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BEST in SHOWS

Vanity Fair US

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June 2025

UNDER JOHN LANDGRAF'S LEADERSHIP, FX HAS BECOME A FACTORY OF PRESTIGE HITS BY NOT ACTING LIKE A FACTORY. INSIDE THE MIND OF THE STREAMING INDUSTRY'S WISE MAN—AND THE STUDIO THAT GAVE US THE BEAR, SHOGUN, FARGO, AND MORE

- JOY PRESS

BEST in SHOWS

The walls of FX are lined with dramatic posters from the likes of The Americans, Fargo, American Horror Story, and Reservation Dogs. Inside the office lobby sits a piano with candy-colored keys, a prop from the eerie “Teddy Perkins” episode of Atlanta. Turn down any random hallway and you'll likely run into a cache of golden statues. In 2024 alone, FX took home 36 Emmys. Thanks in large part to Shōgun and The Bear, it nearly topped Netflix and HBO's combined tally.

In the two decades he has been at FX’s creative helm, Landgraf has transformed it from a basic-cable network known for edgy, testosterone-soaked series like The Shield and Rescue Me into a singular brand that’s now the jewel in Disney’s crown. Landgraf doesn’t believe in churning anything out. Even in his years as chairman, he’s taken an artisanal approach to development. He steered FX through the collapse of the cable industry as well as the madness of Peak TV, a term he himself coined in 2015 to describe the glut of scripted series spewed out during the streaming wars.

Peak TV has peaked and most streamers are scrambling for safety, but FX keeps taking bigger risks—the latest being the upcoming Alien: Earth, inspired by Ridley Scott’s Alien franchise and created by Fargo showrunner Noah Hawley. Some showrunners worried that Disney, which bought what used to be called 20th Century Fox six years ago, might sandpaper down some of FX’s sharp edges.

It’s Always Sunny in Philadelphia, the longest-running live-action sitcom in American history, has been FX’s resident troublemaker since 2005. Its creator and star, Rob McElhenney, says that after the acquisition, Landgraf’s team assured him that nothing would change creatively. McElhenney and his

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Vanity Fair US

Vanity Fair US

UNITED NATIONS

Every World Cup is the biggest event in human history. This summer, it's coming to North America. But down in Mexico this spring, as three nations fight for one ticket to the big show, FRANKLIN LEONARD finds far more than goals or red cards in the tales of Jamaica, New Caledonia, and the Democratic Republic of the Congo

time to read

16 mins

June 2026

Vanity Fair US

Vanity Fair US

LORD OF THE RING

Ukrainian boxer Oleksandr Usyk has won every major title in professional boxing without a single defeat. Amid a war, as ANNA ZOLOTARIOVA writes, he continues to prove that victories can be won despite adversity

time to read

2 mins

June 2026

Vanity Fair US

Vanity Fair US

A LEAGUE OF THEIR OWN

Whether in the arena or at the studio, athletes and artists have a shared reverence for discipline and physicality. NATE FREEMAN explores the symbiotic and sometimes creative relationships between these masters of craft

time to read

5 mins

June 2026

Vanity Fair US

Vanity Fair US

THE TIPPING POINT

After 17 months of heated negotiations and decades of inequity, the WNBA and its players reached a deal this spring that has completely transformed women's basketball. YOHANA DESTA spent an afternoon with Clara Wu Tsai, the billionaire owner of the New York Liberty, to talk about the league's next chapter and the expansion that will forever change women's professional sports

time to read

15 mins

June 2026

Vanity Fair US

Vanity Fair US

THE FRENCH AMBASSADOR

Kylian Mbappé was crowned football's future king when he was just a teenager, but AIDAN MCLAUGHLIN meets the captain of Les Bleus at a turbulent time. He's weathered attacks on his French identity while serving as his nation's chief diplomat, endured criticism of his game while scoring goals by the hatful. He's on top of the world-and under unfathomable pressure. Everything is on the line at this summer's World Cup...

time to read

14 mins

June 2026

Vanity Fair US

Vanity Fair US

HIGH HORSES

Forty minutes inland from the power and pomp of Palm Beach lies a greener, but no less gilded, Florida enclave. In this Year of the Horse, ELISE TAYLOR goes inside the winter equestrian capital of the world

time to read

14 mins

June 2026

Vanity Fair US

Vanity Fair US

KING OF THE COURT

As the brightest star on the men's tennis scene, Carlos Alcaraz draws attention whether he likes it or not. JOSÉ CRIALES-UNZUETA speaks to the Spaniard about his rise to number one and the rivalry that promises the future of his sport

time to read

10 mins

June 2026

Vanity Fair US

Vanity Fair US

TROUBLE IN THE WATER

Star water polo player Lucca van der Woude was arrested in 2024 after being accused of sexual assault, rocking an elite Los Angeles community. Two years later, his former teammate Aidan Romain tells DEANNA KIZIS about his lawsuit against both Van der Woude and Harvard-Westlake School- which Romain says protected the white student who made his life unbearable

time to read

29 mins

June 2026

Vanity Fair US

Vanity Fair US

YOU'VE GOT A FAST CAR

Wildly expensive vehicles, famous fans, and a Netflix glow-up propelled Formula 1 from niche European import to full-blown American obsession. Photographer HAILUN MA documents the early fervor at the 2026 Chinese Grand Prix in Shanghai.

time to read

3 mins

June 2026

Vanity Fair US

Vanity Fair US

THE INVINCIBLE LINDSEY VONN

For the first time since her horrifying crash at the 2026 Olympics, the American skiing legend speaks to ELISE TAYLOR at length about what really happened at Milano Cortina, the five surgeries and paparazzi frenzies that followed, and whether this is really, truly the end

time to read

12 mins

June 2026

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