the daily front row

48
&Discuss Collect Inside! Feast or Fashion FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 7, 2012 JEAN-GEORGES VONGERICHTEN & REID KASTYN

Upload: daily-front-row-inc

Post on 18-Mar-2016

218 views

Category:

Documents


1 download

DESCRIPTION

The Daily Front Row

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: The Daily Front Row

&discussCollect

Inside!

feast or fashion

Friday,SEPTEMBEr 7, 2012

jEan-gEorgES vongErichTEn & rEid kaSTyn

Page 2: The Daily Front Row

Gotham (Book)FONTS: COLORS: Cyan Magenta Yellow Black Die Line/Notes

12-208 DAILY FRONT ROW 0907 MR1.INDDDOCUMENT NAME:

84.75%

COPY/PROOF READ: None LAST MODIFED: 8-2-2012 4:44 PMTRIM: 21.5" x 13.5"

Glenn SettyMODIFED BY:

Kelli Karshner

22" x 14"

Jocelyne LeskoACCOUNT MANAGER:

PRINT PRODUCTION:

DESIGNER: AR New York

PRODUCTION ARTIST: Glenn Setty

LASER SCALE:

...F12 AIRPORT:F12 AIRPORT MECHANICALS:12-208 PRINT MECHANICALS:12-208 DAILY FRONT ROW 0907 MR1.INDDFILE PATH:

PUBLICATION DAILY FRONT ROW UNIT/SIZE SPREAD INSERTION DATE 09.07.12

GUTTER: 0.5"

BLEED:

LIVE: 21" x 13"

285812AD21f100_09_034.jpg, 285812AU14f100_07_032.jpgIMAGE CODE:

Melissa WilliamsonPROJECT MANAGER:

08.29.12DUE TO PUB:

SCALE: 100%

289361bar02DlyFrtRw df

C M Y K

bananarepublic.com

1888BRSTYLE

Live: 21"

Live: 13"

Trim: 21.5"

Trim: 13.5"

Bleed: 22"

Bleed

: 14"

F:10.75" F:10.75"

PACIFIC DIGITAL IMAGE • 333 Broadway, San Francisco CA 94133 • 415.274.7234 • www.pacdigital.comFilename:

Colors:Operator: Time:

Date:289361bar02DlyFrtRw.ps_wf02Cyan, Magenta, Yellow, Black

SpoolServer 17:46:5412-08-02

NOTE TO RECIPIENT: This file is processed using a Prinergy Workflow System with an Adobe Postscript Level 3 RIP. The resultant PDF contains traps and overprints. Please ensure that any post-processing used to produce these files supports this functionality. To correctly view these files in Acrobat, please ensure that Output Preview (Separation Preview in earlier versions than 7.x) and Overprint Preview are enabled. If the files are re-processed and these aspects are ignored, the traps and/or overprints may not be interpreted correctly and incorrect reproduction may result. Please contact Pacific Digital Image with any questions or concerns.

Page 3: The Daily Front Row

Gotham (Book)FONTS: COLORS: Cyan Magenta Yellow Black Die Line/Notes

12-208 DAILY FRONT ROW 0907 MR1.INDDDOCUMENT NAME:

84.75%

COPY/PROOF READ: None LAST MODIFED: 8-2-2012 4:44 PMTRIM: 21.5" x 13.5"

Glenn SettyMODIFED BY:

Kelli Karshner

22" x 14"

Jocelyne LeskoACCOUNT MANAGER:

PRINT PRODUCTION:

DESIGNER: AR New York

PRODUCTION ARTIST: Glenn Setty

LASER SCALE:

...F12 AIRPORT:F12 AIRPORT MECHANICALS:12-208 PRINT MECHANICALS:12-208 DAILY FRONT ROW 0907 MR1.INDDFILE PATH:

PUBLICATION DAILY FRONT ROW UNIT/SIZE SPREAD INSERTION DATE 09.07.12

GUTTER: 0.5"

BLEED:

LIVE: 21" x 13"

285812AD21f100_09_034.jpg, 285812AU14f100_07_032.jpgIMAGE CODE:

Melissa WilliamsonPROJECT MANAGER:

08.29.12DUE TO PUB:

SCALE: 100%

289361bar02DlyFrtRw df

C M Y K

bananarepublic.com

1888BRSTYLE

Live: 21"Live: 13"

Trim: 21.5"Trim

: 13.5"

Bleed: 22"B

leed: 14"

F:10.75" F:10.75"

PACIFIC DIGITAL IMAGE • 333 Broadway, San Francisco CA 94133 • 415.274.7234 • www.pacdigital.comFilename:

Colors:Operator: Time:

Date:289361bar02DlyFrtRw.ps_wf02Cyan, Magenta, Yellow, Black

SpoolServer 17:46:5412-08-02

NOTE TO RECIPIENT: This file is processed using a Prinergy Workflow System with an Adobe Postscript Level 3 RIP. The resultant PDF contains traps and overprints. Please ensure that any post-processing used to produce these files supports this functionality. To correctly view these files in Acrobat, please ensure that Output Preview (Separation Preview in earlier versions than 7.x) and Overprint Preview are enabled. If the files are re-processed and these aspects are ignored, the traps and/or overprints may not be interpreted correctly and incorrect reproduction may result. Please contact Pacific Digital Image with any questions or concerns.

Page 4: The Daily Front Row

NINEWEST.COM

Y10263JOG_TheDaily_Rocker_v1 1 8/29/12 4:12 PM

Page 5: The Daily Front Row

NINEWEST.COM

Y10263JOG_TheDaily_Rocker_v1 1 8/29/12 4:12 PM

Page 6: The Daily Front Row
Page 7: The Daily Front Row
Page 8: The Daily Front Row

my day won’t come. it’s already

here.

i am generation

Page 9: The Daily Front Row

my day won’t come. it’s already

here.

i am generation

Page 10: The Daily Front Row

THE CUT LAUNCH PARTY

your daily dose

Candice Swanepoel

g e t t y ( 6 ) ; p at r i C k m C m u l l a n . C o m ( 5 ) ; b fa n y C . C o m ( 5 ) ; w h i t i m a g e S C o u r t e S y b r k ly n v i e w p h o t o g r a p h y

scene The drink of choice at The Cut’s launch party atop the NoMad? The “Hot Lips,” a Mezcal and jalapeño cocktail. Noshes included crab salad draped on massive lettuce leaves (too messy!) and halved radishes greased with what tasted like margarine and sprinkled with sea salt. ☛ Target brought out the first A-listers of the week to celebrate the new Shops at Target concept at Highline Stages. ☛ And! Brian Atwood’s bevy of beauties graced the Four Seasons Restaurant to toast his campaign and store. Even Nate

Berkus was there!

front row

The

Executive Editor Ashley Baker

Art Director Guillaume Bruneau

Managing EditorTangie Silva

Deputy EditorEddie Roche

Associate Editor Alexandra Ilyashov

Senior Fashion WriterMaria Denardo

Social Media DirectorAshley Tschudin

PhotographerGiorgio Niro

Deputy Art DirectorTeresa Platt

Senior DesignersPaul Morris, Sheila Prevost

Photo EditorsJessica Athanasiou-Piork,

Shane Cisneros, Catherine Gargan

Production & Distribution DirectorAllison Coles

Imaging SpecialistGeorge Maier

Copy EditorsJoyce Artinian, Joey Meyer,

Stefanie Schwalb

Production ManagerDel Pastrana

Imaging AssistantMegan Herlihy

Vice President, PublisherLouis A. Sarmiento

Advertising Director Maritza Smith

Marketing DirectorFred Miketa

Digital DirectorDaniel Chivu

Publishing AssistantAnjali Raja

Distribution ManagerShomari Hines

Distribution SupervisorsBen Woldoff, Nick Mathis

Brandusa NiroEditor in Chief, CEO

Retouched by an Angel!

WHAT IF… Cathy Horyn and Suzy Menkes switched coifs?

BRIAN ATWOOD STORE OPENING

rumor Debunking! with ryan lochte how’s your line coming?We haven’t started it yet. I want to do men’s apparel and accessories. We’re trying to get it up as soon as possible. That’s why I’ve been going all over the place!how’s life post-olympics?It’s been a whirlwind. I haven’t been able to sit down and relax.

breakfaSt break! with adam moss what’s your best dish?I can make eggs—scrambled, with a little bit of cheese and butter. I can also boil water; I’m good at that. I can make coffee, too. So I make breakfast, basically—morning, noon, and night!

getting SlimeD! with Coco rocha

what’s your least fave food?Anything slimy! Clams, squid, —I’m not adventurous.

has anyone ever tricked you into eating something crazy?A few days ago I went to a meal and was trying to be impressive. I said, ‘Oh, I eat anything!’ Then the eel came out and I was like, ‘Forget it.’ now that you live in westchester, how do you nab a good train seat?I get a window seat on the side with the best view, facing the direction I’m going. No motion sickness!

Chatting! with rachel Zoeyou and brian are besties!We’re in love with each other. We are everything but married. feeling good about your show?Nervous as hell, for sure!

there have been rumors lately that your brand isn’t selling…It’s so funny because my business has

beaten expectations and grown exponentially!

KARDAsHIAn ALeRT! After gracing the Atwood bash, Kim also hit the DuJour launch party, making [literally] a two-minute appearance at Capitale for photo opps with Jason Binn and Russell

Simmons—separately.

heidi klum

whit Spring 2013

FA S H I O N W E E K DA I LY. C O M

michelletrachtenberg

rodger berman

brian atwood

alice temperley

lindsay ellingson

R U N W AY : F I R S T V I E W On THe cOveR: Reid Kastyn shot by Giorgio Niro; Styled by Shane

Dress: Oscar de la Renta; Jewelry: H. Stern; Shoes: Manolo Blahnik

the ShopS at target launCh baSh

Sarah easley, mary alice Stephenson, beth buccini

hailee Steinfeld and brooklyn Decker odin’s paul

birardi and eddy Chai

Jessica Chastain

To advertise, contact: Louis Sarmiento, (212) 467-5875,

[email protected]

The Daily Front Row is a Daily Front Row, Inc. publication. Copyright 2012©. All rights reserved. Reproduction with-out permission is strictly prohibited. Requests for reprints must be submitted in writing to: The Daily, Attn: Tangie

Silva,135 West 50th Street, 4th Floor, New York, NY 10020. Printed by Vanguard Printing, LLC., William Sherman.

DAILY FRONT ROW, INC.

Cisneros; Hair and makeup by Aeriel Payne/Contact NYC;

Page 11: The Daily Front Row
Page 12: The Daily Front Row

your daily dose

p at r i c k m c m u l l a n . c o m ( 1 0 ) ; b fa n y c . c o m ( 8 ) ; d r i n k : c o u r t e s y b e lv e d e r e ; b e a u t y : c o u r t e s y m ay b e l l i n e n e w y o r k

FA S H I O N W E E K DA I LY. C O M

scene Leave it to Oscar to start the week off right. The legend was honored with the FIT Couture Council's Artistry of Fashion Award, and he brought his nearest and dearest to celebrate over lunch at Lincoln Center. ☛ Much further downtown, Ben Watts celebrated his new collaging app WattsUpPhoto for the Android’s HTC phone with models, muses, and even sis Naomi at Milk.

MEGA Lashes!Another new way to keep your eyes looking bright: Maybelline New York’s MEGA PLUS by Volum’ Express Mascara. This new gel-mousse formula has 40% less hard waxes for plump lashes with supple volume, and the new Flexor Brush technology works two ways to lift and caress each lash. Expect lashes that are totally full, but also noticeably soft—and for just $7.77! It’s in stores now!

Ever ended up with three pairs of YSL cage booties in your closet…and you only really need deux? Enter Julie Wainwright, who decided to merge consignment with flash sales in her brilliant new ecommerce site, TheRealReal.com.what’s the concept?I founded the site because I love to shop consignment, but I only love really beautiful designer items. It was too much work to go store by store, and it was too hard to con-sign as well. What if you could shop 24/7 at the best possible luxury consignment store…on the Internet? All the competitors who have launched after us have been fo-cused on lower-end merchandise, but the brands we sell—Hermes, Dolce & Gabbana, Gucci—should be displayed in a way that speaks to their integrity. How much merchandise have you sold, personally, on the site?Well, I’ve made over $20,000 in a year, just from things that for one reason or another, I no longer needed.what’s the process?Our consigners clean their closet at regular intervals, and we have sales merchandise managers in every single major market. Just email us at [email protected]. If you have 10 or more items, we can send someone over to work with you and clean out your closet, or New Yorkers can just leave it with their doorman! We’ll move your things to the New York Warehouse, and we’ll notify you when they will be put in a sale. If we price things right, they’ll sell in the first 15 minutes. We’ll have 10 to 15,000 people looking at the sales when they first go live. Some people consign, buy on the site, and re-consign! We’re like a mini-ecosystem.

Are you worried about those over-worked, underfed models? Fear no more! Walgreens is taking over the cafes at Milk and offering up fresh sandwiches, fruit cups, and more to showgoers and mannequins alike. It will also cater all shows and presen-tations happening there with yummy treats from “Nice!” and “Good & Del-ish” brands. Save us some snackage!

DRInK OF THe DAILY!Desperate to unwind? Join the club. Here’s your idea du jour:Belvedere Blossom Mule2 oz Belvedere Vodka¾ oz lime juiceDash simple syrupDash Angostura Bitters

Get tHerealreal!

ATTenTIOn, sHOPPeRs:

I live in the best country that a man can live in and the best city in the world. We have the best mayor that the city has ever had. I’m so proud to be here today with so many of my friends. I can’t name them, but they know exactly who they are.—Oscar de la Renta

Oscar is more than just a fashion luminary...He’s something much more, and I am his biggest fan. —Mayor Bloomberg

Oscar’s FIT Bash

Joe Zee and robbie myers

sarah Jessica parker

dree Hemingway at the watts bash

lisa Hoenshell

martha stewart

Jeanann williams, Zanna roberts rassi, and Jenne lombardo

andy cohen miv watts

and chelsea leyland

r

nina Garcia

linda fargo and iris apfel

barbara bush

and Jenna bush

Hager

donna karan

MODeL MUsInGs!

“I love Ben. He’s one of the first

photographers that I met. We just

have too much fun! All his pictures

are very colorful. I love color, why

am I wearing all black tonight?”

—Alessandra Ambrosio

constance Jablonski

HUNGRY? Help is Here!

BEN WATTS Bash

ROCK ALERT!Meatpacking District haute spot Beaumarchais is hosting an exhibition of work by photographer Mick Rock from September 3-15—and don’t forget to drop by the Beau Lounge, a pop-up/gifting suite open from noon to 5 p.m. from September 10-12.Plus! On September 13, don’t miss Fergie’s Wet & Wild party.

alessandraambrosio

benwatts

Page 13: The Daily Front Row

Now Playing In Select Theatres

Facebook.com/ForAGoodTimeCall#ForAGoodTimeCall

Lose your hang-ups.Find your calling.

WATCH THETRAILER AT

ForAGoodTimeCallMovie.com

HILARIOUS, SMART, FRESH

AND FULL OF HEART!

A deft balance of raunchy humor and delightful charm.”

SCOTT MANTZ,Access Hollywood

DAILY FRONT ROWFRI 9.710-75x13-75 NSall.fgt-10-75x13-75-4c.0907.dfr

Page 14: The Daily Front Row

jean-georges dishes itOUt With THE DAILY!

Want a taste?

appealCritical

He’s one of the biggest names in food, even though you may not be able to pronounce it. Jean-Georges Vongerichten (von-ger-ick-ten) has built an empire in New York and beyond with his artfully assem-bled dishes, fervor for fresh ingredients, sublimely decorated spaces, and spot-on service. But like everyone else, he still has to deal with the critics! BY ALEXANDRA ILYASHOV PHOTOGRAPHY BY GIORGIO NIRO

fa s h i o n w e e k da i ly. c o m

Page 15: The Daily Front Row

Want a taste?

Vongerichten with model, Reid Kastyn in an Oscar de la Renta dress and a Lucifer Von Honestus ring at Jean-George’s restaurant

Page 16: The Daily Front Row

I In January, I’ll have been cooking for 40 years, and I’m still as passionate and committed as when I started.”‘

Page 17: The Daily Front Row

Do you like food critics? I like them all, because you have to like them a little bit! The New York Times is still the bible, but I get used to each critic’s writing style, since they’re there for at least three to four years. I look forward to their reviews—although I get very stressed if it’s about one of my restaurants! Are you skilled at spotting them?I have a laser eye! [makes the sound of a laser]. Every restau-rant has four or five pictures of each critic, and we have to update them often. Pete Wells could be skinny one day, and then on another, he’s not. They could have glasses or a beard! But even when you do spot them, it’s already too late: If a critic comes in at 8:30 p.m. and my fish is rotten, I’m done. If my sauces or combinations don’t taste right, there’s nothing I can do. Who has been your favorite Times critic? The people who have put me on the map! I came to New York in 1986 to work at Lafayette, and Bryan Miller gave me my first three-star review that same year. I got a four-star review in ’88. At the time, I was 29-years-old, which made me the youngest chef to get a four-star review in The Times. Bryan is my God! How quickly did that impact you? It changed my life completely—I was on CNN the next day—and it helped me stay in New York. I was only supposed to be here for three years and then move on. But I couldn’t leave after that; I felt like I’d conquered the city, so I established my name here. Which other critics were useful?Gael Greene really helped me, because she trashed me in her first review, saying I was yet another new French chef arriving in town, cooking with too much cream and butter. New Yorkers don’t like to eat that way, she said—and she was right! New Yorkers go to restaurants every single day, so they don’t al-ways need something really elaborate. So my menu got lighter, and lunch only lasted one hour instead of three!

changes? Around 2003 and 2004, I was on a roll, but I was going a little too fast. I opened three new places in New York within nine months: a Chinese restaurant, 66; Spice Market; and V, a steakhouse. It wasn’t like opening a few little bistros; they were major. Did you sleep at all? I slept just fine! So what caused the flack? Some of the critics really wanted the chef to be in one kitchen. Today, the mindset is more open: people realize the business is very fragile, and margins are small. You have to do multiples if you want to make a good living. For me, it’s not about money. Once you’ve got two or three restaurants, you’ve got to find great sous chefs. Luckily, not everyone wants to open their own restaurants. I like pushing young talent ahead—and my chefs stay with me for a long time. My chef at The Mark has been with me since ’85; my chef at Jean Georges, since ’87, the president of my company has been with me since ’86, and my chef at Mercer Kitchen, since ’99. What’s the backstory on your concepts? I’d spent five years of my life in Asia, so I was very confident about 66 and Spice Market. Because we’d opened a steak-house in Vegas, Prime, which was very, very successful, I de-cided to reinvent the steakhouse with V. I tried to give them a different Caesar salad, deconstructed; 10 meats, 10 sauces, 10 types of potatoes. The response was pretty harsh—everybody hated it! I learned that you shouldn’t touch a national treasure like the steakhouse. The rent was very high, and it became too expensive to keep it up. After being open for two years, we still hadn’t broken even. Usually the first two years in business are the best. If they’re not, where do you go from there? There’s no reason to rent a restaurant space for 15 years and hope that you’ll break even.

Kastyn in an Oscar de la Renta dress and Manolo Blahnik shoesstylist: Shane Cisneros/ShaneCisneros.com Hair & Makeup: Aeriel Payne/Contact NYC

When else have reviews helped you make necessary

Page 18: The Daily Front Row

What does it feel like to close a restaurant? It hurts! You dream it, build it, then it comes alive, and then you close it up. Everyone gets affected: I worked with an architect from France on V and had 25 brass trees made, with chandeliers hanging from all the trees. It was like eating a steak in the park! It was gor-geous, but it was maybe a little too feminine for the boys. What do New Yorkers want in a restaurant? New Yorkers want food to be delicious and simple—they want to trace where their food comes from. ABC Kitchen’s success shows that. There’s no elBulli or Fat Duck in New York. When New Yorkers travel, they want to eat that way, though—it truly makes it a trip. You fly into Barcelona, drive in a car for three hours, go to elBulli, spend a lot of money, and have a memory. You sound like a very hands-on chef. I’m involved in every candle, the flow-ers, the salt, the salt bowls...these are rose-wood, with mother-of-pearl spoons. A lot of people steal them, believe it or not. So don’t even think about it! [laughs] How important is décor? It’s very important that the food matches the place. Just look at ABC Kitchen: there’s reclaimed wood, plus mismatched plates and silverware. I learned how much that matters from critics, actually! What’s the most harmonious matching of food and ambiance? Spice Market and ABC Kitchen each match especially well. People need direction—they don’t want to go to a restaurant and feel like they’re not sure where they are! To make a restaurant into a successful business, you need to guide your customers through the experience. Do you care what people wear to your restaurants? Jean Georges is one of the last places in New York where a jacket is required in the back room. It’s my only formal restaurant. If a diner doesn’t pay atten-tion and shows up without a jacket, other people will complain. So we keep 12 jackets in a closet in the front. Sometimes, we’ll just put a jacket on the back of their chair, so it looks like they just got hot and took the jacket off. It’s good to keep things from being too casual—but that only applies to the back room, not the café in the front. You can have haute couture over here and prêt-à-porter over there, in the same place: I like it that way!Do you ever disagree with a review of one of your restaurants? No, I usually agree. Even with V Steakhouse, I agreed with the reviews. Yes, I wanted to open another res-taurant, but it shouldn’t have been a steakhouse. If we had opened something else, like a Continental restau-rant, I think it would have worked. Which restaurant concept worried you most? I’m always worried! I wake up every morning feeling worried. Every day, I think, I could wake up, the whole thing will collapse, and I’m going to take my suitcase and go back to France. That’s just my nature! But by the time I’ve showered, gone to the Union Square mar-ket, and arrived at my office, I feel better.How has technology evolved food critics’ clout? The public’s voice can be very important—300 people can give you feedback online before the critics arrive.

But a critic can still make or break a restaurant.Do you keep tabs on the Eaters, Yelp-ers, and such? I make my GMs print out the reviews every week. You have a bunch of reviews when you first open, but to survive, you have to be consistent. No one will be coming in if you got a four-star review and then they don’t hear anything about you for five years! Which sites do you rely on? OpenTable has become very important. At all of my restaurants, 50 to 60 percent of our reservations are made there. People who are mad or excited about their meal will answer the survey in OpenTable’s emails afterwards; we often get five surveys a day. I make my managers and GMs read them.

Speaking of, what’s the se-cret to scoring a reservation? When you go to ABC Kitchen, make another reservation on your way out. If you’re right there and you’re probably going to come back in two weeks, pick a date, and don’t take no for an answer. Don’t tell too many people! How has your cooking evolved?

In January, I’ll have been cooking for 40 years, and I’m still as passionate and committed as when I started. Every day I observe the restaurant to make sure every-one looks happy and the water glasses are all filled. I tell my staff to do the same. Otherwise, a customer will write us a letter. I’m in this business to please people! What are your customer service secrets? If we don’t see a regular customer come in for a few months, we call them! If somebody is coming in every week, then gone for a month, and they’re not on vaca-tion, we find out. We want you back. Where do you spend the most time? At Jean Georges, my flagship. When you put your name on the door, you want to be there as much as you can. I usually start in my office in the morning, then I’ll head to Jean Georges, where I stay through dinner until 8:30 or 9:00 p.m. Then I’ll go to one of my other restau-rants, like The Mark, or ABC Kitchen, or Perry St. I have the best job in the world! How big is the Jean-Georges empire by now? We have over 2,000 people working for my restaurant group in New York, and another 4,000 people worldwide. There are 10 restaurants in New York, and 33 in total. I only directly run the New York restaurants, plus one in Paris—I don’t run the businesses for the other locations. We just opened Mercato, an Italian place in Shanghai. Is there anywhere we’ll probably never see a Jean-Georges outpost? I’ve said in the past that I’d never open a restaurant in St. Barths, because that’s my vacation place—my little France away from France. But then I accepted a job last year to do two restaurants there! So who knows?

Frank Bruni: “He is really unique, and read-ing his work was always entertaining. He gave me a couple of jabs, but he was always fair. He wrote some glowing reviews, and when they weren’t so glowing, he was right, at the time—and then we would adjust things. I don’t think he wrote enough about wine, though. That’s an important part of the experience—and wine is 35 percent of sales in my restaurants!” Pete Wells: “I like that he talks about the comfort level of the chairs—I’m a big chair guy! I like that he talks about wine a lot. His writing has lots of detail, and he describes the people around him during a meal. When I read Pete’s writing, I do really feel like I’m there. He’s still new, so we’ll have to see how his writing evolves.” Gael Greene: “She doesn’t hold anything back, which is good! I owe her a lot because she really helped me grow as a chef. It was a big slap in the face when she gave me a terrible review, but I took it like a man and changed what I was doing. Gael helped me become a New Yorker, and she knows it.” Ruth Reichl: “She was amazing, lovely, and very different from other critics. Ruth is a beautiful writer; very mellow, very flowery! She appreciated that I use a lot of foraging herbs in my cooking; I took a class with a forager upstate and in Central Park, even, though I didn’t want to use a lot of the herbs I found in Central Park because I was afraid dogs might have peed on them.” Alan Richman: “In 1991, Alan named Jean Georges the best new restaurant in America. He gave me great critiques for a while, but he likes for chefs to be in one kitchen only. I have too many ideas to be stuck in one place. When I opened two other places, he trashed me. I hid in bed for three days. It hurt, and I thought he was an asshole—and then I got back to work. Alan is part of the reason I was on a pedestal, and then he brought me back to reality. It was good for me. I came back stronger, and now

we’re friends.”

Here’s a crib sheet to Vongerichten’s personal musts on the menus at five of his outposts. Jean Georges: Yellow-fin Tuna Ribbons [with avocado and spicy radish, ginger marinade] (top)“I eat it at least once a week; I couldn’t live without it!” ABC Kitchen: Crab Toast [with lemon aioli] The Mercer Kitchen: Black Truffle and Fontina Cheese Pizza Perry St: Rice Cracker Crusted Tuna [with sriracha-citrus emulsion] (middle) JoJo: Organic Chick-en [roasted with olives, ginger, and coriander, with chick pea fries]

jean-georgesCrITIQUes THe CrITICs

orDer LIKe THe CHeF!

I N S E T : F R A N C E S C O T O N E L L I

Page 19: The Daily Front Row

SPECSL/S: None DOC SIZE: 10.25” x 13”B: None G: None

TEAMCreative: David Fox Alex Smulian

Acct: Kent Breard

Prod/Traf: Janice Thor Lynn Mathis

Studio: bd

MEDIA / PRINT INFOPubs: None Media: Magazine

Line Screen: None

Printed: 8-14-2012 3:29 PM @ None

COLORS Cyan Magenta Yellow Black

MBC_CRP_P12643_TD Client: MERCEDES-BENZ USA, LLC. Corporate WO: 2012 SL “Its not polite” (The Daily Fashion Wk Pg)

IMAGESMB_Gradient_14x12_4C_600.tif (CMYK; 150.75%, -53.5%; 398 ppi, -1122 ppi; SuperStudio:ART:MNH:MERCEDES:MB_Standard Gradients:4 Color Gradients:MB_Gradient_14x12_4C_600.tif) MB_2013SL_Ignition_C_300.tif (CMYK; 66.23%; 452 ppi; SuperStudio:ART:MNH:MERCEDES:2012:2012 Corp:2013SL_Ignition:MB_2013SL_Ignition_C_300.tif) MBFWNY_STAR_Stckd_4C-Pos.eps (34%; SuperStudio:Logos:Mercedes:Fashion Week:MBFW 2011:MBFWNY_STAR_Stckd_4C-Pos.eps)

FONTSCorporate S Light, Bold Corporate A Condensed T Regular Helvetica Neue Regular

200 Varick St. New York, NY 10014 : Phone 212-805-7500

PATH: M.P_MECHANICALS:Volumes:M.P_MECHANICALS:Mercedes:MBC:CRP:P12643:MBC_CRP_P12643_TD

2013 SL shown in Mars Red paint with optional equipment. No system, regardless of how advanced, can overcome the laws of physics or correct careless driving. Please always wear your seat belt. ©2012 Mercedes-Benz USA, LLC For more information, call 1-800-FOR-MERCEDES, or visit MBUSA.com.

It’s not polite to stare.But it’s perfectly understandable.

Style, beauty and glamour brought to you by the leader in style, beauty and glamour. Mercedes-Benz Fashion Week. MBUSA.com/lifestyle

HEADLINE = 44 pt. BODY COPY = 14 pt.

T:10.25”T:13”

Page 20: The Daily Front Row
Page 21: The Daily Front Row

A quarter-century on the GQ masthead and 15 James Beard awards later, the preeminent food critic Alan Richman is as saucy and unbridled as ever. BY ALEXANDRA ILYASHOVPHOTOGRAPHY BY GIORGIO NIRO

At home in Westchester with ALAN RICHMAN

Eater’s digest

FA S H I O N W E E K DA I LY. C O M

Page 22: The Daily Front Row

How does humor factor into excellent food writing? Funny is good, but funny never wins anything. I have the occasional one-liner, but

I’m not a humorist. My style is simple—I’m overrated as a writer, and underrated as a journalist and reporter. I’m a pretty straightforward storyteller, and there’s nothing wrong with that. I make my living by reporting the hell out of a story. I’m a better reporter than any other food writer out there, although no one else will agree with that. Do you feel pressure to give praise at GQ?I have never, ever been treated in anything but the best way journalistically. It’s staggering. I once wrote a pretty mild story that completely pissed off the biggest liquor advertiser at Condé Nast. I heard stories that Si Newhouse had to apologize to this advertiser, but no one ever said a word about it to me. Thoughts on today’s flock of food critics?You’ll be surprised to know that I admire them. But one of the huge problems with food journalism, not criticism, today is that 98 percent of it is puffery. Of the remaining two percent, I probably write one percent of that. It’s all about what’s the best and the greatest; there’s no sense of skepticism, which journalism should always have. Is the current crop as talented as their predecessors? Nobody doing it today competes with the great, pure critics of the past, but I give tons of credit to those who are doing it well in a very tough economic environment with a lot of pressure to be positive about everything. Break down the current critics!I like [Pete] Wells, but I don’t always like his choice of restaurants. I wish he would love high-end restaurants as much as he loves restaurants behind garages. He’s a wonderful writer, though. Before him, I liked [Sam] Sifton and [Frank] Bruni, but I think The Times is dead wrong to be picking critics the way they do. Why?Because it’s become a perk. ‘Oh, you’re really one of our best employees, we respect you—why don’t we honor you with being a critic for a couple of years?’ They’re all brilliant people, and really good writers, but being a critic is something else completely. I loved Bruni’s

writing; he only did it for a few years, but I told him that if he’d been The Times critic for another five years, he could’ve been the best one ever! How about Sam Sifton?Sifton is one of the most brilliant journalists of

our time. After his fabulous review about Masa, I wrote him a note saying it was one of the most brilliant reviews I’d ever read. It’s hard to do first-person, it was his first review in that style, and he was genius at it. I told him to write all of his reviews that way. And he didn’t!What does your research entail? I call chefs before I go on a trip to find out what they’re working on and what’s exciting them in that city. I’ve gone to 10 restaurants over an eight or nine day period. If I hate a place, I’ll tend to leave it out. I’m not there to critique individual restaurants. If I find a key restaurant, I’ll eat there more than once. For a recent piece it was about San Francisco. I didn’t “make” the restaurant, but I really jumped on it. How expensive are these trips?Very! And I’m cheap—I did an eight or nine day story on Tokyo and I told my editor I spent $12,000, not including airfare. My editor said, ‘Is that all?’ I’m very careful; I’ve never been questioned for a single expense. Everyone accuses me of being cheap when they eat out with me, in fact, and that’s partially because I never order expensive wine.How do you report?I take notes under the table, things like that. Ruth Reichl said she never had to take a note because she can remember everything—she has a much better mind than I do! I have tricky ways of doing it, like doing it in the bathroom, for example. I have to steal menus sometimes, and I have very good ways of doing it. I’ve only been caught twice! What was your proudest menu theft?I wanted to write about the wine list at one of the most famous restaurants in New York, and they had one of those huge, thick, leather-bound wine lists. Luckily, it fit in

What’s your writing process?First I type out all of my notes, then I write a really fast first draft, which is garbage, but it gets my ideas out. I do it until I’ve written myself into a corner; sometimes it’s 1,000

words, other times it’s 3,000 words. Do you ever get tired of accepting awards?No. The best one was the first, of course—it was the first-ever James Beard Awards, and I had just started to do food writing for GQ. I was the happiest I’ve ever been, professionally. My most recent award was the second most exciting because I hadn’t won for a while—I’m not washed up, yet, I guess! I’m always happy as hell when I win, and depressed when I lose. When you lose to someone you hate, it feels twice as bad. Do you have more friends or enemies in the food writing world?I think I have more friends. Look, I’m not a horrible human being, even though some people think I am. So much of the criticism I get is people attacking me, when they should attack the story. It’s wrongheaded and immoral to attack the writer, and I don’t forgive some people for that.What do you think of fashion critics? Talk about mean! There seems to be free reign in American fashion criticism, where you can be as snarky as you want and people laugh. Cintra Wilson wrote that scathingly funny piece on J.C. Penney coming to New York in The Times. It was brilliant! Every time I saw her byline I would read it, and I don’t even follow fashion. If I was an editor of a Condé Nast magazine, I would’ve hired her in a minute. What’s the best meal you’ve eaten in 2012? My GQ roast in May has gotta be the best meal of my life! It was at Le Bernardin—I won’t say that’s the best restaurant in the world, but it’s been my favorite restaurant in the world for 25 years, and Jim Nelson bought it out for the occasion! I asked one of our PR people when my next roast was happening, and he said, ‘In about 20 years, when we’ve finished paying for this one.’ Ha! I get along wonderfully with Eric Ripert; he’s just brilliant. He let me pick the dishes, and then of course he didn’t like what I’d picked. Do chef friendships ever get awkward? It’s always weird to be friends with a chef. You have to be really careful. Once in a while, Eric will call me—I love hearing from him because he’ll tell me everything I’m doing wrong; he’s just hysterical. I’m good about keeping my distance, though. Do you keep it nicer with those chef pals?If I’ve known a chef for 20 years, maybe I’m not going to kill him in my writing. That might be the only corruption that’s happened to me over the years: a bit of compassion! I’ve done all the clobbering I need to do at this point. So you’re more mature nowadays?I’m as immature now as I ever was! How do you act when you’re dining on the clock?I try to be a decent dinner companion when I’m not working, but when I’m eating for a story, I’m a total slob. I pick food up with my hands, and I’ll reach over and grab something from someone else’s plate. I have a whole list of rules for when people are out to dinner with me for a story. What kind of rules?When I review, I’m completely passive. I sit there and let the restaurant do it all. New Yorkers instantly complain about everything, from turning down the music to turning up the lights. But I tell my dining companions that they cannot talk to a waiter except to answer their questions or to ask where the bathroom is. What’s up with your foray into academia?I’m the dean of food journalism at The French Culinary Institute, which now goes by the name, The International Culinary Center. As part of my position there, I can take any courses I want! So by the time I’m 90, I’m going to be the best cook in the whole wide world, basically.

What kind of cook are you?I’m not a graceful cook, I’m more of a crabby cook. I’m not a pleasant person to be around in the kitchen—I really have to concentrate and I don’t want to talk to anybody. What are your greatest hits?I can make food that my mother knew how to cook. I do a poor man’s soup: It has beef bones, dried peas, carrots, a little celery, grated onions. It’s an almost-pea soup. I also make my mother’s cheese blintzes, though they’re a little better than my mother’s, I have to say. But I haven’t been able to make brisket as good as hers. How did she do brisket? A Jewish-French recipe: The braising broth is half red wine and half tomato sauce. What else is in your entrée arsenal? My Chinese meatballs! I also make the world’s best Brussels sprouts, but I basically stole that recipe from Marc Vetri. I use butter, oil, salt, and pepper, and I burn them. Do Brussels really benefit from having bacon?No, no, no! There’s too much bacon in food! It’s just ridiculous, and it only started three or four years ago. Only one out of 20 dishes with bacon actually benefit from the bacon. Do you ever follow recipes?I’ve been making Julia Child’s cheese soufflé for 30 years. It’s the greatest!

ALAN IN THE KITCHEN!

FA S H I O N W E E K DA I LY. C O M

my backpack.

Page 23: The Daily Front Row

Shauna Gonzalez - Berkeley College StudentFashion Marketing and Management, Class of ’ 12

“I’ve always loved fashion. Berkeley College’s Fashion Marketing and Management program feeds my passion for the industry and opened my eyes to the exciting career opportunities available. The interesting courses and experienced faculty are helping to prepare me for my dream job as a Fashion Editor!”

Ready, Willing, and

Valuable

For more information,

call 800-446-5400, ext. BFN

BerkeleyCollege.edu • [email protected]

Locations in New York, New Jersey, and Online

Berkeley College reserves the right to add, discontinue, or modify its programs and policies at any time. Modifications subsequent to the original publication of this information may not be reflected here. For the most up-to-date information, please visit

BerkeleyCollege.edu. For more information about Berkeley College graduation rates, the median debt of students who completed programs, and other important disclosures, please visit BerkeleyCollege.edu/disclosures.

BloggerFlickrLinkedInFacebookYouTubeTwitterMySpace BloggerFlickrLinkedInFacebookYouTubeTwitterMySpace

Why are Berkeley College interns and graduates so well prepared?

• Students learn current practices and the latest technologies from accomplished faculty, many of whom are working professionals with market experience

• Advisory Boards help ensure relevant program and course content, based on marketplace needs

• Internships or job-related assignments are required in all programs, providing students with valuable, practical experience

P1975.8.2012

Find out why so many students depend on Berkeley College tohelp prepare for career success!

Page 24: The Daily Front Row

ANY MOMENT ANY MOMENT ANY MOMENT ANY MOMENT ANY MOMENT ANY MOMENTSPARKLE.SPARKLE.SPARKLE.

ANY MOMENT ANY MOMENT ANY MOMENTIntroducing Introducing Introducing

the taste that makes the taste that makes the taste that makes the taste that makes the taste that makes the taste that makes

Enjoy the crisp, clean refreshing taste of natural fruit flavorswith no calories or sweeteners.

© 2012 THE COCA-COLA COMPANY. SEAGRAM’S AND THE SEAGRAM’S CREST DESIGN ARE REGISTERED TRADEMARKS OF LDI (CAYMAN) LTD AND USED UNDER LICENSE. IT’S GOOD TO BE YOU IS A TRADEMARKS OF THE COCA-COLA COMPANY.

IT’S GOOD TO BE YOU™

facebook.com/seagramsgingerale |

Page 25: The Daily Front Row

PRESENTED BY CHASE SAPPHIRESM SUPPORTING SPONSORS BOMBAY SAPPHIRE®

GIN I CHANDON I ELIZABETH ARDEN I ESSIE I EUPHORIA CALVIN KLEIN

HILTON HOTELS & RESORTS I LAURA MERCIER I OPI I SANTA MARGHERITA WINES I SEAGRAM’S® SPARKLING SELTZER WATER

Learn more about the fashionable feast at

BAFeastOrFashion.com

FASHION ALL DAY, FOOD ALL NIGHT

B O N A P P ÉT I T F E A ST O R FA S H I O N celebrates of-the-moment chefs, menus, and coveted fashion during New York City’s most trendsetting week.

Even if you’re not front row at the fashion shows, get a taste of the vibrant nightlife. Beginning Friday, September 7, find Feast or Fashion–curated menus

and discover the most influential chefs and designers. The best part? Experience it all when you book a reservation from Bon Appétit ’s list of restaurants

in New York and select cities nationwide at OpenTable.com.

#BAFEASTORFASHION

Page 26: The Daily Front Row

BOMBAY SAPPHIRE® East Gin, infused with crisp Thai Lemongrass and spicy

Vietnamese Black Peppercorn, will take your senses on a journey unlike any other.

BE BRILLIANT AND INSPIRED. DRINK RESPONSIBLY! facebook.com/bombaysapphire

©2012 Bombay Sapphire, the Bombay Sapphire Bottle Design and device are trademarks and/or registered trademarks. Imported by the Bombay Spirits Company U.S.A., Coral Gables, FL. Gin – 42% Alc. by Vol.

EXPLORE EASTA NEW JOURNEY

BACARDIBS_East_BSAD-444TRIM: 10.25” x 13”

BLEED: 11.25” x 14”LIVE: 9.75” x 12.5”

PUB: The Daily Front Row

910229A01_BACARDI Aug. 9, 2012BS_The Daily Front Row_BSAD-444910229_DailyFrontRow_BSAD444

Page 27: The Daily Front Row

Feast or Fashion?

adam, is this

Why Choose?

RACheL Roy & ADAM RAPoPoRT

+

Page 28: The Daily Front Row

122106 HIL – CHILL PRINT SPREAD – THE DAILY ADDED VALUE

App: InDesign CS5 Keyline Trim: 21.5" x 13.5"Artist: cd Keyline Live: 20" x 13 "Proof #: 2 Keyline Bleed: 22" x 14"Scale: 100%Color: 4/C Fonts: Hermes

Hilton Prague, Czech Republic The Beverly Hilton, Beverly Hills, U.S.A.

STAY HIL TON. GO CHILL.Stay Hilton. Go Everywhere. More than 550 locations in 80 countries.

Find every reason to go at hilton.com/go.

Hilton New York Fashion District, U.S.A.

Page 29: The Daily Front Row

122106 HIL – CHILL PRINT SPREAD – THE DAILY ADDED VALUE

App: InDesign CS5 Keyline Trim: 21.5" x 13.5"Artist: cd Keyline Live: 20" x 13 "Proof #: 2 Keyline Bleed: 22" x 14"Scale: 100%Color: 4/C Fonts: Hermes

Hilton Prague, Czech Republic The Beverly Hilton, Beverly Hills, U.S.A.

STAY HIL TON. GO CHILL.Stay Hilton. Go Everywhere. More than 550 locations in 80 countries.

Find every reason to go at hilton.com/go.

Hilton New York Fashion District, U.S.A.

Page 30: The Daily Front Row

eF a ts✷

Where to Be! ✷Abe & Arthur’s

Ai FioriAnForAAugust

b&b WinepubbeAuty & essex

benoitbrAsserie pushkin

CroWnDel FrisCo’s

DeliCAtessenDell’AnimAFAtty CrAbFAtty ‘Cue

isolA trAttoriA & CruDo bAr

JezebelJoJo

ken & Cookkinshop

lA mArinAl’Artusi

lexington brAsslupA

lure FishbArmArble lAnemermAiD inn

(eAst VillAge)mermAiD inn

(upper West siDe)mermAiD oyster bAr

miChAel’s otto

porter house nyprAnDiAl

pulqueriArAreVieWresette

ryusCArpettA

sons oF essexspAssotAlDe

the DArbythe highliner

the lAmbs Clubthe lion

the nAtionAl

the scoop:

Daily fave and legendary night owl Mario Batali is getting in on the Own the Night action at his restos Lupa and Otto.

Where do you dine during Fashion Week? i don’t change the way i eat, except that there are some fancy, glitzy-looking people in some of my favorite places.Such as?the fash-ion flock is always at the spotted pig, tertulia, and la esquina, which means i avoid la esquina that week. Where in NYC will we proba-bly never find a Batali joint?i haven’t done anything in the upper east or upper West, and i don’t plan to.What’s your favorite way to eat cheeks?i like both beef and pork cheeks, but i’m a big fan of halibut cheeks as well. Who’s invited to your dream fashion folk dinner?i love isaac mizrahi, helena Christensen, michael stipe, and isabella rossellini.What’s on the table?All of those people will eat just about anything i want! so we’d keep it simple: a water-melon or peach salad because they’re still in season, pasta or pizza with a lot of vegeta-bles on the side, and sorbetto or copetta at otto.What’s your current fashion obsession?these really cool bags by Fishtown sail Co. made in michigan from used sails. i’m bringing back five or six bags for my friends. they’re going to be all the rage—every-one is going to want them. As much of a rage as mario batali can start in fashion!

Fix

tag your own the night-related tweets and instagrams with #bAFeastorFashion and your musings and memo-ries may—just may!—appear on bonAppétit.com the morning after.

AND! DON’T FORGET TO

SHOW US THE GOODS…

A CHEEKY MOMENT

With Mario Batali

BON APPÉTIT PRESENTS FEAST OR FASHIONFashion all day, food all night—that’s the bA way. Now in its second year, Feast or Fashion celebrates the happy marriage of these two favorite pastimes by pairing star chefs and designers with post-show celebrations. This week’s theme? A trio of bona-fide power cou-ples. Jean-Georges Vongerichten and his son Cedric will prep a dinner for Michael Bastian’s inner circle, while Rachel Roy will host her post-show dinner on the roof of the The NoMad alongside Executive Chef Abram Bissell and bon Appétit editor-in-chief Adam Rapoport. And Pork Slope’s Dale Talde

has teamed up with Booker and Dax mixologist Dave Arnold to host a house party and bash toasting Chris Benz’s 30th birthday. Expect a cake from Momofuku Milk Bar’s Christina Tosi.

FOR $77!@ AI FIORI:Insalata Pomodori

Heirloom tomato salad, strac-ciatella, basil pesto, balsamico

IppoglossoLine-caught atlantic halibut,

baby romaine, guanciale, white bean puree,

preserved lemon jusPanna Cotta

Vanilla black pepper crema, blackberries,

yogurt, melon sorbetto

MAIS OUI! You spend all day rushing from show to show, but come sunset, a bit of R&R is required, no? Enter Bon Appétit’s new Own the Night project, a collective of NYC’s hautest restaurants who have teamed up to intro-duce their new menus during the very week that designers debut their latest collections. Consider your dinner plans confirmed! THE DATES! Friday, September 7 through Thursday, September 13.

THE DEETS! Forty-five NYC restaurants, in all different nabes and at a myriad of price points, have drummed up prix-fixe menus of their hottest new dishes. Peruse the offerings and book your table at BAFeastorFashion.com/OpenTable, where you’ll find all the info on Bon Appétit’s Own the Night festivities. Or look out for iPad-baring BA staffers at major runway shows, ad agencies, and around the Condé Nast caf—they can make your ressie right away.

Ready to Own the Night?

FA S H I O N W E E K DA I LY. C O M G E T T Y I M A G E S ( 1 ) ; S H u T T E R S T O C K ; C O u R T E S Y l u p A

FOR $35!@ OTTO:

Watermelon and cucumber saladBlack mint, pecorino fresco, and aceto manodori

Arugula ricotta and sungold tomato pizzaArugula pesto, fresh ricotta, sungold tomatoes, and wild arugulaSeasonal sorbetti

What you’ll eat!

Page 31: The Daily Front Row

VIE W

A RARE

Bon Appétit Feast or Fashion celebrates of-the-moment chefs, menus, and coveted fashion during New York City’s most trendsetting week. Kick off your experience as you catch a bird’s-eye view of Manhattan’s dramatic skyline—and see all the action—from RARE View rooftop bar and lounge at Hilton New York Fashion District. Savor libations such as the signature “RARE Fashion” as you soak up the sights and sounds of the Big Apple, from the Empire State Building to the Hudson River.

  Learn more at newyorkfashiondistrict.hilton.com

RARE VIEW BAR & GRILL

BON APPÉTIT

HILTON NEW YORK FASHION DISTRICT, U.S.A.

HILTON NEW YORK FASHION DISTRICT LOBBY

Page 32: The Daily Front Row

Santa Margherita “Prosecco while primping” Full Page Ad • Trim 10.75” X 13.5” • Bon Appetit • Insertion Date: Fashion or Feast Issue 2012 Design: Terlato Wines International • 900 Armour Drive, Lake Bluff, IL 60044 • 847-604-8900

santamargherita.com

impo

rted

by

terl

ato

win

es in

tern

atio

nal,

lak

e bl

uff,

il

ter

lato

win

es.c

om

while primping

experienced

d

Page 33: The Daily Front Row

PREVAGE®

Anti - aging Daily Serum

Helps reverse the signs of environmental damage,the #1 cause of aging skin.*

75% imp ro vemen t i n t h e

app e a ran ce o f f i n e l i n e s ,

w r i n k l e s , r a d i an ce and

s k i n t e x t u r e .**

see the science at elizabetharden.com

*Bahman, G et al l (2009), Fac tors Cont r ibu t ing to the Facial Aging of Ident ical Twins.

**Based on an average percent improvement f rom basel ine in a 12-week cl inical s tudy on 34 women.

©2012 Elizabeth Arden, Inc.

PREVAGE AD -Trim Size: 10.75” x 13.5” DAILY FRONT ROW-SEPT. 2012 ISSUE RELEASED: 08/14/12 DUE: 08/15/12

115965_0

115965_0.pgs 08.14.2012 19:13 PDFX1a

Page 34: The Daily Front Row

FA S H I O N W E E K DA I LY. C O M

Rachel RoyAdam Rapoport: Do you want me to start? That would be so ungentlemanly! OK, I’ll have the local tomatoes and the scampi ravioli. RR: I’m getting the scampi, too. When you’re eating with an expert, you just want to copy whatever they’re having!AR: My wife always orders something different from me, because she feels like she’s supposed to, and then she regrets it. RR: How did you get into food?AR: This is very armchair psychiatrist! Growing up in DC in the seventies, herbs came from a jar. There was no arugula. You had underripe tomatoes year round, and green beans came from a can. If there was broccoli, it was cooked for an hour—smarmy green, soggy, and mushy. But my mom was a good cook. I was the youngest, so when my brother and sister were at school I hung out with my mom in the kitchen. I still thought boxed macaroni and cheese with ground beef mixed in was the best thing ever invented, though.RR: I grew up in Monterey, a gorgeous place very close to the Bay Area. It’s a community of very happy, chic hippies. We lived on the poorer side of town, but the fields of Salinas that John Steinbeck wrote about were my visuals. I still long for the sea. My mom is Dutch and my dad’s Indian. He always had three jobs, and one of them was as a nurse in a psych ward. He’d make friends with the people in the cafeteria, bring home leftovers, and curry them. I didn’t love Indian food as a kid, but I appreciate it now. So does my 12-year-old! After college, I learned how to make stuff that most other people know how to make; I don’t need recipes for exotic dishes. And I had to teach myself to make all of those typical, Leave it to Beaver meals that I thought I was missing out on! Everyone’s house seems cooler than yours when you’re growing up.What was the first dish you learned to cook?AR: My house was all about meatloaf, mashed potatoes, and iceberg lettuce, and the first thing I learned to make was a really good omelet. My father could cook two things: omelets and tuna casserole

with potato chips. He made the omelets on a good, old, French steel skillet. The butter would get all brown, you’d pour the eggs in, and you’d have the perfect omelet in 38 seconds. In ninth grade, we were allowed off campus for lunch for 45 minutes and I’d bring six girls home and make them all omelets. RR: Fresh ingredients really do make all the difference. Everything I wish I’d known sooner, I make sure to tell my girls. Smells, even! We live across the street from Whole Foods, so it’s quite easy because all of the herbs just smell so damn good.AR: When I was in college in Berkeley, I was several beers into the evening at a friend’s house when I saw a jar of fresh rosemary on the table. I called my mom saying, ‘There’s that stuff that you put on your lamb chops! That green stuff!’ Northern California was always steps ahead of the East Coast and the Midwest, especially with Alice Waters and Chez Panisse. In California, I discovered actual Asian cooking and really good Mexican food. And grocery stores with wide aisles and 14 different kinds of peppers! Plus amazing produce at farmer’s markets. That dovetailed with the start of the celebrity chef movement in the early nineties. Did you have any pivotal foodie moments in Berkeley?AR: I was sort of a dork; I subscribed to Gourmet as 20-year-old straight kid. I’d take girls out to restaurants in San Francisco, which was a big thing. But I’d read about those places in Gourmet, saw the pictures, and wanted to go to places like Zuni Café, for the roast chicken with bread salad. At the time, I knew this wasn’t normal.RR: I’m sure the girls appreciated it! No one’s taking you out to restaurants like that in college.AR: I’d get dressed up, too! Other San Francisco food memories include burritos in the Mission. I went to this place, Altena Taqueria. Those big carne asada burritos! And grilled steak with fresh avocado? I’d never had a fresh avocado before I moved to California. Now I’ll put an avocado on absolutely everything. I was awakened: As much as I loved the food I ate growing up, there was a whole other world out there.

adam rachel

when

met

Chiclunch

: What are you ordering, Adam?

Page 35: The Daily Front Row

What happens when you take Bon Appétit editor-in-chief Adam Rapoport and designer Rachel Roy down to Tribeca for a midday lunch at Locanda Verde? A stimulating, often hilarious tête-à-tête spanning the sartorial and edible gamut, from the pitch-perfect omelet technique to white jeans way beyond Labor Day. BY ALEXANDRA ILYASHOVPHOtOgRAPHY BY gIORgIO NIRO

RR: What’s your favorite restaurant in New York? AR: Oh man, I’d get into so much trouble for answering that! RR: I guess that’s like someone asking me to name my favorite designer. AR: It depends on the occasion. Going out with five of my buddies—a bunch of guys from GQ—I’ll do this fun, boisterous place called Pietro’s on East 43rd Street. It’s packed at 6 p.m. and then empty after 9 p.m. There’s good steak, chicken parm, hash browns, really stiff cocktails, and a terrible wine list. I’m also a big fan of Roberta’s in Brooklyn. You can do pizza and cans of Budweiser there, or more experimental cuisine next door at Blanca. But it’s all served in the same environment of picnic tables and Beastie Boys music. It’s a rollicking, rocking place. But last night, I went to Le Bernardin....RR: Every bite there is incredible! AR: I am not a big seafood guy. Pork or a rib-eye steak is what really gets me going. But Eric Ripert is just a phenomenal chef. Everything is calibrated correctly, and it never overwhelms you. RR: A former company president of mine introduced me to that restaurant five or six years ago. We’d ‘take a meeting’ and sit at the bar for lunch. Beyond NYC, which delicious destinations have you graced lately?RR: Sardinia. We ate four or five times a day. Things like fried mozzarella and pizzas covered in tomatoes that taste like candy! It’s an amazing experience if you love food. Fortunately, I do. AR: Were you with your daughters? RR: Unfortunately, no, but they do travel well. I was very excited to fill up my first daughter’s passport. But traveling with one kid is so much easier than two, so Tallulah’s passport isn’t as full as Ava’s. My parents were very good about taking me

around the world. They didn’t have money, but they still managed to do it. One of the best things I’ve done with Ava is take her to Ghana. Whenever she starts to feel sorry for herself, I remind her of kids she’d met on that trip.AR: Moving to fashion—if you’re not wearing your own clothes, what do you wear?RR: My favorites are Givenchy, Céline, and Rick Owens. AR: Oh, wow! Very forward of you. And when you’re just hanging out on the weekends? RR: Levi’s, 501s only. I need that button-fly. And a white men’s button-down. AR: I wear Levi’s myself. I’m into the matchstick ones right now. RR: I like white jeans year round. I don’t care if it’s after Labor Day. I don’t give a sh*t! I think they’re actually quite slenderizing and super classic. AR: I’ve been known in my office for wearing white jeans. I wore a pair yesterday, in fact. I just can’t stop! I’ve become so preppy recently. I’m wearing so much Brooks Brothers stuff—suede bucks, jeans, seersucker shirts. RR: The width of your tie is perfect.AR: It’s a Thom Browne for Brooks Brothers tie, from their Black Fleece collection. I’m also wearing my Ralph Lauren wing-tops. RR: And no socks? AR: Yeah. I worked at GQ, and you’re not allowed to wear socks if you work at GQ. Anyone for dessert?AR: Can I get two espresso shots on ice? Yeah, I’m fancy! RR: I’ll have that, too. AR: Wow, I’m starting a trend! I love how it looks when you pour whole milk into coffee—it gets all marbleized. What’s the most overrated dish? AR: Truffle oil, definitely.

RR: It tastes so damn good, though! AR: I like real truffles, Rachel. The oil is just like that person in the elevator wearing too much perfume. I’m over it!

adam rachel

Page 36: The Daily Front Row

212 564 4646

Client:Product:

Job#:

Pub:

Trim:Bleed:Safety:

Coty PrestigeEPW Lara Stone 2012 ModelUS ROB ADPG - Size Z

1015248

The Daily Feast or Fashion Sept.710.75 x 13.5 in.11.25 x 14 in.10.25 x 13 in.

8/9/12Version: 1

© 2

012

C

alvin Klein C

osm

etic C

orporation euphoria™

calvinkleinfragrances.com

1015248_EPW 2012_Lara StoneThe DailyFeast or Fashion.indd 1 8/10/12 10:47 AM

Page 37: The Daily Front Row

When it comes to the kitchen and the closet, Bon Appétit’s executive editor Christine Muhlke has all her bases covered. From tricked-out tea accoutrements to Lanvin flats, the stylish food savant has a cadre of wearable and edible musts worth cribbing.BY ALEXANDRA ILYASHOV PHOTOGRAPHY BY GIORGIO NIRO

FA S H I O N W E E K DA I LY. C O M

Muhlke’s editrix picks

Musts!

Page 38: The Daily Front Row

...And WhAt tO WEAR!BLUESTAR OVEN “I hate to say that a piece of equipment has changed my life, but five or six years ago, I wrote a book with Eric Ripert and used the money from the advance to buy one of these. This only matters to freaks like me, but the oven fits a full sheet tray. Everything I cook in the BlueStar makes me feel like I should have my own restaurant.”

Christine’s ESSENTIALS

LADURÉE AND BOSIE TEA PARLOUR MACAROONS“I’m always snacking! I like Ladurée, but I can’t stand the lines. I go to a place called

Bosie Tea Parlour on Morton Street in the West Village. The guy there, Damien Herrgott, used to work for Pierre Hermé and Daniel; he’ll do tea flavors, like Darjeeling, Jasmine, or Matcha.”

MALDON SEA SALT“We always have a big bowl of salt near the stove. That way, you can season easily, and you don’t have to measure—you can just pinch it. Maldon salt, from the U.K., is for finishing dishes just before serving. Even just on toasts, with a bit of olive oil, the Maldon salt gives a beautiful, flaky crunchiness.”

BDDW CUTTING BOARDS“I can’t afford BDDW’s furniture, but they just launched these cutting boards a few months ago. They’re unbelievably beautiful, and they come in neat shapes.”

WhAt tO USE...

TEAS FROM LE PALAIS DES THÉS “I can’t drink more than one cup at a time or I get too jazzed! I have green in the morning and black in the afternoon. I’m excited that they’re opening in Soho in November.”

CHANCE STRIPED T-SHIRT“My friend Julia Leach founded Chance, a collection based around striped t-shirts. I have a million—I think it’s around 45 total—and I wear them all the time. Julia worked with the artist Elliott Puckette on a hand-drawn stripe, which is my favorite. Elliott and I trade recipes for art!”

LANVIN FLATS“Mine are from 2004—at least that’s what the date on the label tells me—and they are so easy. My favorite ones have bows—you can’t take yourself too seriously! They make me think of Alber [Elbaz], and he always makes me smile.”

STAUB COCOTTE“This is for doing braises—it’s the perfect size for a chicken. In the winter, you just throw it in the oven and don’t think about it for a few hours. The juices and steam gather and drip back down, so whatever you’re cooking constantly bastes itself.”

HERMÈS DOUBLE TOUR WATCH“Once on a shoot, the stylist Tiina Laakkonen was wearing hers along with about 50 other black leather Hermès bracelets. It was so cool, I copped her look.”

ZERO + MARIA CORNEJO COAT“I’ve been shopping Maria Cornejo since she opened her first store in Nolita over 12 years ago. I just fell in love with her, and I’ve been buying her stuff on sale ever since. I love that Maria’s designs are so outside of fashion, they never go out of style. For Fall, I splurged on this coat.”

TUCKER TOPS “I’m a rabid fan of Gaby Basora’s clothes for Tucker. She

used to intern at Paper, where I used to work, and she’s grown into a big, beautiful designer—even though she’s tiny! Tucker has that easy, breezy, no-brainer chic that you can also wear to dinner at a three-star restaurant.”

FA S H I O N W E E K DA I LY. C O Mm u h l k e : g i o r g i o n i r o ; m o d e l : g e t t y i m a g e s

PLUS! HOW TO DRESS ON THE JOB “I work at a food magazine, so you need to wear expandable waistlines and a built-in bib. Between all the the tunics and skinny pants I bought for my fall pregnancy, it’s all about a Luke Skywalker silhouette. It’s fun to work with Adam [Rapoport] because he’s so style-conscious. Recently, I jokingly asked his permission to wear Birkenstocks around the office, since my ankles got so swollen. He replied, totally deadpan, ‘That’s cool, as long as they’re metallic!’ He also responds well to a print, so he likes all of my Tucker pieces and an old Bernhard Willhem skirt with a dinosaur on it.”

Page 39: The Daily Front Row

COLORS FROM LEFT TO RIGHT: My Very First KnockwurstDon’t Pretzel My ButtonsBerlin There Done ThatDon’t Talk Bach to MeSchnapps Out of It!*Deutsch You Want Me Baby?*Danke-Shiny RedSuzi & the 7 Düsseldorfs*Every Month is Oktoberfest*German-icure by OPINein! Nein! Nein! OK Fine!*Unfor-greta-bly Blue*

*Also available in GelColor by OPI Get gelled today at a salon near you!

MODEL IS WEARING UNFOR-GRETA-BLY BLUE Available at Trade Secret, SmartStyle, Regis Hairstylists, Pure Beauty, Beauty Brands, ULTA, and select Professional Salons.

CONTAINS NO DBP, TOLUENE, OR FORMALDEHYDE Call 800.341.9999 ©2012 OPI Products Inc.

magazine: the daily beast - SEPsize: full pageOPI# 2012-233RPD# 47599

bleed: 11.25in x 14intrim: 10.75in x 13.5inlive: 10.25in x 13in

Page 40: The Daily Front Row

SIP WITHSTYLE HERE

Beauty & Essex146 Essex Street

New York, NY 10002

CO-OP Food & DrinkHotel on Rivington

107 Rivington StreetNew York, NY 10002

Stanton Social99 Stanton Street

New York, NY 10002

Page 41: The Daily Front Row

FA S H I O N W E E K DA I LY. C O M

Andrew Knowlton:Portrait of a Foodist

What was your entrée into food?I grew up in Atlanta, and my dad used to take me out to all of these crazy Indian restaurants where they had this flat bread called naan, and you would order chicken tikki masala, and it was all so foreign. I didn’t realize it at the time, but it had a huge influence on me. After school, I just fell in love with eating and going out. I wasn’t really into theater and movies as much as the next person, so it kind of became my form of entertainment. And then I was at a publishing course at NYU back in 1999, and I ended up interning at Bon Appétit. During that time, I was working as a waiter at a place on Smith Street in Brooklyn called The Grocery. That was my first window into the buzz and the high that you get from being in restaurants. I mean, of course a good writer can write about anything, whether it’s

cars or architecture, but I chose food. Now, everyone’s an expert.Have you ever posted on Yelp?Never. I truly believe that if the restaurant really sucks, it’s not going to get good reviews on Yelp. And if the restaurant is really awesome, it’s not going to have one Yelp star or whatever their rating system is. I agree with [Los Angeles Times critic] Jonathan Gold: Yelp is amazing if you want to know what a Taiwanese teenager thinks about a Taiwanese restaurant in Southern California. But would I ever use that website as a basis for my opinion about a restaurant? No.When did Americans become so much more curious about food? When I started at Bon Appétit, nobody was taking pictures of their dinner. The Food Network was in its infancy. Of course, the overnight celebrity chef stuff

Straight-talking, good-looking men seem to be par for the course at Bon Appétit, but it’s restaurant and drinks editor Andrew Knowlton whose brain is bulging with intel on the hottest, newest, latest boîtes

and bistros all around the globe. Over an Einbecker Pilsner with The Daily at his neighborhood joint, Prime Meats in Carroll Gardens, Brooklyn, he talked both turkey and t-shirts.

BY ASHLEY BAKER PORTRAIT BY DEAN KAUFMAN

Criticwatch

Page 42: The Daily Front Row

ACT 1: COCKTAILSBee

Excuse me, I’m still waiting on my glass of rosé.Waitress

[points] It’s right there!Chang

So sorry. I’m not used to wine served in a red plastic cup.

ACT 2: HORS D’OEUVRESAnnelise

Is there any MSG in the lotus root?Waitress

It’s prepared with wild sesame, soy caramel, and chives. Annelise

OK, two of those. Any other vegan options?

ACT 3: MAINSBee

Let’s make sure to get the pig ear terrine. My mom says pig ear is good for the skin.

Evren Do you think two orders of those chicken wings were too many?

Lola Absolutely not. We’ll also have a double order of the salt

cod fried rice.Annelise

Possible to get another side of lotus root?

ACT 4: LATER, OVER CHAMPAGNE AT ACME…

Lola I still can’t feel anything in my left cheek. Am I hallucinating, or is

anyone else smelling that kung pao pastrami?Evren

Who took the pastrami to-go and is carrying a Céline tote? Because the sauce is dripping out of your bag....

After Andrew’s raves about Mission Chinese—and his less-than-

favorable opinions of our usual fash-crowd haunts, which naturally,

we did not (cannot!) include in these pages—your Daily took four health

freakettes to Danny Bowien’s carnivore-friendly culinary mecca, where

the calorie counts are as bountiful as the “numbing chili” seasoning.

Knowlton scored us a res, as clearly, fashion people do not do a four-hour

wait, and in the spirit of experimentation, we vowed to try every high-fat,

mega-flavor concoction that chef Danny had in store.—AB

WHEN FASHIONETTES GO FOODISTWE Try IT!

BEE-SHYUAN CHANG, FASHION WRITERANNELISE PETERSON, FASHION CONSULTANTLOLA RYKIEL, PUBLICIST, SONIA RYKIELEVREN DOGANCAY, BUYER, KIRNA ZABÊTE

yOUr CAST OF CHArACTErS!

FA S H I O N W E E K DA I LY. C O M

is infuriating sometimes—even nauseating, the way they can take themselves so seriously. But in general, those guys and gals are the ones who raised the bar and brought up food in a way that everyone talks about.What do you hate to see on a menu?A goat cheese and beet salad! [laughs] No, my biggest problems with a menu are laziness and redundancy. It’s hard

to be a chef—it’s basically like being a writer and inventing words or a style of writing. Whether it is a diner or a food truck or a place like Prime Meats or Daniel, I just want to see someone who gives a sh*t.Do you cook?Yeah. I don’t think that every

restaurant critic or writer has to be a chef or a culinary school grad, but I am a student of food, and that means cooking. How often do you eat out?Probably three nights a week, but then I will go two weeks on the road, eating four or five meals a day, and after one of those trips, all I want to do is eat salad and pump out my stomach. Has being a critic impaired your ability to really enjoy the restaurant experience?Well, I can never go back into a restaurant that I have already worked at before. I’m always noticing stuff. I can enjoy the experience, but not completely purely.What is the most memorable revelation you’ve had in a restaurant? I know I don’t have to drink alcohol to have a good time. Is that true?Yeah! When I was a waiter at The Grocery, I used to get so angry with people who just drank water with their meal. But now I have kids, and the hangovers are worse. I still think that the best meals have a nice bottle of wine or a cocktail or a beer behind them, though.Thoughts on the word ‘foodie?’I mean, it’s an annoying as hell term, but is ‘epicurean’ any better? What about ‘omnivore?’ At Bon Appétit, we have bans on the words ‘delicious’ and ‘foodie.’ If someone introduces themselves as a foodie, you know you’re in for it. They’re going to immediately tell you how they got a reservation at Blanca.So how fashion-y are you?Some people spend their money on fashion; I spend mine on food. Predictably, my look has suffered.But you’re wearing a really good t-shirt...I have this thing—I buy a t-shirt at every restaurant or hotel I visit that’s selling one, I don’t care what it looks like. My wife hates this.How many have you accrued after 13 years of restauranting?Hundreds. Some are in storage, some are sent home to Atlanta. The most recent one I bought came from a famous, female-owned strip club in Portland called Mary’s. It’s actually more of a bar that happens to have 50-year-old strippers. Gus Van Sant famously wears a Mary’s shirt, in fact. But some day, if I ever own a restaurant, I want to do something involving t-shirts. Gotcha. As fashion editors, we’re always essentially reacting to what we think is beautiful. As a food critic, are you just reacting to your gut?It all comes down to this: Would you pay for it out of your own pocket? I eat like a billionaire, but I basically live in middle class poverty. And I bet a lot of New Yorkers do the same thing.

Your foodists-in-training: Bee, Annelise, Lola, and Evren

B FA N Y C . C O M ( 2 ) ; P AT R I C K M C M U L L A N . C O M ; A L L FA S H I O N E T T E S C O U R T E S Y

Knowlton with Bon Appétit colleagues Adam Rapoport, Christine Muhlke, and Alex Grossman

Page 43: The Daily Front Row

Now in a convenient crème compact. The No. 1 sellingTinted Moisturizer*“Give your skin a fresh, healthy,

‘no makeup’ look with a soft hint of colour that

evens and enhances the skin.”

—Laura Mercier

New. Tinted Moisturizer Crème Compact SPF20Enhance your fl awless face. Choose from

12 natural, true-to-skin choices.

*Based on The NPD Group, Inc., U.S volume sales in prestige retail,

year ending 2011.

lauramercier.com

fl awless has many faces

Gurwitch Products, LLC gpllc124759a LM212 Bon Appetit - Feast or Fashion Proof No. 1

gpllc124759a.indd 1 8/3/12 10:51 AM

Page 44: The Daily Front Row

FA S H I O N W E E K DA I LY. C O M

CHRIS BENZ: a life in food

What fuels this chicster-about-town’s madcap lifestyle? The Daily demanded photographic evidence

of Benz’s daily intake.

A FAVORITE DISH“Japanese dumplings at TOY, a super fun new place in the Gansevoort Hotel where the sushi boat arrives via a team of waiters with sparklers. I used to love sushi under the backlights at Avenue A Sushi in the nineties, and this is a major throwback.”

DELI DELICACIES “There’s nothing better than this lowbrow version of breakfast: an egg sandwich and hot coffee.”

CAFFEINE COUNT“I’m a Sant Ambroeus disciple, but always al fresco.”

ABSOLUT LOYALTY “Work hard, play hard! Vodka fuels us on hot summer nights as we’re prepping for Fashion Week.”

FETCHED TO ORDER“I have my a.m. and p.m. Starbucks orders taped to the fridge in our studio, so when interns make coffee runs, there are no mistakes.”

AFTERNOON MUNCHIES“I love a rooftop chicken sandwich in Williamsburg during a top-secret photo shoot. It wasn’t on the menu, but that’s just the way I roll.”

A L L P H O T O S C O U R T E S Y

Designerdish

Page 45: The Daily Front Row

MSS2-10055283

Operator: Print/Export: Printed At:GOTHAM 8-7-2012 5:55 PM 100%

BleedTrim

SafetyGutter

Line ScreenLo/Hi Res

PaperProof #

Revision Round

Dir of Studio SvcsDir of Graphic Svcs

Project ManagerAccount Exec

Global Creative DirCreative Director

Art DirectorCopywriter

Proofreader

Additional Specs: None

Notes: None

11.25” x 14”10.75” x 13.5”10.25” x 13”None133HIGHFortune Gloss Text12

Chris WestonStuart TurnerJohn WallRafaela VezaroJane MaukschDiana Stratton-CrookeMabel TongKaty SheshDenni Heiges

THE MAYBELLINE COMPANYEssie

Essie Fall Stylenomics Page None

4/C Non-Bleed Magazine PageBon Appetit: 2012

Fonts: Univers (55 Roman, 65 Bold), Bodoni BE (Medium), Bodoni (Poster)Images: MSS2-10055283_Comp_F_4CMG.tif (CMYK; 300 ppi; 100%), Essie_Signature_K.eps (67.98%)Inks: Cyan, Magenta, Yellow, Black

PDF Sent To

America’s nail salon expert.Since 1981. essie.com

newstylenomics

DBP, Toluene and Formaldehyde free

don’t sweater it

head mistress

recessionista

skirting the issue

miss fancy pants

new fall collection 2012

style nomics.”

“no need to tighten your belt when you practice

S:10.25”S:13”

T:10.75”T:13.5”

B:11.25”B:14”

Page 46: The Daily Front Row

g et t y (4); sh ut terstock

Vices&Crises

h ow’s life?To be honest, I’m feeling a bit burned out.

Pourquoi?Everything’s going digital, even the guys in my crowd. Have you heard about these new smokes that are all microchip, no tar?Are you becoming a bit dated?Not dated—never dated. A little retro, maybe. And a little unserious.you seem to be taken seriously to me.Only as a leper! I used to be everywhere—at the finest barstools at the Rainbow Room, heading the toniest tables at Tavern on the Green.Around the time we first met, you were holding court at Don hill’s.Yes! Those were some good times. I was really going through a renaissance around the time of the Ban. how did that affect you?

It destroyed my appetite, for starters.how does a stimulant get depressed?It’s kind of you to think of me that way.Did you feel like you were in hiding?Essentially. But you know, it’s interesting—as I became scarcer, I became more appealing to the most discerning society. Like a luxury good, if you will.If you had to compare yourself to a fashion accessory...A Taffin opal brooch, a Schlumberger earring, a Cartier Panthère ring. I’m unabashedly opulent.When are you happiest?When I am being enjoyed alone, in secret.Any place in particular?Oh [exhaling], probably Graydon Carter’s office bathroom. The quarters are a bit cramped, but the space itself is sexy.What are your politics?

I suppose it’s on the record that Obama and I go way back.Describe your relationship with food.Mostly compatible.What about with alcohol?We’re frenemies.coffee?Ugh! So annoying.Do you have anxiety about the future?No more than the next vice. But for everyone who abandons me, another adopts. At least that’s how it seems. Or maybe I’m just blowing smoke up your...Why are you such a polarizing character?Oh darling, isn’t it clear? I’m far too magnetic for my own good. Don’t you remember how we met, and how intimate we became, so immediately?I’m trying not to think about it. how do you want to be remembered?On fire!

FA S H I O N W E E K DA I LY. C O M

My ntervew w th a CgaretteMost of the fashion industry’s eccentric habits—wacky diets, dangerous shoes, preening for street-style photogs in a manner that would make Angelina blush—are celebrated. But smoking? Not so much. Your Daily sat down with the once-ubiquitous Marlboro Light in search of answers about its fate. BY ASHLEY BAKER

Page 47: The Daily Front Row

Business and fashion come together in a unique way at LIM College.

For nearly 75 years, we’ve been educating fashion’s business leaders.

With hundreds of the industry’s top companies as partners, and with

expert faculty, a rigorous curriculum, and our prime location in the

world’s fashion capital, this is a hands-on, professional education —

WHERE BUSINESS MEETS FASHION® — unlike anywhere else.

www.limcollege.edu • 800.677.1322 • 12 E. 53rd St. New York, NY

FASHION CAREERS

COME IN DIFFERENT SIZES:

S, M, L AND

NYCwww.limcollege.edu/img

Page 48: The Daily Front Row

MCX2-10064074B

Operator: Print/Export: Printed At:GOTHAM 8-24-2012 10:25 AM 100%

BleedTrim

SafetyGutter

Line ScreenLo/Hi Res

PaperProof #

Revision Round

Dir of Studio SvcsDir of Graphic Svcs

Project ManagerAccount Exec

Global Creative DirCreative Director

Art DirectorCopywriter

Proofreader

Additional Specs: None

Notes: Prepare mechanical per attached Comp-Directory.><Use hi-res art from MCX2-10060290E

11.25” x 14”10.75” x 13.5”10.25” x 13”None133HiFortune gloss13

Chris WestonStuart TurnerPhil KrellRafaela VezaroJane MaukschJudy WongTony HanstadNoneDenni Heiges

MAYBELLINE COMPANYCorporate

Fashion Week Fall 2012 The Daily - Shu Pei-Nail Page

Shu Pei4/C Bleed Magazine PageThe Daily: Sept. 7, 2012

Fonts: Helvetica Neue (55 Roman)Images: MCX2-10064074B_Comp_F_4CMG.tif (CMYK; 579 ppi; 69%), MAYNY05_POS_White.eps (67.46%), MNY-FW_2012_Fall_KO.ai (143.21%)Inks: Cyan, Magenta, Yellow, Black

PDF Sent To

Makeup artistry by Charlotte Willer.©2012 Maybelline LLC.

S:10.25”S:13”

T:10.75”T:13.5”

B:11.25”B:14”