Erica Radol
Erica Radol is a lifestyle and commerce reporter at Page Six’s Style section, focused on shoppable coverage of celebrity-loved fashion, beauty and culture. Her work is distinguished by the way she translates what stars wear and use into specific, accessible product recommendations, balancing luxury names with attainable price points. Across fashion, beauty and everyday lifestyle buys, she writes service-driven stories that show readers exactly how to get the look or product, and why it is worth their attention.
Celeb-loved fashion and beauty finds
At Page Six Style, Radol’s core lane is celebrity-led fashion and beauty that readers can buy directly from her stories. She writes about the clothes, shoes and accessories stars wear off-duty and on the red carpet, highlighting the exact items and close matches that are available at retail. In a recent piece on Jennifer Lawrence, she broke down an outfit pairing an Hermès handbag with iconic under-$30 slides the actor wears on repeat, underscoring how a high-end look can hinge on a surprisingly affordable staple. The focus is not just on the designer name, but on the specific product details and price that make the purchase feel attainable.
Her celebrity coverage extends into beauty, where she tracks the scents, lip products and other staples stars rely on day to day. In a shopping story on Sarah Jessica Parker, she centered the narrative on a retro fragrance the actor carries with her everywhere and emphasized that it costs just $13, positioning a star-approved item as an easy add to a reader’s routine. Across these pieces, she uses direct references to what celebrities keep in their bags or wear on set to anchor product recommendations in real habits rather than abstract trend talk.
Service journalism on products and trends
Radol’s work is grounded in service journalism that explains how products function, not only what they look like. In her coverage of whole-body deodorants, she walks readers through what distinguishes these formulas from conventional deodorant, drawing on a board-certified dermatologist to outline how they neutralize odor-causing bacteria and absorb moisture across different areas of the body. She breaks down formats like sticks, creams, sprays and powders and clarifies where they can be used safely, translating technical information into practical guidance. The tone is instructional and precise, with attention to ingredients and skin sensitivities rather than purely promotional language.
She applies a similar methodical approach to durability and value in product roundups such as “11 Reliable Brands With Lifetime Warranties.” In that piece, she surveys brands that back their goods with long-term or lifetime guarantees, spelling out what each warranty covers and under what conditions. The story sits at the intersection of shopping and consumer education, helping readers understand how policies like repairs for life or multi-year exchanges factor into the real cost of a purchase. Whether the subject is body care or outdoor gear, her service pieces aim to give readers enough context to make informed, confident decisions.
Shopping coverage across lifestyle categories
Beyond fashion and beauty, Radol covers a range of lifestyle categories that still sit firmly in a shopping frame. Her Us Weekly author page describes her beat as shopping and lifestyle, with emphasis on beauty, fashion, celeb-loved trends and home comforts, signaling regular attention to things like everyday essentials and household products alongside wardrobe items. The “home comforts” thread is reflected in pieces that consider how products fit into daily routines, whether it is a scent tucked into a tote or a brand chosen for its warranty-backed reliability. She connects these choices to comfort, convenience and long-term value rather than treating them as one-off impulse buys.
Her role as a lifestyle editor and service journalist, currently covering beauty, culture and fashion for Page Six Style, reinforces the breadth of her shopping lens. She moves between practical explainers, product roundups and celebrity-focused features, keeping a consistent focus on how items are used in real life. The cultural angle in her work shows up in stories that tie products to broader moments, whether that is a hit series, a designer’s persona or a recurring social media trend, but the core deliverable remains concrete guidance on what to buy.
Cross-outlet experience in fashion and beauty media
Radol’s bylines span a wide set of digital outlets in the fashion, beauty and lifestyle space, which informs the way she approaches shopping coverage at Page Six. She has written shopping and lifestyle stories for Us Weekly, including celebrity scent and trend pieces that mirror her focus on affordable, star-approved finds. Her work at BestProducts.com ranges from warranty-focused roundups to beauty science explainers, deepening her experience in parsing product claims and policies for a general audience.
Professional bios note that her writing has appeared in Well+Good, The Daily Beast and other digital publications, and that her beauty and lifestyle coverage can be seen in outlets like Glamour, HarpersBazaar.com and New York Magazine. Across these platforms, she consistently covers beauty, fashion and culture, strengthening her understanding of both editorial storytelling and commerce-driven formats. That cross-outlet experience shapes a distinctive style at Page Six: celebrity-forward, but rigorously focused on the specifics of products, ingredients, warranties and price that matter to readers making a purchase.
4 more fashion journalists.
Aaron Royce
Aaron Royce turns runway moments and celebrity event dressing into clear, wearable stories that show readers how trends move from the red carpet to real life. He is a fashion news writer at The Zoe Report, where he covers fashion, trends, celebrity style, and related news across the site. He also works in a fashion news editing role at The Daily Front Row, extending his reporting into the industry’s front row and party circuit. As a contributing and freelance journalist, he writes for fashion and lifestyle magazines including People, InStyle, Marie Claire, and other outlets, with a focus on shopping, beauty, and culture. His reporting centers on fashion’s visual language, celebrity influence, and shoppable outcomes across fashion, beauty, fragrance, jewelry, skincare, menswear, wellness, accessories, shoes, pop culture, and celebrity news.
Abigail Connolly
Abigail Connolly stands out for covering celebrity culture and fashion as a visual story about outfits, images, and online reaction. She writes for Yahoo and SheFinds, where she covers celebrity news, fashion, and related lifestyle topics. Her beat focuses on stars, royals, and political figures, with stories on red carpet looks, runway trends, state-visit wardrobes, and social media posts that shape public image. She has written about Oprah Winfrey’s all-white Cannes look, Paris Fashion Week fur, Anya Taylor-Joy’s Dior dress, Melania Trump’s style, and royal figures such as Queen Camilla and Prince William. Her reporting is short, tightly focused, and descriptive, using fan comments, captions, and sourced claims to show how a single look or post drives conversation online.
Aemilia Madden
Aemilia Madden writes about how people actually live in their clothes, blending disciplined wardrobe editing with specific shopping recommendations and a clear point of view on taste and restraint. A fashion and lifestyle journalist, former senior fashion writer at Vogue, and now a freelance writer, editor, and consultant, she focuses on service-driven fashion and lifestyle stories grounded in personal testing, long-term wear, and real scenarios. Her work connects shopping lists, trend coverage, and essays into a focus on more intentional choices about what to buy and how to wear it. She reports through first-person experiments, practical shopping guides, sale roundups, and trend explainers, and her portfolio spans Vogue, Harper’s Bazaar, Elle, T Magazine, The Cut, The Wall Street Journal, and her newsletter Taeste Bud, where she extends her interest in archival references, obsessions, and inside-the-closet cleanses.
Air Mail
Batsheva Hay writes fashion and culture pieces for Air Mail with the sensibility of a working designer rather than a conventional style reporter. She is the founder of the cult label Batsheva, known for prairie dresses and vintage-inflected, modest silhouettes that rethink traditions of feminine dress. At Air Mail she sits inside style and lifestyle coverage, writing about fashion and shopping from the point of view of someone who designs the kinds of clothes she describes. Her background as a former lawyer shapes a structured, argumentative way of taking apart dress codes and conventions. She focuses on vintage clothing, modesty, subversion, and how old styles gain new meaning. In guides such as her Upper West Side piece, she treats locations as mood boards and supporting characters, using sensory detail and lived-in references to map the cultural influences behind her clothes and the world her label inhabits.