The Smut

Michelle Ruiz

A new podcast from Vogue and Vanity Fair culture journalist Michelle Ruiz about the sexiest stories in news. Michelle has been reading smut since she was definitely too young to be reading smut. She grew up to be a Cosmo sex editor and believes fading to black is criminal. At her first job at ABC News, an editor referred to a story as “sexy” - not in the literal sense, but the kind that's juicy, colorful and complicated, maybe a little salacious and gossipy. In addition to the actual smut of our times, those are the kind of all-consuming stories and people she'll get into on The Smut.

Episodes

  1. 2D AGO

    The Kennedys & The Windsors (w/ Caroline Hallemann)

    Welcome to The Smut, a podcast about the sexiest stories in news.  I’ve been reading smut since I was definitely too young to be reading smut. A tattered Danielle Steele at a Long Island garage sale hated to see me coming! I grew up to be a sex editor at Cosmo; my desk was littered feather ticklers from 2012-2015. I just love stories that go there and that’s what I try to as a culture journalist for Vanity Fair, Vogue, The New York Times, and others. It’s why I’ve been obsessed with Heated Rivalry and Harry Styles; why I regard Normal People (the book and movie) and The Idea of You (absolutely only the book) as biblical texts.  According to the New York Times, we’re in the midst of a smut renaissance! Like “bitch” before it, the word once used as a burn is now being reclaimed as a high compliment. On The Smut, I want to keep rethinking it. At my first job at ABC News, a veteran editor referred to a story as “sexy” - not necessarily in the literal sense - but the kind of story that is juicy, colorful, complicated, maybe a little salacious and gossipy. The pop cultural fodder you text and DM about and forensically analyze all day long. Like Belle Burden’s memoir Strangers. Or the backlash, and the backlash to the backlash, to Timothée Chalamet. In addition to the actual smut of our times, those are the kind of all consuming stories and  people I want to get into on The Smut. Ithink my first episode is very much one of those.... "Love Story: John F. Kennedy Jr. and Carolyn Bessette" is one of the most feverish cultural, nostalgic, stylistic TV obsessions I can recall. From the beginning of binging this show, I saw the parallels between the Kennedys, America’s ostensible royal family, and the British royal family, in all of its deranged glory, which I’ve covered for Vogue and VF over the years. In episode 8 of Love Story, the worlds of these two royal families collide when the characters of John and Carolyn have big, emotional reactions to Princess Diana's death.  It just so happens that there is a new book, "The Kennedys & The Windsors" by Caroline Halleman, that delves into the "Homeland" wall of connections between these two dynasties. We get into the real kinship between Diana, John and Carolyn, including a now-not-so-secret lunch that John and Diana had in New York, and his real-life reaction to her death... we talk about Megan, Harry, RFK Jr., how The Crown and Love Story are even allowed to exist, and so much more...

    42 min

Ratings & Reviews

5
out of 5
3 Ratings

About

A new podcast from Vogue and Vanity Fair culture journalist Michelle Ruiz about the sexiest stories in news. Michelle has been reading smut since she was definitely too young to be reading smut. She grew up to be a Cosmo sex editor and believes fading to black is criminal. At her first job at ABC News, an editor referred to a story as “sexy” - not in the literal sense, but the kind that's juicy, colorful and complicated, maybe a little salacious and gossipy. In addition to the actual smut of our times, those are the kind of all-consuming stories and people she'll get into on The Smut.