Tag Archives: Paris Hilton

Weekly Juice – Liz Goldwyn Vintage No. 2, Dana Davis Pop-Up Boutique, Kimberly Ovitz Sample Sale, Jimmy Choo for H&M, Plantine pop up bakery at Anya Hindmarch

L.A. Native Dana Davis Launches Pop-Up Boutique
Open now until Dec. 3 at 8459 Melrose Place next to Frederic Fekkai
Hours: 11am – 5pm. Closed Sundays and Thanksgiving, Nov. 25 – 29.

Shoes from Dana Davis’ fall-winter collection.
Launch party this week attended by Anjelica Huston, L.A. Native Paris Hilton, Crystal Lourd, Jerry Bruckheimer, Liane Weintraub and Jamie Tisch, came to support their designer pal and fellow social fixture. L.A. Native Dana Davis is the granddaughter of Barbara Davis.

FROM LA TIMES: Davis was inspired to create her line of ultra-comfortable shoes when she was having trouble standing for long periods of time due to foot pain caused by her diabetes. She and her family have raised over $75 million for diabetes research, with the Carousel of Hope ball fund-raiser being founded in her honor. She developed a shoe with an orthotic sole that’s as cushion-y as any Easy Spirit, but far more fashionable. In fact, Davis has figured out how to increase the heels on pumps to almost 6 inches, while still maintaining the comfort of the built-in orthotic. Those heels will be offered for spring and are sure to be seen on any celebrity who cares about comfort while walking the red carpet.

Dana Davis with L.A. Natives Paris and Kathy Hilton
Barbara Davis and Isabella Davis
Pop-up resale shop at 8420 Melrose:
Feature amazing pieces from fashion editors, stylists, models, socialites, and celebrities closets through Friday, November 13, everyday from 10 am-6 pm. Chanel, Valentino, Gucci, Missoni, Pucci, Roberto Cavalli, Marni, Chloe, Lanvin, Marc Jacobs, Christian Louboutin, Jimmy Choo, Balenciaga & much more at up to 70% off!

Amazing clothing, shoes, bags and accessories.

*Portion of proceeds to benefit the LA Union Rescue Mission homeless shelter in downtown LA

Kimberly Ovitz Sample Sale this weekend:
KIMBERLY OVITZ sample sale this weekend  from her Spring and Fall ‘09 collections featuring one of a kind items that were never put into the line from $10 -$600
Saturday, November 14th
11am – 3pm
2601 Colorado Avenue
Santa Monica, CA 90404
Cash or credit card only

Decadestwo open pop-up shop this weekend in Brentwood “Post 26″:
Christos Garkinos and Cameron Silver of Decadestwo are thrilled to announce their 3rd pop-up shop “Post 26″ at The Brentwood Country Mart.
Our pop-up shop dates/hours:
Friday, November 13th–10 am – 7 pm
Saturday, November 14th–10 am – 7 pm
Sunday, November 15th–12 pm – 5 pm
Expect Balenciaga, Chanel, Gucci, Lanvin, Louis Vuitton, Marc Jacobs, Prada and so many more.
The Country Mart
225 26th Street
Santa Monca, CA
Jimmy Choo for H&M collection debuts in 200 stores worldwide this Saturday, November 14th:
This limited edition collection for ladies will include shoes, bags, accessories and for the first time ever: apparel. To further celebrate the collaboration, Jimmy Choo will extend its design vision to men’s apparel, shoes, bags and accessories.
Faux fur vest, $99
Shoes, $129
Suede dress, $249
Studded belt, $59.95

Plantine pop up bakery at Anya Hindmarch on Robertson Blvd.

Liz Goldwyn Vintage No. 2!!‏
L.A. Native Liz Goldwyn is continuing to offer her delightful vintage finds to savvy ebay shoppers! Check out the Liz Goldwyn Vintage section at lovely BungalowTwentyFour on ebay Sunday November 15, 12pm PST thru Sunday November 22, 12pm PST to peruse and purchase enviable vintage designer duds and accessories. Auction No. 2 includes designer vintage spanning from the 50¹s to the 90¹s from houses such as Lanvin, Cavalli, Galanos and Dior. Direct link to Liz Goldwyn Vintage auction:
http://tiny.cc/LizGoldwynVintage

BungalowTwentyFour:
http://stores.shop.ebay.com/bungalow
twentyfour

Rache Pally
456 S. La Brea 323-932-0907
M-S 11-7 Sun 12-6
This Saturday My House Presents L.A. Native Rachel Pally Pop up boutique Launch Party


Tesoro / Tweak99

L.A. Native Tara Riceberg’s shop is open for the holidays again. Gorgeously pre-wrapped gifts $99 or less. In a new location at 8383 W. 3rd Street, opposite Joan’s on 3rd.
http://www.facebook.com/l/aa7ff;www.tweak99.com

Henri Bendel’s opens at the Beverly Center next week
Beverly Center, 2nd floor

L.A. Native David Katzenberg directs "Hard Times" on MTV

Original post date: 9/1/09

Bret Ratner just gave first-time director David Katzenberg of MTV’s “Hard Times” the thumbs up. David is also an L.A. Native, son of Jeffrey Katzenberg, and Nicky Hilton’s BF. Ratner said via Twitter: “Its his first directing gig and he did a great job!

On July 9th, MTV announced “Hard Times,” a coming-of-age comedy created and executive produced by David Katzenberg and Seth Grahame-Smith. The teen series, whose plot is drawing comparisons to HBO’s older-skewing new comedy “Hung,” chronicles the hellish life of RJ Berger, a desperately unpopular 15-year-old.

David also has a twin sister Laura …

Photo: Nicky Hilton and David Katzenberg at the 2008 MTV Video Music Awards in Hollywood (from MTV)

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Truffle Exclusive: Real Housewives of Beverly Hills cast revealed

Kathy Hilton, Kim Richards, Kyle Richards - Photo by © Glenn Harris

“We hear Kyle & Kim Richards, aunts of Paris Hilton, are signed to the Real Housewives of Beverly Hills … shhhhh!”

Though Bravo has not confirmed it, I’ve have heard several reports that at least one of Kathy Hilton’s beautiful sisters could very well be the belle of Bravo’s Real Housewives of Beverly Hills, which officially begins production in March!

Bravo has been deliberating between two groups of five hopeful Beverly Hills housewives  since the Spring but I have just gotten word production will begin in March, which means its decision time!

“Bravo wanted to build the cast around some Hiltons, yes Kyle is one of them, I think Kim too … but it ain’t over till the fat lady sings ” – an anonymous source close to the project told The Daily Truffle

My source also tells me Lisa Todd, owner of Villa Blanca in Beverly Hills, and a close friend of Kyle, is in the running as well.

Sources also say it’s possible Kim will be cast or else she could be featured in sister Kyle’s scenes.

The source says: “Production officially begins in March and the cast has a 10 month commitment. Bravo is continuing with callbacks now for the remaining spots on the show.”

Kim Richards and Kyle Richards, sisters of Kathy Hilton, are also the aunts of Paris Hilton and Nicky Hilton! First Paris, then Kathy, even Nicky’s boyfriend David Katzenberg has a semi-scripted show on MTV now called “Hard Times”. It makes sense that Kathy’s sisters would follow.

Kyle Richards (born in Hollywood in 1969) is an L.A. native and is five years apart from Kim Richards (born 1964) and ten years apart from Kathy Hilton (nee Kathy Richards, born 1959).

Kyle has been on niece Paris’s two reality series The Simple Life and My New BFF. She is married to Mauricio Umansky, a realtor in Beverly Hills and Beverly Park, at Hilton and Hyland, the same place Paris’ dad Rick Hilton works.

Kim and Kyle were both accomplished actresses – here are some of my favorite credits …

Kim Richards: Escape to Witch Mountain (1975), No Deposit, No Return (1976) and Return to Witch Mountain (1978), Black Snake Moan (2006), Tuff Turf (1985), Meatballs Part II (1984), “Diff’rent Strokes” (1979), “Little House on the Prairie” (1974)

James Spader, Kim Richards and Robert Downey Jr. in"Tuff Turf"

Kyle Richards: “ER” (21 episodes, 1998-2006), “Little House on the Prairie”, Halloween (1979), and episodes of “Love Boat”, “Fantasy Island”, and “Beverly Hills, 90210″. She also played the younger version of her sister’s character in “Escape to Witch Mountain (1975)”. Both sisters were on “Disneyland.”

Kyle and her husband Mauricio Umansky were living in Bel Air near Mulholland – the home is currently for sale for $2,925,000, lowered from $3,450,000.

Lisa Todd aka Lisa Vanderpump Todd co-owns Villa Blanca in Bev Hills with her husband Kevin Todd, a British restaurateur. Lisa is/was an actress; she appeared in “Baywatch” during the mid-1990′s.

If these two are in the show, we will likely be visiting them at their really pretty home in Beverly Park. Pictures of Lisa Todd’s house in Beverly Park:

Last year, we were told the network was still deliberating over two groups of five ladies that had been selected over the summer. Bravo’s Real Housewives of Orange County was cast in much the same process – asking casting directors to develop two story-lines around two different casts – and then letting Bravo executives and producers pick between the two.

I am guessing Bravo was so amped up about the Richards sisters (who wouldn’t be!), they have been working with them to develop an agreeable storyline and maybe even cater to their schedules. Bravo has been quiet about their unexpected delay in casting and it’s almost certainly something along these lines.

The network’s call backs for those extra three spots are still happening – I’ve heard reports on that I’ve been asked not to discuss tell the cast is solidified. But just for fun, here are some hints at the contending finalists – keeping them extremely vague and will NEVER reveal those not cast unless they email me personally at caroline@dailytruffle.net and tell me it’s ok. Best of luck ladies! – add us on facebook! http://www.facebook.com/dailytruffle

1. not caucasian (out of running – name will not be revealed)

2. has lots of brothers (cast!! cant mention named – per Bravo!) *UPDATE: This was ADRIANNE!

3. an L.A. native (out of running – name will not be revealed)

4. flies (out of running – name will not be revealed)

5. something O (out of running – name will not be revealed)

6. rhymes with Yale (out of running – name will not be revealed)

7. Brentwood dweller (out of running – name will not be revealed)

8. Has 3 names! (cast!! cant mention named – per Bravo!) **UPDATE: This was Taylor Ford Armstrong!!

9. as for the rumor spreading about Nicole Richie’s mother – none of our sources have reported this, yet.

Check back with us as this story develops.

Pre-Opening for New Club ‘Hollywood Playhouse’

In L.A., It’s not enough to be invited to the “opening” of a new club, in fact – that’s usually not a good thing. If you get a Grand Opening invitation in your inbox – know that you have fallen into the wrong camp! IF you are in the loop in Los Angeles, you never go to a club opening; you go to pre-openings, sneak peaks, or private events at the not-yet-opened venue. For instance, three years ago before Shag opened, I had my birthday party there with my friend Dory Benami, a friend of the owner’s, Shareen. The next night, Vanity Fair hosted a private party as well. Shag then opened the following weekend … Tonight, Alison Melnick, an L.A. promoter and celebrity wrangler, gave her birthday at the soon-to-open Playhouse. This much awaited club has promised to feature live acrobats swinging from the ceiling all night and rumor has it you can expect your bottle service waiters to jump up on tables and pull bunnies from their hats at any given moment.

Just when I thought this was too good to be true, I ran into my buddy Nico Golfar, a bit of a tech expert, who explained to me that Playhouse has another magic trick:

The club has installed a Funktion-One sound system – which uses a frequency-emitting technology to make sound waves pass through each other – as opposed to bounce off and all over the place. This has the effect of allowing voices to be heard in the club no matter how loud the volume. I was wondering why I didn’t have a headache and wasn’t annoyed despite my drunk date. I am told Playhouse is one of two club in L.A. to bother with the high priced ticket to give club-goers a superior experience. Nico, also a native Brit, went on to tell me this is very standard for clubs in New York and London, once again, defining L.A. as a culture who’s participants simply do not demand quality. A manager of the Nobu chain once told me the difference between Nobu patrons across the globe is as follows: clients in London demand quality in their food, whereas the clients at their New York locations are picky about service. And at their Malibu and La Cienega locations, he says people don’t notice either – they just want a table near the door!

The funniest moment of the evening was when the Fire Marshall came to do the usual head count – as they do every night all over Hollywood. Three acrobat vixens were entertaining a table-full of club-goers and literally – as the Fire Marshall was squeezing behind them – all three lite up Sparklers. Yes! Sparklers. It was like a fire marshall’swet dream. They demanded to see the stock where the sparklers had come from and each fireman stormed out with a couple boxes each! That surely cost club owner Rob Vinokur a pretty penny – though it’s doubtful he was aware of the obvious infringement to safety standards; I’m guessing someone else’s head rolled!

Other interesting partons of the night to attend Allison’s birthday – Casey Johnson (set to inherit the Johnson and Johnson trust), Jessica Meisels (founded of celebrity-connected Fingerprint PR), Samaire Armstron (actress, Dirty Sexy Money), David Katzenberg (son of movie producer Jeffrey Katzenberg and boyfriend of Nicky Hilton), Elliot Mintz (the on-again off-again publicist to Paris Hilton and many others) and singer Eve.

Acrobats hang from the ceiling of Playhouse

"Funktion One Sound System" is run off laptops

 

Fire Marshall sneaks some pics, after confiscating sparklers from the acrobats

Pubicist Jessica Miesels with heiress Casey Johnson, Right: Alison Melnick with singer Eve

Allison Melnick & Samaire Armstrong, David Katzenberg, Allison Melnick, Elliot Mintz

Playhouse owner Rob Vinokur and Igor Z with Playhouse Servers (Uniforms by Kelly Nishimoto)

An interesting perk of the night – “Too-Faced” make-up stationed ”touch-up” booths through-out the club, and gave away cosmetics. Birthday girl Allison Melnick geting a touch-up.

Me leaving without my date - @DoryBenami is too wild for me

Building owner and L.A. nightlife veteran Rick Calamaro leaving the Playhouse

Lines are still endless, Hollywood has a new club in town ...

 

Tights I Like


givenchy fall 2007 couture pumps.jpg

Awards Season: Oscar Week at the Chateau


My favorite part of Oscar Week was when Patrick McMullen yelled at me for not wearing fur. This only brought me closer to the boy I was dating who said he loved my Ralph Lauren puffer, and to my mother later that night who, upon hearing the story, freaked out and ordered her furs out of Saks storage.

Oscar Week in LA is kind of like riding the bus. You get off at all the stops, see the same people, get back on the bus and so forth. I heard Nick Berrgruen, a European banker whom I’ve never met, was having a good bash at the Chateau and so I went by with my buddies journalist Matt Donnelly and UK writer Christoph Hargreaves-Allen. We shim shimmied across the street from the W Magazine party at the Sunset Towers, and before that it was the SOHO house pop-up club at 9200. The on-again-off-again Vanity Fair “maybe party” did happen tho not at Morton’s and no one went. Well, ok, a few people went. I am not allowed to hang out with celebrities and producers, a rule my mother implemented when I got to high school … so the Chateau was pushing it as it was.

Here are Shell and Craig Cardon with their friend designer Monique L’Huillier and her husband. Other friends at the party were Christian Lamb, gorgeous DP to Madonna, with two sexy friends – and the ever-lovely Kimberly Bini with husband Nic, and Chris Vietor. Other guests include: Mike Bauruch, Jason Binn, Russel Simmons, Jason Pomeranc, Ben Silverman, Peter Morton, Linda Evangelista, Adrian Grenier, John Mayer, Lara Shriftman, and just to remind us what planet we’re on, the party compass herself, Paris Hilton with kid sis Nik in tow.

My friend Christian Lamb
Mike Baruch and me
Kimberly Bini & guest
Jason Pomerac, Devon Aoki

Paris & Nicky Hilton, Levin Rambin Cameron Richardson


Fabian Baside with friends, Devon Aoki


Linda Evangelista with Peter Morton, Russel Simmons and guest
Adrian Grenier
Photos from New York Social Diary. Link directly to this post.

Dull guest list? Call the star wranglers – article from L.A. Times – April 02, 2005

By Audrey Davidow, Special to The Times
April 02, 2005

As Hollywood party pros, Joshua Richman, Shane Powers and Hartwell (just Hartwell), founders of the Alliance, have picked up a few insights into poseur behavior. They know, for example, that crashers talk too much. “They start dropping names, which is a surefire way to get us to stop listening,” says Richman, the eccentric of the group who never leaves home without his black fedora and 8-ball-capped cane. “Herbs” he calls them. As in, ” ‘Are you really going to let that ‘Herb’ in?’ “

But running some of the most ironclad events and parties in town isn’t just about knowing whom to let in and whom to keep out. It’s about getting the right people there in the first place. The self-described trio of “event strategists” are the type who have the pull to BlackBerry Keanu — and get a rapid-fire response. In Hollywood’s oversaturated social scene, where the competition for best bash, awards or charity event is fierce, they’re in high demand.

Longtime club promoters, Richman, Powers and Hartwell formed the Alliance five years ago. Though they don’t have an office and they keep the numbers unlisted, the Alliance is part of a growing niche industry in Hollywood: event coordinators who guarantee clients a cool affair for upward of $10,000 per event. This new breed of soiree specialist exists in a gray area somewhere between entertainment marketing executive and hands-on event planner.

They don’t dream up wild centerpieces or construct catwalks or even mastermind strategic seating arrangements. Instead, they’re purveyors of cool, hip-makers called on by clients such as Heineken, Sony and Dennis Publishing to secure over-the-top venues, groovy DJs and tailored guest lists.

For corporate clients looking to up the hip quotient of their brands, attaching companies such as the Alliance to a party is sort of like attaching Julia Roberts to a movie. They know how to draw a crowd — and even more important, the right crowd — by whatever means necessary, whether it’s personal persuasion, a cellphone call list to die for or even lucrative appearance fees to corral rising stars.

Inside the GM “Ten” fashion show on a recent Tuesday night in Hollywood, more than 1,500 mover-shaker-tastemakers were knocking back Stoli tonics. Outside it was pouring pellets, but the Alliance trio was too distracted to notice. “A&D are 30 seconds away,” chirped a perky young publicist, microphone in ear, clipboard in hand. Richman darted through the puddles in his Louis Vuitton Air Jordans to meet them. Ashton Kutcher hugged him, Demi Moore kissed him, and like some kind of covert-ops event specialist, he fast-tracked the power couple through the crowd and into the SkyBar-styled lounge for the cars and stars fashion show.

“They know how to have a great time,” said Kutcher from his front-row seat. “Their parties have the more substantive people — people you can actually have a conversation with, as opposed to just the eye candy.” He paused to take in the view, then added with a grin, “but they have plenty of eye candy too.”

Tom Freydl, director of Ketchum Entertainment Marketing, tapped into the trend last fall when he was faced with the challenge of promoting a Minneapolis-based computer service called the Geek Squad. Freydl hired the Alliance to make the geek-fest chic. Together with party planner Jeffrey Best, the team delivered a blowout bash at the ArcLight Cinemas with a guest list that included David Arquette, Anthony Kiedis of the Red Hot Chili Peppers and a brigade of long-legged babes.


“Honestly, I had never been to a party with that level of coolness,” says Freydl. “People stayed until the very end. That never happens at a corporate event.”

Jessica Meisels knows all about coolness — and the power of celebrity. Meisels, a self-described “talent coordinator,” and her partner Greg Link are the co-owners of the publicity and events firm Fingerprint Communications. They are regularly called on by clients such as W Magazine and the Indy Racing League to utilize a Rolodex that includes everyone from philanthropist Barbara Davis (Meisels is friends with Davis’ grandson Brandon) to Paris Hilton (they’ve known each other since Meisels’ New York days).

Corporate can be hip

Pumping up corporate fetes with star power is nothing new; it’s long been an unpaid part of the PR package. But with the recent boom of weekly celeb rags and “Entertainment Tonight” rip-offs, and the free publicity they provide, it’s become a big business, one that commands up to $50,000 if you include budget for celebrity bait — gifts, transportation and charity donations in the stars’ name. Top publicity houses such as BNC (Bragman Nyman Cafarelli) regularly hire well-connected independent operators such as Fingerprint and the Alliance to jump-start their clients’ events with some trophy guests.

But those in the field bristle at the label of “celebrity wranglers” (try celebrity recruiter, liaison or even guest list manager) and fill out their job descriptions with other duties including marketing, event consulting and production.

“It just sounds so tacky,” says Ashlee Margolis, who left her PR gig two years ago to start her own wrangling business. Still, Margolis, an L.A. scenester who grew up palling around with Quincy Jones’ daughter, Rashida, and is now a go-to wrangler for the charity luncheon set, accepts that the title comes with the territory. She works out of her house and doesn’t even have a business card, but if she did, she says it would have to have a lasso on it.

“When I tell people outside of the industry what I do, they have no idea what I’m talking about. I should be working on a ranch,” she jokes. “That would make more sense.”

Semantics aside, they’re all linked by their ability to deliver the in-crowd and help their clients’ fetes stand out in an increasingly glutted market filled with ubiquitous award shows, the charity dinner du jour and competing blowout parties.

“There’s so much more competition now,” says David Pinsky, director of entertainment marketing at Motorola. “It’s no longer ‘let’s just throw a party.’ You have to make it the party that everyone’s talking about, the event of the season.”

In other words, a $300 gift bag isn’t going to cut it anymore. To attract the cranky, partied-out corps of Hollywood celebs, you need to guarantee an event’s “it” factor.

To do so, they all agree, you’ve got to ensure the right mix of people. Celebs may get you the press, but they don’t necessarily guarantee a good time. Giving good guest list is a strategic balancing act that requires just the right mix of stars, industry-ites and beautiful people, explains Meisels.

A big part of the promoting game, then, is mastering the degrees-of-separation strategy. “It’s who knows who, who can put in the personal call, who has the relationship,” says Jose Martinez, who heads up celebrity recruiting at Harrison & Shriftman, one of the few big publicity firms where all of the celeb outreach is done in-house.

If there’s no direct relationship, you work your way down. You want Nicole Kidman? Start with her pal Naomi Watts. If it’s Watts you want, invite her stylist, her trainer, her homeopath. Keeping tabs on their love lives is also key. Margolis managed to lure Charlize Theron to a charity benefit for the Aaliyah Memorial Fund last year wh
en Theron’s boyfriend, Stuart Townsend, agreed to be on the host committee. Once the connections are exhausted, it’s a matter of basic street-team tactics. Going out every night, partying like it’s their job, and spreading the word.

Yeah, but will they show?

Of course, any party thrower’s worst nightmare is that the talent won’t show. Shara Koplowitz, a former vice president at Harrison & Shriftman, narrowly averted that disaster a few years back at a party for hip-hop artist and producer Pharrell Williams at the Hard Rock Hotel in Las Vegas. “We thought it was a no-brainer,” says Koplowitz, who figured Williams’ clients — among them Snoop, Puffy and Justin Timberlake — would be sure to show. But half an hour into the event, the red carpet was still as empty as a bottle of Cristal on Sunday morning, and everyone, including the Hard Rock CEO, was freaking out. Koplowitz had no choice but to start begging.


A few years earlier, she’d worked with ‘N Sync’s charity, Challenge for the Children, and hit it off with Timberlake’s bodyguard. Over the years she sent him free stuff — a bottle of Tanqueray here, a cellphone there. So when she put out the pager-plea, Big Mike responded right away. Within 15 minutes, Timberlake was at the back door. “Next thing we know, the place was packed and Justin and Busta Rhymes are on stage singing together,” recalls Koplowitz. “It was my biggest save.”

Snagging the premium A-listers — the Toms, Brads and Halles — requires a little more maneuvering. There’s always the gifting game. Come to our party and we’ll give you a PlayStation, a Cartier necklace or VW Bug. Paying them to party is another strategy. But the price tags can be steep. According to Martinez, stars of the moment, such as Eva Longoria and Teri Hatcher, have been known to command $50,000 appearance fees. Attaching a charity or creating an award in their honor, he says, is a safer, cheaper bet. Better yet? Give an award to one of their pals.

Take, for example, the time he landed Tom Cruise for Movieline’s Young Hollywood Awards

. The hook? They were honoring “Jerry Maguire” director Cameron Crowe with a role model award, and Cruise agreed to present. Was the award just a ploy to get the A-lister to commit? Martinez won’t say. “But it was the Young Hollywood awards, and let’s face it, Cruise and Crowe aren’t exactly fresh faces anymore.”

Of course, things don’t always go so smoothly. Even if a celeb says yes to the invite, there’s never any guarantee they’ll actually show. “You work and work to confirm them, and you always know that 60-70% of them aren’t even going to make it,” says Koplowitz, who retired from wrangling last year.

As frustrating as it is, the flake factor is an inevitable — and necessary — part of the game. If A-listers were actually easy to pin down, celeb recruiters would be out of a job. No one understands that better than Koplowitz, who now works on the other side of the fence as a personal publicist, playing gatekeeper for the celebs she once courted. “Now I know just how many of those invites go straight into the trash.”





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