Vanity Fairs Hollywood Portfolio Cover

2018Photoshop fail / magazine cover parodydead

Also known as: Reese Witherspoon Three Legs · Oprah Three Hands

Vanity Fair's Hollywood Portfolio Cover is a 2018 cover-art meme born from a Photoshop fail that gave Reese Witherspoon three legs and Oprah Winfrey 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

The Vanity Fair "Hollywood Portfolio" is the magazine's annual marquee photoshoot for their Hollywood issue, one of the most high-profile celebrity cover shoots of the year. The 2018 edition, photographed by Annie Leibovitz, featured a foldout cover with twelve A-list actors including Oprah Winfrey, Reese Witherspoon, Tom Hanks, Nicole Kidman, and others5. When the images were published online, eagle-eyed Twitter users spotted two glaring Photoshop errors: one that gave Witherspoon a phantom third leg and another that gave Winfrey a mysterious extra hand. The discovery set off a wave of jokes, memes, and eventually a full magazine-cover parody.

On January 25, 2018, Vanity Fair posted their Hollywood Portfolio article to Twitter, featuring the star-studded cover image4. The shoot was meant to mark what the magazine called a "momentous" year in Hollywood, praising its cover stars for providing strong roles for women and for representing the #MeToo movement5. The lineup included Oprah Winfrey, Nicole Kidman, Reese Witherspoon, Tom Hanks, Michael B. Jordan, Zendaya, Jessica Chastain, Harrison Ford, Gal Gadot, Robert De Niro, Claire Foy, and outgoing Vanity Fair editor Graydon Carter5.

Almost immediately after the cover went live, Twitter users noticed something wrong. User @leiascaptain pointed out that a compositing error made it look like Witherspoon had three legs, with the tweet picking up over 8,100 retweets4. User @TNWhiskeyWoman helpfully circled each of Reese's apparent legs in the image, earning another 580-plus retweets4. A separate photo from the portfolio showed Oprah holding Witherspoon while appearing to sprout a third hand.

Witherspoon and Winfrey responded the same day the cover dropped, joking about the errors on Twitter. Reactions to the Photoshop fails were collected in a Twitter Moments roundup4.

Origin & Background

Platform
Twitter (viral spread), Vanity Fair (source photo)
Key People
Annie Leibovitz, @leiascaptain, @TNWhiskeyWoman
Date
2018
Year
2018

On January 25, 2018, Vanity Fair posted their Hollywood Portfolio article to Twitter, featuring the star-studded cover image. The shoot was meant to mark what the magazine called a "momentous" year in Hollywood, praising its cover stars for providing strong roles for women and for representing the #MeToo movement. The lineup included Oprah Winfrey, Nicole Kidman, Reese Witherspoon, Tom Hanks, Michael B. Jordan, Zendaya, Jessica Chastain, Harrison Ford, Gal Gadot, Robert De Niro, Claire Foy, and outgoing Vanity Fair editor Graydon Carter.

Almost immediately after the cover went live, Twitter users noticed something wrong. User @leiascaptain pointed out that a compositing error made it look like Witherspoon had three legs, with the tweet picking up over 8,100 retweets. User @TNWhiskeyWoman helpfully circled each of Reese's apparent legs in the image, earning another 580-plus retweets. A separate photo from the portfolio showed Oprah holding Witherspoon while appearing to sprout a third hand.

Witherspoon and Winfrey responded the same day the cover dropped, joking about the errors on Twitter. Reactions to the Photoshop fails were collected in a Twitter Moments roundup.

How It Spread

The initial blowup stayed mostly on Twitter, where the three-legged Reese image became a quick punchline during a single news cycle. But the meme got a second life nearly four months later.

On May 17, 2018, GQ Magazine released their 2018 Comedy Issue cover starring Kate McKinnon, Issa Rae, and Sarah Silverman. The three women posed in elegant dresses, but the photo was deliberately stuffed with extra limbs. With only three people in the shot, fifteen different arms and legs were visible. GQ published a tongue-in-cheek apology titled "We Deeply Regret Our 2018 Comedy Issue Cover," calling the errors a violation of "GQ's rigorous standards of editorial excellence and the laws of nature".

The satirical apology promised a "thorough internal audit" of the cover-development process, with results to be released "quietly, in 17 months, on Medium". GQ also pledged to ignore its mentions until trust was earned back, and closed the statement by "praying that Donald Trump tweets something about Chrissy Teigen in the next hour so everybody forgets all about this".

Twitter users quickly caught on to GQ's trolling, and Vanity Fair took the joke in stride, responding with a pun-filled tweet. Mashable and Twitter Moments both covered the GQ response.

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

The incident landed during peak #MeToo era Hollywood, which made the Vanity Fair cover especially high-profile. The 2018 Hollywood Portfolio was explicitly framed around female empowerment and the changing industry, featuring outspoken advocates like Jessica Chastain and Gal Gadot alongside barrier-breaking performers like Zendaya. The Photoshop errors undercut the prestige somewhat, turning a carefully curated statement cover into a punchline.

GQ's parody is a notable example of one major publication openly trolling another. The comedy issue cover became as much a story as the original error, covered by Mashable, Twitter Moments, and other outlets. The satirical apology letter itself became a minor meme, with lines like "violated GQ's rigorous standards of editorial excellence and the laws of nature" getting quoted and shared.

The episode also highlighted how social media can instantly turn expensive professional photoshoots into viral embarrassments. Vanity Fair's cover likely went through multiple rounds of editing and approval before anyone caught what random Twitter users spotted in seconds.

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

Vanity Fairs Hollywood Portfolio Cover

2018Photoshop fail / magazine cover parodydead

Also known as: Reese Witherspoon Three Legs · Oprah Three Hands

Vanity Fair's Hollywood Portfolio Cover is a 2018 cover-art meme born from a Photoshop fail that gave Reese Witherspoon three legs and Oprah Winfrey 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 issue.

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

The Vanity Fair "Hollywood Portfolio" is the magazine's annual marquee photoshoot for their Hollywood issue, one of the most high-profile celebrity cover shoots of the year. The 2018 edition, photographed by Annie Leibovitz, featured a foldout cover with twelve A-list actors including Oprah Winfrey, Reese Witherspoon, Tom Hanks, Nicole Kidman, and others. When the images were published online, eagle-eyed Twitter users spotted two glaring Photoshop errors: one that gave Witherspoon a phantom third leg and another that gave Winfrey a mysterious extra hand. The discovery set off a wave of jokes, memes, and eventually a full magazine-cover parody.

On January 25, 2018, Vanity Fair posted their Hollywood Portfolio article to Twitter, featuring the star-studded cover image. The shoot was meant to mark what the magazine called a "momentous" year in Hollywood, praising its cover stars for providing strong roles for women and for representing the #MeToo movement. The lineup included Oprah Winfrey, Nicole Kidman, Reese Witherspoon, Tom Hanks, Michael B. Jordan, Zendaya, Jessica Chastain, Harrison Ford, Gal Gadot, Robert De Niro, Claire Foy, and outgoing Vanity Fair editor Graydon Carter.

Almost immediately after the cover went live, Twitter users noticed something wrong. User @leiascaptain pointed out that a compositing error made it look like Witherspoon had three legs, with the tweet picking up over 8,100 retweets. User @TNWhiskeyWoman helpfully circled each of Reese's apparent legs in the image, earning another 580-plus retweets. A separate photo from the portfolio showed Oprah holding Witherspoon while appearing to sprout a third hand.

Witherspoon and Winfrey responded the same day the cover dropped, joking about the errors on Twitter. Reactions to the Photoshop fails were collected in a Twitter Moments roundup.

Origin & Background

Platform
Twitter (viral spread), Vanity Fair (source photo)
Key People
Annie Leibovitz, @leiascaptain, @TNWhiskeyWoman
Date
2018
Year
2018

On January 25, 2018, Vanity Fair posted their Hollywood Portfolio article to Twitter, featuring the star-studded cover image. The shoot was meant to mark what the magazine called a "momentous" year in Hollywood, praising its cover stars for providing strong roles for women and for representing the #MeToo movement. The lineup included Oprah Winfrey, Nicole Kidman, Reese Witherspoon, Tom Hanks, Michael B. Jordan, Zendaya, Jessica Chastain, Harrison Ford, Gal Gadot, Robert De Niro, Claire Foy, and outgoing Vanity Fair editor Graydon Carter.

Almost immediately after the cover went live, Twitter users noticed something wrong. User @leiascaptain pointed out that a compositing error made it look like Witherspoon had three legs, with the tweet picking up over 8,100 retweets. User @TNWhiskeyWoman helpfully circled each of Reese's apparent legs in the image, earning another 580-plus retweets. A separate photo from the portfolio showed Oprah holding Witherspoon while appearing to sprout a third hand.

Witherspoon and Winfrey responded the same day the cover dropped, joking about the errors on Twitter. Reactions to the Photoshop fails were collected in a Twitter Moments roundup.

How It Spread

The initial blowup stayed mostly on Twitter, where the three-legged Reese image became a quick punchline during a single news cycle. But the meme got a second life nearly four months later.

On May 17, 2018, GQ Magazine released their 2018 Comedy Issue cover starring Kate McKinnon, Issa Rae, and Sarah Silverman. The three women posed in elegant dresses, but the photo was deliberately stuffed with extra limbs. With only three people in the shot, fifteen different arms and legs were visible. GQ published a tongue-in-cheek apology titled "We Deeply Regret Our 2018 Comedy Issue Cover," calling the errors a violation of "GQ's rigorous standards of editorial excellence and the laws of nature".

The satirical apology promised a "thorough internal audit" of the cover-development process, with results to be released "quietly, in 17 months, on Medium". GQ also pledged to ignore its mentions until trust was earned back, and closed the statement by "praying that Donald Trump tweets something about Chrissy Teigen in the next hour so everybody forgets all about this".

Twitter users quickly caught on to GQ's trolling, and Vanity Fair took the joke in stride, responding with a pun-filled tweet. Mashable and Twitter Moments both covered the GQ response.

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

The incident landed during peak #MeToo era Hollywood, which made the Vanity Fair cover especially high-profile. The 2018 Hollywood Portfolio was explicitly framed around female empowerment and the changing industry, featuring outspoken advocates like Jessica Chastain and Gal Gadot alongside barrier-breaking performers like Zendaya. The Photoshop errors undercut the prestige somewhat, turning a carefully curated statement cover into a punchline.

GQ's parody is a notable example of one major publication openly trolling another. The comedy issue cover became as much a story as the original error, covered by Mashable, Twitter Moments, and other outlets. The satirical apology letter itself became a minor meme, with lines like "violated GQ's rigorous standards of editorial excellence and the laws of nature" getting quoted and shared.

The episode also highlighted how social media can instantly turn expensive professional photoshoots into viral embarrassments. Vanity Fair's cover likely went through multiple rounds of editing and approval before anyone caught what random Twitter users spotted in seconds.

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