body issues

Tales From ‘Mademoiselle’: ‘Self-Starvation Was a Competitive Sport’

Valerie Frankel, former editor of now-defunct Condé Nast title Mademoiselle, just released a book about the pressure to stay slim in the world of magazine publishing. In Thin Is the New Happy, Frankel writes she snorted “hillocks of cocaine” to help fit into a size 8 — sometimes at the workplace — and that she did “more blow in my first two years at Mademoiselle than in college, when I lived with a coke dealer.” She adds human resources told new hires to “represent the magazine in [their] personal appearance,” and the office motto of sorts was “get thin or die trying.”

To live up to those standards, “Self-starvation was a competitive sport. At staff lunches, the girl who ate the least won,” Frankel writes. “During downtime, we’d sit in our offices smoking cigarette after cigarette (to quell hunger) and talking about who ate what, the calorie counts of our lunches, the latest dieting trends, who on the staff looked heavy.”

Valerie Frankel, former editor of now-defunct Condé Nast title Mademoiselle, just released a book about the pressure to stay slim in the world of magazine publishing. In Thin Is the New Happy, Frankel writes she snorted “hillocks of cocaine” to help fit into a size 8 — sometimes at the workplace — and that she did “more blow in my first two years at Mademoiselle than in college, when I lived with a coke dealer.” She adds human resources told new hires to “represent the magazine in [their] personal appearance,” and the office motto of sorts was “get thin or die trying.”

Tales From ‘Mademoiselle’: ‘Self-Starvation Was a Competitive Sport’