Daniel's Letter to Editor
I've heard about this letter that Daniel wrote to the editor, but, I was disappointed it wasn't in the UK version of finale. Does anyone know why it wasn't in it and is it in thn US version? Thanks
shareI've heard about this letter that Daniel wrote to the editor, but, I was disappointed it wasn't in the UK version of finale. Does anyone know why it wasn't in it and is it in thn US version? Thanks
shareIt wasn't shown on air in the US, but the online component of ABC posted it on the Ugly Betty website before the show's site was taken down for current shows airing on the network. Here's what the letter said:
LETTER FROM THE EDITOR
A Hundred Years of Attitude
April 15, 2010
A hundred years is plenty of time for a lot to happen in anything. Political powers change hands and change back again, cultural movements evolve into something completely different, whole empires rise and fall. And yet, this is somehow even truer for the world of fashion, one in which a constant state of changing attitudes is implied by the very term itself. For a hundred years, Mode Magazine has been a leader, an ambassador, a harbinger, an opponent of and a champion for shifts in the way our society sees itself, and our next issue is a celebration of that complicated legacy.
Of course, an institution like Mode cannot even pretend to the throne of molding the attitudes of culture if it were not full of attitude itself. And attitude is one thing Mode has always had in abundance. To be honest, sometimes I feel as though we at Mode pack a hundred years worth of it into one day, especially since my co-Editor-in-Chief, Wilhelmina Slater, came on the scene. Ah, but I kid...
...And yet, I don't -- the truth is, the field of fashion is one that is both fast and fierce, and sometimes you have to go through a hundred years worth of attitudes in a day to find the one that suits the precise pulse of our culture at that given point. It's an amazing and arduous process, but, to be even more honest, it's one for which I admit I am not a natural fit, one for which Wilhelmina is.
Since I've experienced so much attitude in my time at Mode, I'd like to posit an observation: One thing that is often lost in the changing of an attitude is the cause for that change. This is best understood when you consider attitudes on a personal level. I ask you, dear reader, to think back to a time when you experienced a major shift in your life. Was it an external change, something that happened outside of you, and forced a change of attitude to help you adapt to the future? Perhaps you saw a friend demonstrate a prowess that cast her in a new light. Heck, maybe it was as simple as your friend getting a makeover. Or perhaps that friend was undergoing her own life change, one in which she would no longer be present in your life, compelling you to make your own change to keep her in it, even if it were in a new context.
Just as important: Maybe the change was an internal one. Maybe you realized you were no longer interested in maintaining your status quo. Perhaps you wanted to try new challenges not only in your professional life, but also in your personal one. Or maybe one day something just changed inside you in the way you saw that good friend, causing you to want her to be more than, well, just a friend.
As you experience our One Hundred Years of Attitude Issue, I ask that you consider not only the attitudes themselves, but the causes that precipitated their change and coming to be. Often the changes in attitude that are the most powerful are rooted in causes that come from without and within. When that unusual synergy occurs, love is often the result. And take it from me: Love is the one attitude that never goes out of fashion. - Daniel Meade
"Perhaps after all it is possible to read too many novels."
That's lovely. I didn't know about the online part. Was it just online or was it on the dvd? Thanks
shareI believe it was just online as supplement to the show. Not sure about the DVDs as I don't own any of them yet, but that would be cool if some of the online content were included.
"Perhaps after all it is possible to read too many novels."
I'm incredibly disappointed this wasn't narrated at the end of the series.
It would have made for a really great perspective, rather than Claire Meade having to point out the feelings...