Vanity Fair released its 21st annual ranking of the most powerful people in business and media.The list is broken up into two categories: "Disrupters," which ranks 50 people who are shaping the way we interact, work, play and consume, and the "Powers That Be," which includes 25 visionaries in business and entertainment who have used their10. Elizabeth Holmes (Theranos)No description found8. Brian Chesky (Airbnb)7. Ted Sarandos and Reed Hastings (pictured) (Netflix)6. Elon Musk (Tesla Motors, SpaceX)5. Sergey Brin (pictured) and Larry Page (Alphabet/Google)4. Tim Cook and Jonathan Ive (Apple)3. Jeff Bezos (Amazon)2. Travis Kalanick (Uber)1. Mark Zuckerberg (Facebook) The Facebook CEO is the youngest person to ever top the New Establishment list. Zuckerberg, who was No. 5 five last year, made major strides this year demonstrating Facebook's potential outside the social networkingThe Powers That Be list included 25 people "many of whom earned their renown after decades of hard work and striving," according to Vanity Fair writer Andrew Ross Sorkin. No. 5 on the list is HBO CEO Richard Plepler. Here are the other top4. Steve Burke (left) and Brian Roberts (right) (Comcast)3. James, Rupert and Lachlan Murdoch (21st Century Fox, News Corp)1. Taylor Swift (singer/songwriter) The singer topped the list due to her hit album, tour and for prompting policy changes at Apple Music.
Mike Coppola/Getty Images
Vanity Fair released its 21st annual ranking of the most powerful people in business and media.