Talking to Dee Korr-Elm, Celebrity Etiquette Expert
As part of our ongoing efforts to cover celebrity culture, Fusion has launched a column by renowned celebrity etiquette expert and small pet hypnotist Dee Korr-Elm, whose name (very nearly) lent itself so perfectly to this column. Ain’t that something?
Dear Dee Korr-Elm:
I am an actor-cum-misanthrope-slash-great-New-Yorker (that latter point having been expressed by other people, not me) who recently met with trannies and gays to learn what words I shouldn’t use to talk about them in public. You see, people have accused me of being homophobic even though, given the nature of my work, I am literally drowning in gays and trannies every single day. I have gay friends and have even made out with a man onstage. Would I have or do any of that if I were truly a homophobic, if great, New Yorker? Compounding this issue is the reality I live in — always being hounded by paparazzi and younger actors who are in the midst of performance art disasters.
I am thinking more and more that the problem here is New York, and that I should leave it. Is there a good, polite way of letting everyone in this city know they are wrong, so as to leave with a clean slate and a clear mind?