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Mara Siegler

pagesix.comUSA
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Celebrity GossipNightlifeFashionReality TV
About

Mara Siegler is a senior reporter at Page Six who covers the way celebrities move through fashion, nightlife and media, with a focus on relationship shifts, big nights out and the scenes around them. Her work is built around sourced gossip and exclusives that tie personal lives to public images, especially for figures at the center of pop culture and style. She writes in a direct, reportorial voice that treats parties, romances and fashion-world drama as news, not fluff, and brings a consistent “gossip girl” persona across her reporting and social platforms.

Celebrity relationships and gossip exclusives

Siegler’s coverage consistently centers on who is together, who has split, and how those changes ripple through the entertainment and fashion ecosystem. In an exclusive about Kendall Jenner and Jacob Elordi, she reports that Jenner is “crazy” about the actor and trying to keep him away from the broader Kardashian machinery, framing the relationship as both personal and strategic for one of fashion’s most visible figures. She co-reports stories that break news on unexpected pairings, such as the Page Six scoop that Andrew Shue and Marilee Fiebig — the former spouses of Amy Robach and T.J. Holmes — are now romantically linked, turning media-industry fallout into a fresh relationship narrative. Her work also extends to high-profile society weddings, including a detailed story with Oli Coleman on Donald Trump Jr. and Bettina Anderson’s Memorial Day weekend wedding on a private island, where she uses sourcing to reveal guest plans, setting and the couple’s preference for privacy over pageantry.

Across these pieces, Siegler treats relationships as a beat in themselves: she tracks timelines, surfaces insider quotes and situates each coupling or split within a broader power map of celebrities, political families and fashion-adjacent figures. Her exclusives often hinge on unnamed sources and tip-driven information, which she then builds into short, tightly written items that move quickly through the gossip ecosystem.

Nightlife, parties and performance culture

A major strand of Siegler’s work is coverage of how celebrities celebrate, unwind and show face in public, especially in nightlife settings. She writes inside-the-room accounts of post-show parties, such as her piece on Demi Lovato’s celebration after a Madison Square Garden performance, where the focus is on who attended, how they marked the milestone and the atmosphere of the event. Her story on Megan Thee Stallion being spotted at Aura 57 club following a split similarly uses a specific venue and moment to signal how the rapper is navigating a change in her personal life, tying nightlife choices to narrative arcs about independence and image.

This party reporting is structured around concrete details — venues, guest lists, timing and mood — rather than commentary. Siegler positions these nights out as consequential: they show where cultural power gathers, which brands and spaces are in favor, and how fashion and music figures choose to be seen. Her own social presence, including TikTok content where she posts about a star of Bravo’s “Next Gen NYC” being at the SoHo “crypto torture house,” reinforces that she follows the intersection of reality television, nightlife and true-crime-adjacent stories and brings those threads back into Page Six’s gossip coverage.

Fashion figures and the business of style

Although she is broadly a gossip reporter, Siegler’s work often runs through fashion, designers and the business of style. Her author archive includes reporting on the death of a New York City designer found on a boat in Montauk, framed through the grieving social-media posts of her business partner, which shows Siegler approaching fashion stories through human stakes and industry relationships rather than trend coverage. In celebrity pieces, fashion is rarely the headline but often the backdrop: the Kendall Jenner and Jacob Elordi story revolves around a model whose brand is deeply tied to luxury labels and runway culture, and the private island wedding of Donald Trump Jr. and Bettina Anderson functions as a society event where dress, setting and guest mix reflect a particular tier of style and wealth.

Her fashion-adjacent reporting focuses on how careers, partnerships and tragedies in the style world play out in public, using Page Six’s gossip framework to surface the softer power dynamics behind labels and creative ventures. Rather than profiling designers or analyzing collections, she looks at who is launching projects, who is losing collaborators, and how the fashion crowd reacts, often through emotional posts and insider commentary.

Voice, format and platforms

Siegler is identified as a senior reporter for Page Six at the New York Post, and her public bios describe her explicitly as a “gossip girl” and “gossip goddess,” matching the tone and focus of her stories. She encourages readers and industry figures to send tips via her publicly listed email, underscoring that much of her reporting is built from incoming information rather than formal announcements or press releases. In addition to filing stories, she has appeared on the television program “Page Six TV” as herself in a reporter role, extending her gossip coverage to broadcast and reinforcing her position as an on-air explainer of celebrity and fashion-adjacent news.

Across platforms, Siegler keeps her format tight: short, sourced items with clear headlines that emphasize exclusivity, relationship updates or notable scenes in nightlife and fashion. Her social media and video presence mirror that style, using the same direct language and tip-driven approach to tease or amplify stories. For anyone tracking how celebrity, nightlife and fashion intersect in the gossip press, her work shows what kinds of scenes and relationships are considered newsworthy and how those stories are built and delivered through Page Six’s lens.

Also covering this beat

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Aaron Royce

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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.

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Abigail Connolly

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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.

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Aemilia Madden

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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.

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Air Mail

airmail.news

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.

USA·Fashion
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