ニューヨーク・タイムズのインスタグラム(nytimes) - 7月23日 04時01分
During his 25-year run as editor in chief of Vanity Fair, Graydon Carter become famous in his own right: a nattily dressed icon who oversaw a very, very successful magazine. Recently, though, Carter’s editorial decision making has come into question after Vicky Ward, a journalist, claimed that a well-sourced accusation of sexual misconduct against Jeffrey Epstein was removed from a profile she wrote in 2003 for the magazine. Carter has said that Ward’s reporting on this aspect of the article did not meet the magazine’s legal and editorial standards. “I didn’t invent the system. I just lived by the system,” he said. Ward disputes this. David Marchese recently talked to Graydon Carter about Vanity Fair, Jeffrey Epstein and an editor’s power. Click the link in our bio to read more. @mamadivisuals took this photo.
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bethjohnsonepstein
It’s easy to “live by the system” when you and your kind thrive in the system. It’s better to challenge failures in that system and improve things. To use your position to make things better. Which those in power are most often NOT motivated to do. Which is why as a culture we still are where we are. Those in power won’t change until they have no choice — either due to financial or societal pressure.
little_fleetwood
Gatekeepers for the famous and wealthy like Graydon Carter are in their well paid, highly privileged positions to protect them from the public and in many cases from themselves.
kpoh115
I like you NY Times, but I am so disappointed to see typos in your social posts. You all are supposed to be better than that.
juleejuleebobulee
And what a joke this interview is. Wow. Does anyone believe Carter is answering authentically here.
real_news_media_2020
I heard this comment section was a war zone ??. If y’all don’t like my account let me know
daily.nose
Epstein, a Jewish pedophile, preyed solely on Christians girls. Isn’t this a hate crime?
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