New York Post

Wintour’s ‘wider net’ for Teen Vogue

- By KEITH J. KELLY kkelly@nypost.com

IT’S back to the drawing board for Anna Wintour. Although there were a handful of other candidates in the running to take over Teen Vogue before Wintour’s top pick of Alexi McCammond blew up in her face, the Condé Nast chief content officer won’t be defaulting to a runner-up, sources said.

The longtime editor-in-chief of Vogue and inspiratio­n for the film “The Devil Wears Prada” wants to vet more candidates before making a final call, which means it could be awhile before she finds a replacemen­t for McCammond, who resigned in a storm of controvers­y last week, sources said.

“I think something about the way this went down has made Anna Wintour want to cast a wider net,” said a source familiar with the process. “I think the trick now is finding someone who will be willing to inherit the scandal, be able to appease advertiser­s who paused their spending and build on the equity of justice reporting that Teen Vogue is known for.”

Sources say Wintour had backed McCammond’s hiring almost until the very end, hoping that controvers­ial anti-Asian tweets, which the company had known about in the hiring process, would not become an issue.

The tweets, which referenced “Asian eyes” and a “stupid Asian” teacher’s assistant, dated to 2011 during McCammond’s freshman year in college at the University of Chicago. McCammond, now 27, first apologized for the deleted tweets when they surfaced two years ago amid her time as an Axios political reporter.

But backlash was harsh after Condé Nast announced it would be putting McCammond in charge of editorial staffers for the first time in her career at a time of surging violence against Asians. Advertiser­s pulled out and she resigned.

“My understand­ing is that Condé was very behind Alexi up until the resignatio­n and that Anna was really upset at the turn of events,” one source said.

Now the disastrous turn of events has media watchers predicting what, if any, long-term damage this might create for Wintour, who continues to wield ever more power at Condé Nast despite harsh criticisms over her handling of race and diversity issues in the past.

“She’s 70 years old, but she still seems to be expanding her responsibi­lities,” said an insider who noted that she was recently promoted from artistic director of US Condé Nast to chief content officer with global responsibi­lity.

“We were all kind of hoping her responsibi­lities by now would have been becoming more symbolic but instead she’s adding to them,” this person added.

Back in June 2020, a group of black journalist­s called on Wintour to resign over her propensity to hire thin white staffers with ties to the upper class.

Wintour at the time acknowledg­ed her past shortcomin­gs in a companywid­e memo and pledged to make more diverse hires.

And for about a day following the March 5 news of her tapping McCammond, Wintour appeared to be in keeping with that promise. McCammond, who has tangled with everyone from Donald Trump to Charles Barkley, was tagged by the National Associatio­n of Black Journalist­s as the emerging journalist of the year in 2019.

Author and blogger Steve Blacker, who consulted with Condé Nast in the 1990s, sees the McCammond pick at a time of rising antiAsian sentiment as pure foolishnes­s. “It shows Condé Nast to be a bunch of bumbling clowns,” Blacker said. “Why didn’t [CEO] Roger Lynch step in, say let’s look at more candidates?”

But other sources are brushing off any concerns of damage to Wintour’s reputation, noting that she’s no stranger to controvers­y. “Anna is impervious, I doubt this is going to affect her in any way.”

The photojourn­alist behind the “f--king hot nurse” caption in the Asbury Park Press is out at the Gannett-owned daily, which has promised to start requiring two sets of eyes on every story. “The reporter in question is no longer with the company,” APP executive editor Paul D’Ambrosio wrote in a column on Tuesday in an effort to explain the caption, which caused an uproar for describing an unidentifi­ed nurse giving a COVID-19 vaccine as a “f--king hot nurse” and “a total JAP” — an acronym for Jewish American Princess. D’Ambrosio said he accepted “full responsibi­lity” for the error and that journalist­s will no longer be allowed to self-publish as a result.

“On Monday, I instructed our staff to always put two sets of eyes on each piece of content, including stories and photos. No photo and caption will be published without another staffer looking it over, regardless of the time of day.”

The photo was credited to Gustavo Martinez Contreras, who did not return calls seeking comment.

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