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Noise
Pollution? Fill'er up!
By Lloyd Grove Washington Post Staff Writer 1/16/03
We
like both Los Angeles pundit Arianna Huffington and New York Post
gossip czar Richard Johnson, so we really don't want to get in the
middle of their bitter little spat. Alas, we have no choice.
Yesterday
Huffington phoned us to complain that Johnson has deliberately misrepresented
her ongoing jihad against gas-guzzling sport utility vehicles. Johnson
-- a proud SUV owner who on Monday devoted much of his Page Six
column to the "Detroit Project," Huffington's anti-SUV
ad campaign -- accused her and her Hollywood cohorts of hypocrisy.
In
a letter signed by movie producer Lawrence Bender, talent agent
Ariel Emanuel -- brother of Rep. Rahm Emanuel (D-Ill.) -- and Laurie
David, wife of writer-comedian Larry David, Huffington scolded New
York Post editor Col Allan: "You have an obligation to [retract
the item], as we have already been approached by other media outlets
that are using this fabricated article as a foundation for their
own stories."
Their
beef: Johnson's item described the group as "Hollywood celebrities
[and] ... hypocrites who consume huge quantities of fossil fuels
in their stretch limos, Gulfstream jets and oversized Beverly Hills
mansions," and identified television mogul Norman Lear -- who
once built a 21-car garage, the item says -- as "spearheading
the conservation crusade." Page Six claimed that Mercedes-Benz
SUV driver Gwyneth Paltrow has appeared in the commercials linking
gas-guzzling to terrorism. "Norman Lear is only one of more
than a 1,800 individual contributors to The Detroit Project,"
wrote Huffington et al. "He is not 'spearheading' the project."
As for Paltrow, she hasn't appeared in any anti-SUV commercials,
and "she has had no contact whatsoever with the Detroit Project,"
they added. "We expect an apology and correction immediately."
We'd
advise Huffington & Co. not to hold their breath. "Arianna
lives in a 9,000-square-foot house with a swimming pool," Johnson
told us. "I imagine that it takes a lot of BTUs to air-condition
in the summer and heat in the winter, and I'm sure the pool is heated."
Johnson
also scorched Huffington's willingness to hitch rides on her powerful
friends' corporate jets. "Saying that she can do it because
there's an empty seat," Johnson argued, "is a little like
saying 'the elephant's already dead, so I might as well buy the
ivory.' "
Huffington's
reply: "As any fifth-grader can tell you, it's a simple problem
of algebra: If a commercial airliner is going from Los Angeles to
Washington, and a corporate jet is already leaving on the same trip,
and you take a seat on the corporate jet, how much extra oil is
burned? Zero!"
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