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"This was news to me. I never had, nor ever would, sign away our journalistic freedom and independent judgment," reads the letter. "As it happens, one of our fashion department staffers had unknowingly signed off on this condition."
Declining to submit to the conditions, BlackBook killed the piece.
Rather than use a standard release, modeling agencies will often draft individual forms, in part because a model's existing endorsements and contracts can be threatened by an unguarded quote. The letter hints the disagreement over the piece lay in comments Murphy made about her ex-husband, who was arrested in January 2006 for extortion, and who had been trying to sell a sex tape from the couple's honeymoon. Garbarino declined further comment Thursday, and a spokesman for IMG said, "We regret that we were unable to come to a more agreeable conclusion with BlackBook on this issue, but we have seen the images and think that they are fabulous." — Irin Carmon
WHERE THERE'S SMOKE...: As of Wednesday, only W, Vogue, Cosmopolitan and Glamour had responded to Congresswoman Lois Capps' (D., Calif.) plea to stop publishing tobacco ads, namely the Camel No. 9 ad from R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Co. The deadline Capps had set for a response from the aforementioned titles, as well as Elle, In Style, Lucky and Marie Claire, was Wednesday. But she didn't have much appreciation for the letters she did receive: "...Magazines seem to care more about their bottom-line profits than the health of their readers, young and old," said Capps.




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