Thursday, February 26, 2026

Sex, Lies and Politics: How FX’s ‘Love Story’ Brings Back the Doomed Romance of John F. Kennedy Jr. and Carolyn Bessette


Paul Kelly and Sarah Pidgeon Love Story FX Variety Cover
Richie Shazam for Variety

Sex, Lies and Politics: How FX’s ‘Love Story’ Brings Back the Doomed Romance of John F. Kennedy Jr. and Carolyn Bessette 

By 
Daniel D'Addario
3 February 2026
Photographs By Richie ShazamCasting John F. Kennedy Jr. was a nightmare.

It was April of last year, and the production of the limited series “Love Story” was three weeks away from starting. Cameras were ready to go up — but for the fact that Camelot’s princess, Carolyn Bessette Kennedy, to be played by Sarah Pidgeon, didn’t yet have her prince.

‘He was approachable, down-to-earth, irritating’: inside the real-life love story of JFK Jr and Carolyn Bessette

 


Sarah Pidgeon as Carolyn Bessette and Paul Anthony Kelly as John F Kennedy Jr in FX's Love Story: John F Kennedy Jr & Carolyn Bessette.
Photo by Eric Leibowitz


‘He was approachable, down-to-earth, irritating’: inside the real-life love story of JFK Jr and Carolyn Bessette

As Ryan Murphy’s new mini-series focuses on their explosive relationship, aides and experts explain the real-life couple behind the myth


David Smith in a Washington
Saturday 21 February 2026

He only met John F Kennedy Jr for five minutes but, three decades later, the memory lingers on. “Oh my God, he had it all,” says Larry Sabato, a political scientist, recalling their encounter at the White House Correspondents’ Association dinner in Washington. “He had his mother’s poise and his father’s charisma; it was a perfect combination of the two. If there was anybody destined to be president, it was him.”

‘Fashion murder’ / Carolyn Bessette Kennedy fans aghast at first images from Netflix series

Sarah Pidgeon as Carolyn Bessette Kennedy filming on the streets of New York.


‘Fashion murder’: Carolyn Bessette Kennedy fans aghast at first images from Netflix series

This article is more than 8 months old

Style watchers quick to disapprove of late publicist’s portrayal in Ryan Murphy’s American Love Story


Lauren Cochrane
Fri 20 Jun 2025 

In fashion, only the real favourites have acronyms. See SJP for Sarah Jessica Parker, ALT for the fashion editor André Leon Talley and – particularly relevant right now – CBK for Carolyn Bessette Kennedy.

Ryan Murphy’s ‘American Love Story’ Casts Sarah Pidgeon as JFK Jr.’s Wife Carolyn Bessette

 


Ryan Murphy’s ‘American Love Story’ Casts Sarah Pidgeon as JFK Jr.’s Wife Carolyn Bessette


Joe Otterson
21 March 2025

American Love Story” at FX has found its first cast member.

 Variety has learned from sources that Sarah Pidgeon has been cast in one of the lead roles for the upcoming anthology series, which was originally announced in 2021. As previously reported, the first season of the series will focus on John F. Kennedy Jr. and Carolyn Bessette. Pidgeon will star as Bessette. 

Wednesday, February 25, 2026

Fathers and Sons by Hemingway

 





FATHERS AND SONS
By ERNEST HEMINGWAY

There had been a sign to detour in the centre of the main street of this town, but cars had obviously gone through, so, believing it was some repair which had been completed, Nicholas Adams drove on through the town along the empty, brick-paved street, stopped by traffic lights that flashed on and off on this traffic-less Sunday, and would be gone next year when the payments on the system were not met; on under the heavy trees of the small town that are a part of your heart if it is your town and you have walked under them, but that are only too heavy, that shut out the sun and that dampen the houses for a stranger; out past the last house and onto the highway that rose and fell straight away ahead with banks of red dirt sliced cleanly away and the second-growth timber on both sides. It was not his country but it was the middle of fall and all of this country was good to drive through and to see. The cotton was picked and in the clearings there were patches of corn, some cut with streaks of red sorghum, and, driving easily, his son asleep on the seat by his side, the day's run made, knowing the town he would reach for the night, Nick noticed which corn fields had soy beans or peas in them, how the thickets and the cut-over land lay, where the cabins and houses were in relation to the fields and the thickets; hunting the country in his mind as he went by; sizing up each clearing as to feed and cover and figuring where you would find a covey and which way they would fly.

Poe / Metzengerstein



Edgar Allan Poe
METZENGERSTEIN

     Pestis eram vivus—moriens tua mors ero.

                —Martin Luther

HORROR and fatality have been stalking abroad in all ages. Why then give a date to this story I have to tell? Let it suffice to say, that at the period of which I speak, there existed, in the interior of Hungary, a settled although hidden belief in the doctrines of the Metempsychosis. Of the doctrines themselves—that is, of their falsity, or of their probability—I say nothing. I assert, however, that much of our incredulity—as La Bruyère says of all our unhappiness—“vient de ne pouvoir être seuls.” {*1}

The Doll by Algernon Blacwood

Algernon Blackwood: The Doll


The Doll

 by Algernon Blackwood 
(Full story)

Some nights are merely dark, others are dark in a suggestive way as though something ominous, mysterious, is going to happen. In certain remote outlying suburbs, at any rate, this seems true, where great spaces between the lamps go dead at night, where little happens, where a ring at the door is a summons almost, and people cry “Let’s go to town!” In the villa gardens the mangy cedars sigh in the wind, but the hedges stiffen, there is a muffling of spontaneous activity.

A Perfect Day for Bananafish by Salinger

 


J. D. Salinger
A PERFECT DAY FOR BANANAFISH

THERE WERE ninety-seven New York advertising men in the hotel, and, the way they were monopolizing the long-distance lines, the girl in 507 had to wait from noon till almost two-thirty to get her call through. She used the time, though. She read an article in a women's pocket-size magazine, called "Sex Is Fun-or Hell." She washed her comb and brush. She took the spot out of the skirt of her beige suit. She moved the button on her Saks blouse. She tweezed out two freshly surfaced hairs in her mole. When the operator finally rang her room, she was sitting on the window seat and had almost finished putting lacquer on the nails of her left hand.
She was a girl who for a ringing phone dropped exactly nothing. She looked as if her phone had been ringing continually ever since she had reached puberty.

Salinger: Seeing the Glass Family (A Perfect Day For Bananafish)

 



J. D. Salinger: Seeing the Glass Family (A Perfect Day For Bananafish)


In 1948, J.D. Salinger published the short story “A Perfect Day for Bananafish” in the New Yorker. This event was a major step in his literary career. First, it brought Salinger serious critical acclaim. Second, it established a working relationship between the author and The New Yorker. The magazine offered Salinger a right of first refusal contract, and he subsequently published his new work almost exclusively in the New Yorker. Third, it marks the first published appearance of Seymour Glass, the oldest sibling in the Glass family. Salinger would go on to chronicle the lives of the Glass family siblings in a series of short stories and novellas.

Tuesday, February 24, 2026

Ben Kingsley / What I’ve Learned

 

Ben Kingsley
Photo by AUSTIN HARGRAVE

What I’ve Learned: Sir Ben Kingsley

Actor; 81; Oxfordshire, England

Interview By Henry Wong
11 December 2025

Sir Ben Kingsley is one of the most acclaimed and prolific stage, film, and television actors of his generation, with a career spanning more than five decades. He won an Oscar for Best Actor for his role in Gandhi (1982). Kingsley appears in the comedy The Thursday Murder Club, out now on Netflix. This interview was conducted on July 4.

Kristen Stewart / What I’ve Learned

 


Kristen Stewart
Photo by Adir Abergel

What I’ve Learned: Kristen Stewart

Actress, writer, director; 35; Los Angeles.

Interview By Anthony Breznican
9 december 2025

Kristen Stewart has been acting since the age of nine and was a teen herself when she starred in the Twilight films. She’s made her feature directing and writing debut with The Chronology of Water, an adaptation of Lidia Yuknavitch’s 2011 memoir. In April, Stewart tied the knot with her longtime girlfriend, screenwriter Dylan Meyer. This interview was conducted on November 2.

Gracie Abrams and Kaia Gerber on Therapy, Taylor, and Unrequited Crushes

 

Gracie Abrams

Gracie Abrams wears Top Bode. Jeans Gracie’s own. Earrings (worn throughout) Stylist’s Own.


Gracie Abramsand Kaia Gerberon Therapy,Taylor, andUnrequited Crushes


Gracie Abrams is over sad-girl music. After making a mark as a moody singer-songwriter and opening for megastars like Olivia Rodrigo and Taylor Swift, the 24-year-old is stepping into her feel-better era with a sophomore album that still mines the bittersweet ache of young love, but with a smirk. Ahead of the release of The Secret of Us, the Los Angeles-born musician got on a call with her friend Kaia Gerber to talk about unrequited crushes, exposure therapy, and spinning out.

Monday, February 23, 2026

Peter Bradshaw’s Baftas 2026 predictions – who’ll get the gongs, who’ll be the goners?

 



Peter Bradshaw’s Baftas 2026 predictions – who’ll get the gongs, who’ll be the goners?

Will Paul Thomas Anderson’s ICE age conspiracy thriller sweep the board, or will Sinners and Hamnet share some glory? Our critic places his bets


Peter Bradshaw

Sunday 22 February 2026

Sunday, February 22, 2026

Nothing in Her Way by Charles Williams

 



Nothing in Her Way: Charles Williams 

“There’s always a warning, if you’ll listen to it. It buzzes when you’re playing cards with strangers and get an almost perfect hand.”

Nothing in Her Way, American author Charles Williams’s fifth novel is completely different from his earlier work. In common with Hill GirlRiver Girl, and Hell hath no Fury, the narrator is a lone male whose life becomes complicated by a woman, but  Nothing in her Way, is primarily about an elaborate con which begins when narrator, Mike Belen crosses paths, once again with his red-headed ex-wife, a knockout called Cathy. Mike had almost forgotten about Cathy, but now she’s back and once more in her presence, her former power over Mike returns. Mike acknowledges “she was a whirlpool I was trapped in,” and while he thinks he knows this woman better than anyone else, she still manages to deliver some surprises–none of them pleasant. Cold and calculating, Cathy always plays the long game.

River Girl by Charles Williams

 



River Girl: Charles Williams 

“It’s men, I tell you. They never should let ’em out alone.”

River Girl is the third novel I’ve read by American crime author Charles Williams, and it’s the best of the three. I didn’t think I’d find one that topped Hell Hath No Fury so when I tell you that River Girl, published in 1951, soars to the number one spot for Charles Williams novels read so far, then that should give you an idea of just how good this tidy, desperate, dark noir novel is. Told initially in a laid-back style by the amoral narrator, Deputy Jack Marshall, the story’s pace picks up, increasing its tone of claustrophobic desperation as Jack’s life spins out of control. 

Big City Girl by Charles Williams




Big City Girl: Charles Williams 

“Once they get you in there in the pen, there ain’t no long-nose bastards  writing about you and talking about you on the radio. Not till maybe thirty years from now, when they might let you out if you behave yourself, or till someday they kill you if you don’t.”

Saturday, February 21, 2026

Review / Dead Calm by Charles Williams

 


Dead Calm (1962) by Charles Williams

What happens when four unstable personalities are trapped together in a tiny cabin on a boat lost and without power in the middle of the South Pacific? How does those four individuals deal with the constantly worsening situation as the boat starts to take on water and rot away? Do the couples wrap themselves up in petty jealousies and bickering? Do they blame each other when things start to go wrong? What happens when one of these people was a bit off his rocker to begin with? Can he really be blamed for what goes wrong? Consumed by paranoia, agoraphobia, claustrophobia, what if he abandons the slowly sinking ship and climbs onto another small sailing vessel? Will the couple on that vessel take him away from there – from where his wife was possibly plotting with another man to drown him in that mighty ocean?