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Saultxyca 06/27/2012 05:32 AM Report
It's the wee-tiny hours but I just had to watch this treasure of an interview again. Nora Ephron is, no doubt, up there lounging on a warm, bright star, nibbling one of those special SF cookies — and taking notes. Her joyful recipe lives on.
natashaarora 06/26/2012 08:11 PM Report
Always elegant and funny, RIP dear Nora Ephron. Your work was always a joy to consume. As per this interview, I hope you had the chance to enjoy your last meal: a hot dog! Charlie, you've lost another good friend. My sincere condolences.
Pat 12/19/2010 07:30 AM Report
Would like to know what her favorite San Francisco cookie is....
sugar 12/06/2010 09:36 PM Report
How I would love to have been a part of that conversation! Just emailed my favorite quote re aging to the show and hope it will find its way to Nora & Charlie. At age 78, I can vouch for it even 'tho it was sent to me years ago by the editor of the magazine: ""As you grow old you lose your interest in sex, your friends drift away, your children often ignore you. There are many other advantages, of course, but these would seem to me to be the outstanding ones." --Richard Needham in the Globe and Mail (Toronto)
-----from "The Riviera Reporter" (Feb/Mar 03) the English-language magazine for Riviera residents.
REMant 12/06/2010 12:06 PM Report
They should not let ppl with kids (underage at least) get divorced, period. If they are going to do that, there's no point to marriage in the first place. If you want to feel better about divorce, let the other person divorce you, not the other way 'round. But it's only women, who worry about marriage contracts. That's a fault with the gender. Really, how does failure enter into it?
Ppl these days forget things because, unlike John Adams, they don't keep diaries, and certainly would not reflect on them if they did. (I wrote the foregoing before Ms Ephron came on). That is, because they want to forget. Or rather they don't want to know. Ms Ephron, herself, seems to be another of those self-absorbed personalities of our times. Maybe she should bequeath her brain to science. Tho I do think she should get checked for Alzheimer's. The book's title must certainly be simply a reversal of Casablanca: "I remember every detail. The Germans wore gray, you wore blue."
Personally, I found journalism anything but romantic. On the one hand, the subjects were generally idiots, and the readers worse, leaving any earnest, honest, intelligent reporter in a real quandary.