Following online backlash over a video featuring editors at Vanity Fair's Hive discussing jokey New Year's resolutions for Hillary Clinton, the magazine issued an apology for the video yesterday, per Deadline. The statement reads: "It was an attempt at humor and we regret that it missed the mark."
What happened: The video suggested that Clinton take up knitting and set aside any future political ambitions, leading some on Twitter — like actress Patricia Arquette and Verrit founder Peter Daou — to brand the video as sexist.
"Cokie and Steven Roberts: A Half-Century of Changing Together," as part of a new N.Y. Times feature, "It's No Secret," highlighting couples who share thoughts about commitment and what they have learned.
The gift of perspective:, from Cokie "I wasn't always able to appreciate him; and he, me. We've learned to do that more now that we're old."
MasterCard announced that U.S. shoppers spent over $800 billion during the 2017 holiday season — the most ever — per Reuters. That's up 4.9% from last year, marking the biggest year-over-year increase in holiday shopping since 2011.
Why it matters: It's finally some good news for sagging department stores with stocks across the industry rising as a result. Mastercard's report pegged online sales as only 11-12% of total retail sales, meaning that the vast majority of Americans did their holiday shopping in traditional brick-and-mortar locations.