 |

The
Washington Post (11-15-02)
The
Reliable Source
Lloyd
Grove, Washington Post Staff Writer
There
was much ado about yesterday's item regarding Los Angeles pundit
Arianna Huffington and her incipient ad campaign against gas-guzzling
SUVs. A swarm of television news producers immediately booked Huffington
on this and that, and readers e-mailed us in amusement and outrage.
Washington
Post columnist James Glassman wrote: "Enjoyed your item on
Arianna, who has gone completely off the deep end.... I am the one
who got her to buy an SUV in the first place and created a monster.
Was on a radio show with her and she kept ranting and raving about
SUVs, and I said to her, 'But you own one, right? Why don't you
get rid of it?' Which she did a week or so later." Huffington
said she had already made arrangements to lose the Lincoln Navigator
and buy her 50-miles-per-gallon Toyota Prius by the time she appeared
with Glassman.
Time
magazine writer Amy Dickinson wrote: "I loved your item about
Arianna Huffington 'driving' and now 'not driving' an SUV, but --
as I'm sure you know -- Arianna doesn't drive. Arianna gets driven."
Huffington said that these days she's behind the wheel.
Ritz-Carlton
Hotel publicity director Colleen Evans wrote: "Puleeeeze --
I am not giving up my Cadillac Escalade SLV (Sport Luxury Vehicle).
Since I'm only 5'3 I love the 'on top of the world' feel....Ms.
Huffington is once again sounding very 'fuelish'."
And
Tom Riley of the Office National Drug Control Policy, whose ubiquitous
television commercials are parodied in Huffington's proposed anti-SUV
campaign, wrote: "We're pleased that Ms. Huffington has joined
with millions of other Americans in recognizing the power and impact
of our ads linking drug trafficking with international terror."
Huffington told us: "Actually, their ads have been totally
ineffective."
|
 |
 |
 |
| You
can help stop our dependence on foreign oil from the Middle
East. Help get our TV ads on screens across America -
click here to find
out how you can make a donation online or through the
mail. |
 |
 |
| Check
out our newest TV ad! The Detroit Project, in partnership
with NRDC, has produced a new ad aimed at getting Detroit
to increase fuel efficiency. Click
here to watch the new ad or view our past TV ads.
|
 |
 |
Let
Detroit know that inefficient cars and trucks have kept
Americans chained to the gas pump, and American security
chained to foreign oil, long enough.
Send them an email from the NRDC
Break the Chain Web site. |
 |
 |
| Send
an email about our site by clicking
here. If you've got your own Web site you can download
banners and buttons to display on your site here. |
 |
|