
My take on the @metcostumeinstitute show, “Costume Art”: There’s something hopeful about being surrounded by this plurality of ideas and bodies, an optimism that feels like a comforting throwback in an age of Ozempic, Mar-a-Lago Face and anti-‘woke’ rhetoric. ‘It’s about everybody and it’s about every body,’ insisted Anna Wintour, Met Gala chair and global chief content officer for Condé Nast, the gallery’s principal benefactor.
Is that sentiment at odds with the tech billionaires that would raise $42 million for the Costume Institute and later party in its galleries? That might be an unintended consequence of the entire exercise. After all, as Costume Institute director Andrew Bolton said, ‘to study fashion is to study ourselves’.
Head over to @wallpapermag dot com for the full story.
My take on the @metcostumeinstitute show, “Costume Art”: There’s something hopeful about being surrounded by this plurality of ideas and bodies, an optimism that feels like a comforting throwback in an age of Ozempic, Mar-a-Lago Face and anti-‘woke’ rhetoric. ‘It’s about everybody and it’s about every body,’ insisted Anna Wintour, Met Gala chair and global chief content officer for Condé Nast, the gallery’s principal benefactor.
Is that sentiment at odds with the tech billionaires that would raise $42 million for the Costume Institute and later party in its galleries? That might be an unintended consequence of the entire exercise. After all, as Costume Institute director Andrew Bolton said, ‘to study fashion is to study ourselves’.
Head over to @wallpapermag dot com for the full story.
My take on the @metcostumeinstitute show, “Costume Art”: There’s something hopeful about being surrounded by this plurality of ideas and bodies, an optimism that feels like a comforting throwback in an age of Ozempic, Mar-a-Lago Face and anti-‘woke’ rhetoric. ‘It’s about everybody and it’s about every body,’ insisted Anna Wintour, Met Gala chair and global chief content officer for Condé Nast, the gallery’s principal benefactor.
Is that sentiment at odds with the tech billionaires that would raise $42 million for the Costume Institute and later party in its galleries? That might be an unintended consequence of the entire exercise. After all, as Costume Institute director Andrew Bolton said, ‘to study fashion is to study ourselves’.
Head over to @wallpapermag dot com for the full story.
My take on the @metcostumeinstitute show, “Costume Art”: There’s something hopeful about being surrounded by this plurality of ideas and bodies, an optimism that feels like a comforting throwback in an age of Ozempic, Mar-a-Lago Face and anti-‘woke’ rhetoric. ‘It’s about everybody and it’s about every body,’ insisted Anna Wintour, Met Gala chair and global chief content officer for Condé Nast, the gallery’s principal benefactor.
Is that sentiment at odds with the tech billionaires that would raise $42 million for the Costume Institute and later party in its galleries? That might be an unintended consequence of the entire exercise. After all, as Costume Institute director Andrew Bolton said, ‘to study fashion is to study ourselves’.
Head over to @wallpapermag dot com for the full story.

My take on the @metcostumeinstitute show, “Costume Art”: There’s something hopeful about being surrounded by this plurality of ideas and bodies, an optimism that feels like a comforting throwback in an age of Ozempic, Mar-a-Lago Face and anti-‘woke’ rhetoric. ‘It’s about everybody and it’s about every body,’ insisted Anna Wintour, Met Gala chair and global chief content officer for Condé Nast, the gallery’s principal benefactor.
Is that sentiment at odds with the tech billionaires that would raise $42 million for the Costume Institute and later party in its galleries? That might be an unintended consequence of the entire exercise. After all, as Costume Institute director Andrew Bolton said, ‘to study fashion is to study ourselves’.
Head over to @wallpapermag dot com for the full story.
My take on the @metcostumeinstitute show, “Costume Art”: There’s something hopeful about being surrounded by this plurality of ideas and bodies, an optimism that feels like a comforting throwback in an age of Ozempic, Mar-a-Lago Face and anti-‘woke’ rhetoric. ‘It’s about everybody and it’s about every body,’ insisted Anna Wintour, Met Gala chair and global chief content officer for Condé Nast, the gallery’s principal benefactor.
Is that sentiment at odds with the tech billionaires that would raise $42 million for the Costume Institute and later party in its galleries? That might be an unintended consequence of the entire exercise. After all, as Costume Institute director Andrew Bolton said, ‘to study fashion is to study ourselves’.
Head over to @wallpapermag dot com for the full story.

As a rural kid who discovered fashion magazines at the grocery store, I never could have imagined that I’d be covering New York Fashion Week. Two decades later, I did just that— five days, 13 shows, infinite inspiration. Head over to @wallpapermag to read my coverage. ✨

As a rural kid who discovered fashion magazines at the grocery store, I never could have imagined that I’d be covering New York Fashion Week. Two decades later, I did just that— five days, 13 shows, infinite inspiration. Head over to @wallpapermag to read my coverage. ✨
As a rural kid who discovered fashion magazines at the grocery store, I never could have imagined that I’d be covering New York Fashion Week. Two decades later, I did just that— five days, 13 shows, infinite inspiration. Head over to @wallpapermag to read my coverage. ✨

As a rural kid who discovered fashion magazines at the grocery store, I never could have imagined that I’d be covering New York Fashion Week. Two decades later, I did just that— five days, 13 shows, infinite inspiration. Head over to @wallpapermag to read my coverage. ✨

As a rural kid who discovered fashion magazines at the grocery store, I never could have imagined that I’d be covering New York Fashion Week. Two decades later, I did just that— five days, 13 shows, infinite inspiration. Head over to @wallpapermag to read my coverage. ✨
As a rural kid who discovered fashion magazines at the grocery store, I never could have imagined that I’d be covering New York Fashion Week. Two decades later, I did just that— five days, 13 shows, infinite inspiration. Head over to @wallpapermag to read my coverage. ✨

As a rural kid who discovered fashion magazines at the grocery store, I never could have imagined that I’d be covering New York Fashion Week. Two decades later, I did just that— five days, 13 shows, infinite inspiration. Head over to @wallpapermag to read my coverage. ✨
As a rural kid who discovered fashion magazines at the grocery store, I never could have imagined that I’d be covering New York Fashion Week. Two decades later, I did just that— five days, 13 shows, infinite inspiration. Head over to @wallpapermag to read my coverage. ✨
As a rural kid who discovered fashion magazines at the grocery store, I never could have imagined that I’d be covering New York Fashion Week. Two decades later, I did just that— five days, 13 shows, infinite inspiration. Head over to @wallpapermag to read my coverage. ✨

As a rural kid who discovered fashion magazines at the grocery store, I never could have imagined that I’d be covering New York Fashion Week. Two decades later, I did just that— five days, 13 shows, infinite inspiration. Head over to @wallpapermag to read my coverage. ✨
As a rural kid who discovered fashion magazines at the grocery store, I never could have imagined that I’d be covering New York Fashion Week. Two decades later, I did just that— five days, 13 shows, infinite inspiration. Head over to @wallpapermag to read my coverage. ✨

“Malibu at its most glamorous” — that’s how Pamela Shamshiri of @studioshamshiri described this high-drama beach house, as featured in our November Art Issue. Her muses (and my favorite element of this home tour)? Lina Bo Bardi and James Bond. 🌴🍸
Head over to @wallpapermag dot com for the full story.
📸 by @stephenkentjohnson
Produced by @michaelreynoldsnyc
Special thanks to @billprinceinc and @charliegunn

“Malibu at its most glamorous” — that’s how Pamela Shamshiri of @studioshamshiri described this high-drama beach house, as featured in our November Art Issue. Her muses (and my favorite element of this home tour)? Lina Bo Bardi and James Bond. 🌴🍸
Head over to @wallpapermag dot com for the full story.
📸 by @stephenkentjohnson
Produced by @michaelreynoldsnyc
Special thanks to @billprinceinc and @charliegunn

“Malibu at its most glamorous” — that’s how Pamela Shamshiri of @studioshamshiri described this high-drama beach house, as featured in our November Art Issue. Her muses (and my favorite element of this home tour)? Lina Bo Bardi and James Bond. 🌴🍸
Head over to @wallpapermag dot com for the full story.
📸 by @stephenkentjohnson
Produced by @michaelreynoldsnyc
Special thanks to @billprinceinc and @charliegunn

“Malibu at its most glamorous” — that’s how Pamela Shamshiri of @studioshamshiri described this high-drama beach house, as featured in our November Art Issue. Her muses (and my favorite element of this home tour)? Lina Bo Bardi and James Bond. 🌴🍸
Head over to @wallpapermag dot com for the full story.
📸 by @stephenkentjohnson
Produced by @michaelreynoldsnyc
Special thanks to @billprinceinc and @charliegunn

“Malibu at its most glamorous” — that’s how Pamela Shamshiri of @studioshamshiri described this high-drama beach house, as featured in our November Art Issue. Her muses (and my favorite element of this home tour)? Lina Bo Bardi and James Bond. 🌴🍸
Head over to @wallpapermag dot com for the full story.
📸 by @stephenkentjohnson
Produced by @michaelreynoldsnyc
Special thanks to @billprinceinc and @charliegunn

“Malibu at its most glamorous” — that’s how Pamela Shamshiri of @studioshamshiri described this high-drama beach house, as featured in our November Art Issue. Her muses (and my favorite element of this home tour)? Lina Bo Bardi and James Bond. 🌴🍸
Head over to @wallpapermag dot com for the full story.
📸 by @stephenkentjohnson
Produced by @michaelreynoldsnyc
Special thanks to @billprinceinc and @charliegunn

For as long as anyone can remember, the women of Gee’s Bend— a rural community tucked into a snug curve of the Alabama River — have been making quilts. These textiles were at first made for warmth and crafted from materials like flour sacks or old clothes. Over generations, their makers developed dynamic patterns and styles, transforming these humble coverings into works of art. Today, these hand-sewn American treasures can be found in the collection of some 40 museums world-wide. But the Gee’s Bend quilters want you — yes, you—to come visit them. The brilliant reporter @diana_b travelled to Gee’s Bend with @soulsgrowndeepfoundation for the annual Airing of the Quilts festival earlier this month to understand how these textiles have served as a community-builder and economic lifeline for this rural town. Head to @wallpapermag dot com for the full story — it’s an incredible read.
Photo attributed to Edith Morgan; and by Stephen Pitkin/Pitkin Studio

For as long as anyone can remember, the women of Gee’s Bend— a rural community tucked into a snug curve of the Alabama River — have been making quilts. These textiles were at first made for warmth and crafted from materials like flour sacks or old clothes. Over generations, their makers developed dynamic patterns and styles, transforming these humble coverings into works of art. Today, these hand-sewn American treasures can be found in the collection of some 40 museums world-wide. But the Gee’s Bend quilters want you — yes, you—to come visit them. The brilliant reporter @diana_b travelled to Gee’s Bend with @soulsgrowndeepfoundation for the annual Airing of the Quilts festival earlier this month to understand how these textiles have served as a community-builder and economic lifeline for this rural town. Head to @wallpapermag dot com for the full story — it’s an incredible read.
Photo attributed to Edith Morgan; and by Stephen Pitkin/Pitkin Studio

For as long as anyone can remember, the women of Gee’s Bend— a rural community tucked into a snug curve of the Alabama River — have been making quilts. These textiles were at first made for warmth and crafted from materials like flour sacks or old clothes. Over generations, their makers developed dynamic patterns and styles, transforming these humble coverings into works of art. Today, these hand-sewn American treasures can be found in the collection of some 40 museums world-wide. But the Gee’s Bend quilters want you — yes, you—to come visit them. The brilliant reporter @diana_b travelled to Gee’s Bend with @soulsgrowndeepfoundation for the annual Airing of the Quilts festival earlier this month to understand how these textiles have served as a community-builder and economic lifeline for this rural town. Head to @wallpapermag dot com for the full story — it’s an incredible read.
Photo attributed to Edith Morgan; and by Stephen Pitkin/Pitkin Studio

For as long as anyone can remember, the women of Gee’s Bend— a rural community tucked into a snug curve of the Alabama River — have been making quilts. These textiles were at first made for warmth and crafted from materials like flour sacks or old clothes. Over generations, their makers developed dynamic patterns and styles, transforming these humble coverings into works of art. Today, these hand-sewn American treasures can be found in the collection of some 40 museums world-wide. But the Gee’s Bend quilters want you — yes, you—to come visit them. The brilliant reporter @diana_b travelled to Gee’s Bend with @soulsgrowndeepfoundation for the annual Airing of the Quilts festival earlier this month to understand how these textiles have served as a community-builder and economic lifeline for this rural town. Head to @wallpapermag dot com for the full story — it’s an incredible read.
Photo attributed to Edith Morgan; and by Stephen Pitkin/Pitkin Studio

Retail design is always fun to write about because of the storytelling underpinning the spaces. Wallpaper*400 design studio @valledevalle (co-helmed by my former AD colleague @janekeltnerdev !) infused @ullajohnson ‘s new Upper East Side boutique with clever (not to mention elegant) uptown references, from the Frick to the Carlyle. ‘It feels like a glowing jewel box of treasures,’ Johnson says. ‘There is a warmth. Gilded wall coverings, hand painted arches, lush textiles, luminous plaster – all things that I love.’ ✨

Retail design is always fun to write about because of the storytelling underpinning the spaces. Wallpaper*400 design studio @valledevalle (co-helmed by my former AD colleague @janekeltnerdev !) infused @ullajohnson ‘s new Upper East Side boutique with clever (not to mention elegant) uptown references, from the Frick to the Carlyle. ‘It feels like a glowing jewel box of treasures,’ Johnson says. ‘There is a warmth. Gilded wall coverings, hand painted arches, lush textiles, luminous plaster – all things that I love.’ ✨

Retail design is always fun to write about because of the storytelling underpinning the spaces. Wallpaper*400 design studio @valledevalle (co-helmed by my former AD colleague @janekeltnerdev !) infused @ullajohnson ‘s new Upper East Side boutique with clever (not to mention elegant) uptown references, from the Frick to the Carlyle. ‘It feels like a glowing jewel box of treasures,’ Johnson says. ‘There is a warmth. Gilded wall coverings, hand painted arches, lush textiles, luminous plaster – all things that I love.’ ✨

Retail design is always fun to write about because of the storytelling underpinning the spaces. Wallpaper*400 design studio @valledevalle (co-helmed by my former AD colleague @janekeltnerdev !) infused @ullajohnson ‘s new Upper East Side boutique with clever (not to mention elegant) uptown references, from the Frick to the Carlyle. ‘It feels like a glowing jewel box of treasures,’ Johnson says. ‘There is a warmth. Gilded wall coverings, hand painted arches, lush textiles, luminous plaster – all things that I love.’ ✨

Retail design is always fun to write about because of the storytelling underpinning the spaces. Wallpaper*400 design studio @valledevalle (co-helmed by my former AD colleague @janekeltnerdev !) infused @ullajohnson ‘s new Upper East Side boutique with clever (not to mention elegant) uptown references, from the Frick to the Carlyle. ‘It feels like a glowing jewel box of treasures,’ Johnson says. ‘There is a warmth. Gilded wall coverings, hand painted arches, lush textiles, luminous plaster – all things that I love.’ ✨

Retail design is always fun to write about because of the storytelling underpinning the spaces. Wallpaper*400 design studio @valledevalle (co-helmed by my former AD colleague @janekeltnerdev !) infused @ullajohnson ‘s new Upper East Side boutique with clever (not to mention elegant) uptown references, from the Frick to the Carlyle. ‘It feels like a glowing jewel box of treasures,’ Johnson says. ‘There is a warmth. Gilded wall coverings, hand painted arches, lush textiles, luminous plaster – all things that I love.’ ✨

Retail design is always fun to write about because of the storytelling underpinning the spaces. Wallpaper*400 design studio @valledevalle (co-helmed by my former AD colleague @janekeltnerdev !) infused @ullajohnson ‘s new Upper East Side boutique with clever (not to mention elegant) uptown references, from the Frick to the Carlyle. ‘It feels like a glowing jewel box of treasures,’ Johnson says. ‘There is a warmth. Gilded wall coverings, hand painted arches, lush textiles, luminous plaster – all things that I love.’ ✨

Five years ago today, in the middle of the pandemic, @reddihough and I drove to the parking lot of an Elks Lodge outside Saratoga Springs, New York to adopt a dog we found on the Internet. Never had we seen a funnier looking creature — or Portuguese Podengo as we were told. Turns out, it was the best not-so-impulsive decision we’ve ever made. Happy Gotcha Day, Taco.

Five years ago today, in the middle of the pandemic, @reddihough and I drove to the parking lot of an Elks Lodge outside Saratoga Springs, New York to adopt a dog we found on the Internet. Never had we seen a funnier looking creature — or Portuguese Podengo as we were told. Turns out, it was the best not-so-impulsive decision we’ve ever made. Happy Gotcha Day, Taco.

Five years ago today, in the middle of the pandemic, @reddihough and I drove to the parking lot of an Elks Lodge outside Saratoga Springs, New York to adopt a dog we found on the Internet. Never had we seen a funnier looking creature — or Portuguese Podengo as we were told. Turns out, it was the best not-so-impulsive decision we’ve ever made. Happy Gotcha Day, Taco.

Five years ago today, in the middle of the pandemic, @reddihough and I drove to the parking lot of an Elks Lodge outside Saratoga Springs, New York to adopt a dog we found on the Internet. Never had we seen a funnier looking creature — or Portuguese Podengo as we were told. Turns out, it was the best not-so-impulsive decision we’ve ever made. Happy Gotcha Day, Taco.

Five years ago today, in the middle of the pandemic, @reddihough and I drove to the parking lot of an Elks Lodge outside Saratoga Springs, New York to adopt a dog we found on the Internet. Never had we seen a funnier looking creature — or Portuguese Podengo as we were told. Turns out, it was the best not-so-impulsive decision we’ve ever made. Happy Gotcha Day, Taco.

Five years ago today, in the middle of the pandemic, @reddihough and I drove to the parking lot of an Elks Lodge outside Saratoga Springs, New York to adopt a dog we found on the Internet. Never had we seen a funnier looking creature — or Portuguese Podengo as we were told. Turns out, it was the best not-so-impulsive decision we’ve ever made. Happy Gotcha Day, Taco.

Five years ago today, in the middle of the pandemic, @reddihough and I drove to the parking lot of an Elks Lodge outside Saratoga Springs, New York to adopt a dog we found on the Internet. Never had we seen a funnier looking creature — or Portuguese Podengo as we were told. Turns out, it was the best not-so-impulsive decision we’ve ever made. Happy Gotcha Day, Taco.

Five years ago today, in the middle of the pandemic, @reddihough and I drove to the parking lot of an Elks Lodge outside Saratoga Springs, New York to adopt a dog we found on the Internet. Never had we seen a funnier looking creature — or Portuguese Podengo as we were told. Turns out, it was the best not-so-impulsive decision we’ve ever made. Happy Gotcha Day, Taco.

Five years ago today, in the middle of the pandemic, @reddihough and I drove to the parking lot of an Elks Lodge outside Saratoga Springs, New York to adopt a dog we found on the Internet. Never had we seen a funnier looking creature — or Portuguese Podengo as we were told. Turns out, it was the best not-so-impulsive decision we’ve ever made. Happy Gotcha Day, Taco.

Five years ago today, in the middle of the pandemic, @reddihough and I drove to the parking lot of an Elks Lodge outside Saratoga Springs, New York to adopt a dog we found on the Internet. Never had we seen a funnier looking creature — or Portuguese Podengo as we were told. Turns out, it was the best not-so-impulsive decision we’ve ever made. Happy Gotcha Day, Taco.

Five years ago today, in the middle of the pandemic, @reddihough and I drove to the parking lot of an Elks Lodge outside Saratoga Springs, New York to adopt a dog we found on the Internet. Never had we seen a funnier looking creature — or Portuguese Podengo as we were told. Turns out, it was the best not-so-impulsive decision we’ve ever made. Happy Gotcha Day, Taco.

Five years ago today, in the middle of the pandemic, @reddihough and I drove to the parking lot of an Elks Lodge outside Saratoga Springs, New York to adopt a dog we found on the Internet. Never had we seen a funnier looking creature — or Portuguese Podengo as we were told. Turns out, it was the best not-so-impulsive decision we’ve ever made. Happy Gotcha Day, Taco.

Five years ago today, in the middle of the pandemic, @reddihough and I drove to the parking lot of an Elks Lodge outside Saratoga Springs, New York to adopt a dog we found on the Internet. Never had we seen a funnier looking creature — or Portuguese Podengo as we were told. Turns out, it was the best not-so-impulsive decision we’ve ever made. Happy Gotcha Day, Taco.

Five years ago today, in the middle of the pandemic, @reddihough and I drove to the parking lot of an Elks Lodge outside Saratoga Springs, New York to adopt a dog we found on the Internet. Never had we seen a funnier looking creature — or Portuguese Podengo as we were told. Turns out, it was the best not-so-impulsive decision we’ve ever made. Happy Gotcha Day, Taco.

Five years ago today, in the middle of the pandemic, @reddihough and I drove to the parking lot of an Elks Lodge outside Saratoga Springs, New York to adopt a dog we found on the Internet. Never had we seen a funnier looking creature — or Portuguese Podengo as we were told. Turns out, it was the best not-so-impulsive decision we’ve ever made. Happy Gotcha Day, Taco.

Five years ago today, in the middle of the pandemic, @reddihough and I drove to the parking lot of an Elks Lodge outside Saratoga Springs, New York to adopt a dog we found on the Internet. Never had we seen a funnier looking creature — or Portuguese Podengo as we were told. Turns out, it was the best not-so-impulsive decision we’ve ever made. Happy Gotcha Day, Taco.

Five years ago today, in the middle of the pandemic, @reddihough and I drove to the parking lot of an Elks Lodge outside Saratoga Springs, New York to adopt a dog we found on the Internet. Never had we seen a funnier looking creature — or Portuguese Podengo as we were told. Turns out, it was the best not-so-impulsive decision we’ve ever made. Happy Gotcha Day, Taco.

Five years ago today, in the middle of the pandemic, @reddihough and I drove to the parking lot of an Elks Lodge outside Saratoga Springs, New York to adopt a dog we found on the Internet. Never had we seen a funnier looking creature — or Portuguese Podengo as we were told. Turns out, it was the best not-so-impulsive decision we’ve ever made. Happy Gotcha Day, Taco.

Five years ago today, in the middle of the pandemic, @reddihough and I drove to the parking lot of an Elks Lodge outside Saratoga Springs, New York to adopt a dog we found on the Internet. Never had we seen a funnier looking creature — or Portuguese Podengo as we were told. Turns out, it was the best not-so-impulsive decision we’ve ever made. Happy Gotcha Day, Taco.

Five years ago today, in the middle of the pandemic, @reddihough and I drove to the parking lot of an Elks Lodge outside Saratoga Springs, New York to adopt a dog we found on the Internet. Never had we seen a funnier looking creature — or Portuguese Podengo as we were told. Turns out, it was the best not-so-impulsive decision we’ve ever made. Happy Gotcha Day, Taco.

Chasing down the finish line at the @wgmarathon this weekend. ✨
Not pictured: busted toenails, bathroom breaks in bushes, hundreds of Strava miles, my bad-ass coach @lindaleighlore and my one-man pit crew, @reddihough. Marathons are hard— and I’m beyond grateful to still be doing this.

In 2006, a little sport called cross country landed at my high school. None of us knew what to make of it (Running? For fun??), but we showed up anyway. What resulted was not just a sports team, but a family. Safe to say, it changed many of our lives. Twenty seasons later, Giants CC is still going strong and we all gathered in Legion Park this weekend, where we’d always meet before crisp autumn runs, to celebrate and share memories. Thank you, Coach Christ, for being an inspiration to us all!

In 2006, a little sport called cross country landed at my high school. None of us knew what to make of it (Running? For fun??), but we showed up anyway. What resulted was not just a sports team, but a family. Safe to say, it changed many of our lives. Twenty seasons later, Giants CC is still going strong and we all gathered in Legion Park this weekend, where we’d always meet before crisp autumn runs, to celebrate and share memories. Thank you, Coach Christ, for being an inspiration to us all!

In 2006, a little sport called cross country landed at my high school. None of us knew what to make of it (Running? For fun??), but we showed up anyway. What resulted was not just a sports team, but a family. Safe to say, it changed many of our lives. Twenty seasons later, Giants CC is still going strong and we all gathered in Legion Park this weekend, where we’d always meet before crisp autumn runs, to celebrate and share memories. Thank you, Coach Christ, for being an inspiration to us all!

In 2006, a little sport called cross country landed at my high school. None of us knew what to make of it (Running? For fun??), but we showed up anyway. What resulted was not just a sports team, but a family. Safe to say, it changed many of our lives. Twenty seasons later, Giants CC is still going strong and we all gathered in Legion Park this weekend, where we’d always meet before crisp autumn runs, to celebrate and share memories. Thank you, Coach Christ, for being an inspiration to us all!

In 2006, a little sport called cross country landed at my high school. None of us knew what to make of it (Running? For fun??), but we showed up anyway. What resulted was not just a sports team, but a family. Safe to say, it changed many of our lives. Twenty seasons later, Giants CC is still going strong and we all gathered in Legion Park this weekend, where we’d always meet before crisp autumn runs, to celebrate and share memories. Thank you, Coach Christ, for being an inspiration to us all!

In 2006, a little sport called cross country landed at my high school. None of us knew what to make of it (Running? For fun??), but we showed up anyway. What resulted was not just a sports team, but a family. Safe to say, it changed many of our lives. Twenty seasons later, Giants CC is still going strong and we all gathered in Legion Park this weekend, where we’d always meet before crisp autumn runs, to celebrate and share memories. Thank you, Coach Christ, for being an inspiration to us all!
In 2006, a little sport called cross country landed at my high school. None of us knew what to make of it (Running? For fun??), but we showed up anyway. What resulted was not just a sports team, but a family. Safe to say, it changed many of our lives. Twenty seasons later, Giants CC is still going strong and we all gathered in Legion Park this weekend, where we’d always meet before crisp autumn runs, to celebrate and share memories. Thank you, Coach Christ, for being an inspiration to us all!

In 2006, a little sport called cross country landed at my high school. None of us knew what to make of it (Running? For fun??), but we showed up anyway. What resulted was not just a sports team, but a family. Safe to say, it changed many of our lives. Twenty seasons later, Giants CC is still going strong and we all gathered in Legion Park this weekend, where we’d always meet before crisp autumn runs, to celebrate and share memories. Thank you, Coach Christ, for being an inspiration to us all!
The Instagram Story Viewer is an easy tool that lets you secretly watch and save Instagram stories, videos, photos, or IGTV. With this service, you can download content and enjoy it offline whenever you like. If you find something interesting on Instagram that you’d like to check out later or want to view stories while staying anonymous, our Viewer is perfect for you. Anonstories offers an excellent solution for keeping your identity hidden. Instagram first launched the Stories feature in August 2023, which was quickly adopted by other platforms due to its engaging, time-sensitive format. Stories let users share quick updates, whether photos, videos, or selfies, enhanced with text, emojis, or filters, and are visible for only 24 hours. This limited time frame creates high engagement compared to regular posts. In today’s world, Stories are one of the most popular ways to connect and communicate on social media. However, when you view a Story, the creator can see your name in their viewer list, which may be a privacy concern. What if you wish to browse Stories without being noticed? Here’s where Anonstories becomes useful. It allows you to watch public Instagram content without revealing your identity. Simply enter the username of the profile you’re curious about, and the tool will display their latest Stories. Features of Anonstories Viewer: - Anonymous Browsing: Watch Stories without showing up on the viewer list. - No Account Needed: View public content without signing up for an Instagram account. - Content Download: Save any Stories content directly to your device for offline use. - View Highlights: Access Instagram Highlights, even beyond the 24-hour window. - Repost Monitoring: Track the reposts or engagement levels on Stories for personal profiles. Limitations: - This tool works only with public accounts; private accounts remain inaccessible. Benefits: - Privacy-Friendly: Watch any Instagram content without being noticed. - Simple and Easy: No app installation or registration required. - Exclusive Tools: Download and manage content in ways Instagram doesn’t offer.
Keep track of Instagram updates discreetly while protecting your privacy and staying anonymous.
View profiles and photos anonymously with ease using the Private Profile Viewer.
This free tool allows you to view Instagram Stories anonymously, ensuring your activity remains hidden from the story uploader.
Anonstories lets users view Instagram stories without alerting the creator.
Works seamlessly on iOS, Android, Windows, macOS, and modern browsers like Chrome and Safari.
Prioritizes secure, anonymous browsing without requiring login credentials.
Users can view public stories by simply entering a username—no account needed.
Downloads photos (JPEG) and videos (MP4) with ease.
The service is free to use.
Content from private accounts can only be accessed by followers.
Files are for personal or educational use only and must comply with copyright rules.
Enter a public username to view or download stories. The service generates direct links for saving content locally.