divorce

The Week in Gossip: Politics, Pistols, and a Bunch of B.S.

Friday, October 17th, 2008

Tempting Timberlake directs his fans to “Vote in the Box.” All of Hollywood is partaking in this movement to sway young peeps to exercise their democratic right to vote; most celebs just cross their fingers and cuss a lot to get the point across. But when JT croons, all the girls swoon, so he rocked an off-the-cuff version of his Emmy-winning SNL ditty at a Vegas “Last Chance for Change” rally last weekend.

KILL YOUR SATURDAY NIGHT PLANS. Sarah Palin is set to appear on SNL this weekend. “It would be fun to meet her, imitate her and keep on giving her new material,” said Palin about potentially sharing the stage with Tina Fey. A certain someone obviously doesn’t realize that the world isn’t laughing with her—just at her. But we’ll keep the vice-presidential nominee in the dark for the time being. I mean, that’s where she’s most comfortable, yeah?

Quote of the Week: “If she wins, I’m done . . . And by ‘I’m done,’ I mean I’m leaving Earth,” said Tina Fey to TVGuide on the topic of Sarah Palin. Whether Fey’s “leaving Earth” would be prompted by the demands of having to impersonate Palin week-after-week for the next four years or the mere idea of a Palin vice-presidency is left to our interpretation, but for the sake of being objective, I’ll tell you—she means the latter. (more…)

President, king, priest

Friday, October 19th, 2007

sarkocecilia.jpg

Consider for a minute the presidential personal-life narrative that is the big news in Paris this week.

French President Nicolas Sarkozy got a very quiet divorce on Thursday. He met his now-former wife Cecilia, a one-time model, when they were both married to other people. They had an affair, then divorced from their spouses and moved in together. Eventually they got married. This past year the campaign for the presidency apparently strained the marriage. Cecilia stopped attending formal functions. Then there was a brief unofficial separation during which she had a very public affair, including being captured by paparazzi strolling hand-in-hand with her lover through NYC. The first couple then reconciled but Cecilia’s heart wasn’t in it. Most famously she blew off a picnic with George and Laura Bush last month in Kennebunkport.

French political and media analysts are describing the story as a public soap opera. Discussion of whether it will damage the president concerns mostly the possibility that he will fall into depression, that he will experience the debilitating headaches that plagued him during the months of the separation and her affair. On the matter of perception, the story “may reinforce the image that he is just like the rest of us,” according to an analyst quoted by the Washington Post who wished to remain anonymous “when talking about Sarkozy’s personal life.” The decorous analyst went on to question whether such a perception would be positive or negative. “It’s an unanswered question,” he said, “because the office of the president here has monarchical overtones.”

Affairs, separations, flings, jealousy, divorces while in office—problem in France is the common humanity of it all. In the United States any bit of it would signal moral corruption, effectively constitute impeachable offenses and bring on political death. In France the president is perceived as a monarch. In the U.S. as a minister or priest.