Hollywood PR ace Howard Bragman represents Anthony Scaramucci, who was President Trump's communications director for a 10-day stint before he went down in flames courtesy of a nighttime call he made to New Yorker magazine.
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The head of Fifteen Minutes has extensive experience in the celebrity, crisis communications, and LGBT categories earned from work for Monica Lewinsky, Barry Manilow, Lucy Lawless and Sheryl Swoopes.
He declined to confirm or deny to Politico, which first reported the story, his representation of "The Mooch."
Bragman, though, posted on Twitter a picture of him and Scaramucci and tweeted: "Enjoying my time with this guy. Enough said."
The White House last week named Hope Hicks, 28-year-old actress and model who had represented Ivanka Trump's fashion line, as Scaramucci's successor.



If you’re like a lot of people, you have been obsessed with “Love Story,” the FX series that has been airing for the past eight weeks about JFK Jr. and Carolyn Bessette. But why didn’t Kennedy use crisis PR to deal with the paparazzi, the news media and the tabloids?
Much is made of the importance of proper planning to anticipate and manage a crisis—but what matters most is understanding how decisions will be made once the crisis is underway.
Slow and procedural messaging without emotional resonance, fragmented leadership communication, overwhelming policy‑heavy language and a pervasive gap between words and observable action have repeatedly undermined corporate credibility.
New York Magazine profiles 78-year-old Peggy Siegal, who was once among the most powerful publicists in the Big Apple, in an article headlined: "The Grand Dame of the Epstein Files.”



