a stand on an important issue, people seem surprised?" Clinton wrote in a letter from the editor.
"That’s why, when the brilliant Elaine Welteroth invited me to edit this issue, I jumped at the chance. Teen Voguetakes teen girls seriously and understands that style and substance aren’t mutually exclusive. I love seeing articles about the search for the perfect makeup remover next to essays about running for office (I have strong opinions on both topics, but we’ll get to that later). Teen girls are a powerful force for good in the world, and it’s refreshing to see that reflected in these pages."
Along with Clinton's letter from the editor, the issue features a letter from Clinton to her teenage self. Welteroth, Teen Vogue's usual editor, said that the issue would explore Clinton's "impact, her style, and her grace under fire."
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
"Some will say it’s too partisan, too political, too retrospective, too 'echo-chamber-y,'" Welteroth wrote in her letter from the editor. "This issue isn’t for them. It was designed for the millions who acknowledge that until women, girls, people of color, members of the LGBTQ community, immigrants, and the economically disadvantaged are on an equal playing field, we must hold space for these critical conversations."
Condé Nast said last week that Teen Vogue would end its quarterly print edition but maintain its thriving digital presence. The 13-year-old magazine is going out with a bang.
Just how hot is 'hot as balls?' One curious man found out.SpaceX launches and lands a brand new version of its Falcon 9 rocketDJI launches new drone Air 3 with dual cameras · TechNodeElon Musk promises Tesla robotaxis in August while denying reports about Tesla's future.Meta briefly blocked a local news organization critical of FacebookDiseases from mosquitos and ticks have tripled in the U.S., CDC finds'Monkey Man' review: Dev Patel's directorial debut is both exhilarating and rawNewly found Tasmanian devils are free from cancer ravaging the speciesX's AI chatbot Grok made up a fake trending headline about Iran attacking Israel'Immortal Life' fantasy farming sim adds trauma bonding to pastoral ideal, and I love itJD rebrands groupBest smart TV deal: Get the Insignia HD Fire TV for $90 at AmazonChappell Roan is the internet's new favorite pop starGWM’s EV unit ORA launches a new vehicle in Brazil · TechNode'Ripley' vs. 'The Talented Mr. Ripley': The tiny change that makes a big impactNow you can see China's solar power boom from spaceWhere to find solar eclipse glasses on sale: Amazon and more deals to stay safe on April 8Alibaba DAMO Academy’s senior researcher, Shen Jiaxiang, resigns · TechNodeiPhone 16: This rumored design change could mean more screen real estateJD rebrands group An Evening at New York’s New Playboy Club by Laura Bannister We Tell Ourselves Stories: Didion’s “White Album” Takes to the Stage by Daniel Penny On Edmond Baudoin, an Ink The Moral of the Story by Anthony Madrid Staff Picks: Potters, Porridge Bowls, and Pastries as Existential Truths by The Paris Review Building a Monument: An Interview with Natasha Trethewey by Lauren LeBlanc On Uwe Johnson: Poet of Both Germanys by Damion Searls The Draw of the Gothic by Sarah Perry Time Warps Are Real and What You Should Do About It by Anthony Madrid Poetry Rx: I Was No Good at Survival by Kaveh Akbar Redux: James Merrill’s Ouija Board by The Paris Review Coveting Cartier Necklaces and Celtic Torques at the Met by Julia Berick Scenes Dealing with Walking Dead, Torture, Vampires by The Paris Review What Our Contributors Are Reading This Fall by The Paris Review Cooking with Bohumil Hrabal by Valerie Stivers No One Has a Monopoly on Death Becoming Radicalized: An Interview With John Wray Political Fiction: Unraveling America at a West Wing Fan Convention Ugliness Is Underrated: Ugly Fashion by Katy Kelleher A James Salter Dinner Party by Valerie Stivers
1.9491s , 10107.4140625 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Watch Sex (1994) Part 1】,Openness Information Network