| LINDSEY UNDERWOOD,
SENIOR EDITOR |
|
|
Things are getting spooky in the run-up to Election Day—or at least they were at a Halloween party in Bushwick, Brooklyn, last night hosted by Hot Girls for Zohran, a grassroots organization that works independently from the New York City mayoral candidate’s official campaign. VF’s Olivia Empson went to the party (in a Labubu costume) and encountered one Mamdani supporter dressed as a Tylenol bottle and another as the candidate’s proposed rent freeze! |
“Charli xcx.” A bottle of Tylenol. And (at least) one accidental crasher. VF’s Olivia Empson has the full party report: “I wish to banish Cuomo to Florida.” |
|
|
A new biography of Oscar winner Joan Crawford disputes the popular narrative: “There was never a feud because it takes two to tango and I refuse to fight.” |
Charlie Kirk’s longtime friend and momfluencer Allie Beth Stuckey devoted a recent episode to the horrors of the season, which she calls “a high holiday for the satanic church” that’s also dangerously intertwined with “LGBTQ pride.” |
The murder mystery has haunted pop culture for over a century—here, VF breaks down seven more potential suspects, according to Borden experts. |
|
|
For more than a century after Jack the Ripper became one of history’s most feared and famous murderers, his identity remained a mystery. Then in 2001, on a tour of Scotland Yard, a best-selling American crime novelist met a leading British authority on the Ripper.
In an excerpt from the resulting book, Patricia Cornwell reveals how she and other investigators used state-of-the-art forensic science, including DNA tests, to make the case that the serial killer who terrorized Victorian England was the handsome, gifted young artist named Walter Sickert. |
|
|
|