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Publishing house Condé Nast has sicced lawyers on the site that published a dishy, tell-all interview with fired British Vogue fashion director Lucinda Chambers.

The article has officially become a debacle: After posting the story on Tuesday, fashion site Vestoj took the article down, then reposted it, then — after hearing from the magazine’s legal team — deleted sections.

Among other things, Chambers, who had been at the mag for 25 years, said she hadn’t read Vogue “in years,” that “the clothes are just irrelevant for most people,” and that she knew some of her own work was “cheesy” but did it anyway to please advertisers.

On Wednesday, Vestoj said that lawyers for Condé and new British Vogue Editor-in-Chief Edward Enninful — who Chambers claimed had fired her without anyone else’s knowledge — had asked for sections to be cut.

It said, “This request has now been granted.” A portion of the text was deleted, removing Chambers’ claim that she was fired by Enninful “in three minutes.”