This month's Vanity Fair has an outrageously mysterious profile/psychological study wrapped in a tale of investigative journalism called "A Claim to Camelot." A man named Jack Worthington claims his mother had an affair with JFK and he's his son. If anything JFK-conspiracy based floats your boat, check out this piece immediately. There's a DNA test. Two of them! And a trip to the "largest collection of hair from historical figures. I'm not going to tell you how it winds up, the journey is half the fun and the story is hot.
Who could pass up this story with a teaser like this:
I have been retained to represent my client who is the son of President John Fitzgerald Kennedy in his effort to prove his paternity. . . . His mother . . only recently told my client that John F. Kennedy was his father. My client’s physical appearance and personality closely resemble JFK. He has been stopped on the street on numerous occasions by strangers who have told him such resemblance is remarkable…
Come on admit it! Don't you want to know?









Dolce & Gabbana
ras
John Lewis
Yeah maybe.
1It just takes ONE to get the ball rolling and now they'll ALL be crawling out of the woodwork!
2I get stopped on the street because I'm a spitting image of Adalai Stevenson, but I don't even get an article in Women's Day. It's such a superficial game.
3I just read that whole article, all I can say is "WOW".
4Now that story was to loooooooooooong. They should have just said the results up front. That was like reading a book not an article.
And there are people out there who look like the next man, and if the next man is famous then so what. There is no need to make a big deal about it and go this route, Kennedy or not.
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