
THE BUFFALO WERE GRAZING BY THE HIGHWAY ON THE OUTSKIRTS OF THE RICHEST COUNTY IN THE RICHEST COUNTRY IN THE HISTORY OF THE WORLD.
It was a clear morning in the Tetons, and with binoculars it was possible to see all the way across the valley known, since prehistory, as one of the most secure and comfortable little basins in all of the Mountain West—named, for one of the first white trappers to winter there, Jackson’s Hole. The landscape may have looked like wilderness to the caravanning tourists in $200,000 Sprinter vans and thousands more in athleisure who now flood Teton County year-round. But it is also a kind of hyperreality of money—tens of thousands of acres and hundreds of millions of dollars worth of conservation easements—in what may be the world’s most unequal political jurisdiction. Above the ospreys and eagles, there was a constant traffic of small jets and private aircraft, humming into and out of a town that has become a modern refuge for people with remote jobs and portfolios fattened by one of history’s great asset bubbles, many of them driven to the Northern Rockies by a worry or wariness that the rest of America is on its way toward environmental, political, or economic breakdown. Or some combination of the above.
A couple hours outside Jackson, I met Catharine O’Neill, whose family once owned these mountains. Her great-great-grandfather was John D. Rockefeller, and she worked in Trump’s State Department. Now, she was living in a modest little house outside of Casper, Wyoming, and was about to have her first child with a home appraiser she’d met after moving there. She isn’t hiding out exactly, but, like many Americans these days, she has a sense that things are cracking up.
This story is from the Hollywood 2023 edition of Vanity Fair US.
Subscribe to Magzter GOLD to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 8,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign in
This story is from the Hollywood 2023 edition of Vanity Fair US.
Subscribe to Magzter GOLD to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 8,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign in

The In Crowd - The 2023 Hollywood Portfolio
For our 29th Annual Hollywood Issue, a dozen captivating young stars gathered for the after-party of our dreams

L.A. CONFIDENTIAL
With a classic flair for Hollywood intrigue, The Ankler has become an industry mustread. But can Richard Rushfield and Janice Min scale a scrappy newsletter into a media empire?

THE APES OF WRATH
NFTS LIKE BORED APES WERE SUPPOSED ΤΟ BE A FAST TRACK TO BILLIONS. THEIR RAPID DECLINE SAYS A LOT ABOUT CRYPTO, CELEBRITY, AND ART IN THE HYPE ERA

GEN Z IN THE HOUSE
A week with MAXWELL FROST, the youngest new member of Congress

Swanson Song
GLORIA SWANSON's best-selling autobiography was the product of a literary quadrangle with all the emotional complexity and sexual tension of her immortal comeback vehicle, Sunset Boulevard. Breaking his silence four decades after helping ghostwrite Swanson on Swanson, WAYNE LAWSON sets the record straight about its fraught genesis and the smear campaign that followed

WEST OF EDEN
OUT OF THE FRINGE RIGHT, A NEW VISION OF THE OLD FRONTIER IS RISING OFF THE GRID, BACK TO THE LAND, \"PROTECTING\" AN AMERICAN DREAM THAT THEY BELIEVE TO BE THEIR OWN

Free AGENTS
With the old guard holding on to power, younger talent reps are shaking up the industry by walking out

Τimes of the Sign
The Hollywood sign began its life, fittingly enough, as a flashy billboard no more permanent than a film set. In the 100 years since. it has been rebuilt, rebranded, and reborn as a beacon for aspiring stars from around the world and a reminder of just how few dreams of fame and fortune come true.

Twilight Zone
What does it mean to rethink time and optimize it? Enter low-fuss skin care for nightly repair

The Montreal Mafia Murders
When an unwitting rural Canadian couple met two local Mob henchmen, Coen brothers-level mayhem ensued. But the gory murders they became party to were anything but a joke

AMERICA'S FUTURE IS AT SEA
The nation is ceding the seas to its enemies. It's not too late to avoid catastrophe.

KEEPERS OF THE FLAME
Culture warriors, foodies and affluent homeowners are clutching their gas stoves. Can Americans finally be persuaded to switch to induction?

THE MOST AFFORDABLE EVS FOR 2023
The push for new, appealing electric vehicles has gained considerable momentum recently. The next few years will see a rollout of EVs in every popular automotive segment, increasing competition and decreasing prices. At the moment, however, all-electric vehicle development costs remain high and most new additions are priced well above equivalent gaspowered models.

The History of Patents and African Americans...
The first United States patent was issued in 1641. Though it was the right of all American citizens under the U.S. Constitution, Black Americans were not allowed to patent their inventions and were excluded from obtaining patents. That did not stop Blacks from inventing or being innovative.

America's Greatest Workplaces for Diversity 2023
And that makes sense, not only because diversity is important, particularly to younger job applicants, but also because it is well-documented that workplaces filled with people with different worldviews are more creative, more innovative, and generally make better decisions.

5 TIPS FOR PAIN-FREE SHOULDERS
FOLLOW THESE SIMPLE STEPS FOR IMPROVED STRENGTH AND MOBILITY

Biden's Antitrust Crusade
In summer 2021, President Joe Biden issued an executive order on "Promoting Competition in the American Economy." A White House fact sheet declared that the economy was "booming under President Biden's leadership," saying the order was "building on this economic momentum" by pushing back against corporate consolidation, primarily through aggressive antitrust enforcement.

RABBI RAMI SHAPIRO-ROADSIDE ASSISTANCE FOR THE SPIRITUAL TRAVELER
For over half a century, RABBI RAMI has been devoted to a single teaching: Alles iz Gott, Everything is God.\" To learn more, visit the website rabbirami.com.

The System: Eric Levitz
When supply, not demand, is the problem the economy is changing. Liberalism must change with it.

A reporter at large – Trapped in the Trenches
On Ukraine's battle fil, drone surveillance ae it almost ete sible to maneuver.