Gwyneth Paltrow was proud of her lack of fact-checking at Goop

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I was about to write a story about how much I dislike Gwyneth Paltrow – which would have been news to so many, right? – but then I came across this interview with famous journalist/celebrity-profiler Taffy Brodesser-Akner, who is currently promoting her first novel, Fleishman Is In Trouble. Taffy is well-known around the gossip blogs for doing some of the best celebrity profiles and best pieces of entertainment journalism of the past five years or so. Her GQ profile of Tom Hiddleston still haunts me (and truly, Hiddles has never been the same since that profile). Her NYT profile of a dour Bradley Cooper last year was so unfavorable, it probably did more to ruin A Star Is Born than anything else. And of course, she did an epic profile of Gwyneth Paltrow and Goop for the NYT which spilled so much tea about Gwyneth’s true motivations for Goop and her lack of interest in fact-checking or, you know, actual science. Here’s what Taffy says about the Gwyneth profile now:

Brodesser-Akner had wanted to interview her for ever and had gone on a long campaign to secure the interview, assuring Paltrow she would take her seriously as a businesswoman, which she did. (And rightly so). She didn’t let her off the hook. I remember reading the piece and not liking Paltrow much more than I had going into it. I also wondered if, when the piece came out, she had felt betrayed. The story quoted from Dr Jen Gunter, Paltrow’s arch-nemesis who likes to point out the ludicrous and occasionally dangerous implications of, for example, suggesting underwire bras might cause cancer.

In fact, says Brodesser-Akner, Paltrow liked the piece, posting it on her Instagram and letting it be known that she found it broadly flattering. Didn’t she flinch at the paragraphs detailing Goop’s appalling lack of fact checking? “Oh my God, no! She was like, you bet we don’t do fact checking! It’s part of her revolution. And don’t you always find that the thing you’re horrified to ask is the thing people really stand by?”

What Brodesser-Akner hadn’t anticipated was what reporting on the story would do to her own psychology – the terrible Stockholm syndrome that can descend when you spend too much time with a subject. “There was a time in the middle when [Paltrow] became scared of me and my intentions. And after having gotten along so well, it made me so angry. But the anger was embarrassment that, oh, I thought we were getting along. Awful. I mean, I never hated her. I really liked her. And I thought she was so talented. And the thing that people hate – ‘Ugh, she’s just so privileged’ – how can you hold against her? It’s OK to be born wealthy. It’s very lucky. And also most of the people I know who were born privileged are incredible f–k-ups. They can’t figure out a goal or a motive. She [Paltrow] works so hard.”

Did people get mad with you for not being more critical of her? “No. I didn’t hear any of that. I hope that I made a compelling case. And the thing I determined was that it was not about how I felt about her; it was about how I felt about myself in her reflection that was the issue. And it was unbearable to me. I’ve never been happier to be done with a story, to go back to being an average person as opposed to the least graceful person in the room, the least successful person in the room. I’m a fine successful person, but next to her … ”

By the end of the story, even Paltrow’s posture struck Brodesser-Akner as a rebuke. When she asked Paltrow how she managed to keep her back so straight, “she was like, ‘You think so?’ She’d never considered it. And then I was even more upset! If you can have that posture without thinking about it? I don’t even know what species you are.” The bottom line is you can’t be friends with these people; above a certain altitude, not even their friends can be friends with them. “These are people who no one makes requests of any more. They think they’re having a friendship, but they’re not.”

[From The Guardian]

“Oh my God, no! She was like, you bet we don’t do fact checking! It’s part of her revolution. And don’t you always find that the thing you’re horrified to ask is the thing people really stand by?” It’s part of her revolution! The revolution of… pseudoscience and not fact checking. Honestly though, I respect what Taffy did with that specific profile of Gwyneth – it was half-respectful of the actual lucrative business of pseudoscience and half-shady because it was so matter-of-fact about how much bullsh-t Gwyneth actually shills.

Taffy also talked about the Hiddleston profile and how there were paparazzi photos of the two of them, and the Daily Mail called her Tom’s “mystery brunette.” Tom called her afterwards and she says: “He said, ‘I’m so sorry. Tell your husband I’m horrified.’ And I said you should not be horrified! It’s the best week of our lives!”

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Photos courtesy of WENN.

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23 Responses to “Gwyneth Paltrow was proud of her lack of fact-checking at Goop”

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  1. Eliza says:

    That headline made my day!! She’s only out there to sell to people with more money than sense. Why should she bother fact checking? They won’t either!

  2. Incredulous says:

    *sneers* Magic beans purveyor.

    • terra says:

      I’ve always thought snake oil saleswoman was quite an accurate description for the sometimes downright harmful things she shills.

      • (TheOG)@Jan90067 says:

        She really is insufferable. I’m completely surprised that she hasn’t been sued already by someone harmed by her gadgets.

      • jennifer says:

        @theOG, true, but i would think that if someone got a jade egg stuck up their vagina, or some random, extinguished infection from cooking and stirfrying their vagina, they would probably be too embarrassed to go public and sue.

      • terra says:

        @(TheOG) I agree, it’s pretty shocking, but there’s always tomorrow. It’ll happen one day.

        @jennifer There’s always someone shameless enough to put up with embarrassment in the name of a pay day. There have been so many ridiculous lawsuits. Hot coffee always springs to mind.

      • Incredulous says:

        Uh, the McDonald’s hot coffee lawsuit? It does sound stupid but the details of the case were horrifying and the lawsuit seemed absolutely necessary to me – boiling hot coffee, improperly sealed container leads to spillage over lady parts and those parts melting and fusing to the woman’s leg.

      • terra says:

        @Incredulous Goodness, no. That’s not the one I was referencing. There was another case I heard about a while back. It wasn’t McDonald’s, though, I know that for sure.

        I didn’t know there was a McDonald’s lawsuit, although with the volume of customers they have it’s not surprising. That case sounds horrifying. That poor woman, she was absolutely in the right if that was what happened to her,

  3. lolalola3 says:

    So is it laziness, too cheap to hire fact-checkers or is it the purposeful avoidance of fact checkers somehow gets her/GOOP off the hook for recommending something? Huh? I don’t get this POV. Is this like saying I don’t need to bother getting a driver’s license because I can just put the key in and go. Who cares if I kill someone?

    p.s. I love the Hiddles but now I have to go read that story. Is he really ruined for you? forever?? Reading it anyway. I need less celebrity crushes.

    • Mo says:

      It’s the whole What matters are your feelings! Trust your instincts! BS. It’s being such a control freak that you pretend you didn’t hear/read about anything that you disagree with or would make you the least bit uncomfortable. Because you are getting input from the outside world, otherwise how would you find out about vage steaming?

      The problem with “trust your instincts” is that it really only works in areas where you have expertise. So… this period pain is serious, not normal for me, and needs to be dealt with… yes. Vaccines and cancer… no.

    • Justme says:

      I like her piece on Hiddleston. So did a lot of people. So read it and make up your own mind. He came across as very human and sweet.

  4. Ali says:

    That dress is such a nightgown.

  5. amp122076 says:

    WHO buys anything on her site? How is she possibly profitably monetizing it?

  6. Soni says:

    I just tried reading the NY Times profile and couldn’t get through the first few paragraphs. It’s so ridiculous I don’t know whether to laugh or be angry. These people aren’t real and don’t care about women. They want to make money by making other women feel less than. Ugh.

  7. crass says:

    Goop, kim kardashian (and family) – they are the purveyors of the shallow and the unthinking that contributed to a trump presidency (major contributors – racism, misogyny). All three are con artists selling the rich, vapid, “aspirational” lifestyle that most people saw as “goals”. Fact-checking is too much of an effort. Fact-checking does not matter at all. Goebbels said “If you tell a lie big enough and keep repeating it, people will eventually come to believe it.”. These people are the modern day Goebbels along with the rest of the republicans and their ilk.

    • Sue Denim says:

      Yes… I remember when reality tv first came out and how fun it was, but now we’re living a reality show presidency and GP’s holier than thou attitude based on nothing, no depth or expertise, is so emblematic of our losses… like hard work and expertise are for chumps… and agree w others, she has terrible posture. One last thing, the disorientation she describes reminds me of times when I’ve been around narcissists…just saying…

  8. Harryg says:

    “Paltrow’s posture” – but she has a terrible, limp posture! I found this whole piece very odd.

    • perplexed says:

      I didn’t get that either. Paltrow has other strengths, but I never thought of her posture as one of them.

      I didn’t realize the original article was about the author’s reflections of herself through Gwyneth. I thought it was a legitimate critique piece of Gwyneth.

  9. Jenn says:

    I’m sympathetic to a lot of the “woo” Goop peddles, simply because a lot of chronic pain, autoimmune illness, and reproductive-health issues are so often ignored by actual medical practitioners. Medicine still has a gender bias, and that leaves a lot of people hurting and desperate. I don’t defend Goop’s terrible health advice; I just think Goop is a symptom of a capitalist society with privatized healthcare and underdiagnosed pain and disease.

    I “got into crystals” — never “yoni egg” territory, but close — because I had the worst combination of vulnerabilities: disposable income, plus pain that was dismissed as “somatic.” I hoped I could “buy my way out” of pain, I guess, and I suspect that’s the allure of Goop for a lot of people. (I eventually managed to land a referral to Stanford. Turned out my “somatic pain” was a connective-tissue disease paired with gastroparesis.)

  10. JanetFerber says:

    There’s a similarity in ignorance and arrogance between Paltrow and Trump. It’s like a cult of personality. “Trust ME to tell you the truth. No outside sources are necessary.” This is demagogue territory, so I fear in all trends we’re moving not towards enlightenment, but the dark ages again. It’s very dangerous to think things don’t HAVE to make sense and to put your faith in some deity with clay feet (to the non-idolaters, very obvious clay feet). We are no longer operating in an age of reason. That scares me. And by the way, wtf is it about Goop’s posture that’s so intimidating? Really?

  11. Sue Denim says:

    I just read the full NYT article and love the author’s sense of humor and insight. Also as one NYT commenter wrote so well I think: “I acknowledge Ms. Paltrow’s hard work, but what I think she misses is the essential unkindness and unfairness of her enterprise. I would welcome Ms. Paltrow’s efforts to use the Goop platform to also address some pressing social problems that align with her interests, say safe drinking water in our communities in the interest of hydration for all, or access to reproductive care clinics in the interest of wellness for women. While Goop took advantage of a cultural movement to grow, it may not thrive during this current moment when people with limited time and money are becoming increasingly impatient with those who use their extensive resources to further their privileged agenda instead of the public good.” Thought provoking…