Her Wonderful Career
Posted on | August 4, 2010 | 40 Comments
OK, so I was sitting in my home office this afternoon and, as usual, CNBC was on the office TV. When I sit at my desk typing, the TV is behind me and off to the right side. It’s usually tuned to CNBC during the day so that by swiveling my chair slightly, I can glance over and catch the latest Dow Jones Industrial Average. When the financial cataclysm hits, I’ll be ready to blog it in real time.
So I was sitting here about 2:30 in the afternoon and CNBC was having a panel discussion about millionaires: How are the ultra-wealthy spending their money? What would be the impact of imposing new taxes on the rich? When I glanced over to check the Dow I saw this person:
Huh? She looks like a teenager. Yet the hosts of the show were treating this impossibly young person as if she were an authoritative source on the habits of the rich. Who could she be?
Some quick Googling determined that Chloe Malle is the daughter of actress Candace Bergen and film director Louis Malle and thus is, so to speak, born and bred for such work.
Honestly, she seems to be an excellent young reporter — here’s a very nice feature she did on zoning wars in the Hamptons, for example. And it is altogether admirable, I suppose, that a third-generation celebrity (her grandfather being the famed ventroloquist Edgar Bergen) is actually working for a living, rather than indulging in the Paris Hilton famous-for-being-famous lifestyle.
Nevertheless, just that morning I had exchanged e-mails with a now-successful writer who explained that, when she once spent a year trying to make it as a young freelancer in New York, the disheartening experience had driven her into a state of clinical depression. And I furthermore thought of some former interns I’d mentored and the difficulties they’ve experienced in their lives and careers. What would Monique Stuart or Deb McCown give for a shot at a job at the New York Observer, or to be featured on national TV at age 25?
Contemplating this, however, eventually led me back to a conclusion I reached long ago about the stupidity of envying people you think of as privileged. Having gotten to know a number of very successful people – attending parties at mansions and interviewing bold-face names — I discovered that the rich and famous aren’t usually the kind of snooty Thurton Howell III stereotypes many people imagine.
Financial success provides comforts and advantages, but most “rich” people work for their money, and deal with the same mundane hassles as anyone else. Hollywood’s portrayal of effete aristocrats indulging in idle luxury, their every whim attended to by butlers and maids and chauffeurs, doesn’t typify the lives of the rich people I personally know.
Envy is the most futile emotion because you can never really see inside the lives of the people you envy. Live long enough and pay close attention, and you’ll find that some people you thought of as having all the luck are, in fact, afflicted with private torment or stoically shouldering a burden that you never imagined. And in the final analysis, envy is ungodly, when we consider that ”he maketh his sun to rise on the evil and on the good, and sendeth rain on the just and on the unjust” (Matthew 5:45).
Let the judgment fall on me. Here I was, ready to dismiss Chloe Malle as a posh overprivileged debutante – Riverdale Country School, Brown University, etc. — until I Googled onto a profile of her in the January issue of Vanity Fair and saw this:
Would love to have dinner with: “My parents.”
Chloe’s father died of cancer when she was 10, you see. And in that one little wish — two words on a questionnaire — I caught a tiny glimpse of a human soul that feels real pain from a real loss.
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- http://theothermccain.com/2010/08/04/her-wonderful-career/?sms_ss=email Candice Bergen
- http://theothermccain.com/2010/08/04/her-wonderful-career/?sms_ss=email Candice Bergen
- http://theothermccain.com/2010/08/04/her-wonderful-career/?sms_ss=email Candice Bergen

