I’d rather see *CBS This Morning* coanchor Anthony Mason prop a ring light on a shaky pile of books.Įven the anchor who is perhaps closest to celeb-status, Anderson Cooper, doesn’t appear thrilled with our sudden arrival- look at the vintage books, the dark wood, the lone Apple AirPod careening out of his ear-this is a man who has been forced, on short notice, to become a vlogger.Īt some point the pandemic will lift and we will return to our offices. Reese Witherspoon has a large gilt-framed mirror and tasteful rustic home accessories? Shocker. Much better to see Andrew Ross Sorkin’s color-coded bookshelf (When I do it it’s “basic,” but when Andrew Ross Sorkin does it, it’s “cool” and “a good backdrop for an interview with Aperture Investors CEO Peter Krauss”). But news anchors, who tend to keep more of a professional distance, have neither the time nor the taste for brutalist architecture required to stage their homes in time for their audience’s unexpected visits.Ī peek inside Kim Kardashian West’s well-stocked cupboards is, at this point, hardly more exciting than a trip to the grocery store-stars have more or less agreed to trade access to their interiors for Instagram followers. Celebrities invite us into their homes all the time-most of us could freehand draw the architectural plans for the Kardashian-Wests’ estate, down to the contents of their vegetable drawer. These sudden, mirage-like appearances of familiar talking heads in unfamiliar environments-several of which look like interview backdrops from Netflix’s *Tiger King*-are a delightful oddity in painfully odd times. This content can also be viewed on the site it originates from.
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