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News We Disapprove Of
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Good morning Jodi,
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I love evergreen headlines, those perpetually blooming stories that could
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run in any newspaper, any year (an example: "New Jersey Official Indicted, Mob
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Ties Alleged"). Well, the front page of today's New York Times provides
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an all-time classic of the genre: "Pediatricians Urge Limiting TV Watching."
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Stop the presses! No, on second thought, didn't I read that same story in the
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Times in 1979? Or was it 1959?
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Back in the old days, like 1979 or 1959, the Times editorial page was
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the repository of the conventional wisdom written in a uniquely ponderous style
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that combined voice-of-God self-confidence and the bromides of a
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foundation-backed task-force report. All that has mercifully changed as the
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edit page has been transformed under the editorship of Howell Raines. But every
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so often, the Times goes completely retro with a return to
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yes-but-on-the-other-hand prose. Today, the edit page finally weighed in on
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Hillary's Talk interview, devoting infinitely more space to the
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"Intimate Hillary" than was deemed appropriate by the news section. (I have
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long thought that the Times should handle hot-potato stories like this
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with a special daily page called: "News We Disapprove Of.") But the
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Times editorial concluded with a sentence so pompous and so
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non-committal that it should be immediately be added to the syllabus in
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journalism schools.
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Jodi, parse this one if you dare: "In a contest involving two personalities
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as distinctive as Mrs. Clinton and Mayor Rudolph Guiliani, the potential
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Republican nominee, every citizen will have to reach a decision that balances
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all aspects of a candidate's abilities, issue positions and personal
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qualities."
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This morning I was overjoyed to snag the last copy of the New York
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Post at my little Washington newsstand. That's where I learned of the
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latest circulation-boosting gambit by Modern Maturity , that
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up-with-aging monthly published by the AARP. The big story this month on the
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senior circuit is an exclusive listing of the 50 "sexiest" celebrities who are
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over 50 years old. The winners include Richard Gere and Susan Sarandon ("steam
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heat"), Julie Christie and Tom Selleck ("anytime sexy"), Donna Karan and Louis
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Rukeyser ("sexy in suits") and Lauren Bacall and Paul Newman ("vintage
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sexy").
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I'm 52 years old, balding, well-rounded, and doomed to always misplace my
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reading glasses. But I'm also old enough to know that sexual allure does not
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necessarily dim with age. (At last year's Time magazine anniversary
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gala, I found myself positively tongue-tied, embarrassingly adolescent in my
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awkwardness, on being introduced to Lauren Bacall.) So why does the "Modern
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Maturity" spread leave me so uncomfortable? Would I feel different if this sexy
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plus-50 cavalcade appeared in People magazine?
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My guess--and let's not delve too deeply into my psyche--is that I'm
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offended by the AARP's role in sponsoring this silliness. There's something
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about this middle-aged spread (the magazine's, not mine) that suggests a
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desperate need to join the self-esteem movement. It all seems, well,
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Viagra-esque.
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Jodi, any reaction from a younger and fitter generation?
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