Vanity Fairs Hollywood Portfolio Cover
Also known as: Reese Witherspoon Three Legs · Oprah Three Hands
Vanity Fair's "Hollywood Portfolio" Cover is a meme that originated from a botched Photoshop job on the magazine's January 2018 Hollywood issue cover, which gave actress Reese Witherspoon the appearance of having three legs and Oprah Winfrey three hands. The editing errors became instant Twitter fodder, with both stars joining in on the joke, and the incident later inspired a deliberate parody from GQ's comedy issue4.
TL;DR
Vanity Fair's "Hollywood Portfolio" Cover is a meme that originated from a botched Photoshop job on the magazine's January 2018 Hollywood issue cover, which gave actress Reese Witherspoon the appearance of having three legs and Oprah Winfrey three hands.
Overview
Origin & Background
How It Spread
How to Use This Meme
The Vanity Fair cover meme mostly lives as a Photoshop-fail reference rather than a reusable template. People used it in a few common ways:
- Pointing out editing errors in professional photos by comparing them to the Witherspoon/Winfrey incident - Adding extra limbs to group photos as a joke, following GQ's lead - Parodying corporate apology language by imitating GQ's over-the-top faux-sorry statement - Circling "errors" in images, real or imagined, in the style of @TNWhiskeyWoman's annotated version
The GQ comedy cover works as its own format: take a group photo and Photoshop in an absurd number of extra body parts, then issue a deadpan apology for the "mistake."
Cultural Impact
Fun Facts
The 2018 Hollywood Portfolio cover included thirteen people total: twelve actors plus outgoing Vanity Fair editor Graydon Carter, who stepped down after 25 years leading the magazine.
GQ's apology letter joked that the audit results would be released "on Medium," a dig at the platform's reputation as a graveyard for corporate transparency posts nobody reads.
The GQ comedy cover dropped the same day Chrissy Teigen announced the birth of her second child, which GQ jokingly hoped would distract people from their stunt.
Annie Leibovitz, one of the most famous celebrity photographers in the world, shot the original Vanity Fair cover that contained the errors.
Derivatives & Variations
GQ Comedy Issue Cover (2018):
The most direct spinoff. GQ intentionally Photoshopped 15 limbs onto three comedians as a deliberate parody, complete with a satirical apology statement[1].
Vanity Fair's own response:
The magazine tweeted a lighthearted, pun-filled reply to GQ's troll, turning the exchange into a friendly inter-magazine bit[4].
Witherspoon and Winfrey tweets:
Both stars joked about their extra appendages on Twitter the day the cover launched, making them willing participants in their own meme[4].
Frequently Asked Questions
References (5)
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