Gwyneth Paltrow’s biographer: ‘Goop sowed a distrust of western medicine’

Amy Odell has written Gwyneth: A Biography, and it will be released in a few days. People Magazine, Page Six and Us Weekly have all published excerpts from the book, and there’s been a lot of interest in the vintage ‘90s gossip, especially the stuff about Gwyneth Paltrow’s relationships with Brad Pitt and Ben Affleck. This biography is not authorized and Odell did not interview Gwyneth – Odell approached Paltrow and her people and they turned her down. But I believe Odell when she talks about how many people she spoke to, and I think this book is probably pretty accurate. Odell gave an exclusive interview to Vanity Fair to promote the book – you can read the VF piece here. Some highlights:

Gwyneth’s parking space at Goop: “Reserved for G-Spot,” reads the sign on Goop CEO Gwyneth Paltrow’s company parking space, according to Amy Odell’s reporting in her new biography. Gwyneth is “one of the most resented celebrities in the world.”

Gwyneth was a major nepo baby: “I mean, nature and nurture, who knows? The doors would open for her. But when she walked in the room, she would deliver. People would say she was a knockout. She was great. She was mesmerizing. I heard that a lot. I mean, she didn’t get every part. When she wanted What About Bob? the casting director of that film said he needed someone funny, and she wasn’t funny.”

Gwyneth’s milieu: “I also think that’s important in understanding the Goop part because she was in the milieu that she has been in her whole life, this rarefied, glamorous, wealthy milieu. She never knew anything else. People told me her father had amazing taste and clothes and home interiors. He studied art at Tulane, and she seemed to absorb that. That really helped her market Goop.”

What happened to Gwyneth’s career after she won the Oscar: “Well, Hollywood calls that the Oscar Curse. Some people might say that it’s just hard to find another role after you ascend to the pinnacle of your career. And she was 26. So young. And then you’ve reached the peak. People told me that she seemed to have a little bit of a crisis like, “Oh my God, now what am I going to do?” She wanted to do comedy and slapstick stuff, and that just didn’t work. She seemed to succeed the most when she was in roles that were similar to her life. The director of A Perfect Murder said he wanted to cast her because she was that woman. She had lived on the Upper East Side, understood that world. Emma, she plays an aristocratic, well-to-do, even though it’s hundreds of years ago, young woman. Great Expectations, too. Even though that wasn’t the best movie, and [director] Alfonso Cuarón has kind of denounced it, she’s memorable. You remember she wore that green outfit by Donna Karan. And then Royal Tenenbaums, too. They were a well-to-do family.

Carolyn Bessette Kennedy & Gwyneth: “I just know that Carolyn Bessette-Kennedy, her job, she was basically dressing VIPs at Calvin Klein. And that’s how she met JFK Jr., because he came in to get a custom fitting. So Gwyneth was one of the people, because Calvin Klein wanted to dress her, because she’s this young glamorous actress doing highbrow movies, and quite frankly, people told me repeatedly she had the thin body type that he wanted to see wearing his clothes, those ‘90s slip dresses. She would go by the office and pick out clothes. She would encounter Carolyn Bessette-Kennedy. I talked to people close to her who said Gwyneth just kind of irked her, and she would see a picture of Gwyneth in the newspaper and have kind of a smart remark about it.

What happened with Winona Ryder: “Probably part of it is the chaos of [being in her 20s]. It seemed to me like she was viewing Winona through the eyes of Ben Affleck, in a way, and how Ben viewed his friend’s girlfriend. But the Shakespeare in Love—obviously that’s lore, right? That she pulled the script off of Winona’s coffee table. What happened was she was sent the script, she might not have read it because she had just done Emma and she said she didn’t want to do another period film. Then the producer bumps into her on the street and is like, “Why aren’t you doing this movie? It’s Tom Stoppard, it’s amazing. Why wouldn’t you do it?” It sounded to me like what happened was she was staying with Winona and she picked the script up off of her table and read it, and then decided to commit.

Gwyneth is a true believer in the quack science she shills: I wanted to know if Gwyneth really believed in the things that she was publishing and selling. And people said that she did. She really believed in those gurus. I mean, you guys have covered them. Shaman Durek [Verrett], he’s quite fascinating. But he said in one of his books that part of the reason doctors prescribe chemotherapy to cancer patients is because they make money off of it. [Durek didn’t respond to VF’s request for comment.] These are the things that experts find really troubling. And the jade egg—did she really believe in that stuff? People said they didn’t understand it, but she did believe in that stuff.

Gwyneth’s impact on the wellness industry: “Goop did two things that I think were really important for the wellness industry. One, they gave it this gorgeous aspirational aesthetic that resonates with people. And two, they gave wellness a rhetoric and a language, talking about toxins and getting them out of your life, and clean beauty, clean eating. But also Goop sowed a distrust of western medicine, of established science, promoted the idea that you should do your own research and find out the truth. That’s kind of what we’re seeing now, with RFK Jr. as the Secretary of Health and Human Services. A lot of his ideas are about the ingredients in our food. Seed oils. Like, seed oils are fine. Vilifying these things that are fine, meanwhile cutting Medicaid. One public health expert said to me, “You hear wellness people talk about toxins and how they might cause cancer. You never hear them say the HPV vaccine is a really great way to prevent cancer.” I was like, “What is Gwyneth’s legacy?” And Dr. Jen Gunter told me, “I think she showed the world that wellness is something that can be monetized.” Another expert, Dr. Andrea Love said, “Facts aren’t profitable.”

[From Vanity Fair]

Odell also talks about how she communicated with Harvey Weinstein through his lawyers/reps, and Weinstein told her some interesting stuff about the business side of Gwyneth in the ‘90s and early ‘00s – basically, that after she won her Oscar, she was commanding such big paychecks, no one could hire her for the smaller films which she really would have thrived in. There was also a convoluted story about Gwyneth’s brother possibly directing something, and I don’t know how much stock I put into all of that. I think all of the stuff about Goop and the wellness industry is a much-needed conversation though – while it’s fun to gossip about Gwyneth’s romantic history, I’m glad Odell is like: no, really, Gwyneth is partially to blame for this anti-science political movement.


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Photos courtesy of Backgrid and Netflix Press.

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18 Responses to “Gwyneth Paltrow’s biographer: ‘Goop sowed a distrust of western medicine’”

  1. Fandango says:

    It’s fascinating they’re still trying to say G moved the needle on health and wellness when, frankly, she may have had articles written but nothing she said was new. She claimed to almost invent yoga, 5000 year old practice I was doing before I knew her name. Supplements, diets for health issues? Again, been around for thousands of years. Her narcissism is honestly next level. I know she believes her lies but no one else does.

    • Lady Esther says:

      I’m an old and I remember Oprah platforming all kinds of quacks and gurus on her show well before Gwyneth did. It may be true that as Odell says Gwyneth gave the wellness craze a veneer of sophistication or glamour amongst the kind of women who consider themselves her fans, but I’d not lay the blame for “anti-science” at her feet. She’s such a miniscule part of that entire wave.

      I think also around the same time as Gwyneth maybe didn’t get “indie” roles anymore because of her salary (!!!?! what an anti-feminist take…you never hear that about male actors. SHAME ON THE WOMAN FOR WANTING WHAT SHE WAS WORTH, IT’S ALL HER FAULT) she married Chris Martin and was raising a family, and looking for ways to monetize that on the side. Nothing wrong with switching gears. She could probably return to “serious” acting anytime but doesn’t seem to want to at the moment. But she’ll be just fine. If there is anything in the world Gwyneth Paltrow has and always had, it’s choices.

      And look at me here defending a ridiculous, insufferable, pampered nepo baby like Gwyneth! Dear me the Universe is full of surprises…

      • HillaryIsAlwaysRight says:

        Thank you for bringing up Oprah here. You’re right, she made a career of promoting pseudoscience and gave main stream media such winners as Dr. Oz, Dr. Phil, and Christiane Northrup. She also had Goop on early in her career, and I do think there is a through line from Oprah to Goop on medical disinformation. Oprah’s ‘special’ on menopause this past Spring was just offensive in its lack of real information and its exploitation of women in the audience. They took comments from a woman while you could literally see steam rising off her head and sweat pouring down her face. Nothing on TV is coincidence. They set her up to exploit her. Read more on the damage Oprah does to women’s understanding of their own bodies here:

        https://substack.com/home/post/p-160270824

      • Kitten says:

        Exactly. Oprah was far more influential than Goop, who most people don’t take seriously.

        I know people love her but the fact that she unleashed ghouls like Dr. Phil and Dr. Oz should be a permanent stain on her legacy. Oh and let’s not forget The Secret, which is pure pseudoscience and essentially a cult playbook.

        And I understand that she might have pursued these endeavors in earnest and good faith but the end result is still the perpetuation of junk science and I don’t think she’s ever really atoned for that.

      • DeeAnne says:

        Yes, Oprah inflected quacks on the public, and we’re still feeling the reverberations. Normalizing Oz, Phil, McCarthy contributed to RFK, Jr., in power.

  2. Brit says:

    I miss the days when no one wrote about her. Because there’s really nothing to write about.

    • Jegede says:

      Has that ever been a case??

      Even when she was appearing in schlock movies post-Oscar, her dating life ensured Paltrow was always a topic of conversation and a constant in fashion magazines.

  3. Thinking says:

    She acts like she invented a lot of things.

    I think she can act. I guess this explains why her career in acting somewhat fell apart. It seems she was too expensive. I always wondered…

  4. Brassy Rebel says:

    So basically, if Trump ever needs to replace RFK jr., he should have GP on speed dial. But I will never read a book that has Harvey Weinstein as a source even through his lawyers. Nope.

  5. KristenfromMA says:

    There are a number of actors who come from monied backgrounds (Kyra Sedgwick, Ed Norton, Cumberbatch), who have no trouble playing a whole host of parts. Paltrow is a dyed-in-the-wool snob. She simply isn’t interested in anything outside of her privileged bubble.

  6. Thinking says:

    She’s always deemed to be more special than the other rich, upper class people among her. I remain puzzled by it.

    She’s beautiful, but her beauty is also deemed to be more special than the beauty of other beautiful women around of her. That’s also puzzling to me.

  7. Up In Toronto says:

    Once again, I think we’re giving unearned credit to Gwyneth for something that has made impact..if any actress has an impact to sow doubt into Western medicine, it was Jenny McCarthy who said her son changed after receiving vaccines..she went from being a MTV Playboy bunny goofball host to relentlessly spreading unproven accusations that vaccines caused autism.

    Gwyneth has never been taken seriously in her “medical” efforts, from Jade eggs to NASA stickers, and was an opportunist who co-opted Eastern health practices under the veneer of rich blond rarefied lifestyle to promote goop through shock and controversy. She was and still is only interested in making that buck, regardless who she steals ftom.

    At this point, Gwyneth is just shooting off about her vagina, trying to be provocative, which more power to her for anyone who can bear listening to her on it, but I rest the roots of anti Western medicine at Jenny McCarthy’s feet for causing this anti vaccine insanity

    • HillaryIsAlwaysRight says:

      Oprah had Jenny McCarthy on many times to talk about her anti-vaccine views. Oprah gave her the audience.

    • Thinking says:

      yeah, I always think of Gwyneth as someone who likes to make money more than anything else. In that sense, her approach to life seems to be more like an influencer on Instagram rather than someone who comes from a rarefied background we’d be envious of. She wants a lot of money, which is fine (sort of), but I don’t really associate that kind of attitude with someone who is so privileged they can survive without money either. She clearly needs money like the rest of us to survive her lifestyle. In that sense, she’s kind of like a peasant like the rest of us. I can’t imagine selling vagina-scented candles as something someone is genuinely interested in, except for the money.

      • Lady Rae says:

        I agree she clearly wants money and she might come from a privilege background but it doesn’t seem like the well is that deep as she clearly needs to keep generating money and not live like a socialite. It doesn’t sound like her parents gave her a trust fund to live off.

  8. Amy Bee says:

    I’m not sure Gwyneth can be credited with starting the anti-modern medicine movement. That started long before her as others have said Oprah has helped platform these types. I wouldn’t even give Oprah that credit either. The movement against western medicine has always been there, I just think the internet and social media has helped to make it flourish over the last 20 -25 years.

  9. Jaded says:

    “Shaman Durek [Verrett], he’s quite fascinating. But he said in one of his books that part of the reason doctors prescribe chemotherapy to cancer patients is because they make money off of it.”

    That makes me so angry…because of chemo I’m still alive. My tumour markers went from 41 down to 1 in 3 months of treatment. Goop is the one spreading dangerous misinformation to the uninformed to make money off of it.

  10. bisynaptic says:

    “Goop did two things that I think were really important for the wellness industry. One, they gave it this gorgeous aspirational aesthetic that resonates with people. And two, they gave wellness a rhetoric and a language, talking about toxins and getting them out of your life, and clean beauty, clean eating. But also Goop sowed a distrust of western medicine, of established science, promoted the idea that you should do your own research and find out the truth.“
    — It’s ALL awful: “clean beauty”, “clean eating”… just trendy labels for privileged neurosis.

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