Over the Top on St. Barth

The summer “On the Road” issue of Palmer is now on newsstands, and includes my latest piece for the magazine, “Clouds on the Horizon,” about how the elite island of St. Barthelemy is pushing back against over-development, greedy investors, $480 restaurant steaks and my favorite new hashtag, rampant #assholery. Also included, a portfolio of vintage […]
Cinema in the Sand

My third story for Palmer, the luxe new Palm Beach magazine, is called Cinema Paradiso, and looks back at two classic landmark theaters on the resort island–one for films, one for live theatricals–both now being revived by local aficionados.
Preparing for Take-off

In New York Social Diary today, David Patrick Columbia reveals the jacket and previews my five-years-in-the-making new book, Flight of the WASP. “He explores the elite culture in microcosm,” Columbia writes. “And if you’ve read Michael Gross, you are already assured that you will find it fascinating.” Click here to preorder.
RIP Patty Raynes

The late Patty Raynes, who died this week, plays a small part in my book Unreal Estate: Money, Ambition and the Lust for Land in Los Angeles. But her father, Marvin Davis, is and was as oversized a character—physically and in American social and business life—as the L.A. estate he owned. Click the link to […]
Tina Chow, Redux

She’s still got “it.” The late Tina Chow–jewelry designer, restaurant hostess, best-dressed fashion icon, muse–has her second New York magazine cover this week, featured as the epitome of the New York City It Girl. Her first cover, just over than 31 years ago, which tells the whole story of her life and death as one […]
WASPs Take Flight

Though it does not yet have a jacket, and won’t come out until November 14th (the waiting is the hardest part), my new book, Flight of the WASP: The Rise, Fall and Future of America’s Original Ruling Class, is now available for pre-order from the bookseller of your choice. From Bookshop.org From Barnes & […]
Greta Garbo Died 33 Years Ago This Weekend

When Greta Garbo died on April 15, 1990, I stepped out of my comfort zone of fashionable society to write about her final days in her beloved East Midtown Manhattan, the one place where she could truly find the peace and solitude she had long craved. And discovered she had very fashionable friends and lived […]
Who Sez Print is Dead?

Print may be imperiled but Palmer and Park (where I’m, respectively, the Editor-at-Large and the Special Correspondent), are thriving, over-sized, advertising-stuffed, old-school magazines. In the current issue of Palmer, I write about controversial new ordinances that either threaten to alter or promise to update the world-famous style of Palm Beach gardens. And the new Park […]
(Not) Everyone Loves a Rogue

Richard Avedon’s mural sized group portraits and off-takes from their making drew me to the Metropolitan Museum of Art this weekend, where I also confirmed that Rogues’ Gallery, my 2009 expose of the museum’s leaders, is still banned from sale in its store. (Flattered!) So, I’m delighted to say that, out of the blue, shepherd, […]
R.I.P. Chip Rachlin, Agent Extraordinary

Just learned with sadness of the death of Chip Rachlin, who headed contemporary music at ICM when I interviewed him for a story on rock music booking agents in Swank magazine circa 1976. Click to read a priceless period piece.