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the breakfast table: An e-mail conversation about the news of the day.

from: Lloyd Grove
to: George Rush

Oliver Stone, Yasser Arafat, and Middle East Peace?

Posted Tuesday, March 26, 2002, at 4:42 PM ET

Who are these people?

Oliver Stone and Yasser Arafat—Yikes! Not only do I find this image extraordinarily disturbing, I am also concerned that you are attempting to push our discussion into areas of substance and foreign policy. I mean, what is your proposal for Middle East peace anyway? Surely it can't involve Oliver Stone.

Have a great flight. Is it true that Mort Zuckerman flies you everywhere first class, or is that just another one of those Hollywood rumors?



I await your clarification—or confirmation—first thing tomorrow. In the meantime, have a flute of champagne on my behalf.

Best,
Lloyd

from: Lloyd Grove
to: George Rush

Oliver Stone, Yasser Arafat, and Middle East Peace?

Posted Tuesday, March 26, 2002, at 4:42 PM ET
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Lloyd Grove, a 22-year veteran of the Washington Post, took over "The Reliable Source" column in May 1999. George Rush writes the "Rush & Molloy" column for the New York Daily News with his wife, Joanna Molloy.
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Reader Comments From The Fray:


Let's face facts, all this stuff about terrorists, the Middle East, Enron, Northern Ireland, and the mid-term elections is kind of a downer. Finally, Slate has bravely put forth two people who write about celebrities. I mean I like politics and foreign affairs as much as the next guy, but this has been a long stretch without a lot of humor. Finally, the "Breakfast Table" addresses the real issues: Is Russell Crowe a thuggish alcoholic, do movie people act as badly as we hope they do, and do gossip reporters feel like badly dressed party crashers? Apparently, the answer to all these questions is yes. I for one hope this exchange continues into an exploration of the sexual relationships between famous married people and relatively attractive starlets. By exploration I mean naming names and the reactions of the betrayed spouses. Onward, no more international bummers, and drinks for everyone.

--Neill Hamilton

(To find or answer this post, click here.)


Everybody bitches about the speeches going on too long, but this isn't the problem. We want to see people who are happy to receive the award. It's part of the reward itself to get a multi-million-person captive audience for a minute or two. No, the Oscars seemed to run long this year because the running time was fueled by the Academy's own filmmaking: the innumerable montages, tributes, and other "entertainment" that looks for all the world like it was inserted to pad out the ceremony time-wise. We could do without three honorary awards with a montage each. We could probably get by without the circus acts, the meaningless pre-recorded comments, and the insider's walks down memory lane.

Or could we? I was entertained by all these things, and would regret seeing them go. I like the idea that the academy hold reverence for people I've never heard of because they were behind-the-scenes. If you get bored easily, don't watch; or wait until the next day when it's all boiled down to more manageable chunks of highlights. If you want to see what the Academy wants to offer, then by all means do so--but get ready to hunker down

--Mangar

(To find or answer this post, click here.)

(3/26)





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