The job was Mystery Shopper, part of a shadowy $1.5 billion industry. [View in Browser]( [Esquire Sunday Reads]( [I Got Paid to Spy on People While They Worked]( I Got Paid to Spy on People While They Worked At the kitchen table of my fifth-floor Harlem walk-up, a roach trap beneath my foot, I stare at a printout titled âCHEAT SHEET.â I read from a script; the responses might determine whether or not this saleswoman gets fired. As Linda, I am a mystery shopperâa euphemism for corporate spy. Mystery shopping companies, which serve as middlemen between mystery shoppers and retailers seeking to review customer service, contact me to evaluate employees. I time how fast they make hot chocolate, rate their enthusiasm while scheduling appointments, and verify if they mention specific cord-blood benefits. Over the six months Iâd spend as a shopper, I'd discover the free meals and easy cash promised by mystery shopping providers would come at a costâtaxing my morals until, ultimately, I quit. [Read the Full Story]( [MORE FROM ESQUIRE]( [Murder, Muggers, and Rottweilers: Stories From My Best, Worst Apartment]( Murder, Muggers, and Rottweilers: Stories From My Best, Worst Apartment The Fender Stratocaster my brother, Gene, had given me was my only possession other than a chair and a mattress. I had no dresser. The clothes I wore were primarily bought from the open bins in front of Canal Jean Co., a remainder store on Canal Street (it would eventually move to a building on Broadway in SoHo). Shirts, trousers, and shoes could be had for a dollar a pop there. They were all âirregulars,â mistakenly sewed such that buttons didnât quite match buttonholes, for instance. They werenât considered very hip by any contemporary boutique standard, which at that time favored either hippie-funk flash or colorful-disco glam. The âlookâ of downtown no wave wasnât retail-supported. If it aspired to anything, it was the uptown aesthetic of Fiorucci or the London-punk influence of Trash & Vaudeville on St. Markâs Place. But those places were prohibitively expensive, especially compared with Canal Jean, and people on the downtown punk streets tended to struggle to make ends meet. The clientele at CBGB and Maxâs didnât dress punk in any way that would have been endorsed by Londonâs Kingâs Roadâno bondage gear, safety pins, or teddy boy accoutrements. If you walked into a club looking like that, it would be obvious that you were from way out of town or had seen pictures in magazines and thought that was what punk was. Or else it simply meant you had money. [Read the Full Story]( [The 60 Best HBO Series of All Time, Ranked]( The 60 Best HBO Series of All Time, Ranked On a weekly basis, HBO viewers will tune in to see massive dragons, a post-apocalyptic zombie drama, a giant media conglomerate takeover, and a British guy cracking jokes about the news. Chances are, you knew that those shows are Game of Thrones, The Last of Us, Succession, and Last Week Tonight with John Oliver. Somehow, the network has figured out how to make TV good no matter whatâs on screenâand they have us all hooked. The old slogan used to be that âItâs not TV, itâs HBO,â which basically just meant that itâs damn good TV. Even with HBO's revamped streaming service, Max, HBO's original shows are still gripping the attention of audiences enough to recall the days of a water-cooler monoculture. After all, a little olâ show about a depressed mob don went on to become one of the greatest TV shows ever made. Now, everyone and their parents are trying to figure out how a video game became a spectacular television show. Until you find the answer, here are the 60 best shows ever made by the house of peak TV. [Read the Full Story]( [The Most Luxurious Duvet Ever Made]( The Most Luxurious Duvet Ever Made Unless you have $50,000 to drop on a bed or youâve watched Emily in Paris, you probably don't know what Hästens is. Maybe youâve seen the mattresses' signature blue checkerboard pattern, but it doesnât really click for you. Well, itâs the most expensive, outrageous mattress brand in the world, and as much as you might want to exit this page thinking itâs not for you, think again. The price of a Hästens bed starts at around $15,000 and goes all the way to $400,000 (Drake owns that one, obviously). I wonât be splashing out my salary on one of those anytime soon, but its over-the-top bedding accessories arenât to be ignored. Most of all, the duvet. [Read the Full Story](
[What I've Learned: Gay Talese]( What I've Learned: Gay Talese Gay Talese, 91, is a living legend of journalism. He wrote what is considered the greatest magazine story ever published, "Frank Sinatra Has a Cold," which appeared in the April 1966 issue of Esquire. His latest book, Bartleby and Me, is out now. Talese spoke to Esquire at his home in Manhattan. I didnât want to be a five-w reporterâwho, what, why, where, when. I didnât want to be a hard-news reporter. I wanted to be a fucking writer. My real stars were fiction writers. I wanted to be a fucking writer of nonfiction, but I wanted to have literary status. Iâm not sure I ever got it, but I wanted it. [Read the Full Story]( [Five Fits With: Zane Lowe, Who Loves Great Style Almost as Much as He Loves Music]( Five Fits With: Zane Lowe, Who Loves Great Style Almost as Much as He Loves Music For me, Five Fits With is particularly special this week. As a music obsessive, I canât think of anyone more fun to talk to then one of the most documented obsessives in the world: Zane Lowe, Apple Musicâs global creative director and Apple Music 1 host. No doubt youâve seen his interviews with some of the worldâs most famous and exciting artists. Whatâs most fun to me is how wide-reaching this series has become. The through-line is style, and while we sometimes discuss âfashionâ in these interviews, the most important thing is that the subject has his or her own, honed through years of experimentation, joy, and appreciation. Brand names really arenât important here. I love these outfits Lowe put together. Yes, there are a few notable luxury brands, but nothing he wears is emblazoned with logos, and you can really tell these are clothes he wears daily. Iâd add Zane is exactly the same person that youâve seen conduct those interviews, and itâs why heâs able to elicit such comfort and openness from his guests, regardless of who they are or how much success theyâve had. Below, Zane and I discuss how how heâs able to continue such a prolific interview output with the same standard and integrity, his favorite albums from 2023, his own style journey, and plenty more. [Read the Full Story]( [LiveIntent Logo]( [AdChoices Logo]( Follow Us [Unsubscribe]( | [Privacy Notice]( | [CA Notice at Collection]( Esquire is a publication of Hearst Magazines.
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