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Megan Hustad

Stepping in GOOP

Gwyneth Paltrow Mark Stewart/Camera Press/Retna Gwyneth Paltrow's new website about living the way-too-good life could not have launched at a worse time.

In the beginning, there was GOOP. When it launched in September, Gwyneth Paltrow's oddly named venture into the World Wide Web consisted of nothing but a spare gray and white design and a vague promise of future inspiration. “My life is good because I am not passive about it,” Paltrow wrote in her inaugural address, and she had some advice to give: “Don’t be lazy. Workout and stick with it. GOOP. Make it great.”

Just recently, Paltrow began adding more content to the site, under the five categories MAKE, GO, GET, SEE, DO. She sends out a weekly newsletter with hints for cooking, baking, shopping, eating, traveling, art gallery-going—in short, how to make each day beautiful. "Cook a meal for someone you love. Pause before reacting. Clean out your space."

“The hotels are on the pricey side," Paltrow writes on the site’s GO section, "but my GOOP girls are doing some research into some more affordable places, which we will personally try before recommending."

GOOP, Paltrow enthused, will encourage us to "Invest in what's real."

And what's real, judging from the first GOOP newsletters, is a sugar-free diet and a pair of Giuseppe Zanotti gray pumps. The site is more about an aspirational (read: unattainable) lifestyle than helpful tips. In the current reality-based market, Gwyneth’s timing could not have been more awkward. In fact, she may have gone from a venerable fashion icon to a new irrelevancy almost overnight.

Paltrow amply deserves her style icon status, and the venture may have looked glamorous two years ago, but the shaky economy has swiftly and effectively rendered the ability to look smashing while disembarking from a trans-Atlantic flight somewhat…less pressing. What might have seemed a slight stretch to members of her intended audience just a few months back is now likely to induce cramps or at least giggles. As layoffs mount and airlines cut routes, suggesting a quick trip to the Prado sounds less madcap sophisticate, more just disconnected with the world. Paltrow, usually so self-possessed, seems somewhat hung out to dry here. A heart necklace from Chopard is a "fun idea"? Well, sure! Who needs electricity anyway?

So if it’s not too soon to talk about potential upsides to our financial meltdown, I'd propose that a temporary moratorium on celebrity lifestyle recommendations may be one of them. I've long been fixated, low-budget Edith Wharton-like, on what happens when different strata of society rub up against each other. Is it possible that now, brandishing one's piles of money could become a career liability? On GOOP, for example, Paltrow recommends an extended stay at London's Blakes Hotel, where a night in a standard double costs £265 ($475) exclusive of 17.5 percent VAT. Paltrow also plugs a Zooey gray T-shirt ($58) and pairs it with Alice + Olivia tights and black Bottega Veneta riding boots ($975).

To be fair, GOOP does get the balance between high- and low-end right on occasion. "It could be Zara, it could be Balenciaga,” Paltrow writes in her November newsletter, juxtaposing a down-market retailer with a legendary couture house, “but a well-cut, well-proportioned black dress has gotten me through many a fashion crisis." She just might be one of us, after all! But then it’s back to a Tod's cashmere trench.

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December 4, 2008 | 6:02am
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JABMICH

Paltrow has stepped in it....big time. The site is an absolute insult to intelligence of bright ( young and old) women everywhere.

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6:54 am, Dec 4, 2008

shopreese

just looked at the site..ouch...i have a feeling 2 or 3 weeks of living this "lifestyle" might beat sarah palin's $150,000 (as of today $180,000) shopping spree by a mile...

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9:12 am, Dec 4, 2008

Veronicaxy

"our judgments are merely an indication of where we are at spiritually."

My husband is a psychologist and I hear stories about what people have survived in their lifetime, it's mind boggling. I'm amazed some of them are even standing alive given what they lived through, 'wrecked, standing and functioning' can be a major achievement.

I know you admire this guy's pronouncement but I actually think it's the perfect ending to your point about the elitism and shallowness of GOOP. You really don't know squat until you've talked with someone, and that kind of compassion (and lack of glib judgment) is a hallmark of spirituality. What they survived might speak far more of their spiritual strength than what many others ever had to muster.

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10:11 am, Dec 4, 2008

Helena1940Handbasket

Celebrities are self-absorbed and always sure the average person is interested in what they have to say and what they are doing. Your article supports my observation.

Paltrow and mate are awash in millions. Neither has to work another day in their life. The majority reading at DB cannot say the same. I do hope their lives continue to be blessed .... but, I don't believe a self-indulgent site is a path to sharing those considerable blessings of wealth and fame.

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11:37 am, Dec 4, 2008

This user is no longer registered.

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11:47 am, Dec 4, 2008

sjburris

It's usually disappointing when movie stars begin to take themselves seriously as cultural commentators, isn't it? Embarrassment for them is the most common feeling. The banality of Ms. Paltrow's site is exquisite, but that requires an ironic reading of it, and I don't think irony is her long suit.

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12:52 pm, Dec 4, 2008

Tridentway1

It's comforting to know that celebrity and money do not automatically guarantee the validity of the words that come out of your mouth. It's the sign of the times, just ask the Big 3, the Treasurer, and Wall Street.

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3:39 pm, Dec 4, 2008

JdeLondon

Oh Dear Gwennie... it would've been better if you'd stayed in bed, flicked on the TV and eaten chocolates all day long. Can luxury shopping be life affirming? Hmm, maybe I need to cool off with some �8.00 per bottle Kabbalah water..."yummy, I feel cleansed to my core". You imagine that we want your advice...um... we don't.

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3:43 pm, Dec 4, 2008

signe1

There is no appropriate time or place for GOOP. It once again reminds us (if anybody needs reminding) that celebrities need to come face to face with the poor and broken middle class and join the volunteers who are trying to make a difference. A passing, pitying glance while strolling down Fifth Avenue ain't gonna cut it.......

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3:54 pm, Dec 4, 2008

maitriquest

So am I the only one who is having scenes from one of Paltrow's best movies, Emma, flash into mind?

This all reminds me of the scolding Emma receives from Mr. Knightly about being completely insensitive to the challenging plight of others who are doing their very best, but have to struggle in ways Emma cannot imagine. I used to so enjoy reading about Paltrow, even her own writings, I found her fresh and insightful, but now I feel as if the wealth and glow of being rich and famous has blinded her. Mr. Knightly we need you!

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4:26 pm, Dec 4, 2008

carter

GOOP me with a spoon! Has she always been this repugnant or is this a recent development? The crack she made a few years ago about how the British were smarter, or more interesting, or whatever the heck it was, than Americans was deeply obnoxious, but I must admit that there was a part of me that wondered if she might not be right. Now I realize that Gwynnie apparently doesn't actually know from smart and interesting; she's not just boorish, she's a bore!

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2:24 am, Dec 5, 2008

archizoo

Hmmm...and a click on one of the recommended gifts yields a warning from my browser saying that the linked site is an "attack site" and identifies the site components that will be used to steal private data from my computer...first time it's happened in years.

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6:57 am, Dec 5, 2008

BernieO

Paltrow is just copying Oprah who in recent years has continually pushed luxurey and touted expensive items as affordable. (A blouse over $100 is not a reasonable price for the average American.) In between flogging extravagance Oprah has shows about living frugally, chiding people for running up debt. Talk about being out of touch! It will be interesting to see if she changes her tune given our economic woes.

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8:54 am, Dec 5, 2008

agering

Carter:

Of course Paltrow has always been this repugnant---and hypocritical. Her husband writes "Fair Trade" on his hand while his wife advertises for Tod's. If she read, say, Roberto Saviano's _Gomorrah_, she'd know that such Italian goods are made by organized crime's slave labor.

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9:13 am, Dec 5, 2008

NewOrlinNC

She portrays herself as such a liberal Democrat who cares about the plight of the average citizen. Instead, she is just a money-hungry, over-exposed fashion-obsessed celebrity who never had any relevance to anyone beyond celebrity watchers. Whenever she opens her uneducated mouth (I'm sorry but Spence is a HIGH SCHOOL; she has ZERO college degree) to talk politics, I want to gag. If she really cares about the country and wants to change it for the better, why didn't she start a website that focuses on charity work instead of absurdly conspicuous consumption?

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12:31 pm, Dec 5, 2008
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Stepping in GOOP

by Megan Hustad

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