It’s the sexual content that’s really troubling. In all fairness, that’s kind of the nature of the brand - the opinion pieces are interspersed among groundbreaking reports such as “Miley Cyrus, Ariana Grande, and Lana del Rey Are Quite Possibly Releasing a Song Together” and “We Found the 12 Cutest Bathing Suits on Amazon,” and our expectations should be informed by that context. The political commentary has generally been harmless enough, although (or maybe because) it tends to be mind-numbingly unintelligent.
Capitalizing on inflamed political feelings and rapidly rising interest in digital-media outlets, the tabloid transformed itself into an online hybrid of far-left political commentary and something like Cosmo-for-kids. But, floundering after just over a decade in circulation, the Vogue spinoff took a sharp turn around 2016. It started innocently enough, as a fashion and celebrity-gossip magazine intended for teenage girls.
T een Vogue has jumped the shark - maybe around the time it published “Anal Sex: What You Need to Know,” probably a good while before that.