Tom McGeveran
Articles by Tom McGeveran
Sean Avery's Vogue Internship: In Which He Doesn't Always Have to Wear a Shirt
Jun. 23rd, 2008, 1:46 pm
Have you been following the course of Sean Avery's career? Not with the National Hockey League but in his betweentimes internship at Vogue?
Well, Men's Vogue has. On their web site, Mr. Avery gets a byline for telling readers what it's like to be a hockey player who likes to play dress-up:
I don't watch sports. I don't read about sports. Generally, other than spending a lot of time in dressing rooms both at home and on the road, I don't hang out with other athletes. Over breakfast in hotels when the Rangers are on the road, I read the Style section in The New York Times. read more »
The Week in DVR: Take a Dip in the Poul! Sleazy Swinging, 70's Style, on CBS
Jun. 2nd, 2008, 8:00 am
MONDAY, JUNE 2
Monday evening begins promisingly enough with a tribute to recently departed cinema god Sydney Pollack; Turner Classic Movies is spooling four of his films tonight. The Slender Thread airs at 8 p.m., starring Anne Bancroft and Sidney Poitier and a suicide hotline--for real! Then every two hours another one: Three Days of the Condor, Tootsie, and Jeremiah Johnston.
If you only tune in for Tootsie, you'll be done in time to catch the premiere episode of Legally Blonde: The Musical: The Search for Elle Woods, in which contestants vie to play Reese Witherspoon's secretly-smart ditz lawyer on Broadway. On MTV, of course. read more »
CBS Acquires CNET in $1.8 Billion Deal
May. 15th, 2008, 8:40 am
CBS has just announced plans to acquire online media company, CNET, in a deal worth $1.8 billion.
The press release says: "The acquisition will make CBS one of the 10 most popular Internet companies in the United States, with a combined 54 million unique users per month, and approximately 200 million users worldwide."
Most of you probably know CNET.com, the Web site that breaks news about online and tech industries.
They're also the purveyors of ZDNet, GameSpot.com, TV.com, mp3.com, CNET news.com, UrbanBaby, CHOW, Search.com, BNET, MySimon and TechRepublic.
Full press release after the jump, and thanks to PaidContent.org, where we first read the news (you can find some more analysis of the deal there, and we'll come back to this when we've had a chance to think it through a bit). read more »
American Cutie
May. 13th, 2008, 8:11 pm

public life in Preen bandage dress, 5-inch
Alexander McQueen stilettos.
In the course of promoting her latest movie, Iron Man, Gwyneth Paltrow has been seen in at least three incredibly short dresses. read more »
Times: CBS in Talks to Outsource Newsgathering Operations to CNN
Apr. 7th, 2008, 8:18 pm
So now we know what Matt Drudge was talking about: Tim Arango at the Times is reporting that CBS "has been in discussions with Time Warner about a deal to outsource some of its newsgathering operations to CNN," a report sourced to "two executives briefed on the matter."
This is something CNN has talked about with other networks in the past, Mr. Arango points out in the article, but the talks with CBS have been "revived and lately intensified." read more »
Eliot Spitzer: Bringing the Passion Back to Albany
Mar. 10th, 2008, 3:13 pm
Eliot Spitzer's 2006 campaign message: "Bring some passion back to Albany."
Morning Memo: Marion Cotillard's Wacky 9/11 Theory; P. Diddy Comes Out as Bicoastal
Mar. 3rd, 2008, 10:06 am
Oscar-winner Marion Cotillard thinks the World Trade Center might have been destroyed because it was too expensive to re-wire the building for class-A tenants. (PageSix.com)
An example of the kind of freedom satellite radio affords Howard Stern: His half-hour rant calling former sidekick Stuttering John a "no-talent ingrate." (PageSix.com) read more »
David Shuster Will Return to NBC In Time for Debate
Feb. 15th, 2008, 11:56 am
Not only will David Shuster, the MSNBC talent who got into trouble over claiming the Clinton campaign had "pimped out" former first daughter Chelsea on the hustings, be returning to the network; his suspension will have lasted two weeks, and he'll be back in time for the NBC-sponsored debate between Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama Feb. 26. Broadcasting & Cable reports: read more »
Report: Hillary Clinton Campaign Has Lodged Complaints About Chris Matthews With MSNBC
Feb. 14th, 2008, 4:41 pm
Greg Sargent: David Shuster Will Not Be Fired
Feb. 13th, 2008, 4:45 pm
After Hillary seemed to suggest that his suspension was not enough of a punishment for his pimp remark, MSNBC affirmed to Greg Sargent at Talking Points Memo that David Shuster will not be fired.
"He remains on suspension indefinitely, but he will not be fired and will be returning to MSNBC," MSNBC director of communications Alana Russo told Sargent, who then speculates (pretty plausibly, we think) what it all means: read more »
Video: Sam Zell to L.A. Times: 'I'm Your Viagra!'
Feb. 8th, 2008, 10:08 am
Solidarity! Vanity Fair Cancels Oscar Party
Feb. 5th, 2008, 5:48 pm
Vanity Fair just announced that they are planning to cancel their annual Oscars after-party.
Here's the entire announcement, as posted on VF Daily this afternoon:
After much consideration, and in support of the writers and everyone else affected by this strike, we have decided that this is not the appropriate year to hold our annual Oscar party. We want to congratulate all of this year’s nominees and we look forward to hosting our 15th Oscar party next year.
Writer Joshua Stein Still/Actually/Finally Leaving Gawker
Jan. 31st, 2008, 9:27 am
In the mundane setting of its morning Gossip Round-Up, Gawker blogger Joshua Stein announced this morning that he really is leaving the site this time.
Toni Morrison's Letter to Barack Obama
Jan. 28th, 2008, 11:36 am
Legendary novelist and editor Toni Morrison's endorsement of Barack Obama is obviously not significant for her ability to move voters at the polls, which is not proven and probably not likely to be proven. But given her perceived attachment to the Clintons—Bill, she famously once called America's first black president; and Hillary she has been close to in the past—we thought it worth printing in full the letter of endorsement she sent to the Illinois senator, as released by the Obama campaign. Follow the jump to read it. read more »
Academy Award Nominees: Cate Blanchett Double-Dips; Michael Clayton Makes Its Case; Biggest Surprise Is Kathy Bates!
Jan. 22nd, 2008, 10:01 am

The biggest surprise during this morning's announcement of nominees for the 2007 Academy Awards was that they were able to find someone—Kathy Bates, "a good friend of the Academy"—who was willing to risk the ire of the striking writers by participating. Cate Blanchett, the new Meryl Streep, garnered nominations for playing Queen Elizabeth and Bob Dylan. Also, remember Michael Clayton? The Academy does! Nor was sentimental indie favorite Juno shut out. read more »
Video: Chris Matthews Apologizes to Hillary Clinton, Says He Has A Good Heart
Jan. 17th, 2008, 8:03 pm
Chris Matthews addresses criticism of his recent statements about Hillary Clinton's career earlier today on his cable news show, Hardball.
And here is the comment that started it all:
Overset: James Wolcott, Howell Raines, Margaret Atwood, and More Maureen Dowd
Jan. 14th, 2008, 6:43 pm
Terminator: The Sarah Connor Chronicles beat out that weird Golden Globes whatever-it-was in last night's ratings. (The Hollywood Reporter)
James Wolcott signed a two-book deal with Doubleday. One is for a memoir of New York in the 1970's, the other is a collection of his writing. (Publishers Weekly)
Margaret Atwood just delivered her first manuscript in five years; it's untitled. (CBC)
There was some shuffling that, deep down, involves More and Marie-Claire. We'll figure it out off-hours. (Eat the Press)
There is something kind of unseemly about Esquire's stoutly promotional cover-spread advising men to shop at Victoria's Secret. (Jeff Bercovici)
Rachel Sklar has devoted some serious pixels to the ongoing Maureen Dowd dateline debate; it's a good place to catch up. (Eat the Press)
Former New York Times executive editor Howell "Change Agent" Raines will write a media column for Portfolio. (Howard Kurtz)
And here's why, for now at least, we are calling this new daily end-of-day round-up what we're calling it.
Seating Charts: Morgenthau at Balthazar
Jan. 11th, 2008, 8:12 am
Our friend and sister-wife (via Observer blog The Media Mob) John Koblin was out in Soho last night and files this report:
At a little after 8 p.m. last night, the 88-year old Manhattan District Attorney Robert Morgenthau strolled into Balthazar.
If you tried to get a table at that time you were told there was a 90-minute wait. But not Mr. Morgenthau, who model-stomped deliberately up to the hostess stand and flashed open his wallet to show his ID. He was immediately ushered to a table. read more »
Michael Cunningham on Joan Didion at the National Book Awards
Dec. 20th, 2007, 1:15 pm
The National Book Foundation has released videos from the National Book Awards (hosted by Fran Liebowitz!) Here's Fran introducing Hours novelist Michael Cunningham, who presents an award to Joan Didion after introducing her with a little speech. Afterwards you can go watch your Chris Crocker or Jacob Lodwick video or whatever. Merry stinkin' Christmas, ingrates!
Fed to Lend Banks Money to Buy Ads on CNN.com?
Dec. 19th, 2007, 1:09 pm
A reader just sent us this screenshot. It's something we've noticed before on television--endless advertising for one of the biggest players in the credit crunch storyline, often opposite news programming detailing the downward spiral.
Jay Leno to Pay Staff Through Christmas
Dec. 6th, 2007, 8:47 am
In a meeting yesterday, Jay Leno told his staff he'd continue to pay their salaries through Christmas, Variety reports.
Previously, Mr. Leno had been paying them on a week-by-week basis, which he'll continue to do after the holiday, he reportedly said. read more »
Report: Bust in Flatiron Poker-Club Murder
Dec. 6th, 2007, 7:27 am
Police have arrested a second man in connection with the hold-up at a Flatiron District private poker club that cost a New Jersey college professor and father his life.
The New York Post reports that Steven Perez, 21, of Tampa, Fla., was arrested last Saturday and is being held without bail in the hold-up.
A source who was at the club that night gave Spencer Morgan an eyewitness account of the evening's events, in which a shotgun dropped by one of the robbers apparently went off, fatally wounding 55-year-old Frank DeSena in the chest.
The Post report cited a source saying it was not clear whether Mr. Perez is the 'triggerman' but that police believe he is one of three suspects in the hold-up caught on video surveillance cameras at the 'secret' poker club near 28th Street and Fifth Avenue.
From Spencer Morgan's account:
There was a guy in a yellow slicker who had been under a table with Mr. DeSena. He said that the man with the shotgun had been shaking, and the shotgun had slipped and dropped to the floor. When the gunman rushed to pick up the shotgun, it went off, and hit Mr. DeSena.
They waited: It took 20 minutes for the ambulance. Two of the club’s female waitresses were sobbing. People kept saying what a nice guy Mr. DeSena was. He would be taken to St. Vincent’s Hospital where he would be pronounced dead shortly before midnight. >> READ THE STORY
Oh, G! Brooklyn Gets Extensions
Nov. 23rd, 2007, 5:16 pm
The hapless G train will be getting an extended run: According to The Brooklyn Papers, the MTA plans to extend G service south beyond its current terminus at Smith-9th Streets to Church Avenue.
The real question is whether the G will ever be "extended" to Continental Avenue on the other end, which is its official terminus but whither it rarely goes.
Judge a Neighborhood By Its Bookstores! St. Mark's Bookshop Best-Seller List Heavy on Cormac, Comics
Nov. 23rd, 2007, 5:05 pm
With No Country For Old Men's cinematic debut it was perhaps inevitable that bookstores would see a surge of popular interest in the already-popular work of Cormac McCarthy. And in the East Village, where the reading of novels is hardly the greatest danger posed to young men's virility, Cormac's doing double-time.
Click "Read More" for more of our annotated version of St. Mark's Bookshop's instore bestseller list.
read more »
Penelope Cruz: Almodovar's Like Family, and Bono Was With His Family
Nov. 23rd, 2007, 4:55 pm
In Vogue's holiday issue, actress Penelope Cruz unloads on the paparazzi that fueled the story that she and U2's Bono were having an affair: read more »
Fernanda Eberstadt's Park Avenue
Nov. 23rd, 2007, 2:13 pm
Novelist Fernanda Eberstadt has written into Max Abelson of our blog, The Real Estate, with some of her early memories of life on Park Avenue:
The most famous party my parents gave was in 1962. It was a costume party. They moved out all the furniture and brought in a reggae band, and Jacqueline Kennedy, who was then First Lady, came to the party, with a lot of Secret Service men, and everybody danced till dawn, when they were served bacon and eggs. read more »
Project Runway Gets Bitten With Sex and the City Branding Bug
Nov. 23rd, 2007, 1:48 pm
Sarah Jessica Parker, the actress who is frequently confused soap-opera-fan-style with Carrie Bradshaw, the character she portrayed on HBO hit series Sex and the City, who was a writer and not a fashion designer anyway (and based on former Observer scribe Candace Bushnell, btw), has been rewarded for being the beneficiary of a fantastic wardrobe: she has her own fashion line! read more »
Linda Tripp's Black Friday
Nov. 23rd, 2007, 1:23 pm
OK, it's a rough day for New York society gossip. Park Avenue Peerage is off to India; A Socialite's Life has posted a Thanksgiving message that reminds us of a bad drag queen joke, and we've already visited David Patrick Columbia.
Gossip Roundup: Vincent Gallo and Terry Richardson Wish You an Annoying Thanksgiving; Nicole Richie's Turkey-Day Good Deed!
Nov. 23rd, 2007, 10:30 am
Yawn. What? Right. Here's the gossip round-up for Nov. 23, 2008, Thanksgiving Friday and possibly the slowest news day ever.
An eight-months-pregnant Nicole Richie and her friend, the society disc jockeyess Samantha Ronson, volunteered at a Hollywood soup kitchen yesterday. read more »
Remains of the Day: Stolen Art; Michi on Sacks; Rowling's Latest
Nov. 20th, 2007, 6:21 pm
Former Getty Museum antiquities curator Marion True went on trial in Athens yesterday on charges she conspired over a decade ago to acquire for the museum an ancient gold funerary wreath.
After the Battle of Brooklyn: East River Incognita II "further examines [artist Duke Riley's] fascination with and exploration of maritime history and events around the waterways of New York City. read more »
Rosie Txts Jacques: "2day there is no deal" With MSNBC
Nov. 8th, 2007, 8:40 am
Jacques Steinberg had a nice bit of news in an otherwise unrewarding piece on cable network MSNBC the other day: Rosie O'Donnell was close to a deal to host a show on the network.
Then, last night at 7:06 p.m., O'Donnell posted the following to her blog:
msnbc
one hour
live
following keith olbermannwe were close to a deal
almost done
i let it slip in miami
causing panic on the studio endwell
what can u do2day there is no deal
poof
my career as a pundit is over
b4 it began read more »
'Preppy Murder' Convict Robert Chambers in Drug Bust
Oct. 23rd, 2007, 12:30 pm
Robert Chambers, the 41-year-old who made headlines as a York Prep kid in the 80's when he was convicted of manslaughter in the death of 18-year-old Jennifer Levin, has been busted again.
According to the Manhattan District Attorney's office, he and 39-year-old Shawn Kovell had been the target of a three-month investigation after "citizen complaints" that they were selling drugs out of an apartment they shared on East 57th Street.
It looks like they've got him dead to rights, too: "The investigation utilized surveillance techniques and an undercover detective to purchase quantities of cocaine directly from Chambers and Kovell near and inside their residence," the D.A.'s office announced in a press release.
They were arrested last night on multiple counts of felony narcotics sales after police turned up drug paraphernalia including crack pipes and "packaging materials" in the apartment.
The 14 counts Mr. Chambers is charged with carry sentences ranging from three and a half to 30 years in prison each.
The district attorney described a "violent struggle" during the arrest and did not rule out further charges coming from those.
Financial Times Girds for Battle With Rupert
Oct. 2nd, 2007, 9:26 am
With Rupert Murdoch talking about taking The Wall Street Journals Web site free, Financial Times is girding its loins for battle.
The newspaper announced yesterday that later this month it will initiate a program that allows online readers to access 30 articles a month without registering as paying members of the site.
Presently most of its content requires a subscription. read more »
Beastie Boys Get Hall of Fame Nomination
Sep. 28th, 2007, 2:24 pm
From a New York point of view, the AP buried the lede here:
NEW YORK (AP) -- Here's something Madonna can really celebrate: a nomination to the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame.
Madge joins heartland rocker John Mellencamp, the puckish rappers Beastie Boys and premier dance acts Donna Summer and Chic among the nine nominees for the hall.
(Even calling her Madge is like an acknowledgement of her non-New Yorkiness!) So we remember that she got her start at the Mudd Club and broke out of the crazy early-80's dance scene, but does anyone else? read more »
Paul Anka! Matthew Broderick! Um ... It Must Be the Plaza's 100th Birthday!
Sep. 28th, 2007, 12:25 pm
Did you know The Plaza was turning 100 this coming month? Paul Anka knew! Matthew Broderick knew! They're both going to be on hand, apparently, to celebrate the momentous event. Once upon a time it was a lovely hotel your middle-class mother took you to for tea once a year (hey, Carmela! Welcome back!) Now it's a condominium you can't afford to live in. So break out the Grucci fireworks, the 12-foot birthday cake, and ... the Orchestra of St. Luke's!
Read the full press release after the jump. read more »
Did Si Newhouse 'Rip Up' Portfolio?
Sep. 28th, 2007, 7:35 am
It's hard to evaluate the news coming from Keith Kelly's Media Ink column in The New York Post about Conde Nast chief Si Newhouse's Wednesday meeting with Joanne Lipman, editrix of Portfolio.
The splashy $100 million project is the object of some Schadenfreude, though the Schaden-part has always been difficult to pin down. read more »
New York Times Abandons 'Times Select' Paywall
Sep. 18th, 2007, 7:09 am
Minutes after Times spokespersons had confirmed published reports the company was set to stop charging readers for access to parts of its Web site, the online version of the newspaper published an article by its own media reporter, Richard Perez-Pena, in which Times brass explained the move.
Much of the lead of the article was devoted to vindicating the Times' decision exactly two years ago to institute a paywall for access to its 23 news and opinion columnists' work, as well as to much of the Times' archived news material. read more »
Jack Bryan's Siberia Documentary
Sep. 14th, 2007, 4:22 pm
Leona's 'Rattlesnake' Eulogizes the 'Queen of Mean'
Aug. 23rd, 2007, 9:13 am
The reports are in from the funeral of Leona Helmsley, which was attended by about 150 people--an invite-only crowd of colleagues, employees and family members. It's no surprise this was not like lying in state; the so-called 'Queen of Mean' was the sworn enemy of many in New York's real-estate elite, not least of all Donald Trump and Peter Malkin, who wrestled with her for control of the Empire State Building.
But from at least one report on the funeral, it seems that those who loved Helmsley tell the same kinds of stories as those who hated her:
"She was a special lady," said Frank LaRuffa, a construction consultant who worked with her for over 35 years. The service "was very quiet, very elegant."
He remembered her as "very tough, however, very fair. When she got angry, she was usually right."
He said that even people she fired had a lot of respect for her.
One even managed to sneak her way back on the payroll, according to an anecdote her longtime adviser John Codey told in his eulogy.
"She was determined to have this woman removed," Codey said, recalling the five-year-old incident.
But he didn't want to see the worker fired; she had a knack with Trouble, Helmsley's beloved Maltese. He tried in vain to convince the impetuous Helmsley to change her mind.
So he told the maid to come back with a new hairdo and outfit in a week, in hopes of fooling Helmsley into thinking it was a different woman for the job.
When the "new" maid came for an interview, Helmsley couldn't believe how well Trouble took to the newcomer, and hired her on the spot.
But the joke was on Codey.
"She knew all along what I was doing," he said.
Helmsley confronted him and called him a "rattlesnake."
"I'll remember her as a friend," he said.
Rest in peace, Leona.
Criminal Investigation in Deutsche Bank Fire
Aug. 21st, 2007, 2:55 pm
Manhattan District Attorney Robert Morgenthau announced today that his office has opened an investigation into the Aug. 18 fire at the Deutsche Bank building near Ground Zero "to determine whether any criminal violations occurred in connection with the fire."
There's a lot to go on.
Did a construction worker's lit cigarette spark the fire? Bloomberg reports: read more »
Hatchet-Job Katie Couric Bio Hits Bookstores Next Tuesday
Aug. 21st, 2007, 10:15 am
The Daily News has some nuggets from Ed Klein's latest Unauthorized Biography. He continues to stalk powerful women in this portrait of Katie Couric, which hits bookstores a week from today.
The News writes:
The most shocking tale in author Edward Klein's unauthorized biography, "Katie: The Real Story," is that Couric's marriage to Jay Monahan was on the rocks long before he died of cancer in 1998. read more »
Did New Republic Soldier-Writer Recant Grisly War Tales?
Aug. 7th, 2007, 7:09 am
Last week, New Republic editor Franklin Foer released a statement detailing the results of an internal investigation of columns written by Pvt. Scott Thomas Beauchamp, who is stationed in Iraq. read more »
Unforbidden Kingdom: Weintsteins Set $285 M. Slate of Asian Films
Aug. 7th, 2007, 6:36 am
Bob and Harvey Weinstein have activated a $285 millon fund for the acquisition and development of a slate of 21 films and 10 direct-to-video titles shot and directed over the next six years in Asia. read more »
Did Rupert "Buy Off" Bancroft Advisers?
Aug. 2nd, 2007, 8:11 am
Yesterday, lots of Wall Street Journal staffers and one former Dow Jones board member, James Ottaway, talked to the Observer about what, in the final hours of News Corp.'s bid to buy Dow Jones, had increasingly become the central issue: Could Dow Jones set up a $30 million fund to pay the lawyers and bankers who had advised the Bancrofts on the sale-and have Rupert Murdoch foot the bill? read more »
Return of the Indie Bookseller? Brooklyn's BookCourt Expands
Jul. 31st, 2007, 7:27 am
We missed this article on Friday about one of our favorite bookstores, Cobble Hill's BookCourt.
In the late 1990's, whining about the fate of independent bookstores was a favorite pastime in a certain New York demographic. But the counterexamples are starting to crop up: For every Madison Avenue Bookshop there is a Corner Bookstore; Shakespeare and Company never really went out of business; and now comes word that BookCourt is expanding for a third time in response to demand in its nook in Cobble Hill. read more »
Liz Claiborne's Fire Sale
Jul. 31st, 2007, 7:06 am
For the last ten years, Liz Claiborne seemed to be buying everything in sight, especially things that were to most of us difficult to distinguish from Liz Claiborne itself. (Ellen Tracy? Dana Buchman?)
Now it appears that the company is prepared to part with many of its 16 subsidiaries practically for the asking, so that the company can bestow all its peach-fuzzy kisses on a few younger and more prominent brands like Juicy Couture and Kate Spade.
WWD reports: read more »
'Brinksmanship' In Overnight Negotiations to Sell Dow Jones
Jul. 31st, 2007, 5:41 am
While you were sleeping, the proposal to sell Dow Jones, Inc. to Rupert Murdoch's News Corp. got more complicated.
The Bancroft family, which controls Dow Jones Inc., missed a self-imposed deadline yesterday to line up enough votes to agree to sell the company to Rupert Murdoch's News Corp. read more »
New Republic Investigates Its Anonymous Baghdad Correspondent
Jul. 24th, 2007, 8:17 am
New Republic editor Franklin Foer tells The New York Times today that the magazine is investigating articles written under the pen name Scott Thomas and billed as the magazine's "Baghdad Diarist."
Three articles have been attributed to Thomas in the magazine since February, describing gruesome events in Iraq from the point of view of an American soldier. read more »
Will Spielberg, Geffen Walk From Dreamworks?
Jul. 23rd, 2007, 8:30 am
Peter Bart reports in today's L.A. editions of Variety that Viacom chief Sumner Redstone's relationship with Steven Spielberg and David Geffen is going south.
According to his report-which relies on unnamed sources-the duo could walk in 15 months if their relationship with Mr. Redstone, whose purchase of Dreamworks through Paramount was regarded as a coup in Hollywood, does not improve.
Report: Harry Potter Earned $150 M. in 24 Hours
Jul. 23rd, 2007, 8:05 am
Variety reports out an interesting take on the record-breaking sales of Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows:
While the book and movie businesses are structured very differently, dollars the franchise generated domestically this weekend for its creator and distributor surpass what a studio might take in for a hit tentpole. Publishers typically sell books to wholesalers and retailers for a 40%-45% discount off the retail price, which means the Saturday sales alone could generate more than $150 million in receipts for Scholastic and Rowling.
8.3 million copies of the book sold in the first 24 hours after its midnight release July 21. When you consider that almost all of the marketing and advertising costs are borne by the retailers, that's a lot of dosh.




















