Culture might be more easily seen than defined, a point driven home by the crowd at New York magazineās party celebrating its Culturati 50 list on Wednesday night.
Editor in chief David Haskell was joined by host committee and cover stars including Parker Posey, Claire Danes, and Rachel Zegler. Greeted by a photographer upon her arrival at Manuela in SoHo, Posey gamely fanned her skirt and posed in front of a printed curtain, explaining, āItās all about the billowing.ā
True to the reason for the play-it-forward celebration, Poseyās instinct was to take a closer look at the finished product.
The Vox Media-owned outlet highlighted 50 actors, performers, artists, and creatives who shaped entertainment and culture this year.Ā āSeveranceā lead Adam Scott, āThe Gilded AgeāsāĀ Ben Trotter, āOvercompensatingāsā Benito Skinner, āLiberationāĀ playwright Bess Wohl, Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright Branden Jacobs-Jenkins, āLonely Crowdsā author Stephanie Wambugu, musician The Dare, and āSomebody Somewhereāsā Jeff Hiller were among the guests on hand.Ā

Parker Posey
Marsha Bernstein/WWD
Haskell hopes the Culterati list will become an annual expression of New York magazineās version of culture. āYou could obviously just build it up with just musicians or movie stars. For us, it was really important to cross all the disciplines that we consider to be interesting [to] culture,ā he said. āAnd to find people who had really great years. Itās not that theyāre just incredible directors or performers, but that this year they did something interesting.ā
Noting how so much cultural material that debuted this year was not developed anticipating a second term for President Trump, Haskell added that context has lent new relevance to projects such as Broadway play āLiberation,ā which deals with abortion rights.
Asked about the cultural moment that New York magazineās former Washington correspondent Olivia Nuzzi is having [with her tell-all āAmerican Cantoā that details her sexting affair with Robert F. Kennedy Jr.], Haskell said, āItās a sad situation.ā
Several guests spoke of the political overshadows on culture. Writer and comedian Julio Torres said that people need to realize āhow symbiotic culture and politics are, how one informs the other and how impossible it is to isolate one from the other. Itās interesting to see the tensionĀ between politics and resistance to the culture. Every time I talk about this, I sound like a beauty queen, saying, āI want world peace.āā
After Danes swung by to introduce herself as āa major fan,ā the āColor Theoriesā show creator and āProblemistaā filmmaker continued, āDuring the first Trump wave, there was this idea that the arts will save us. Now as artists, we find ourselves wrestling with the idea that we canāt isolate our politics from our art.ā

Martine Gutierrez and Julio Torres
Marsha Bernstein/WWD
Now developing āColor Theoriesā for HBO, Torres has also been commissioned with his friendĀ Martine GutierrezĀ for the 2026 Whitney Biennial, and the pair are considering āsomething underwater.ā Ā Ā
Asked whatās driving culture, Skinner said, āI think itās a fear of fascism. Weāre doing more art because weāre terrified and we need outlets for that. People want it more than ever. That may be a beautiful result of a terrible time.ā
Skinner is working on the second season of āOvercompensatingā for Amazon Prime, and said that viewers are in for Spring Break and a Valentineās Day episode āthat is kind of nasty.ā āIt feels really raw. Weāre raising all the stakes in the show, but still maintaining this nostalgic world that is grounded in college,ā he said. āBut the emotions are higher ā more sex, more drugs, hopefully, more laughs. Weāre going for it.āĀ
Posey said the New York magazine assignment attuned her antenna to culture and heightened her appreciation for it. āWe see cultural things and weāre moved by them,ā said Posey. āBut not always are we asked to carry it within the year to express it in a journalistic piece.ā
Being part of the cultural moment that the hit HBO show created didnāt really change her perspective. āThatās the kind of thing that when it happens to you, you kind of disassociate from it,ā she said. āTo be on the inside of entertainment [as a Culturati] was so much fun. Thatās the baseline of what I do. Having people imitate me in a backyard, that was joy. Joy.ā
Ready for the Dec. 17 premiere of Season Two of āFallout,ā actress Frances Turner echoed that sentiment. āWeāre in a moment where cultural moments are more important to hold onto and really savor. Dive into culture and wrap yourself in culture to get more disconnected. Sometimes it feels like these things that connect us are these cultural moments,ā she said, naming theĀ Museum of Modern Art and the Metropolitan Museum of Art as favorite escapes in the city.

Frances Turner
Quadir Moore/BFA.com
Two influencers and relative newcomers to the city, Sophie Silva and Kalita Hon ā who are not among this yearās Cultarati 50 ā suggested the interplay at the party best exemplified New Yorkās culture. (They were guests of Buick, which sponsored the bash with Johnnie Walker.) āInteractions in passing are everything,ā Silva said. āIām from L.A., technically. If youāre in your car all the time and do self-checkout at the grocery store, you donāt want to interact with anyone. Something about New York generates those conversations that can drive culture.āĀ
Hon added, āAll you have to do is walk out your door.ā

