
Zoe Bernard
Writer at Freelance
Contributing Editor at Vanity Fair
contributing editor at Vanity Fair, mostly writing about tech. bad at social media, good at long phone calls unsure how to use this website
Articles
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3 weeks ago |
vanityfair.com | Zoe Bernard
It’s late April in Los Angeles, and I’m bobbing and weaving through a crowd at a downtown film production studio to watch what’s been billed as the world’s first sperm race. There’s a stage, a Jumbotron, and ring girls in white miniskirts. The game is about to begin, and a woman in a lab coat peppers a contestant with questions about his health. “How long since your racers last raced?” she asks. (This, it seems, is a euphemism for masturbating.) “Sunday, 11:59 p.m.,” he replies.
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4 weeks ago |
vanityfair.com | Zoe Bernard
In the past few months, San Francisco residents have been noticing small changes in their city. They’ve seen more law enforcement patrolling their notoriously troubled neighborhoods, such as the Tenderloin and South of Market. What’s more, police are making arrests for crimes like theft and selling drugs. Some say life feels safer, a sign of change that’s met with cautious optimism.
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2 months ago |
businessinsider.es | Zoe Bernard
Dos meses después del comienzo del segundo mandato de Donald Trump, los líderes conservadores de la industria tecnológica, algunos de los cuales asesoran a la Administración, se encuentran en un estado de confusión. Les irrita cómo la caótica forma de gobernar del presidente, inusual incluso para los estándares de Trump 1.0, está haciendo cada vez más difícil dirigir sus empresas. "Ninguno de mis amigos que votaron a Trump está contento ahora mismo.
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2 months ago |
vanityfair.it | Zoe Bernard
Questo articolo è pubblicato sul numero 14 di Vanity Fair in edicola fino al 1 aprile 2025SAN FRANCISCO, metà ottobre. Una folla di circa 200 fedeli – alcuni seduti sulle panche, altri in piedi sotto le finestre da cattedrale in fondo – prega con il capo chino. Un djdiffonde un ritmo incalzante di musica sacra remixata, mentre camerieri in camicia nera servono cosmopolitan alla mela e piatti di cucina birmana.
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2 months ago |
businessinsider.com | Zoe Bernard
This story is available exclusively to Business Insider subscribers. Become an Insider and start reading now. Have an account? . Two months into Donald Trump's second term, conservative leaders in the tech industry — some of whom are advising the administration — are in a state of turmoil. They are bristling at how the president's chaotic governing, unusual even by the standards of Trump 1.0, is making it increasingly difficult to run their companies.
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"In a way, the speed and ease with which AI proved itself able to do college-level work simply exposed the rot at the core." https://t.co/Et5NI79hjz

RT @alaynatreene: Scoop: Trump called Amazon founder Jeff Bezos Tuesday morning to complain about reports that his company was considering…

RT @kimbal: Boeing’s prices to Americans will jump sky high because parts to make their planes will be much more expensive. This means we…