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Conde Nast Posted Their Summer Internships
Condé Nast's summer internships highlight the importance of investing in talent and innovation within the media industry. For brand strategy, this signals a need for companies to prioritize attracting skilled individuals who can contribute to creative and strategic initiatives, especially in a rapidly evolving digital landscape.
Feed Me: Condé Nast posted their summer internships. Plus surviving NYE beautifully, should authors be on Substack, and more. Good morning everyone. Over the weekend, I asked my readers what their most strongly-held predictions for 2026 were.
Responses included: moral questions around assisted fertility, visible bra straps, a rise in popularity of traditional Chinese medicine, people turning on Esth*r P*rel, Substack writers unionizing, and predictions markets making gambling legal across the US. If you’d like to read what everyone had to say or submit your own, head over to the Feed Me Substack chat. Today’s letter includes: Ken Klippenstein went offline for a week and now he wants to start a news site off Substack, Christmas commercials made without AI won the holiday season, anonymous editors told New York Magazine that authors shouldn’t be on Substack, and Condé Nast’s summer
interns will get $25/hour. 📱 Have a story you think we should look into? Text the anonymous Feed Me Tip Line: (646) 494-3916 If you need two hands to count the amount of holiday party hangovers you had this month, have a suitcase somewhere in your bedroom that has yet to be unpacked, and can’t remember the last time your legs saw the sun, you’re not alone — we’re also sensing that rallying for New Year’s Eve will be more of a marathon than a sprint. Maybe “holiday season beauty” sounds like a paradox to you, because the dead of winter is not the time of year when you feel most beautiful.
Maybe you’ve been sitting under a red light like a hen, waiting for your skin to glow like it did in August. Or, you’ve been busy playing Santa/mom/daughter-in-law/responsive manager and haven’t found the time to read a book during the languid days between Christmas and January 1. We hope that many of you will be going out-out on New Year’s Eve. Or at least just out.
In the spirit of getting you through the last stretch of the holiday season before hunkering down on January 1, we’ve asked 12 beauty experts — from dermatologists to editors to acupuncturists — about their best hacks for the holidays. Jenna Perry, colorist and founder of Jenna Perry Hair: The best holiday hair looks like you didn’t try too hard because you didn’t have to. Start with the cleanest hair possible and a great blowout. I recommend straying from wanded/iron waves because they are dated and usually flatten by day two.
Book in at Jenna’s on 9th or Jenna Perry Hair and ask your stylist for a ’90s-inspired voluminous blowout using R+Co Bleu Essential Blow Dry Crème (created by Garren, so you know it delivers). Keep it fresh on day two and three with a dry shampoo like Olaplex’s No. 4 Dry Shampoo and when it’s time to switch it up, spray in R+Co Bleu Ultra Dry Texture Spray for that Bardot-esque texture and pull your hair into a sexy 60s French twist or chignon with a hair pin. Savannah Galvin, beauty writer and sales associate at the Goop store on Bond Street: The holiday season is hard on skin in ways we don’t always realize.
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The article discusses a common practice of internships in a major media company, emphasizing talent investment, which is relevant but not groundbreaking in the brand strategy context.
