Editor’s Pick
JUNE 1, 2009 12:42PM

Waiting On Mel Gibson

With Mel Gibson in the news lately -- thanks to his recent divorce and pregnant girlfriend -- I can't help but fondly remember the one and only time I served him dinner in Santa Fe.

I had been freelancing for NPR and local publications and was worn out from the daily
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Editor’s Pick
APRIL 2, 2009 11:50AM

To Mammogram or Not to Mammogram?

One pesky item has been sitting on my daily to-do list since November of 2007 and no matter how much time I have during a given day, I just never get around to crossing it off. Get thee to a radiology clinic, it says, and get thee your annual mammogram --/…

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APRIL 19, 2009 1:18PM

Susan Boyle: Why Should I Change?

So much has been written about Susan Boyle since the frumpy, middle-aged Scot from West Lothian became a talent show phenomenon barely a week ago that I hesitate -- but only mildly -- to add my tuppence to the mix.

Something struck me in one of her many media interviews -- it… Read full post »

Forget the stock market, forget home foreclosures, credit card defaults and unemployment.

According to people in the know, the best way to determine how far the economy has tanked is to find out how many new underpants guys are buying at the store.

Sales of boxers and briefs are usually flat
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Editor’s Pick
JUNE 11, 2009 10:14AM

Beware the Porta Potties of France

Everyone dreams of visiting the elegant castles of the Loire Valley in central France.

That was also our dream when my husband and I took a fast train from Gare Montparnasse in Paris to the city of Angers, which sits at the center of the Loire's famous chateau country.

As soon
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If anyone has harbored the tiniest shred of doubt about whether John Edwards is the father of his mistress' baby, Andrew Young's upcoming book should do away with it.

Young, who worked for Edwards and considered him a close friend, now says that Edwards begged him to claim he was theRead full post »

Editor’s Pick
MAY 11, 2009 2:04PM

Getting Whipped in Kazakhstan

Sometimes we end up in a strange land and we have only the American taxpayer to thank.

When I contacted the renowned journalist Pierre Salinger in Washington -- whom I'd met some years earlier -- I hoped he might hire me at his public relations agency, one of the… Read full post »

JULY 23, 2009 11:17AM

Marriage Ain't For Sissies

When my dear husband and I were married thirteen years ago, I was a big sissy.

I didn't know I was a sissy -- after all, I was 39 and had been around the block more times than I could count -- but once we tied the knot, I could
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MAY 26, 2009 12:02PM

Why Are Women Still So Unhappy?

You would think that with all of the gains made for and by women in the past, say, 45 plus years, that we would now rate ourselves as significantly happier than our mothers and grandmothers back in the dark ages.

Not so, according to economists Betsey Stevenson and
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With football season now gearing up, it's hard not to think of this health care reform debate as the Super Bowl of politics.

So much of our political, economic and social life over the years has been in preparation -- in training -- for this big game.

That's why things have
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NOVEMBER 13, 2009 1:21PM

Afghanistan: Nothing But A Fool's Errand

For anyone trying to write about Afghanistan, the war in that ornery, cantankerous and choleric nation is one of the fastest-moving targets around.

Writing about it, like fighting it, is like playing dodge-ball with a fruit fly. Like shooting minnows in the sea. Like pitting Wile E. Coyote ag
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APRIL 7, 2009 6:12PM

Desperation Made Me Do It

I was desperate to start a blog but terrified of falling on my face in the process.

Could I write original posts that people might actually want to read?

After about 30 years of churning out NPR pieces, cable and public TV programs, newspaper and magazine articles and even children's books --… Read full post »

MARCH 16, 2009 7:34PM

Dropping Bombs with Kenny Clarke

When French writer Marcel Proust tasted madeleines, he remembered his beloved aunt serving him those "squat, plump little cakes" during his childhood at Combray.

When I taste madeleines, I remember sitting at the feet of the great jazz drummer, Kenny Clarke, in his modest living room in Montreu/…

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MARCH 18, 2009 9:01AM

AIG Laughing to the Bank

Once the curtain closes on this latest drama with AIG, the executives will keep their bonuses, the politicians will keep their seats and the American taxpayer will keep on paying.

I would love to be wrong.

But honestly, who really expects AIG to be ashamed of themselves? The way they played… Read full post »

APRIL 21, 2009 7:18PM

Confessions of an Insomniac

Sleeping is no mean art:
for its sake one must stay awake all day.

-- Friedrich Nietzsche

Were it so easy. No doubt that two-hour nap today will rob
my sleep of art tonight. But no amount of prodding could keep me vertical with a mere ten hours over three nights.


If you can'tRead full post »
JULY 8, 2009 2:08PM

The End of France?

Back in 1978, while a student in Paris, I passed by a McDonald's on the Boulevard St. Michel on the Left Bank.

I nearly fell over. What was that fast-food joint -- apparently one of the first in France -- doing in the hallowed Latin Quarter, within shouting distance
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When I was a kid, one of my favorite errands to run with my parents was a trip to the cobbler's.

The tiny shop on the edge of the town square, the clutter of shoes and boots, the smell of wax and polish, the kindly gentleman behind the counter --
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Editor’s Pick
MARCH 7, 2009 1:48PM

Could Have Ended Badly in Soviet Arctic

Perhaps it would have been fitting -- in some macabre way -- to have gone down with that Aeroflot helicopter in a land so replete with death, where the earth had been toughened by the bones and soaked with the blood of millions of gulag prisoners going back at least a… Read full post »

MARCH 24, 2009 5:33PM

Striding with (Little) Joe Turner

When I walked into La Calvados, a tiny jazz bo îte near the Champs-Elysees in Paris, I could hear someone tickling the ivories but couldn't see the tickler. It was two in the morning, the place was thick with people and smoke, and waiters rushed by with plates of spaghetti… Read full post »

Editor’s Pick
OCTOBER 13, 2009 8:58AM

Why No Nobel Prize in Fashion?

The Nobel Prize Committee has been handing out awards like candy this past week -- and that was quite a sugar-coated jaw breaker for Barack Obama -- but I just don't understand why there is never a recipient from the fashion world.

That said, it has been quite a year for
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MARCH 3, 2009 5:01PM

Let's Hope Limbaugh Fails...

...at trying to make Obama and his policies fail.

What kind of country does Rush Limbaugh think he and the Republican party would inherit in four years if our new President's plans don't work? If Obama fails, the country fails, and we are all in for trouble that we can just… Read full post »

MARCH 11, 2009 2:17PM

Days of Welfare and Jell-O

The week my only child was born, Ford, Chrysler and General Motors announced massive layoffs and F. W. Woolworth revealed steep declines in their profits. General Foods also announced it would close a Jell-O and puddings plant in Delaware for seven days later that month.

Jell-O! Was nothing safe?
%IMAGRead full post »

Editor’s Pick
MARCH 13, 2009 1:52PM

The Heart and Sweat of Dexter Gordon

I was 25-years old and dressed in my favorite outfit -- a dark blue top and short skirt that fit snuggly and was, if I do say so myself, not unflattering. I had taken extra care to curl my short hair around my cheeks and on my feet wore light green/…

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MARCH 19, 2009 12:28PM

AIG CEO Says No Bonus Without Bailout

Follow-up to yesterday's post on AIG:

I have not seen the following mentioned in any media reports on AIG CEO Edward Liddy's testimony to Congress yesterday...

When asked by a woman Senator -- whose name escapes me -- if the  notorious AIG executivess would have received their bonuses if the tax… Read full post »

APRIL 29, 2009 12:03PM

These Are The Days

When I was a teenager and well on into my 40s, I thought I had all the time in the world to become who I wanted to be -- though I was never exactly clear what that me would look like -- and spent most of my time planning my… Read full post »