Kate Middleton Joins the Long, Goofy, Controversial Line of Celebrity Guest Editors
In DepthToday, Kate Middleton is “guest-editing” HuffPo UK. She’s not the first and God knows she won’t be the last celebrity to turn her hand to gratis editorial work.
The idea of the guest editor isn’t new, of course. Sylvia Plath was famously a guest editor at Mademoiselle after winning the magazine’s annual college contest. Obviously, there’s an element of marketing in soliciting your young readers to enter a competition in which one can come Get That Life! for a time. Vogue’s French outpost regularly solicited guest editors, including Salvador Dalí’s 1971 stint. But in those days, it wasn’t necessarily simply “celebrities” so much as people who somehow made logical sense to come spice things up.
But magazines got a little weird in the 1990s! This was, after all, the era of George, when the very famous John F. Kennedy Jr. launched his own publication. Perhaps the most in/famous “guest editor” gig in history is the time Tina Brown got Roseanne to help out with a 1996 issue of the New Yorker dedicated to women. (All of ‘em.) When anybody wants to talk about Tina Brown’s enthusiastic and flail-y attempts to revitalize the magazine, roping in Roseanne makes the perfect synecdoche. Witness Maureen Dowd’s syndicated column in response (which ran in newspapers around the country with a whole series of headlines in this vein):
The article is very much worth enjoying in full. “Can this be?” Dowd asks. “The magazine of Dorothy Parker and Hannah Arendt joining forces with the boorish TV star who urges women to kill bad husbands and children to kill bad parents? The alliance struck me as inharmonius, so I called Ms. Brown for amplification.” Before it was all said and done, Jamaica Kincaid would quit the magazine (only returning once Brown was toast), establishing perhaps the greatest feud in the history of media—one which runs practically to this very day!
By 1998, there’d been enough celebs supposedly putting their stamp on issues that the New York Post did an entertainingly dismissive story. Spin and Civilization both regularly used them. Bill Bradley of the Knicks and the U.S. Senate did Sports Illustrated; “Hollywood star and Brad Pitt-ex Gwyneth Paltrow” did Marie Claire. Sure enough, this was a way for magazines to get media coverage, for instance this little write-up from The Hour (via Google’s newspaper archive):