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Vanessa Grigoriadis — one of the most distinctive magazine writers of her generation — joins Lachlan Cartwright for a sharp, funny, and revealing look at how celebrity, journalism, podcasting, and culture have transformed over the past two decades.
From Rolling Stone and New York Magazine to Campsite Media, Vanessa traces how the magazine industry became a “Titanic,” how she helped pioneer the boom in narrative podcasts, and why serialized audio storytelling is now collapsing under its own economics. She breaks down the making of her new limited-series on NXIVM’s Allison Mack, why it was so hard to sell, and the surprising place it finally landed.
The conversation also dives into the weirdness of modern media — TikTok fame, AI-generated podcasts, the Rogan effect, the death of the celebrity profile, the resurgence of Epstein reporting, and the ethics of interviewing powerful people. This is one of the most wide-ranging and brutally honest media conversations on The Breaker Pod to date.
⏱️ Chapters
00:00 – Welcome to The Breaker Pod at Seahorse, Union Square
01:10 – Vanessa Grigoriadis on leaving magazines for podcasting
02:10 – Selling spoken features in 2019 and the podcast gold rush
03:20 – Limited-series podcasts and the crash of the bubble
04:00 – The Allison Mack project and how the deal finally sold
05:15 – Why serialized storytelling is struggling
06:20 – The Rogan phenomenon and first-mover advantage
07:10 – Crime Junkie, Call Her Daddy, and the new audio power players
08:20 – Why making money in podcasting is brutally hard
09:10 – Merch, live events, Substack: the new media ecosystem
10:30 – Shopping the NXIVM project and why Americans didn’t bite
12:00 – Why Canadians bought the show
13:10 – Journalism vs. documentary and why tape gathering is dying
14:00 – AI podcasts and the 175,000-episode flood
16:00 – The future of YouTube creators and longform conversation
17:10 – How Vanessa chooses profile subjects
18:00 – Early magazine days: Carl Lagerfeld, Paris Hilton, and access
19:20 – Celebrity culture in the TikTok era
20:10 – The death of the real celebrity profile
22:00 – The red-rope era of journalism
23:15 – Will print die? Why magazines still matter
24:50 – Epstein reporting and the story that won’t die
26:40 – Public records, Florida law, and early Epstein coverage
28:10 – Why the Epstein story resurges every election cycle
29:30 – Best interview, worst interview, and the one that got away
31:40 – Lies, tape recorders, and protecting credibility
33:10 – How public personas diverge from reality
34:40 – Regrets, write-arounds, and the ethics of profiling
36:00 – Final thoughts and closing
#VanessaGrigoriadis #jeffreyepstein #MediaIndustry #Epstein #EpsteinFiles
By Breaker5
44 ratings
Vanessa Grigoriadis — one of the most distinctive magazine writers of her generation — joins Lachlan Cartwright for a sharp, funny, and revealing look at how celebrity, journalism, podcasting, and culture have transformed over the past two decades.
From Rolling Stone and New York Magazine to Campsite Media, Vanessa traces how the magazine industry became a “Titanic,” how she helped pioneer the boom in narrative podcasts, and why serialized audio storytelling is now collapsing under its own economics. She breaks down the making of her new limited-series on NXIVM’s Allison Mack, why it was so hard to sell, and the surprising place it finally landed.
The conversation also dives into the weirdness of modern media — TikTok fame, AI-generated podcasts, the Rogan effect, the death of the celebrity profile, the resurgence of Epstein reporting, and the ethics of interviewing powerful people. This is one of the most wide-ranging and brutally honest media conversations on The Breaker Pod to date.
⏱️ Chapters
00:00 – Welcome to The Breaker Pod at Seahorse, Union Square
01:10 – Vanessa Grigoriadis on leaving magazines for podcasting
02:10 – Selling spoken features in 2019 and the podcast gold rush
03:20 – Limited-series podcasts and the crash of the bubble
04:00 – The Allison Mack project and how the deal finally sold
05:15 – Why serialized storytelling is struggling
06:20 – The Rogan phenomenon and first-mover advantage
07:10 – Crime Junkie, Call Her Daddy, and the new audio power players
08:20 – Why making money in podcasting is brutally hard
09:10 – Merch, live events, Substack: the new media ecosystem
10:30 – Shopping the NXIVM project and why Americans didn’t bite
12:00 – Why Canadians bought the show
13:10 – Journalism vs. documentary and why tape gathering is dying
14:00 – AI podcasts and the 175,000-episode flood
16:00 – The future of YouTube creators and longform conversation
17:10 – How Vanessa chooses profile subjects
18:00 – Early magazine days: Carl Lagerfeld, Paris Hilton, and access
19:20 – Celebrity culture in the TikTok era
20:10 – The death of the real celebrity profile
22:00 – The red-rope era of journalism
23:15 – Will print die? Why magazines still matter
24:50 – Epstein reporting and the story that won’t die
26:40 – Public records, Florida law, and early Epstein coverage
28:10 – Why the Epstein story resurges every election cycle
29:30 – Best interview, worst interview, and the one that got away
31:40 – Lies, tape recorders, and protecting credibility
33:10 – How public personas diverge from reality
34:40 – Regrets, write-arounds, and the ethics of profiling
36:00 – Final thoughts and closing
#VanessaGrigoriadis #jeffreyepstein #MediaIndustry #Epstein #EpsteinFiles

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