New York Times Fashionさんのインスタグラム写真 - (New York Times FashionInstagram)「Jenna Lyons, the famously stylish former president of J. Crew, has joined the rebooted “Real Housewives of New York City.” Why?  The announcement last October that @jennalyonsnyc would star on the upcoming season of “RHONY” drew much attention — and some confusion. Lyons, 55, was known for being tasteful, aspirational. She’d been to the Met Gala seven times. The Housewives were a brawling pageant of guilty pleasure, redefining the cultural meaning of “housewife.” (Many of them were, in fact, divorced.) They were flamboyant, chaotic. Two of them went to prison.  In an interview with The New York Times, Lyons explained her reasoning. She liked the idea of bringing some queerness to a largely straight franchise. And she believed appearing on television could help advance her business pursuits.  But one day, while Lyons was reciting this reasoning to a close friend, she said, the friend stopped her: “‘You want the attention,’” the friend said. “‘You don’t want to fade into oblivion.’”  And it was true, Lyons realized. After she left J. Crew, the fashion industry, once enamored with her, seemed to move on. “I really faded away,” she said. “It was such a big job, and I was well respected, and I had a big life in that way, and then it kind of all went away.”  Tap the link in our bio to read the full story from @jtes. Photo by @yael_malka」6月27日 4時30分 - nytstyle

New York Times Fashionのインスタグラム(nytstyle) - 6月27日 04時30分


Jenna Lyons, the famously stylish former president of J. Crew, has joined the rebooted “Real Housewives of New York City.” Why?

The announcement last October that @jennalyonsnyc would star on the upcoming season of “RHONY” drew much attention — and some confusion. Lyons, 55, was known for being tasteful, aspirational. She’d been to the Met Gala seven times. The Housewives were a brawling pageant of guilty pleasure, redefining the cultural meaning of “housewife.” (Many of them were, in fact, divorced.) They were flamboyant, chaotic. Two of them went to prison.

In an interview with The New York Times, Lyons explained her reasoning. She liked the idea of bringing some queerness to a largely straight franchise. And she believed appearing on television could help advance her business pursuits.

But one day, while Lyons was reciting this reasoning to a close friend, she said, the friend stopped her: “‘You want the attention,’” the friend said. “‘You don’t want to fade into oblivion.’”

And it was true, Lyons realized. After she left J. Crew, the fashion industry, once enamored with her, seemed to move on. “I really faded away,” she said. “It was such a big job, and I was well respected, and I had a big life in that way, and then it kind of all went away.”

Tap the link in our bio to read the full story from @jtes. Photo by @yael_malka


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