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by Laraine Newman
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The other day I was thumbing through a copy of OK magazine….alright,
I was reading it. They have a section that shows celebrities doing
normal things! Captions that read, “They pick up their own dry
cleaning!” “They put money in the parking meter!” “They go to the
carwash!!!”
Growing up in Los Angeles, specifically Beverly Hills, I would see
countless celebrities in their normal, every day life. Cary Grant
shopping at Carroll & Company. Fred Astaire strolling up Rodeo
Drive. Or Sonny & Cher about to walk into Nate ‘N’ Al’s.
I went to school with the children of many famous people. In
some cases, there was a particular tragedy about them. The legacy of
their parent’s fame was a tyranny to their self-esteem. The comparisons
that were made, especially if, God forbid, the kid wanted to go into
the same business imposed an obligation that more often than not was
unattainable. Some came to terms with it and went on to live happy and
healthy lives. Others perished under it.
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by Agatha French
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I considered myself a food lover: a zealous, open-minded, and
studious consumer of food. My tastes ran the gamut from Chex Mix to
Chez Panisse, and I felt this to be charmingly, almost wittily,
indiscriminate of me. I read cookbooks, restaurant reviews, and food
writing. I cooked. I baked. I ate out. I would have, without
hesitation, claimed to be well versed, at the top of my game even, in
the Art of Eating.
I was, needless to say, a recent college graduate and an
unfounded know-it-all. I look back on those days with an indulgent
fondness for my younger self, and her survey-class approach to eating.
There she is, I think in my memory, burning garlic and liking it. I
smile, knowing that soon enough she will be introduced to someone so
enamored of food that in his presence one begins to question their own
passion for almost anything else. To my student’s eye, meeting Ryan
was like being introduced to Edward Said after a steady diet of Cliffs
Notes: there is, after all, much more to be found in the details.
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by Ann Nichols
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My introduction to oysters came when I lived in Boston in college, and
had a roommate (let’s call her “Ellen”) who was one of the most
unattractive specimens of humanity I have encountered in my years on
earth. I am not referring to her physical
appearance; I’m not that shallow.
Her significant deficits had mostly
to do with manners, and with the fact that she kept a small
refrigerator in our extremely small dorm room, from which she regularly
withdrew and inhaled various edibles ranging from liverwurst and cream
cheese sandwiches to ice cream. She often consumed these items in her
bed, never offered to share, and frankly made such a display of
dripping, chomping barbarousness that any appetite I might have had was
crushed.
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by Laura Johnson
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I grew up in the deep south, a small town called Hawkinsville, GA, population 3500. Probably the best thing I have ever eaten in my life is the BBQ we had on special occasions on our farm. I know, you can get BBQ everyday. Yes, I have been to those famous BBQ joints in Memphis and those in North Carolina. Not impressed; it's all about the sauce and good BBQ needs little sauce. My dad employed an old man named Clayton since I was a child until he died a few years ago. Great BBQ is an art, like the glass blowers in Murano, Italy or a small farmer in France making cheese. There is no recipe, just talent and experience.
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by Pamela Felcher
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I have
taught English for over twenty years and the reading, planning,
grading, and yes, the teaching consume much of my waking time from
August 28th until June 20th every year. I have never had children of
my own. But I guess you could say, I'm "the village." I have taught
about 3200 students in all, ranging from the kids whose mothers clean
the homes and care for the children in Santa Monica to the kids in
Santa Monica whose moms employ the other moms.
I have taught future
lawyers, doctors, rabbis, curators, filmmakers, poets, art historians,
scientists, and I have taught future crack addicts, pregnant teens,
suicides, and criminals. I have taught the ambitious and the indolent,
the focused and the preoccupied, the optimistic and the pessimistic,
the successful and the not so successful.
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