I was surfing just now and came across something that simply shocked me: a blog entry for The New York Times called "Now Scrutinizing: A Rounder Golden Globes."

This is from last week, but I just saw it now. Blogger Andy Post comments that Jennifer Aniston, Courtney Cox and Kate Hudson all looked like they'd put on weight at the Golden Globes.

I think Post may have thought that since his piece lacked a "value judgment" about weight gain (he spoke of 'sexier curves' and said they were 'more Marilyn than Twiggy') that this sort of speculation was less damaging.

Of course, it's this very sort of objectifying of bodies that leads women (and men, I might add) to eating disorders and other vastly unhealthy practices that stem from obsession over physique. I mean, if those women are round, I'm a balloon, and so are most humans.

This seems to me to be an example of good intentions gone awry. I can tell from his piece that he means to nuance this sort of body image discussion by not showing a preference for the unhealthy, zero-size aspirations that the tabloids seem to consider ideal. But instead, it's just another crap piece with an unhealthy focus on exterior. How about a piece about what an unheralded great actress Courtney Cox is? What's Kate Hudson like as a person?

Why is The Times involved in this sort of journalism in the first place? Why do we continually set the bar for discourse at the lowest possible level? Let's raise the bar. Significantly.
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...Wadorf to Your Astoria is done. Through. Finished.

This will be the final post here.

But fear not! If you go over to my brand-spankin' new website, billkonigsberg.com, you will see that I am still blogging over there.
Just four more days in 2012... Hard to believe how quickly --

Who the hell am I kidding?

This was the slowest year in the history of man. I don't mean that in a bad way. It just went slowly. To me, last December seems like years ago.

It was a great, slow year:

1.
Tomorrow is the first day of NaNoWriMo, also known as National Novel Writing Month. Every November, all sorts of writers take on the challenge of trying to write a draft of a novel in a month.
I'll tell you what, people who plan to vote for Mitt Romney:

I disagree with you, and not just a little. Your support of the Romney/Ryan ticket feels like a kick to the stomach, because as a gay man, this stuff is personal to me.

But you know what? Don't de-friend me.
What would happen at an all-boys boarding school in Massachusetts if an athlete came out as gay?

This is NOT the subject of my upcoming novel, Openly Straight. In fact, it is the setting for that novel, but it is the plot of my first novel, Out of the Pocket.
Today I've decided to be one of those helpful authors and let you know what happens when you attempt to use copywritten song lyrics in your novel.
Waldorf to Your Astoria
Waldorf to Your Astoria
Waldorf to Your Astoria
The blog of author Bill Konigsberg
About Me
About Me
Tempe, AZ, United States
Author of Lambda Literary Award-winning novel OUT OF THE POCKET (Dutton). For more information, go to www.billkonigsberg.com
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