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Airhead – Emily Maitlis (1)

As I was at that age. The conversation then takes a turn for the more surreal. Why Penguins? I ask. If you wanted to get the chocolate sides off whole, then surely Club bars or even the now defunct Montegos are infinitely more satisfying. That chocolate comes off in hard slabs, not soggy corners like Penguins. I do not have Brand’s backstory. His messy childhood hinterland. I cannot tell you the street names for smack. Well, only about two.
But if it’s 1970s after-school biscuits, then, look, I am hands-down unbeatable. I think he knows it. He looks crumpled and then explains that the Penguins weren’t really his choice: his mum got them. I nod, fearing I’ve gone too far, and anxious to drive us back on to the subject in hand. Brand explains his own early addiction as a worry about his mum’s health. Of feeling unsafe. But it mutated over the years: ‘The only consistency is this sense of longing, a sense of yearning you can be fulfilled somehow.
You can connect through material.’ Then the time has come to ask about sex. The stories of Brand’s sex life are rife. He once checked himself into a US clinic to curb his need for lap dancers and prostitutes. Surrounded by what he called a rotating harem of women, topped up by one-night stands and casual encounters – around five different ones a day at one point, or nearly twenty a week. So would he call himself a sex addict?
I ask. ‘Possibly not at the time, but I think in retrospect it was pretty clear that I was using sex to medicate and to feel connected and to deal with that yearning and longing, so yeah, in fact I start to think that the object of the addiction becomes less and less relevant.’ So does he think – married now with a baby and a big fluffy dog – that sex addiction still threatens him?
He pauses. ‘It’s really challenging. I don’t just think, Oh no I’m a rampant sex addict, how will I stay in a monogamous relationship?
Introduction: The 2 a.m. Call Donald Trump and Miss USA How I Got into Television by Not Speaking Chinese Simon Cowell: The Vampire Hour Two Days with President Clinton The Umbrella Movement, Hong Kong Jon Stewart: The End of His Daily Show The Migrant March from Budapest Central Station David Attenborough: One Hour in a Hot-Air Balloon An Airport Hotel with the Dalai Lama Arrested in Cuba A Gathering of Neighbours How I Was Accidentally Accused of Running a CIA Black Site for Torture Rachel Dolezal: The Black Human Rights Activist who Turned Out to be White The Fire at Grenfell Tower Theresa May After Grenfell Russell Brand: How Addiction Starts with a Penguin Biscuit Piers Morgan Becomes a Feminist Emma Thompson on Harvey Weinstein Steve Bannon Emerges from the Shadows for His First International Broadcast Interview Sheryl Sandberg: Good Grief Gordon Ramsay on Cocaine Tony Blair: When the Interview Comes to You Zelda Perkins: Harvey Weinstein’s Personal Assistant James Comey and His Part in the Election of President Trump #MeToo and the Chippendales Double Deaf Disco Sean Spicer: Corrupting Discourse for the Entire World After Twenty-Seven Years …
Anthony Scaramucci on the White House Lawn Stuck in a Lift with Alan Partridge And Then They Died (End Thought) Acknowledgements 1kitap1.com/en About the Author Emily Maitlis presents the BBC flagship nightly current-affairs show Newsnight and specializes in election coverage in the UK and the USA. The Canadian-born, Sheffield-raised British television presenter and journalist began her career in Hong Kong. She lives in London with one husband, two boys, and a large whippet. 1kitap1.com/en For my boys, Milo and Max, who have inspired me and laughed at me in equal measure.
And for Mark, who agreed to marry me, and who continues to make every day of my life better. It was the best question I ever asked. 1kitap1.com/en The first and greatest sin of the deception of television is that it simplifies; it diminishes great, complex ideas, stretches of time; whole careers become reduced to a single snapshot. James Reston Jr, Frost/Nixon 1kitap1.com/en Introduction: The 2 a.m.
Call My phone is on silent. But it’s still managed to wake me up. The yellow flashing glare perhaps or a sort of fuzzing of atoms. It’s 2 a.m. and I see on the screen it’s my Newsnight editor, Ian Katz. No thanks, I think, and hide it under a book about psychological warfare. It’s the heaviest one next to the bed.
Ian has a way of wanting to talk about things at odd hours. He normally catches up on his texts around one in the morning – which is lovely for him, but slightly confusing for everyone else. This time, I’m not in the mood. It’s a Friday night in November 2015.
This is a short excerpt from the opening of “” by Unknown, quoted for review and introduction purposes. All rights belong to the copyright holders.
Book Information
- Unique ID: c76372e898b1eecf
- File Extension: .pdf
- File Size: 1,921,697 bytes (1.833 MB)
- Title: –
- Author: Unknown
- Pages: 230
- Language: English (en)
Reading & Word Statistics
- Estimated Reading Time: 422.77 minutes
- Total Words: 84,555
- Total Characters: 463,709
- Average Words per Page: 367.63
- Average Characters per Page: 2016.13
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