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Rosebud in NYC - Fran Lebowitz

6/5/20261 hr

Leading up to the 250th anniversary of American independence, Rosebud is giving you a series of interviews recorded in New York City. Our first is with the sharpest observer of New York life - the wit, conversationalist and writer, Fran Lebowitz. In this brilliant interview, Fran tells Gyles about her family, who moved to the US from Russia and Eastern Europe to escape the Jewish pogroms. She talks about her happy childhood, cycling on her "freedom machine" around her pretty hometown in New Jersey, where her father owned an upholstery business and her mother had aspirations to be Fred Astaire's dance partner. She tells Gyles about being punished for being a chatterbox at school, about knowing she was gay from a young age, and about moving to New York to become a writer. She talks about Andy Warhol and being paid to write porn. She talks about smoking, the internet, and her enormous collection of books. Finally, Gyles awards Fran a medal from the Oscar Wilde Society, in recognition of her brilliance as a talker.

As you might expect, this is a fabulous conversation. It's well worth your time.

Enjoy this.


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First 90 seconds
  1. Gyles Brandreth· Host0:00

    Welcome to Rosebud. This is my podcast with me, Gyles Brandreth, produced by my friend, Harriet Jane. And we're very lucky. We have literally millions of downloads. We've become a huge podcast worldwide. There are millions of you out there. So I'd like you all to join with me now as I say what I say every week as we begin another episode. Are you ready? On the count of three. Three, two, one. Cue the music. [upbeat instrumental music] Welcome to Rosebud. Yes, it's a Friday if you're listening in real time, and it's me, Gyles Brandreth, in a state of some excitement because today I'm talking to you from New York City. It's very exciting. We've done a few interviews in New York, and this is a very special one. And my special guest today is someone who, well, really is the sensibility of New York, is the voice of New York. In fact, the New York Times called her a modern-day Dorothy Parker. As some of you may know, I'm the president of the Oscar Wilde Society. And at a recent gathering of Oscar Wilde enthusiasts, we fell to talking

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