Molly Ivins was 62
The NY Times obit about Molly Ivins, the journalist who had worked there and last night died of breast cancer, includes some passages worth repeating:
In 1976, her writing, which she said was often fueled by “truly impressive amounts of beer,” landed her a job at The New York Times. She cut an unusual figure in The Times newsroom, wearing blue jeans, going barefoot and bringing in her dog, whose name was an expletive.
...
“Naturally, I was miserable, at five times my previous salary,” she later wrote. “The New York Times is a great newspaper: it is also No Fun.”
...
Covering an annual chicken slaughter in New Mexico in 1980, she used a sexually suggestive phrase, which her editors deleted from the final article.
(The Washington Post obit tells the story a little differently, leaving me all the more curious: In 1982, after she used a colorful colloquialism to described a local chicken-killing festival, the Times and Ms. Ivins recognized that it was time to part ways.)
What did she say??
...
Ms. Ivins learned she had breast cancer in 1999 and was typically unvarnished in describing her treatments. “First they mutilate you; then they poison you; then they burn you,” she wrote. “I have been on blind dates better than that.”
She is missed.
In 1976, her writing, which she said was often fueled by “truly impressive amounts of beer,” landed her a job at The New York Times. She cut an unusual figure in The Times newsroom, wearing blue jeans, going barefoot and bringing in her dog, whose name was an expletive.
...
“Naturally, I was miserable, at five times my previous salary,” she later wrote. “The New York Times is a great newspaper: it is also No Fun.”
...
Covering an annual chicken slaughter in New Mexico in 1980, she used a sexually suggestive phrase, which her editors deleted from the final article.
(The Washington Post obit tells the story a little differently, leaving me all the more curious: In 1982, after she used a colorful colloquialism to described a local chicken-killing festival, the Times and Ms. Ivins recognized that it was time to part ways.)
What did she say??
...
Ms. Ivins learned she had breast cancer in 1999 and was typically unvarnished in describing her treatments. “First they mutilate you; then they poison you; then they burn you,” she wrote. “I have been on blind dates better than that.”
She is missed.

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