Tommy Pisani
Tommy Pisani focuses on the intersection of celebrity culture and style, consistently framing pop culture moments through what stars wear, how they present themselves, and the visual stories around them. His coverage leans on highly visual, event-driven reporting and list features that track fashion history and trends through the lens of celebrity appearances and relationships.
Celebrity style and event coverage
Pisani’s day-to-day work centers on red carpets, premieres, festivals, and public appearances where fashion is a key part of the story. He writes up major entertainment events with attention to what celebrities are wearing, how their looks fit the occasion, and which moments define the visual tone of the night. Recent pieces include coverage of the “House Of The Dragon” Season 3 world premiere in London, highlighting the stars in attendance and their red carpet presence, and reporting on North West’s long blue hair and unique style during Coachella 2026’s first weekend. Across these stories, he treats each appearance as both a pop culture and fashion moment, making the visual details central to the write-up.
Fashion history and list-driven features
Beyond daily event recaps, Pisani regularly produces list and history features that organize celebrity fashion into accessible narratives. In a feature looking back at 30 iconic dresses in Oscars history, he guides readers through standout looks from past ceremonies, positioning the dresses as milestones in fashion and award-show culture. His list on the youngest hosts in Saturday Night Live history similarly pairs biographical and career details with the aesthetic and cultural context of hosting the show. These pieces show a pattern: he uses ranked or collected formats to map out how style, age, and visibility intersect in entertainment, with fashion as a recurring anchor.
Relationship timelines and celebrity image
Pisani also works with relationship timelines and dating histories, using them to explore how celebrity image evolves over time. In his breakdown of Kendall Jenner’s dating history, he catalogs her famous ex-boyfriends and ties their relationships into a broader picture of her public life. A similar feature on Emma Stone’s dating history organizes her high-profile relationships into a narrative that reflects both career phases and public perception. These stories sit adjacent to fashion coverage: they reinforce how personal relationships, public outings, and paparazzi imagery build a continuous visual and reputational narrative around high-profile figures.
Reality and entertainment scandal coverage
Pisani’s beat also includes reality television and entertainment scandals where image and reputation are central. In his feature on the most shocking cheating scandals in Bravo history, he lays out key incidents across the network’s franchises, focusing on the personalities involved and the fallout of their actions. He has also covered projects built around major celebrity incidents, such as a docu-series development about Kim Kardashian’s 2016 Paris robbery, treating the show’s announcement as both an entertainment industry move and a retelling of a defining moment in her public life. These pieces show his comfort with reality-tv sourced narratives, where wardrobe, settings, and televised aesthetics are part of how scandal is communicated.
General pop culture and entertainment writing
Within Just Jared, Pisani’s work extends across movies, television, music, and celebrity news while retaining a strong pop culture and fashion lens. His author archive includes pieces on comedians like Wanda Sykes calling out sexist jokes at a Netflix roast, scripted projects such as Jodie Comer’s casting in an HBO limited series, and sports-adjacent celebrity news like Tiger Woods returning to competition. In each case, he situates these developments within the broader celebrity ecosystem that drives trends, sponsorships, and style moments. This range underscores his role as a pop culture and fashion writer who can move from style-led stories to broader entertainment news without losing the focus on how public figures present themselves.
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.