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	<title>Observer &#187; Vogue’s September Issue, Reviewed: The Magazine That Mistook a Pop Star for a Hat</title>
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		<title>Observer &#187; Vogue’s September Issue, Reviewed: The Magazine That Mistook a Pop Star for a Hat</title>
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		<title>Vogue’s September Issue, Reviewed: The Magazine That Mistook a Pop Star for a Hat</title>

		<comments>http://observer.com/2012/08/vogues-september-issue-reviewed-the-magazine-that-mistook-a-pop-star-for-a-hat/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 21 Aug 2012 17:15:12 -0400</pubDate>
					<link>http://observer.com/2012/08/vogues-september-issue-reviewed-the-magazine-that-mistook-a-pop-star-for-a-hat/</link>
			<dc:creator>Daniel D'Addario</dc:creator>
				
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://observer.com/?p=258628</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[<p><a href="http://observer.com/2012/08/vogues-september-issue-reviewed-the-magazine-that-mistook-a-pop-star-for-a-hat/lady-gaga-vogue-sept-2012/" rel="attachment wp-att-258630"><img class="alignleft size-medium wp-image-258630" title="Lady Gaga." src="http://nyoobserver.files.wordpress.com/2012/08/lady-gaga-vogue-sept-2012.jpg?w=221" alt="" width="221" height="300" /></a>September’s 916-page <em>Vogue</em> induced in us a medical crisis (two crises, if you count the hernia we sustained while carrying it from the mailbox). After reading contributor <strong>Lynn Yaeger’</strong>s piece on her prosopagnosia, commonly known as face blindness, we began to fret that we, too, were afflicted. Ms. Yaeger admits that she didn’t even recognize <strong>Gisele Bundchen</strong> in person—imagine! She also wrote that she gets particularly perplexed when her friends tuck their hair into big fur hats, a mere 78 pages before we noted some unrecognizable model posing with her hair tucked into one big fur hat after another. Hey, wait, that’s <strong>Lady Gaga</strong>, as styled by the clever <strong>Grace Coddington</strong>! Ms. Coddington furthered our face-blindness in a spread based on the life of Edith Wharton, with Ms. Wharton played by model <strong>Natalia Vodianova</strong>, in Nina Ricci and Rochas, and Henry James played by—we were sure our eyes deceived us!—<strong>Jeffrey Eugenides</strong>. <em>The Marriage Plot</em> author looks familiar only because he sports a series of vests not dissimilar to the one he wore on a Times Square billboard last year. Finally, there’s the profile of a sporty young graduate student in a metallic Marc Jacobs gown—hey, that’s <strong>Chelsea Clinton</strong>! And while America was shocked by her hinting to writer <strong>Jonathan Van Meter</strong> that she might run for office, we were shocked by Mr. Van Meter’s declaration that Ms. Clinton has a fashion sense similar to <strong>Beyoncé</strong>’s. Turns out prosopagnosia is no impediment to writing for Vogue. Just ask Ms. Yaeger, who, in a separate piece this month on the history of models, writes, “For years nobody knew their names.” She should know.</p>
]]></description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><a href="http://observer.com/2012/08/vogues-september-issue-reviewed-the-magazine-that-mistook-a-pop-star-for-a-hat/lady-gaga-vogue-sept-2012/" rel="attachment wp-att-258630"><img class="alignleft size-medium wp-image-258630" title="Lady Gaga." src="http://nyoobserver.files.wordpress.com/2012/08/lady-gaga-vogue-sept-2012.jpg?w=221" alt="" width="221" height="300" /></a>September’s 916-page <em>Vogue</em> induced in us a medical crisis (two crises, if you count the hernia we sustained while carrying it from the mailbox). After reading contributor <strong>Lynn Yaeger’</strong>s piece on her prosopagnosia, commonly known as face blindness, we began to fret that we, too, were afflicted. Ms. Yaeger admits that she didn’t even recognize <strong>Gisele Bundchen</strong> in person—imagine! She also wrote that she gets particularly perplexed when her friends tuck their hair into big fur hats, a mere 78 pages before we noted some unrecognizable model posing with her hair tucked into one big fur hat after another. Hey, wait, that’s <strong>Lady Gaga</strong>, as styled by the clever <strong>Grace Coddington</strong>! Ms. Coddington furthered our face-blindness in a spread based on the life of Edith Wharton, with Ms. Wharton played by model <strong>Natalia Vodianova</strong>, in Nina Ricci and Rochas, and Henry James played by—we were sure our eyes deceived us!—<strong>Jeffrey Eugenides</strong>. <em>The Marriage Plot</em> author looks familiar only because he sports a series of vests not dissimilar to the one he wore on a Times Square billboard last year. Finally, there’s the profile of a sporty young graduate student in a metallic Marc Jacobs gown—hey, that’s <strong>Chelsea Clinton</strong>! And while America was shocked by her hinting to writer <strong>Jonathan Van Meter</strong> that she might run for office, we were shocked by Mr. Van Meter’s declaration that Ms. Clinton has a fashion sense similar to <strong>Beyoncé</strong>’s. Turns out prosopagnosia is no impediment to writing for Vogue. Just ask Ms. Yaeger, who, in a separate piece this month on the history of models, writes, “For years nobody knew their names.” She should know.</p>
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