![]() There she was, relaxing at “#home #NYC” on a Thursday night, in a room that looked like a fevered baroque dream. Here she was, head to toe in white, posing on the Trump jet. There was Melania in a white robe, working with her “glam team” of stylists, perched on a gilded throne, overlooking Central Park. Melania had signed up for a life of conspicuous conspicuousness, one she dutifully chronicled on Instagram and Twitter up until about a year ago, when her social-media accounts-unlike those of her husband-went silent with Trump’s entrance into the race. But unlike Jackie, who met John Kennedy when he was already a congressman, Melania wasn’t signing on to be a political spouse when she met the notorious Donald Trump in 1998. “She’d be great at picking out the china patterns she’d be a classic First Lady,” says stylist Phillip Bloch, who has worked with both of the Trumps and attended fashion shows with Melania. Those who know Melania say the Jackie template isn’t a bad one for her to aspire to. “It’s all business now it’s nothing personal.” “This is it, what it is,” Melania tells me. And you can think, as Melania Trump says she does, that it’s no huge deal, really. But things change quickly-which is perhaps the enduring fact of Melania Trump’s entire improbable life-and when your husband works up a plan to make America great again, the very same Clintons you once smiled with on your wedding day can now become your family’s mortal enemies. A pair of ordinary people, really, uniting in matrimony in the presence of Rudy Giuliani and Kelly Ripa, as Billy Joel serenaded the couple and guests slurped caviar and Cristal in the shadow of a five-foot-tall Grand Marnier wedding cake. He in a tux she in a $100,000 Dior dress that laborers’ hands had toiled upon for a legendary 550 hours, affixing 1,500 crystals-jewels fit for private citizens like them. Just two private citizens getting hitched at the groom’s 126-room Florida palace. “When they went to our wedding, we were private citizens,” Melania reminds me. “It was completely different than it is now,” Melania Trump tells me, recalling those bygone days of sanity, speaking in her now famous accent, a kind of dreamy Transylvanian.īack then, in 2005, it didn’t seem odd that she and Donald Trump would mark their happy occasion with the former president and First Lady, then a senator from New York. ![]() Once upon a time, a man could marry his Slovenian sweetheart, invite Bill and Hillary Clinton to the lavish wedding, and only the society pages would bother with it. The book, Russia Girl, is slated for publication in 2020.It wasn’t always this way. In March 2018 Ecco, an imprint of HarperCollins, announced a book deal with Ioffe. From 2016 to 2019, she worked as a contributing writer at Politico Magazine, as a national security, foreign policy and politics correspondent for The Atlantic, and as a political reporter for GQ. and became a senior editor for The New Republic in Washington, D.C. Ioffe spent three years in Moscow, from 2009 to 2012, working as a correspondent for The New Yorker and Foreign Policy. Over the years, she contributed articles to The New Yorker, The New York Times, The New York Times Magazine, The Washington Post, Foreign Policy, Bloomberg BusinessWeek, Forbes, GQ, The New Republic, Politico, Buzzfeed, Huffington Post Highline and The Atlantic. Ioffe began her career as a fact-checker for The New Yorker in 2005. Julia Ioffe is a Russian-born American journalist who covers national security and foreign policy topics for GQ magazine. ![]() V březnu 2018 vyhlásil Ecco – součást HarperCollins, že bude ve spolupráci s Ioffe vydávat knihu s názvem Russia Girl, která by měla vyjít v roce 2020. Mezi lety 2016 a 2019 pracovala a psala články pro Politico, působila jako zpravodajka pro zahraniční politiky a národní bezpečnost v časopise The Atlantic a politická reportérka pro GQ. V roce 2012 se vrátila do USA a stala se seniorní editorkou The New Republic ve Washington D.C. Ioffe strávila tři roky v Moskvě, od roku 2009 do roku 2012, kde pracovala jako zpravodajka pro New Yorker a Foreign Policy. Během posledních let publikovala články pro New Yorker, New York Times, časopis New York Times, Washington Post, Foreign Policy, Bloomberg, Forbes, GQ, The New Republic, Politico, Buzzfeed, Huffington Post Higline a The Atlantic. V roce 2005, na začátku své kariéry, ověřovala Ioffe data pro New Yorker. Julia Ioffe je v Rusku narozená americká novinářka, která se věnuje tématům národní bezpečnosti a zahraniční politiky pro časopis GQ.
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