Tina Brown on Epstein, the Über-Rich and Her Most Burning Resentments

蒂娜·布朗谈爱泼斯坦、超级富豪以及她最强烈的怨恨

The Interview

2025-11-15

48 分钟
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单集简介 ...

The longtime editor and chronicler of the elite says she’s liberated and is letting it rip.
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单集文稿 ...

  • I'm Dan Barry, and I'm a longtime reporter with The New York Times.

  • I've been here for 30 years, and I've seen a lot of things change.

  • I was here before there was a website.

  • But one thing hasn't changed at all,

  • and that's the mission of The New York Times, to follow the facts wherever they lead.

  • And if that means publishing something a government or a leader or a celebrity doesn't want to aired,

  • that's not our concern.

  • If you believe in the importance of fact-driven reporting,

  • You can support it by becoming a New York Times subscriber.

  • From The New York Times, this is the interview.

  • I'm Lulu Garcia Navarro.

  • The lavish expense accounts, the power, the shoulder pads.

  • The days of elite media in New York are long gone.

  • But there is perhaps still no sharper observer of politics and culture than one of that period's most prominent figures.

  • Tina Brown.

  • In the 80s and 90s,

  • she was the editor-in-chief of Vanity Fair and The New Yorker until leaving to start an ill-fated magazine called Talk with Harvey Weinstein.

  • That venture folded after a few years.

  • But Brown wasn't done,

  • entering her online era with the launch of The Daily Beast in 2008 and becoming an author of books about the royal family and her time at Vanity Fair.