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	<title>Observer &#187; American Idle! Posh Peeps Profess Passion For Bad TV</title>
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		<title>Observer &#187; American Idle! Posh Peeps Profess Passion For Bad TV</title>
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		<title>American Idle! Posh Peeps Profess Passion For Bad TV</title>

		<comments>http://observer.com/2007/01/american-idle-posh-peeps-profess-passion-for-bad-tv/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 29 Jan 2007 00:00:00 -0400</pubDate>
					<link>http://observer.com/2007/01/american-idle-posh-peeps-profess-passion-for-bad-tv/</link>
			<dc:creator>Simon Doonan</dc:creator>
				
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.observer.com/2007/01/american-idle-posh-peeps-profess-passion-for-bad-tv/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[<p><img class="alignleft" src="http://nyoobserver.files.wordpress.com/2011/06/012907_article_doonan.jpg?w=200&h=300" />I believe that New Yorkers can now be divided fairly and squarely into two distinct groups: those who watch trash TV (the new intelligentsia), and those who don&rsquo;t and inveigh against it (the narrow-minded poo-poo heads).</p>
<p>I am also convinced that being a trash-watcher is not determined by class or money. All you need is a great sense of fun, a deep appreciation for the foibles of humanity and a love of community. Yes, I said community. Watching trash TV is a shared interest that provides the glue vital to the survival of any social group. In addition, watching trash TV enhances group productivity: So desperate are my girls and I in the Barneys advertising department to rehash the previous night&rsquo;s shenanigans on <i>I Love New York, </i>we all arrive <i>early</i> for work on Tuesday morning!</p>
<p>What better place than the Winter Antiques Show opening soir&eacute;e to confirm my supposition that rich people in mink stoles were tucking into <i>Ego Trip&rsquo;s (White) Rapper Show </i>and <i>The Surreal Life: Fame Games </i>along with the rest of us? </p>
<p>Surveying the famous-ish faces on Jan. 18 at the Seventh Regiment Armory on 67th Street (the event tends to have all the restrained humility of a Puerto Rican drag show, and last Thursday&rsquo;s extravaganza was no exception), I spotted Ivana Trump, looking like a high-glamour flight attendant in a scalpel-cut blue two-piece. </p>
<p>&ldquo;Do you watch trash TV?&rdquo; I asked.</p>
<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s all trash!&rdquo; said the gorgeous mother of Ivanka and ex of trash-TV titan Donald. &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t vatch trash. I vatch CNN for the news and New York 1 in the morning to see vhat&rsquo;s going on viz ze traffic.&rdquo;  </p>
<p>Similarly unconvincing denials came from befurred <i>Town</i><i> &amp; Country </i>editor in chief Pamela Fiori. &ldquo;Absolutely not! It&rsquo;s the imbeciling of America,&rdquo; said the always-glam Pam, effortlessly inventing a great new word.</p>
<p>After these negative comments, the evening&rsquo;s hostess, Margaret Russell, editor in chief of <i>Elle D&eacute;cor</i>, was a beacon of fiery enthusiasm. &ldquo;I started with <i>Queer Eye</i>&mdash;I just love reality television,&rdquo; said she, lovely in simple black Lanvin and Prada. </p>
<p>In the interests of full disclosure, I should point out that La Russell&rsquo;s excitement could have something to do with the fact that she herself has thrown her chapeau into the reality arena. Starting on Jan. 31, Margaret&mdash;&ldquo;Peggy&rdquo; to her pals&mdash;will star in <i>Top Design,</i> Bravo&rsquo;s interior-design version of <i>Top Chef</i>. And&mdash;further disclosure&mdash;the fact that I am ranting on about it in this paper could have something to do with the fact that my Jonny, Jonathan Adler, is the lead judge on the same show. <i>Yes, my Jonny has a major TV gig! </i></p>
<p><i> </i></p>
<p>Entre nous, I&rsquo;m actually starting to get a bit worried about my Jonny. <i>Top Design</i> has not even begun to air yet and he has already turned into a deranged spotlight-crazed Gloria Swanson&ndash;esque figure. The turning point was a recent West Coast Bravo press junket, where he hung out with his idols, <i>The Real Housewives of Orange County&mdash; </i>&ldquo;They&rsquo;re my new posse, now that I&rsquo;m part of the <i>Bravo</i> family,&rdquo; he bragged&mdash;and hasn&rsquo;t shut up about it since. As his media star rises, mine, of course, is plummeting. If this show is a hit, I will end up in the Erich von Stroheim role, picking up his dry cleaning, chauffeuring him around and keeping my trap shut regarding my own former reality-show glories <i>avec</i> Tyra Banks on <i>America</i><i>&rsquo;s Next Top Model.</i></p>
<p><i> </i></p>
<p>Back to the tiaras: Having found little enthusiasm for trash TV among the show&rsquo;s attendees, I decided that I should probably ask some of the exhibitors. I felt sure that I would find some TV addicts among these antique dealers, who are&mdash;despite the ultra-snooty nature of their attire and their offerings&mdash;mostly just a bunch of tarted-up carnies. (Not that there&rsquo;s anything wrong with that!)</p>
<p>I went straight to the top and buttonholed the always genial and camera-ready Leigh Keno, one of the legendary Keno twins. </p>
<p>&ldquo;I love <i>American Chopper</i>!&rdquo; he enthused with an air of butch bravado that was slightly at odds with his artificially bronzed visage, &ldquo;and I&rsquo;m <i>really</i> into racing motorcycles.&rdquo; </p>
<p>Though Leigh and I might enjoy the same telly programs, our taste in furniture differs dramatically. Maybe I am too flashy and nouveau riche to understand the Keno aesthetic; either way, those lugubrious but stratospherically priced Early American antiques fill me with suicidal melancholy. (I suspect his stuff might appeal to those narrow-minded poo-poo heads.) The last time I saw Leigh, at the 50th Show, he was flogging a monumentally depressing little object, a minute Queen Anne tea table, for an astonishing $385,000. Guess what? He actually sold that one, and now he has another one. Here&rsquo;s the bad news: It&rsquo;s even more frowzy and forgettable than its predecessor. Now the good news: It&rsquo;s more expensive. At $410,000, it is totally imbecilic!</p>
<p>In fairness to Mr. Keno, he was by no means the only carny flogging absurdly expensive (if not roll-in-the-aisles expensive) historic mundanities at the fair. At the Wayne Pratt Antiques gallery, I found a nest of three horrid little muffin baskets. They were so dreary and depressing that I knew that, in this wacky opposite-world, they would surely be worth a bloody fortune. Chatting with Marybeth Keene, the V.P. of Wayne Pratt, I wasn&rsquo;t surprised to learn that these were special &ldquo;Nantucket&rdquo; baskets and that they could be mine for a mere $78,000&mdash;for all three! Thanks but no thanks. I think I will buy the entire floor stock of my local Pier 1 instead.</p>
<p>Unable to nail any real enthusiasm for trash TV among the szhooshy guests or exhibitors, I turned to that old stand-by, interior decorators. When asked about his TV preferences, Thomas Jayne immediately confessed to an abiding passion for plastic-surgery reality shows. &ldquo;Plastic surgeons and interior decorators are basically the same thing,&rdquo; said the handsome, bow-tie-wearing giant: &ldquo;We take an old ruin and transform it.&rdquo; </p>
<p>At last! A real TV enthusiast, I was anxious to probe further. But the clock was ticking. It was 8:45 p.m.; I had exactly 15 minutes to get downtown in time to watch <i>American Chopper</i>. Judging by the stampede of lacquered, perfumed, tweezed <i>incroyables</i> reclaiming their sables at the coat check, about half of the guests had had the same idea. Case closed. Hypothesis proven.</p>
<p>As my cab pulled away from the gorgeous Armory building, a light rain was falling. I waved at the exiting TV addicts&mdash;my people, the new intelligentsia. And then a wave for all those still preening inside. Farewell, earnest poo-poo heads! Enjoy your $78,000 muffin baskets!</p>
<p><i>Vive la vulgarit&eacute;!</i></p>
]]></description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img class="alignleft" src="http://nyoobserver.files.wordpress.com/2011/06/012907_article_doonan.jpg?w=200&h=300" />I believe that New Yorkers can now be divided fairly and squarely into two distinct groups: those who watch trash TV (the new intelligentsia), and those who don&rsquo;t and inveigh against it (the narrow-minded poo-poo heads).</p>
<p>I am also convinced that being a trash-watcher is not determined by class or money. All you need is a great sense of fun, a deep appreciation for the foibles of humanity and a love of community. Yes, I said community. Watching trash TV is a shared interest that provides the glue vital to the survival of any social group. In addition, watching trash TV enhances group productivity: So desperate are my girls and I in the Barneys advertising department to rehash the previous night&rsquo;s shenanigans on <i>I Love New York, </i>we all arrive <i>early</i> for work on Tuesday morning!</p>
<p>What better place than the Winter Antiques Show opening soir&eacute;e to confirm my supposition that rich people in mink stoles were tucking into <i>Ego Trip&rsquo;s (White) Rapper Show </i>and <i>The Surreal Life: Fame Games </i>along with the rest of us? </p>
<p>Surveying the famous-ish faces on Jan. 18 at the Seventh Regiment Armory on 67th Street (the event tends to have all the restrained humility of a Puerto Rican drag show, and last Thursday&rsquo;s extravaganza was no exception), I spotted Ivana Trump, looking like a high-glamour flight attendant in a scalpel-cut blue two-piece. </p>
<p>&ldquo;Do you watch trash TV?&rdquo; I asked.</p>
<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s all trash!&rdquo; said the gorgeous mother of Ivanka and ex of trash-TV titan Donald. &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t vatch trash. I vatch CNN for the news and New York 1 in the morning to see vhat&rsquo;s going on viz ze traffic.&rdquo;  </p>
<p>Similarly unconvincing denials came from befurred <i>Town</i><i> &amp; Country </i>editor in chief Pamela Fiori. &ldquo;Absolutely not! It&rsquo;s the imbeciling of America,&rdquo; said the always-glam Pam, effortlessly inventing a great new word.</p>
<p>After these negative comments, the evening&rsquo;s hostess, Margaret Russell, editor in chief of <i>Elle D&eacute;cor</i>, was a beacon of fiery enthusiasm. &ldquo;I started with <i>Queer Eye</i>&mdash;I just love reality television,&rdquo; said she, lovely in simple black Lanvin and Prada. </p>
<p>In the interests of full disclosure, I should point out that La Russell&rsquo;s excitement could have something to do with the fact that she herself has thrown her chapeau into the reality arena. Starting on Jan. 31, Margaret&mdash;&ldquo;Peggy&rdquo; to her pals&mdash;will star in <i>Top Design,</i> Bravo&rsquo;s interior-design version of <i>Top Chef</i>. And&mdash;further disclosure&mdash;the fact that I am ranting on about it in this paper could have something to do with the fact that my Jonny, Jonathan Adler, is the lead judge on the same show. <i>Yes, my Jonny has a major TV gig! </i></p>
<p><i> </i></p>
<p>Entre nous, I&rsquo;m actually starting to get a bit worried about my Jonny. <i>Top Design</i> has not even begun to air yet and he has already turned into a deranged spotlight-crazed Gloria Swanson&ndash;esque figure. The turning point was a recent West Coast Bravo press junket, where he hung out with his idols, <i>The Real Housewives of Orange County&mdash; </i>&ldquo;They&rsquo;re my new posse, now that I&rsquo;m part of the <i>Bravo</i> family,&rdquo; he bragged&mdash;and hasn&rsquo;t shut up about it since. As his media star rises, mine, of course, is plummeting. If this show is a hit, I will end up in the Erich von Stroheim role, picking up his dry cleaning, chauffeuring him around and keeping my trap shut regarding my own former reality-show glories <i>avec</i> Tyra Banks on <i>America</i><i>&rsquo;s Next Top Model.</i></p>
<p><i> </i></p>
<p>Back to the tiaras: Having found little enthusiasm for trash TV among the show&rsquo;s attendees, I decided that I should probably ask some of the exhibitors. I felt sure that I would find some TV addicts among these antique dealers, who are&mdash;despite the ultra-snooty nature of their attire and their offerings&mdash;mostly just a bunch of tarted-up carnies. (Not that there&rsquo;s anything wrong with that!)</p>
<p>I went straight to the top and buttonholed the always genial and camera-ready Leigh Keno, one of the legendary Keno twins. </p>
<p>&ldquo;I love <i>American Chopper</i>!&rdquo; he enthused with an air of butch bravado that was slightly at odds with his artificially bronzed visage, &ldquo;and I&rsquo;m <i>really</i> into racing motorcycles.&rdquo; </p>
<p>Though Leigh and I might enjoy the same telly programs, our taste in furniture differs dramatically. Maybe I am too flashy and nouveau riche to understand the Keno aesthetic; either way, those lugubrious but stratospherically priced Early American antiques fill me with suicidal melancholy. (I suspect his stuff might appeal to those narrow-minded poo-poo heads.) The last time I saw Leigh, at the 50th Show, he was flogging a monumentally depressing little object, a minute Queen Anne tea table, for an astonishing $385,000. Guess what? He actually sold that one, and now he has another one. Here&rsquo;s the bad news: It&rsquo;s even more frowzy and forgettable than its predecessor. Now the good news: It&rsquo;s more expensive. At $410,000, it is totally imbecilic!</p>
<p>In fairness to Mr. Keno, he was by no means the only carny flogging absurdly expensive (if not roll-in-the-aisles expensive) historic mundanities at the fair. At the Wayne Pratt Antiques gallery, I found a nest of three horrid little muffin baskets. They were so dreary and depressing that I knew that, in this wacky opposite-world, they would surely be worth a bloody fortune. Chatting with Marybeth Keene, the V.P. of Wayne Pratt, I wasn&rsquo;t surprised to learn that these were special &ldquo;Nantucket&rdquo; baskets and that they could be mine for a mere $78,000&mdash;for all three! Thanks but no thanks. I think I will buy the entire floor stock of my local Pier 1 instead.</p>
<p>Unable to nail any real enthusiasm for trash TV among the szhooshy guests or exhibitors, I turned to that old stand-by, interior decorators. When asked about his TV preferences, Thomas Jayne immediately confessed to an abiding passion for plastic-surgery reality shows. &ldquo;Plastic surgeons and interior decorators are basically the same thing,&rdquo; said the handsome, bow-tie-wearing giant: &ldquo;We take an old ruin and transform it.&rdquo; </p>
<p>At last! A real TV enthusiast, I was anxious to probe further. But the clock was ticking. It was 8:45 p.m.; I had exactly 15 minutes to get downtown in time to watch <i>American Chopper</i>. Judging by the stampede of lacquered, perfumed, tweezed <i>incroyables</i> reclaiming their sables at the coat check, about half of the guests had had the same idea. Case closed. Hypothesis proven.</p>
<p>As my cab pulled away from the gorgeous Armory building, a light rain was falling. I waved at the exiting TV addicts&mdash;my people, the new intelligentsia. And then a wave for all those still preening inside. Farewell, earnest poo-poo heads! Enjoy your $78,000 muffin baskets!</p>
<p><i>Vive la vulgarit&eacute;!</i></p>
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