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	<title>Observer &#187; Aileen Mehle</title>
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		<title>Observer &#187; Aileen Mehle</title>
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		<title>Who Says There&#8217;s No New Society? Jill Kopelman Anointed Next Suzy</title>

		<comments>http://observer.com/2001/03/who-says-theres-no-new-society-jill-kopelman-anointed-next-suzy/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 12 Mar 2001 00:00:00 -0400</pubDate>
					<link>http://observer.com/2001/03/who-says-theres-no-new-society-jill-kopelman-anointed-next-suzy/</link>
			<dc:creator>Deborah Schoeneman</dc:creator>
				
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.observer.com/2001/03/who-says-theres-no-new-society-jill-kopelman-anointed-next-suzy/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[<p>On Feb. 26, at 7 p.m., Jill Kopelman stepped out of a</p>
<p>chauffeured Mercedes station wagon at the School of American Ballet at Lincoln</p>
<p>Center, where a black-tie awards dinner was honoring legendary ballerina Maria</p>
<p>Tallchief and Richard S. Braddock, chairmanof Priceline.com. Ms. Kopelman, 26,</p>
<p>and her mother, Coco, were there as longtime S.A.B. supporters, their matching</p>
<p>Chanel bags and diamond Chanel rings flashing as they shook hands with friends</p>
<p>in the receiving line. But tonight, Ms. Kopelman was also there to work. She</p>
<p>was using the dull family outing-enlivened only by the presence of Chelsea</p>
<p>Clinton-as fodder for her new column, "Eye Spy: The Whirlwind Diary of a Social</p>
<p>Scribe," on Style.com, the joint Web site of Vogue and W that draws 11</p>
<p>million bored Condé Nast assistants, gossipy fashion addicts and Elisabeth</p>
<p>Kieselstein-Cord stalkers to its pages each month.</p>
<p> Ms. Kopelman's bimonthly column, which was launched in</p>
<p>December and will go weekly this spring, is being billed as the</p>
<p>Hilton-sisters-era answer to "Suzy," W magazine's</p>
<p>high-society chronicle that has been written by Aileen Mehle since 1991.While</p>
<p>Ms. Mehle, a society pet who once dated Frank Sinatra, goes out regularly to</p>
<p>detail the social migrations of the rich and thin, Ms. Kopelman, the daughter</p>
<p>of Chanel president Arie Kopelman, writes about how much she'd rather be under</p>
<p>her duvet, inserting the boldfaced names of acquaintances between accounts of</p>
<p>what she just scored from the hors d'oeuvres tray.</p>
<p> In November, when Ms. Kopelman landed her job, editors at W nicknamed her "Little Suzy." But the</p>
<p>seventysomething original, who has been writing under her pseudonym since 1951,</p>
<p>didn't find the reference so amusing. So Suzy 2.0 was named after Ms. Mehle's</p>
<p>"Eye" column in Women's Wear Daily.</p>
<p> When called for a comment about Ms. Kopelman, Ms. Mehle</p>
<p>said, "I'm not online," and hung up.</p>
<p> Perhaps Ms. Mehle is miffed that anyone-let alone the</p>
<p>daughter of a couple that appears regularly in her column-is being groomed as</p>
<p>her heir. Then again, these days it's the offspring of society staples that are</p>
<p>getting the most ink-or online hits-as they misbehave at corporate-sponsored</p>
<p>events. Ms. Mehle endeared herself to her subjects by reporting on a dinner</p>
<p>party's menu rather than the hosts' pending divorce. "People felt safe with</p>
<p>her," said Dominick Dunne, who has known Ms. Mehle for decades. "She's part of</p>
<p>it, but she's not part of it at the same time. The 'not' part of her is the</p>
<p>writer of it all."</p>
<p> Ms. Kopelman is a part of society, but she'd rather not be.</p>
<p>The "not" part-plus her knack for social observation, teen-mag-inflected</p>
<p>writing and a personality that's more Woody Allen than Beth Rudin de</p>
<p>Woody-makes her an unusual yet almost logical choice as Little Suzy.</p>
<p> "No one could ever replace Aileen Mehle," said Ms. Kopelman,</p>
<p>who added that her column and Suzy's don't really overlap. "I'm covering a</p>
<p>different scene; I try to mix in a drag show in the Village with something</p>
<p>that's happening at the Frick. I don't feel at all that I'm stepping on her</p>
<p>toes."</p>
<p> Though she was born with gold interlocking C's in her mouth,</p>
<p>Ms. Kopelman doesn't want readers to know it. Her column comes off as being</p>
<p>written by the goofy girl lurking in the corner, amazed by the stupidity she's</p>
<p>forced to endure. She may have been skimming the society pages of Vogue , Harper's Bazaar and Women's</p>
<p>Wear Daily when she was in first grade, attending Spence with Gwyneth</p>
<p>Paltrow (she helped fix Ms. Paltrow up with her godbrother, ketchup heir Chris</p>
<p>Heinz, last summer) and spending spring breaks in the front row of the Chanel</p>
<p>shows in Paris, but she goes to great lengths to differentiate herself. Rather</p>
<p>than join Equinox, she walks from her East 76th Street apartment to Brooklyn to</p>
<p>"touch Joe DiMaggio and Marilyn Monroe's gate" while listening to Howard Stern.</p>
<p>Instead of borrowing a Burberry gown for the recent Tartan Ball at the Frick,</p>
<p>she bought $6 worth of plaid fabric in the Garment District and pinned it to</p>
<p>her cheap black dress. (She also paid $400 for two tickets, even though her</p>
<p>press status would have gotten her in free.) While other socialites attend</p>
<p>Memorial Sloan-Kettering's benefit parties, Ms. Kopelman visits cancer patients</p>
<p>there every Monday. And she wasn't allowed to wear Chanel until she turned 21.</p>
<p>("I didn't want to spoil her," said Mr. Kopelman.) She's still only granted one</p>
<p>Chanel outfit a year, and she can't borrow samples for events because she's</p>
<p>proudly "not a sample size."</p>
<p> "Sometimes I want to be Skeletor," she said, reaching for a</p>
<p>squash-and-mozzarella tidbit at the S.A.B. gala. "But it's not worth it." She</p>
<p>insisted that she's a size eight by choice. Ms. Kopelman's use of the word</p>
<p>"Skeletor"-the name of the bad guy in the cartoon series He-Man and the Masters of the Universe -is just one of many</p>
<p>Kopelisms, a private dialect of pop-culture vernacular, abbreviations and</p>
<p>dropped pronouns. "I'm like camel," she said as she took a second glass of</p>
<p>water from a silver tray at Lincoln Center.</p>
<p> In her column, Ms. Kopelman has invented words like</p>
<p>"glamissima" to describe socialite Susan Fales-Hill and called herself a "roe</p>
<p>ho" for loitering by a caviar table "avec toast points." (Food and body image</p>
<p>factor strongly into her column, ranging from the boastful-"I jammed back one</p>
<p>more of Susan Fales-Hill's delicious chocolate-chip cookies"-to the self-loathing:</p>
<p>"Hey, can a normal Rubenesque [read: obese] girl get a drink around here?" she</p>
<p>wrote after attending the launch party for Shoshanna Lonstein's swimwear line.)</p>
<p>Readers over 40 might also trip over such terms as "social peeps," "cocktail</p>
<p>rager" and "total nugget." "I find store openings very decaf," she wrote of a</p>
<p>party filled with "overbred and underfed sprockets." And it's hard to imagine</p>
<p>Suzy closing a column with, "All my crappy worries vanished, like hemlines on a</p>
<p>Hilton sister."</p>
<p> "She was our own private dinner theater," said Mrs.</p>
<p>Kopelman, beaming as her daughter cracked jokes and dropped phrases like</p>
<p>"Raging with the ex-Prezzie!" after Peter Martins, S.A.B.'s chairman of faculty</p>
<p>and a family friend, said that he and Bill Clinton would be in Denmark at the</p>
<p>same time, hitting the bars. Ms. Kopelman said she got her sense of humor from</p>
<p>her father, who was once a Borscht Belt comedian. "We're always laughing and</p>
<p>telling dirty jokes like weird wackos," she said. "I had a really great</p>
<p>childhood. I didn't have any dark moments. So many writers, you read these</p>
<p>beautiful things and you know they endured tragedies. I'm reading Pat Conroy's Beach Music and I'm just like, 'Oh my</p>
<p>God, I have nothing to offer! Who am I to write a novel?' I never considered</p>
<p>myself a journalist. I write little puff pieces, but I try to make them funny.</p>
<p>I've always wanted to do comedy."</p>
<p> In 1995, after Ms. Kopelman had graduated from Yale in just</p>
<p>three years and moved in with her parents on Park Avenue and 65th Street, she</p>
<p>would entertain them over dinner with stories of her surreal days as an</p>
<p>editorial assistant at Interview ,</p>
<p>where her duties included writing about music and art as well as comforting</p>
<p>editor in chief Ingrid Sischy when Gianni Versace died, and taking care of the</p>
<p>$3,000 worth of roses that Elton John sent after he and Ms. Sischy had a tiff.</p>
<p>When Ms. Kopelman would complain about her job to her father, he would simply</p>
<p>tell her to "remember the Holocaust."</p>
<p> Ms. Sischy described Ms. Kopelman as smart, funny and "a</p>
<p>real social observer." She said it was no secret that Ms. Kopelman's father was</p>
<p>the honcho of Chanel (an Interview</p>
<p>advertiser), but she never let her sense of entitlement show. "She never</p>
<p>wielded a mallet that said, 'Hey, my father is someone. You need to listen to</p>
<p>me,'" she said. "She has always been discreet about that and acted like an</p>
<p>editorial assistant."</p>
<p> She might have responded differently had she seen Intern , the movie Ms. Kopelman co-wrote</p>
<p>with her friend Caroline Doyle (whose mother, Kathleen Doyle, owns the auction</p>
<p>house William Doyle Galleries) when they were practically still interns</p>
<p>themselves. An early New York Times</p>
<p>article about the project sent a chill through the magazines about to be</p>
<p>blasted onscreen-by a couple of rich mail-openers, no less-but the movie bombed</p>
<p>after brief openings in New York and Los Angeles last August. Intern takes one scene-in which an</p>
<p>editor demands that the intern update his Rolodex, no matter whether the people</p>
<p>are dead or alive-from Ms. Kopelman's experience at Interview . Ms. Kopelman also parodied her experiences at Mademoiselle , Harper's Bazaar and MTV, including a time when a fittings editor at</p>
<p> Mademoiselle publicly vomited a</p>
<p>cappuccino when she found out it was made with two-percent milk instead of</p>
<p>skim.</p>
<p> On a chilly February afternoon at the Regency Hotel on Park</p>
<p>Avenue and 61st Street, Ms. Kopelman-wrapped in a frumpy black hat, scarf and</p>
<p>sweater-described the experience of being on set during the filming of Intern as "horrible."</p>
<p> "I was disappointed with the product," she said, sipping her</p>
<p>hot chocolate and reaching for peanut M&amp;M's. "They sort of pumiced out all</p>
<p>the really true, New York-y, thorny moments." Ms. Kopelman is particularly</p>
<p>disappointed that she never got paid for Intern ,</p>
<p>which lost between $40,000 and $100,000, depending on whether you ask Ms.</p>
<p>Kopelman or the film's producers. She's miffed because she wrangled many of the</p>
<p>film's celebrity cameos (many of whom were family friends), including Ms.</p>
<p>Paltrow, Kenneth Cole, Karl Lagerfeld, Frédéric Fekkai, Diane von Furstenberg,</p>
<p>André Leon Talley, Cynthia Rowley and Tommy Hilfiger. "We never got paid, which</p>
<p>is why we're probably going to litigation," she said.</p>
<p> The film's producer, Galt Niederhoffer, 25, a friend of one</p>
<p>of Ms. Kopelman's Spence classmates, said Ms. Kopelman was not suing her,</p>
<p>though the two did file a complaint on JudgeJudy.com in January. "It is</p>
<p>unfortunate that Jill is disappointed with the poor reception of her film and</p>
<p>has resorted to such unprofessional and tasteless muckraking," said Ms. Niederhoffer,</p>
<p>who sounded weary of discussing the film. "This movie has neither made money</p>
<p>nor garnered critical praise; would that we all had the luxury of blaming</p>
<p>someone else for its failure."</p>
<p> Failure or not, Intern</p>
<p>helped Ms. Kopelman land her current job. Last fall, W and Vogue editors</p>
<p>familiar with her writing (and, some might sniff, with Chanel) asked her to</p>
<p>interview for the "Eye Spy" stint. The next day, she dropped off a copy of the Intern script per their request. After</p>
<p>writing four samples, her first column debuted in December.</p>
<p> Robert Haskell, who edits Ms. Mehle's "Eye" column for W as well as Ms. Kopelman's column, said</p>
<p>he knew Ms. Kopelman from Yale and thought she'd be perfect to write the young</p>
<p>new society page for Style.com. "She's not cut from the same cloth, but at the</p>
<p>same time she obviously grew up in a world full of fashion and society, so she</p>
<p>knows what she's talking about, even though she tries to pretend she's just an</p>
<p>outsider looking in," said Mr. Haskell.</p>
<p> "I really don't go up to strangers and say, 'Hi, can I</p>
<p>interview you?'" said Ms. Kopelman, who often reports-without notepad or tape</p>
<p>recorder-from her vantage point "in the corner." She added: "I don't really</p>
<p>consider myself as this journalist getting the scoops. I really just survey. I</p>
<p>feel sometimes like a loner at these parties," she said. "I'm not into</p>
<p>air-kissing everybody." Her Jan. 12 column moaned, "But even in my anti-social,</p>
<p>let-me-stay-at-home-avec-remote-control state, I battled the piercing cold and</p>
<p>hit a lovely soiree …."</p>
<p> "I'm not a party girl," she said. "I get exhausted and am in</p>
<p>bed by 11 p.m. to watch Law &amp; Order</p>
<p>every single night." Her favorite bar is Marie's Crisis, a piano bar in the</p>
<p>West Village where she sings along to show tunes with her girlfriends. "It's</p>
<p>like gay Cheers ," she said.</p>
<p> Ms. Kopelman pokes fun at her world in "Eye Spy," but for</p>
<p>those familiar with her connections, her choice of parties has raised more than</p>
<p>one eyebrow. One week she mocked the "Muffies" at the opening of the Winter</p>
<p>Antiques Show at the Armory on Park Avenue, though it's a committee her father</p>
<p>chairs. (A photograph of her at the party also turned up in the March issue of Quest .) The previous column gushed</p>
<p>about a Winter Antiques Show preview dinner, hosted at her friend socialite</p>
<p>Marjorie Gubelmann's home. In an act of dizzying cross-nepotism, she covered</p>
<p>the December event for S.A.B.'s junior benefit committee-which Ms. Kopelman</p>
<p>co-founded in 1999-at the new Chanel boutique in Soho. This time she added a</p>
<p>disclaimer, stating, "My dad works for Chanel, but I swear I'd rip on it if it</p>
<p>was lame." And in the May issue of W ,</p>
<p>Ms. Kopelman will appear in an advertising spread for De Beers jewelers</p>
<p>featuring "it girls" (read: celebrity offspring), including Kidada Jones, China</p>
<p>Chow, Zoë Cassavetes and Kate Driver. She wore a Chanel gown for the shoot.</p>
<p> In addition to her column, Ms. Kopelman, who works out of</p>
<p>her apartment, is keeping busy with "10 jobs," which include writing editorial</p>
<p>content for Polo.com and adapting a children's story for Nickelodeon. She's</p>
<p>also writing a novel, tentatively titled Resilient</p>
<p>Little Muscle , after the last line in Ms. Kopelman's favorite movie, Hannah and Her Sisters . Ms. Kopelman and</p>
<p>Ms. Doyle have also finished three more screenplays, one of which, Delayed Reaction , was recently optioned</p>
<p>by Indyssey, a film company owned by Katrina Pavlos, a socialite who appeared</p>
<p>in one of Ms. Kopelman's columns.</p>
<p> "I'm happy to do it for</p>
<p>a while," Ms. Kopelman said of "Eye Spy" via e-mail. "I do totally feel like</p>
<p>it's great for material. I always love parlaying over-the-top personalities</p>
<p>into characters, because honestly, some people in New York are stranger than</p>
<p>fiction."</p>
]]></description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>On Feb. 26, at 7 p.m., Jill Kopelman stepped out of a</p>
<p>chauffeured Mercedes station wagon at the School of American Ballet at Lincoln</p>
<p>Center, where a black-tie awards dinner was honoring legendary ballerina Maria</p>
<p>Tallchief and Richard S. Braddock, chairmanof Priceline.com. Ms. Kopelman, 26,</p>
<p>and her mother, Coco, were there as longtime S.A.B. supporters, their matching</p>
<p>Chanel bags and diamond Chanel rings flashing as they shook hands with friends</p>
<p>in the receiving line. But tonight, Ms. Kopelman was also there to work. She</p>
<p>was using the dull family outing-enlivened only by the presence of Chelsea</p>
<p>Clinton-as fodder for her new column, "Eye Spy: The Whirlwind Diary of a Social</p>
<p>Scribe," on Style.com, the joint Web site of Vogue and W that draws 11</p>
<p>million bored Condé Nast assistants, gossipy fashion addicts and Elisabeth</p>
<p>Kieselstein-Cord stalkers to its pages each month.</p>
<p> Ms. Kopelman's bimonthly column, which was launched in</p>
<p>December and will go weekly this spring, is being billed as the</p>
<p>Hilton-sisters-era answer to "Suzy," W magazine's</p>
<p>high-society chronicle that has been written by Aileen Mehle since 1991.While</p>
<p>Ms. Mehle, a society pet who once dated Frank Sinatra, goes out regularly to</p>
<p>detail the social migrations of the rich and thin, Ms. Kopelman, the daughter</p>
<p>of Chanel president Arie Kopelman, writes about how much she'd rather be under</p>
<p>her duvet, inserting the boldfaced names of acquaintances between accounts of</p>
<p>what she just scored from the hors d'oeuvres tray.</p>
<p> In November, when Ms. Kopelman landed her job, editors at W nicknamed her "Little Suzy." But the</p>
<p>seventysomething original, who has been writing under her pseudonym since 1951,</p>
<p>didn't find the reference so amusing. So Suzy 2.0 was named after Ms. Mehle's</p>
<p>"Eye" column in Women's Wear Daily.</p>
<p> When called for a comment about Ms. Kopelman, Ms. Mehle</p>
<p>said, "I'm not online," and hung up.</p>
<p> Perhaps Ms. Mehle is miffed that anyone-let alone the</p>
<p>daughter of a couple that appears regularly in her column-is being groomed as</p>
<p>her heir. Then again, these days it's the offspring of society staples that are</p>
<p>getting the most ink-or online hits-as they misbehave at corporate-sponsored</p>
<p>events. Ms. Mehle endeared herself to her subjects by reporting on a dinner</p>
<p>party's menu rather than the hosts' pending divorce. "People felt safe with</p>
<p>her," said Dominick Dunne, who has known Ms. Mehle for decades. "She's part of</p>
<p>it, but she's not part of it at the same time. The 'not' part of her is the</p>
<p>writer of it all."</p>
<p> Ms. Kopelman is a part of society, but she'd rather not be.</p>
<p>The "not" part-plus her knack for social observation, teen-mag-inflected</p>
<p>writing and a personality that's more Woody Allen than Beth Rudin de</p>
<p>Woody-makes her an unusual yet almost logical choice as Little Suzy.</p>
<p> "No one could ever replace Aileen Mehle," said Ms. Kopelman,</p>
<p>who added that her column and Suzy's don't really overlap. "I'm covering a</p>
<p>different scene; I try to mix in a drag show in the Village with something</p>
<p>that's happening at the Frick. I don't feel at all that I'm stepping on her</p>
<p>toes."</p>
<p> Though she was born with gold interlocking C's in her mouth,</p>
<p>Ms. Kopelman doesn't want readers to know it. Her column comes off as being</p>
<p>written by the goofy girl lurking in the corner, amazed by the stupidity she's</p>
<p>forced to endure. She may have been skimming the society pages of Vogue , Harper's Bazaar and Women's</p>
<p>Wear Daily when she was in first grade, attending Spence with Gwyneth</p>
<p>Paltrow (she helped fix Ms. Paltrow up with her godbrother, ketchup heir Chris</p>
<p>Heinz, last summer) and spending spring breaks in the front row of the Chanel</p>
<p>shows in Paris, but she goes to great lengths to differentiate herself. Rather</p>
<p>than join Equinox, she walks from her East 76th Street apartment to Brooklyn to</p>
<p>"touch Joe DiMaggio and Marilyn Monroe's gate" while listening to Howard Stern.</p>
<p>Instead of borrowing a Burberry gown for the recent Tartan Ball at the Frick,</p>
<p>she bought $6 worth of plaid fabric in the Garment District and pinned it to</p>
<p>her cheap black dress. (She also paid $400 for two tickets, even though her</p>
<p>press status would have gotten her in free.) While other socialites attend</p>
<p>Memorial Sloan-Kettering's benefit parties, Ms. Kopelman visits cancer patients</p>
<p>there every Monday. And she wasn't allowed to wear Chanel until she turned 21.</p>
<p>("I didn't want to spoil her," said Mr. Kopelman.) She's still only granted one</p>
<p>Chanel outfit a year, and she can't borrow samples for events because she's</p>
<p>proudly "not a sample size."</p>
<p> "Sometimes I want to be Skeletor," she said, reaching for a</p>
<p>squash-and-mozzarella tidbit at the S.A.B. gala. "But it's not worth it." She</p>
<p>insisted that she's a size eight by choice. Ms. Kopelman's use of the word</p>
<p>"Skeletor"-the name of the bad guy in the cartoon series He-Man and the Masters of the Universe -is just one of many</p>
<p>Kopelisms, a private dialect of pop-culture vernacular, abbreviations and</p>
<p>dropped pronouns. "I'm like camel," she said as she took a second glass of</p>
<p>water from a silver tray at Lincoln Center.</p>
<p> In her column, Ms. Kopelman has invented words like</p>
<p>"glamissima" to describe socialite Susan Fales-Hill and called herself a "roe</p>
<p>ho" for loitering by a caviar table "avec toast points." (Food and body image</p>
<p>factor strongly into her column, ranging from the boastful-"I jammed back one</p>
<p>more of Susan Fales-Hill's delicious chocolate-chip cookies"-to the self-loathing:</p>
<p>"Hey, can a normal Rubenesque [read: obese] girl get a drink around here?" she</p>
<p>wrote after attending the launch party for Shoshanna Lonstein's swimwear line.)</p>
<p>Readers over 40 might also trip over such terms as "social peeps," "cocktail</p>
<p>rager" and "total nugget." "I find store openings very decaf," she wrote of a</p>
<p>party filled with "overbred and underfed sprockets." And it's hard to imagine</p>
<p>Suzy closing a column with, "All my crappy worries vanished, like hemlines on a</p>
<p>Hilton sister."</p>
<p> "She was our own private dinner theater," said Mrs.</p>
<p>Kopelman, beaming as her daughter cracked jokes and dropped phrases like</p>
<p>"Raging with the ex-Prezzie!" after Peter Martins, S.A.B.'s chairman of faculty</p>
<p>and a family friend, said that he and Bill Clinton would be in Denmark at the</p>
<p>same time, hitting the bars. Ms. Kopelman said she got her sense of humor from</p>
<p>her father, who was once a Borscht Belt comedian. "We're always laughing and</p>
<p>telling dirty jokes like weird wackos," she said. "I had a really great</p>
<p>childhood. I didn't have any dark moments. So many writers, you read these</p>
<p>beautiful things and you know they endured tragedies. I'm reading Pat Conroy's Beach Music and I'm just like, 'Oh my</p>
<p>God, I have nothing to offer! Who am I to write a novel?' I never considered</p>
<p>myself a journalist. I write little puff pieces, but I try to make them funny.</p>
<p>I've always wanted to do comedy."</p>
<p> In 1995, after Ms. Kopelman had graduated from Yale in just</p>
<p>three years and moved in with her parents on Park Avenue and 65th Street, she</p>
<p>would entertain them over dinner with stories of her surreal days as an</p>
<p>editorial assistant at Interview ,</p>
<p>where her duties included writing about music and art as well as comforting</p>
<p>editor in chief Ingrid Sischy when Gianni Versace died, and taking care of the</p>
<p>$3,000 worth of roses that Elton John sent after he and Ms. Sischy had a tiff.</p>
<p>When Ms. Kopelman would complain about her job to her father, he would simply</p>
<p>tell her to "remember the Holocaust."</p>
<p> Ms. Sischy described Ms. Kopelman as smart, funny and "a</p>
<p>real social observer." She said it was no secret that Ms. Kopelman's father was</p>
<p>the honcho of Chanel (an Interview</p>
<p>advertiser), but she never let her sense of entitlement show. "She never</p>
<p>wielded a mallet that said, 'Hey, my father is someone. You need to listen to</p>
<p>me,'" she said. "She has always been discreet about that and acted like an</p>
<p>editorial assistant."</p>
<p> She might have responded differently had she seen Intern , the movie Ms. Kopelman co-wrote</p>
<p>with her friend Caroline Doyle (whose mother, Kathleen Doyle, owns the auction</p>
<p>house William Doyle Galleries) when they were practically still interns</p>
<p>themselves. An early New York Times</p>
<p>article about the project sent a chill through the magazines about to be</p>
<p>blasted onscreen-by a couple of rich mail-openers, no less-but the movie bombed</p>
<p>after brief openings in New York and Los Angeles last August. Intern takes one scene-in which an</p>
<p>editor demands that the intern update his Rolodex, no matter whether the people</p>
<p>are dead or alive-from Ms. Kopelman's experience at Interview . Ms. Kopelman also parodied her experiences at Mademoiselle , Harper's Bazaar and MTV, including a time when a fittings editor at</p>
<p> Mademoiselle publicly vomited a</p>
<p>cappuccino when she found out it was made with two-percent milk instead of</p>
<p>skim.</p>
<p> On a chilly February afternoon at the Regency Hotel on Park</p>
<p>Avenue and 61st Street, Ms. Kopelman-wrapped in a frumpy black hat, scarf and</p>
<p>sweater-described the experience of being on set during the filming of Intern as "horrible."</p>
<p> "I was disappointed with the product," she said, sipping her</p>
<p>hot chocolate and reaching for peanut M&amp;M's. "They sort of pumiced out all</p>
<p>the really true, New York-y, thorny moments." Ms. Kopelman is particularly</p>
<p>disappointed that she never got paid for Intern ,</p>
<p>which lost between $40,000 and $100,000, depending on whether you ask Ms.</p>
<p>Kopelman or the film's producers. She's miffed because she wrangled many of the</p>
<p>film's celebrity cameos (many of whom were family friends), including Ms.</p>
<p>Paltrow, Kenneth Cole, Karl Lagerfeld, Frédéric Fekkai, Diane von Furstenberg,</p>
<p>André Leon Talley, Cynthia Rowley and Tommy Hilfiger. "We never got paid, which</p>
<p>is why we're probably going to litigation," she said.</p>
<p> The film's producer, Galt Niederhoffer, 25, a friend of one</p>
<p>of Ms. Kopelman's Spence classmates, said Ms. Kopelman was not suing her,</p>
<p>though the two did file a complaint on JudgeJudy.com in January. "It is</p>
<p>unfortunate that Jill is disappointed with the poor reception of her film and</p>
<p>has resorted to such unprofessional and tasteless muckraking," said Ms. Niederhoffer,</p>
<p>who sounded weary of discussing the film. "This movie has neither made money</p>
<p>nor garnered critical praise; would that we all had the luxury of blaming</p>
<p>someone else for its failure."</p>
<p> Failure or not, Intern</p>
<p>helped Ms. Kopelman land her current job. Last fall, W and Vogue editors</p>
<p>familiar with her writing (and, some might sniff, with Chanel) asked her to</p>
<p>interview for the "Eye Spy" stint. The next day, she dropped off a copy of the Intern script per their request. After</p>
<p>writing four samples, her first column debuted in December.</p>
<p> Robert Haskell, who edits Ms. Mehle's "Eye" column for W as well as Ms. Kopelman's column, said</p>
<p>he knew Ms. Kopelman from Yale and thought she'd be perfect to write the young</p>
<p>new society page for Style.com. "She's not cut from the same cloth, but at the</p>
<p>same time she obviously grew up in a world full of fashion and society, so she</p>
<p>knows what she's talking about, even though she tries to pretend she's just an</p>
<p>outsider looking in," said Mr. Haskell.</p>
<p> "I really don't go up to strangers and say, 'Hi, can I</p>
<p>interview you?'" said Ms. Kopelman, who often reports-without notepad or tape</p>
<p>recorder-from her vantage point "in the corner." She added: "I don't really</p>
<p>consider myself as this journalist getting the scoops. I really just survey. I</p>
<p>feel sometimes like a loner at these parties," she said. "I'm not into</p>
<p>air-kissing everybody." Her Jan. 12 column moaned, "But even in my anti-social,</p>
<p>let-me-stay-at-home-avec-remote-control state, I battled the piercing cold and</p>
<p>hit a lovely soiree …."</p>
<p> "I'm not a party girl," she said. "I get exhausted and am in</p>
<p>bed by 11 p.m. to watch Law &amp; Order</p>
<p>every single night." Her favorite bar is Marie's Crisis, a piano bar in the</p>
<p>West Village where she sings along to show tunes with her girlfriends. "It's</p>
<p>like gay Cheers ," she said.</p>
<p> Ms. Kopelman pokes fun at her world in "Eye Spy," but for</p>
<p>those familiar with her connections, her choice of parties has raised more than</p>
<p>one eyebrow. One week she mocked the "Muffies" at the opening of the Winter</p>
<p>Antiques Show at the Armory on Park Avenue, though it's a committee her father</p>
<p>chairs. (A photograph of her at the party also turned up in the March issue of Quest .) The previous column gushed</p>
<p>about a Winter Antiques Show preview dinner, hosted at her friend socialite</p>
<p>Marjorie Gubelmann's home. In an act of dizzying cross-nepotism, she covered</p>
<p>the December event for S.A.B.'s junior benefit committee-which Ms. Kopelman</p>
<p>co-founded in 1999-at the new Chanel boutique in Soho. This time she added a</p>
<p>disclaimer, stating, "My dad works for Chanel, but I swear I'd rip on it if it</p>
<p>was lame." And in the May issue of W ,</p>
<p>Ms. Kopelman will appear in an advertising spread for De Beers jewelers</p>
<p>featuring "it girls" (read: celebrity offspring), including Kidada Jones, China</p>
<p>Chow, Zoë Cassavetes and Kate Driver. She wore a Chanel gown for the shoot.</p>
<p> In addition to her column, Ms. Kopelman, who works out of</p>
<p>her apartment, is keeping busy with "10 jobs," which include writing editorial</p>
<p>content for Polo.com and adapting a children's story for Nickelodeon. She's</p>
<p>also writing a novel, tentatively titled Resilient</p>
<p>Little Muscle , after the last line in Ms. Kopelman's favorite movie, Hannah and Her Sisters . Ms. Kopelman and</p>
<p>Ms. Doyle have also finished three more screenplays, one of which, Delayed Reaction , was recently optioned</p>
<p>by Indyssey, a film company owned by Katrina Pavlos, a socialite who appeared</p>
<p>in one of Ms. Kopelman's columns.</p>
<p> "I'm happy to do it for</p>
<p>a while," Ms. Kopelman said of "Eye Spy" via e-mail. "I do totally feel like</p>
<p>it's great for material. I always love parlaying over-the-top personalities</p>
<p>into characters, because honestly, some people in New York are stranger than</p>
<p>fiction."</p>
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