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PETA  lets fur fly with worst dressed list

Cindy Crawford is really in the doghouse with animal rights activists. The former spokesmodel for People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals has been named high atop the group’s list of the Worst Dressed of 2004.
/ Source: msnbc.com contributor

Cindy Crawford is really in the doghouse with animal rights activists. The former spokesmodel for People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals has been named high atop the group’s list of the Worst Dressed of 2004.

Crawford is No. 2 on the dreaded annual list; she ran afoul of the group she had once touted when she started appearing in fur ads this year. “With that big furry mole on her face, you’d think she’d be more sensitive to the plight of animals,” PETA fumed. Following Crawford, Jennifer Lopez comes in at No. 3. “The lives of the animals she wears are like her relationships: short and painful,” PETA tells the Scoop.

Susan Lucci comes in at No. 4, and Ashley Olsen is No. 5 on the list, which will be posted at FurIsDead.com. But newly wed “View” co-host Star Jones Reynolds is No. 1. “With the amount of dead animals she wore at her wedding,” notes PETA, “it looked more like a funeral.”

Being black-balled

Celebrity biographer Kitty Kelley launches her new book about the Bush family
Celebrity biographer Kitty Kelley talks about her new book about the Bush family \"The Family: The Real Story of the Bush Dynasty\" during a book signing at the National Press Club in Washington, September 16, 2004. REUTERS/Yuri Gripas US ELECTIONYuri Gripas / X00866

Kitty Kelley got dropped from Washingtonian magazine because of her scathing tell-all book about the Bush family.

Kelley’s name had been on the masthead of the magazine — which is owned by a buddy of the Bushes — for nearly 30 years, but it disappeared without explanation shortly after her book “The Family: The Real Story of the Bush Dynasty” was published. When Kelley asked why, editor Jack Limpert e-mailed her: “[T]here was a considerable reaction here to your Bush book.” He went on to say that Kelley “had crossed a line of responsibility and partisanship that is important to us. We are always willing to attack the policies, and the behavior, of the President. But it seems to us that the office deserves respect.”

Kelley fired back an email. “I recognize the owner’s influence on his magazine and would understand if you said that you needed to remove me from the masthead in order to preserve your job. In fact, I would [have] applauded your honesty,” she wrote. “Instead, you . . .  wrapped your criticism around a pious respect ‘for the office of the President’ and for the private lives of those who occupy the White House. Yet where that same high-mindedness was when the magazine was writing about Bill and Hillary Clinton and publishing rumors in Capital Comment about Julia Thorne’s divorce from John Kerry, I do not know.”

Limpert denies he got any pressure from the owner, and — while he admits that he read only “parts” of the book — tells the Scoop that the move was made because “we did not want the magazine associated with the book.”

KEYS
** FILE ** Alicia Keys performs during the 32nd annual American Music Awards in Los Angeles, in this Nov. 14, 2004 file photo. Keys was nominated for record of the year during the 47th annual Grammy Awards nomination announcements Tuesday, Dec. 7, 2004, in Los Angeles. (AP Photo/Mark J. Terrill, File)Mark J. Terrill / AP

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