The malaise-free Carter era in American journalism

The malaise-free Carter era in American journalism


“I think it would be fun to run a newspaper,” said Charles Foster Kane. But in the telling of Graydon Carter, there was no enterprise more engaging, stimulating, or fun than running a glossy, well-subsidized general-interest magazine at the turn of the millennium. In a droll, trenchant, and surprisingly affable new memoir, When the Going Was Good, Carter recounts his incomparable tour of duty at the helm of Vanity Fair from 1992 to 2017, a period that roughly coincided with the last go-go period in American print media.

These days, the shine is off the job of running Vanity Fair, as we can see from the abbreviated reign of Carter’s successor, Radhika Jones, who will soon be calling it quits a mere eight years after taking

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