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appalachiablue

(41,103 posts)
Fri Dec 16, 2022, 02:16 PM Dec 2022

Fran Lebowitz on Life without the Internet: 'If I'm Cancelled, Don't Tell Me!'

Fran Lebowitz on life without the internet: ‘If I’m cancelled, don’t tell me!’ The Guardian, Dec. 10, 2022.

The writer is easy to spot if you spend long enough in New York, but interviews have to be over her landline, as she is permanently offline. She reveals why Andy Warhol wasn’t so smart, and how she learned to love a good party.

WHEN Fran Lebowitz was a child, she was told her opinions were not welcome. This was the 1950s, she says, when “children were not supposed to comment on the things adults were saying. It was called talking back, and you were not allowed to do that. Even as a small child, this seemed unfair to me. In school I would get sent out of the classroom even though the other kids made it clear they wanted to hear what I had to say. So it did amuse me, when I got much older, that the thing I got punished for I was now getting paid for.”

At 72, Lebowitz’s opinions – acerbic, unfiltered, nearly always right – have rarely been more in demand. After publishing two bestselling books, Metropolitan Life (1978) and Social Studies (1981) early in her career, she developed writer’s block – she prefers to call it “writer’s blockade” – and reinvented herself as a public speaker. In the 2021 Netflix series Pretend It’s a City, directed by her friend Martin Scorsese (it’s his second Lebowitz documentary; the first was 2010’s Public Speaking), you can find her holding forth about her home of New York, from the smoking ban to the subway to the lawn chairs dotted about on Times Square.

With its lingering shots of her walking the streets in her signature get-up – Anderson & Sheppard coat, white shirt, jeans, chunky boots – the series cemented Lebowitz’s status as a style icon and introduced her to a new generation of fans, many of whom now accost her on the street. “They say: ‘I came to New York because I thought I’d see you and now I did.’ I say: ‘Well, of course, because it’s a very small place and I walk around a lot. So naturally you saw me.’”

Lebowitz is talking from her apartment via her landline, which is not only her preferred means of communication but her only one. She doesn’t have a mobile phone or a computer, and has no need for wifi. She talks in staccato sentences that can, on the page, be construed as ill-tempered but are usually delivered in a tone of amusement. Lebowitz doesn’t suffer fools but she loves an appreciative audience.

I am a psychotic perfectionist when it comes to writing, which makes it very hard...

- More, https://www.theguardian.com/books/2022/dec/10/fran-lebowitz-new-york-writer-essayist-interview

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Fran Lebowitz on Life without the Internet: 'If I'm Cancelled, Don't Tell Me!' (Original Post) appalachiablue Dec 2022 OP
Enjoyed her dweller Dec 2022 #1
Thanks! I'd forgot that role, Fran was excellent. : ) appalachiablue Dec 2022 #2
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