March 2009 Archives

Alex McCord on unemployment, that parenting book & Simon as a doula

blog_mccord_06.jpg'Tis a pity that season two of The Real Housewives of New York has already wrapped—we'll be missing out on all the exciting recent events, like Kelly's assault charge, the collapse of the Countess's fairytale marriage and Alex's dismissal from her job as a "visual merchandiser" at Victoria's Secret Beauty. But it seems the blonder half of Silex has chosen to make lemonade of her recent lot in life by penning a surprisingly cogent column for The Huffington Post. Yes, the gal who opens every episode of Real Housewives with the cringe-worthy line, "To certain group of people in New York, status is everything," is now pounding the pavement alongside all the other plebes.

We popped on the phone with the Brooklyn mom last week and heard about all sorts of plans, including the parenting book she's been penning with hubby, and more to come on the Huff Po front.

I think I need clarity about the book. Do you have a publisher lined up?
We have a confirmed offer and we're just nailing down the details. We'll probably be signing the contract within the next week.

It's a little unusual to start writing without one. Did you at least do a proposal?
We did, and then rapidly expanded that. We're at about 60 pages. This is a subject that's very easy for me to write about. So it began when we were on vacation last summer.

blog_mccord_03.jpgDid you and Simon just crack open a bottle of wine in your hotel room in St. Bart's after the boys were asleep and start writing?
You know how sometimes when you're in a tropical climate you just get up at the crack of dawn?  We found ourselves doing that. No matter how late we'd been out the night before, we were beckoned by the beautiful terrace outside our cottage, right by the water. So we had this amazing deck, an espresso machine and our laptops and it just started happening.

So is it aimed at show watchers, or are you hoping for a larger audience?
It's for anyone who wants to know what it's like to raise kids in an urban area. Before I gave birth, I read everything I could get my hands on. And the books that resonated with me most were stories from the trenches: the good things, the bad things, the wonderful, the horrible, the absurd, the sublime. I don't find it particularly helpful to read a book by a child psychologist about what you should be doing in order to raise the perfect child. Of all the how-to-raise-a-child books by experts the only one we have in the house that I can even remember the name of is The New Basics by Michel Cohen.

blog_mccord_05.jpgLove him. Well, actually I love the women in his practice even more. But his book is fabulous. So will you be touching on such unglamorous subjects as potty training?
Everything. And as a little preview on that: We were very, very Michel Cohen with our potty training. We let the kids run around naked until they got the idea. The book is a collection of anecdotal experiences, as in, "Here's this crazy, off-the-wall thing that happened last week and here's how we dealt with it." The other unique thing about it is that Simon and I are writing it together. Different people, different takes on a situation. For example, our son Francois had written a song called, "Putting to Death Is Not Nice." I thought it was really funny -- because putting to death isn't nice. But Simon was alarmed.

Had you guys just put a cat to sleep or something?
No. He had some friends over and they were getting a little raucous. You know how little boys are.

I'm impressed you had two drug-free births.
I didn't intend to do that from the get-go. But I've never been happy with our existing health care system, and I don't like the idea that people try to hit conditions with drugs or invasive procedures rather than preventing them. I also wanted to control my experience. So I viewed childbirth as an athletic event. Yes, it was painful, but after both births, I experienced a kind of runner's high. I think the most important thing is to have an advocate. A third party. Someone who isn't the medical provider and isn't you. A lot of women hire a doula for that, but Simon functioned as the best doula. He was willing to burn down the hospital to get me what I needed.

blog_mccord_04.jpgLet's switch gears. I'm surprised the subject of your acting career never comes up on the show. It seems as if you were completely into that for a long time.
I spent ten years as an actor, and I went to Northwestern for the theater school. Don't forget, we film for hours and hours and only a couple of minutes of that makes it to air. So I've never not talked about my acting. It's just that we don't put the show together and people tend to think that the other things we talk about are more interesting.

How did the Huffington Post blog come about? Did you approach them or vice versa?
Simon and I met someone from the Huffington Post at a party several months ago. And we talked about doing something. We were writing the book at that time, and weren't really sure what the best angle was. Then after my layoff happened, and the economy declined, it really made sense to do a series about someone who is affected by the economy and also has all these other things going on in her life. I'm currently going through a lot of what other laid-off employees are going through, but all the while writing a book and having the experience of being on a reality show.

Was being on the show a factor in getting laid-off?
No. One had nothing to do with the other.

Still, it must have been hard to have maintained such a big job at the same time.
We filmed weekends and evenings, but certainly it was a big juggle. It was really difficult to balance filming a show, working 40 to 50 hours a week, traveling for business and raising two young kids. Oh, and renovating our home.

How's that going?
I'm sure as the season progresses, you'll see us both looking more and more stressed-out.

blog_mccord_02.jpgSee our previous interview with LuAnn HERE.

Thanks to David Gilmore of Pretty On The Outside for use of his artwork. Photos courtesy of NBC Universal.

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W's Beloved Columnist Suzy ... in Korea!

blog_koreanw_2.jpgAileen Mehle stopped writing her much-loved "Suzy" social column in 2005. But we recently discovered that the Suzy byline is still going strong, month after month, in the South Korean edition of W.

blog_koreanw.jpgUnfortunately, our Korean is a little rusty so we'll have to get back to you as to whether our overseas counterparts have done Aileen justice.

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What we learned from a big-deal diet doc

blog_skinnycover.jpgWe ignore most of the new weight-loss books that appear on our desks at W month after month. The advice is usually either totally obvious or totally lunatic, and we're often too busy deciding between the slow-roasted pork at 'Wichcraft or the chicken & avocado at Pret a Manger, anyway. We were, however, sufficiently intrigued by The Skinny: On Losing Weight Without Being Hungry (Broadway) by Louis J. Aronne, the New York-Presbyterian/Weill-Cornell obesity specialist whom David Letterman has called "the man who saved my life." Among other things, Aronne (who also slimmed down derm-to-the-stars Pat Wexler) says that weight loss isn't about willpower, but about biology, and that people can trick their bodies into feeling satisified by eating filling foods first.  

There are a lot of diet doctors in New York who scold and yell. You have the reputation as the "nice" weight-loss doc.
I don't advocate perfection -- I advocate the good. I'm sick and tired of people being persecuted for being overweight. As I say right at the top of my book, "It's not your fault." Dieting isn't about willpower.

We hear you aren't exactly the biggest fan of The Biggest Loser.
Some people say the show is motivating and I can understand that. But to me, the show is upsetting. The way the show humiliates people -- you couldn't treat people with any other disease that way. Someone hasn't eaten in a month, and then you put food in front of them, and then if they eat the food they get voted out? It's ridiculous.

Well, those people do seem to lose a lot of weight.
Basically, if you're on the show your job is to live in that house and be tormented by fitness people.  And it's very unrealistic because if you lose a huge amount of weight one week, your body will compensate for it. So one week you could be the hero, but then the next week you're thrown out.

blog_wexler.jpgPatricia Wexler in 2004 (left) and 2007.

Here's a scenario. I'm on a mission to lose 15 pounds, but I went to Waverly Inn last night and had cheese fondue and the chocolate-covered potato chips. Should I just give up now?
They key is not to feel guilty, which just sets you up for yo-yo dieting. The best thing to do after a binge is to wake up and eat what I call a "Skinny" breakfast, a bigger than normal breakfast with protein-rich foods, which will help break the overeating cycle.

What do you say to all those Manhattan society diet doctors who prescribe things like vitamin B12, coenzyme Q10 and glutamine pills?
I've done 35 clinical trials of new treatments for obesity and there are certain prescription medications that may help if you try everything and still can't lose. But I would ask the doctors you're talking about to show me a research study that any of those supplements work. There is no research to prove that any of it is effective.
 
How was Harvey Weinstein as a patient?
Sorry, I can't say anything about Harvey. But he did blurb my book!


See our November 2008 story on NYC's top society doctors

Photo: Wexler (left): Billy Farrell/PMc. Wexler (right), Jennifer Livingston.

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Self-Tanner That Doesn't Stink

beauty-blog-selftanners.jpgThere are still misguided souls who think of self-tanning as the province of coeds readying themselves for spring break. But the ability to sniff out faux sun worshippers will now be blunted--literally. Two brands have found a way to combat the awful odor that arises when the active ingredient in self-tanners--dihydroxyacetone (DHA)--reacts with skin. St. Tropez is using Aromaguard, a technology said to reduce the scent of DHA by 70 percent, and Hawaiian Tropic's new products contain "odor synthesis technology," which also cuts down on DHA's smell. Now if only someone could invent a cure for orange palms.

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Behaving Badly at ClampArt

blog_gallery_goround.jpgLast Thursday we squeezed into the packed opening of "Kids Behaving Badly" at ClampArt, a group show of contemporary photographers, including Nan Goldin, Larry Clark and Ryan McGinley. In addition to the well-knowns, the exhibition also showcases some fresh talent, like Collin LaFleche, who is just this year graduating from NYU's Tisch School of the Arts. True to the show's title, the works on display are infused with a healthy dose of drugs, sex and youthful abandon. (We were actually a little disappointed that so few of the attendees took the night's "behaving badly" theme to heart.)

1clampart5.jpg2clampart2.jpg3clampart8.jpg4clampart3.jpgPhotographer Collin LaFleche (right).

5clampart9.jpgRyan McGinley's Vice Magazine Collage, 2007.

6clampart4.jpg7clampart6.jpgLaFleche (middle), standing next to his work, Emily at the Pool Hall, 2007.

8clampart1.jpgPhotos by Ryan James MacFarland.

See more Gallery Go-Rounds HERE.

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The Thursday Reading List

If, like us, you live for The Real Housewives of New York City, you will dig David Gilmore's blog (complete with Ramona, LuAnn, Bethenny inspired artwork), Pretty on the Outside.

"Glamorous Grandma" Nancy Pelosi turns 69 today. And according to this reporter, all anyone wants to talk about is who did her amazing plastic surgery. (Daily Beast)

Martha Stewart wants us to know that her beloved horse, Martyn, "loves a good massage," and gets one daily. (The Martha Blog)

Johnny Wright, Michelle Obama's hairstylist, remains very discreet, even after the reporter buys him a martini. (Washington Post)

Lily Allen has a controversial new rounded bob. (Bella Sugar UK)

The Slumdog Millionaire kids are so cute they kill us (Huff Po)

Mariah Carey wants David Saperstein's $125 million mansion and an all-pink nursery. (Celebitchy)

Our friend Francesca, who blogs at Motherblogger, alerted us to this poster.  We are ordering one right now!
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Gloria Allred Sits on This

Yesterday, at the press conference that attorney Gloria Allred held about Octuplet mother Nadya Suleman's firing of her clients, Angels in Waiting, we learned some fascinating things. (See our previous post HERE.)

We were also interested to see that the diminutive civil-rights attorney chose to sit on this during the conference.


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You don't need to have 14 kids to recognize it as the $19.99 foam "Yellow Pages" booster seat by Boost. Maybe it's something she picked up from the Suleman kids?blog_octomom_booster2.jpg

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Upstairs from W's offices... an Octomom moment

blog_octomom_hat.jpgYesterday, while chaos continued to reign elsewhere in the world,  it was business as usual in the TMZ.  Television crews and reporters were gathered in a conference room high above LA’s Wilshire Blvd at the invitation of Gloria Allred, the camera-ready civil rights attorney, who, along with her clients, the nurses from Angels in Waiting, was recently fired by “Octo-Mom” Nadya Suliman.   

Why were we there, you may ask? As it happens Ms. Allred’s office is in the same building as W magazine’s LA bureau. And well, we couldn’t resist.

blog_octomom_gloria.jpgAllred and two AIW nurses arrived 30 minutes late.   Small and compact, the attorney was clad in an aquamarine pants suit, sensible sling-backs and an omelet of make-up. She sat atop what appeared to be a large rubberized Yellow Pages telephone book [see our follow-up post HERE]and proceeded to read a detailed statement contesting the dismissals.

Initially, everything went according to press conference plan, and details of the goings-on inside the Suliman household were appropriately unsettling. (For instance, a number of non-AIW nurses were allowed to work in the nursery even though they had tested positive for TB.)  Unbeknownst to Gloria, however, there was one attendee sitting directly behind her who had a slightly different agenda.

To anyone familiar with the Jimmy Kimmel show, the man was no stranger. It was “Jake Byrd, Celebrity Avenger,” who has a regular segment on the talk show where he injects himself into the crosshairs of celebrity media frenzies.  (His antics at the trials of Paris Hilton, Michael Jackson and OJ Simpson are up on YouTube.)



Wearing shorts, a baseball cap that read “I heart famous people” and a t-shirt with Nadya Suliman’s picture and the words  “#1 MOM,” the Avenger sat impassively at first. But his wildly expressive face soon caught the reporters’ eyes.   He shook his head disapprovingly when Gloria talked about the nursery’s unsanitary conditions caused by the media and their “dirty camera and light equipment…reporters, camera men, producers.” He cowered when Gloria reported that she was told to “get the f—- out of here” by Suliman’s attorney. His eyes bulged when one of the nurses talked of the large Jacuzzi being installed in Suliman’s master bedroom just moments after she’d claimed poverty. And he beamed with pride when the nurses talked of their good intentions when it came to caring for the babies. 

Allred finally became aware of him when he asked a couple of questions, one of them being, “Is that aqua or aquamarine?” referring to the color of Allred’s suit. He also attempted to high five one of the nurses.  

Gloria was not amused.  When asked for his ID at the end of the conference, he produced a deeply suspicious, ABC credential with no photo and held up a poster that read “Mama-razzi.”    


  

More…

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Eva's entrance, Bijou's bijou and more

blog_confederacy.jpgThe high point of L.A.'s  disjointed fashion week was probably Friday night's party at Danny Masterson's fashion emporium Confederacy. Vena Cava's Sophie Buhai was one of the first guests to arrive, shuttling past a rack of her own designs to check out the store's Opening Ceremony display. Brent Bolthouse stuck close by Masterson at the DJ booth, while Whitley Kros designer Marissa Ribisi and stylist Estee Stanley waited out the crowds at the tapas joint Cobras and Matadors next door before venturing into the party.

The event's host, Eva Mendes, arrived arm-in-arm with the night's guest of honor, photographer Eric Ray Davidson, whose photos from NY fashion week were on display. But the real focus of the evening was on former wild-child Bijou Phillips, who sat perched on one of the shop's few chairs as friends (among them Summer Phoenix, Rebecca Minkoff, and Cameron Richardson) gave their congratulations and eyed the actress's sizeable engagement ring, given to her just last week by Masterson. (Photo here is from Paper Magazine's January cover story about the Hollywood power couple.)

blog_bijou_papermag.jpgStylists Jessica Paster and Nicole Chavez hung out with the boutique's co-owner, Ilaria Urbinati, while Chavez's husband, Kevin Volchok of Endeavor, was seen talking up some potential clients in the valet line. Once Liv Tyler arrived, the actress made straight for Mendes, who was deep in conversation with a dressed-down Jessica Alba, there with husband Cash Warren. Wilmer Valderrama did nothing to dissuade his reputation as ladies-man as he attended to a bevy of beauties in the menswear section of the store. Though a solo January Jones arrived just as the party was wrapping up, the Mad Men actress politely posed for photogs before catching what she could of the scene.

Photo, top: WireImage 

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Marketing Adventures in Williamsburg

blog_303grand_front.jpgThe Williamsburg boutique 303 Grand is not exactly what it appears to be. To mark its recent opening, the store hosted a lavish two-week festival, including film screenings and artist workshops, that closed out with a big "magic berries" tasting party.

blog_303grand.jpgAt this packed event (think thick glasses, high-top sneakers and chunky gold chains as far as the eye can see) guests were invited to sample synsepalum dulcificum (a berry that makes everything taste sweet--the latest gastonomic fetish) and then gorge on various fruits, Tabasco-laden sauces and beer-and-pickle-flavored cupcakes. Totally fun, but how does a little store like this, running on the concept of a "revolving storefront," expect to turn a profit?

blog_303grand_2.jpgWell, it's not a store in any traditional sense. 303 Grand is operated by Street Attack, an "alternative marketing and digital marketing agency" located in, of all places, Boston. Street Attack's clients are the very brands, artists, and organizations featured at the store. As the company so (squarely) states on its website, "Located in the hip and trendy neighborhood of Williamsburg, 303GRAND provides brands, artists, and organizations an opportunity to create an experiential pop-up store or retail experience with minimal time or budget commitment."

And there you have it. We can't decide whether we are appalled or impressed. At any rate, we're looking forward to June, when 303 Grand will be refashioned into a temporary wedding chapel.

See our Williamsburg-centric street fashion slideshow, "Hipsters' Response to the Financial Crisis," HERE

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