E. Jean Carroll
Elizabeth Jean Carroll (born December 12, 1943) is an American journalist and advice columnist. Her "Ask E. Jean" column has appeared in Elle magazine since 1993, and was ranked one of the five best magazine columns (along with Anthony Lane of The New Yorker and Lewis Lapham of Harper's Magazine) by the Chicago Tribune in 2003.[1]
Early life
Carroll was born in Detroit, Michigan, to a Jewish family, and nicknamed "Betty Jean" from an early age. Her father, Tom Carroll, is an inventor, and her mother, Betty Carroll, is a retired Allen County, Indiana politician. Carroll was raised in Fort Wayne, Indiana. She attended Indiana University, where she was a Pi Beta Phi and a cheerleader and was crowned Miss Indiana University. In 1964, representing Indiana University, she won the Miss Cheerleader USA title.[2] Carroll appeared on the mid-1980s edition of Card Sharks hosted by Bob Eubanks.
Advice columnist career
Her column became known due to Carroll's opinions on sex, her insistence that women should "never never" structure their lives around men, and her compassion for letter-writers experiencing difficult life situations.[3][4] Amy Gross, former editor-in-chief of Elle and currently the editor-in-chief of O, The Oprah Magazine, describes the "Ask E. Jean" debut as "though we had put her on a bucking bronco and her answers were the cheers and whoops and hollers of a fearless woman having a good ol time."[5]
NBC’s cable channel, America's Talking, produced the Ask E. Jean television show based on the column from 1994-1996 (when the channel became MSNBC).[6] Entertainment Weekly called Carroll "the most entertaining cable talk show host you will never see." [7] Jeff Jarvis in his review in TV Guide said watching E. Jean and her "robotic hyperactivity drove [him] batty". He went on: "However then I listened to her, and couldn’t help liking her. E. Jean gives good advice".[8] Carroll was nominated for an Emmy for her writing for Saturday Night Live (1985) and a Cable Ace Award for the Ask E. Jean show (1995).
Carroll also runs the AskEJean.com website, based on the Elle column, where users can type in questions and receive instant video answers on topics such as careers, beauty, sex, men, diet, "sticky situations", and friends. Users can also join the Advice Vixens, where advice is provided by other users. "Top Campus Sex Columnists" features college advice columnists from across America.[9]
Journalism and books
In 2002 Carroll's "The Cheerleaders" which appeared in Spin, was selected as one of the year's "Best True Crime Reporting" pieces. It appeared in Best American Crime Writing edited by Otto Penzler, Thomas H. Cook, Nicholas Pileggi (Pantheon Books, 2002).[10]
Carroll has been a contributing editor to Esquire, Outside and Playboy magazines. Her focus is "the heart of the heart of the country". For an April 1992 issue of Esquire, she chronicled the lives of basketball groupies in a story called "Love in the Time of Magic". In June 1994, she went to Indiana and investigated why four white farm kids were thrown out of school for dressing like black artists in "The Return of the White Negro".
In "The Loves of My Life", (June 1995), she tracked down her old boyfriends and moved in with them and their wives.[11] Bill Tonelli, her Esquire and Rolling Stone editor has commented that: "All of E. Jean’s stories are pretty much the same thing. Which is: ‘What is this person like when he or she is in a room with E. Jean?’ She’s institutionally incapable of being uninteresting."[12]
For Playboy (February 1988) at the height of the "Sensitive Man" era, E. Jean told her editors that "modern women run around complaining that they want a primitive man, so I thought it would be fun to come to New Guinea and find a real one."[13] Carroll hiked into the Star Mountains, with an Atbalmin tracker and a Telefomin warrior. She became the first white woman to walk from Telefomin to Munbil in the former West Irian Jaya, and nearly died.[13]
For Outside, Carroll wrote about (among other things) taking Fran Lebowitz camping and going down the Colorado with a group of "Women Who Run With No Clothes On". Several of E. Jean’s pieces for Outside have been included in various non-fiction collections such as The Best of Outside: The First 20 Years (Vintage Books, 1998), Out of the Noosphere: Adventure, Sports, Travel, and the Environment (Fireside, 1998) and Sand in My Bra: Funny Women Write from the Road (Traveler’s Tales, 2003).
E. Jean Carroll has written five books:
- Female Difficulties: Sorority Sisters, Rodeo Queens, Frigid Women, Smut Stars, and Other Modern Girls (Bantam Books, 1985)
- A Dog in Heat Is a Hot Dog and Other Rules to Live By (a collection of her Ask E. Jean columns, Pocket Books, 1996)
- Hunter: The Strange and Savage Life of Hunter S. Thompson (Dutton, 1993)
- Mr. Right, Right Now (HarperCollins, 2004)
- What Do We Need Men For?: A Modest Proposal (St. Martin's Press, 2019)
Websites
In 2002, Carroll got "sick sick sick of women writing to me asking how to find a man", and co-founded (with her sister, Cande Carroll) Greatboyfriends.com. On the site, women recommend their ex-boyfriends to each other.[14] The Oprah Winfrey Show profiled the website in 2003. The Knot, Inc. bought GreatBoyfriends in 2005. In 2004 she launched Catch27.com as a spoof of Facebook. On the site, people put their profiles on trading cards and buy, sell, and trade each other. The Boston Globe headline was "You Can’t Buy Friends Like These...Well, Actually You Can."[15] AskEJean.com was launched in 2007. Carroll is pictured and listed on the Tawkify.Com website as co-founder, and an adviser to Tawkify's matchmaking team.[16]
Personal life
She currently resides in upstate New York.[17]
On June 21, 2019, Carroll alleged in a first-person essay in New York that Donald Trump sexually assaulted her in the fall of 1995 or the spring of 1996 in a Bergdorf Goodman store in New York City.[18][19] In the essay Carroll said, “I have never had sex with anybody again”.[20] The essay was published as part of an excerpt of Carroll's book What Do We Need Men For? A Modest Proposal, which is being published on July 2, 2019. The White House denied the allegation.[18] Carroll also alleged that in the 1990s, media executive Les Moonves had assaulted her as well.[18]
References
- ^ Chicago Tribune, June 12, 2003, "The 50 Best Magazines" https://pqasb.pqarchiver.com/chicagotribune/results.html?st=advanced&QryTxt=%22e.+jean+carroll%22&type=current&sortby=REVERSE_CHRON&datetype=0&frommonth=01&fromday=01&fromyear=1985&tomonth=04&today=26&toyear=2007&By=&Title=&Sect=ALL
- ^ Holly Miller, Indianapolis Monthly (October 1996) "Zings and Arrows"
- ^ Joan Kelly Bernard, Newsday, March 1994, pg B.13 "Get a Grip and Take Some Sassy but Sane Advice from Elle’s E. Jean"
- ^ The New York Times, Sunday March 30, 1997, front page of the Styles section
- ^ Katherine Rosman, "Method to Her Madness," page 99, Brill’s Content, November 1999.
- ^ USA Today, Friday, December 15, 1995, front page
- ^ Entertainment Weekly, December 30, 1994/January 6, 1995/September 30, 1994
- ^ TV Guide, March 1995
- ^ Tormented? Driven Witless? Whipsawed by Confusion? - Ask E. Jean
- ^ http://www.avclub.com/content/node/20721
"…The book’s first and finest piece, "E. Jean Carroll’s "The Cheerleaders" (which surveys an upstate New York community cursed by murder and suicide on their high school football team) would be exploitative if its dismembered, half-naked cheerleaders were on a movie screen; conceived as reportage, the details of the case retain their mystery."
- ^ Esquire, April 1992, June 1994, June 1995.
- ^ Katherine Rosman, "Method to Her Madness," page 98, Brill’s Content, November 1999.
- ^ a b Playboy, Page 88, February 1988
- ^ Ginia Bellafante, The New York Times, November 24, 2002. "Take My Ex, Please: Preowned, Preapproved."
- ^ Matthew Shaer, The Boston Globe, February 21, 2006
- ^ "Tawkify - A Personal Concierge to your Dating Life". Tawkify, Inc. Tawkify, Inc. June 19, 2017. Retrieved September 11, 2018.
E. Jean advises Tawkify's matchmaking team.
- ^ Bio appearing on AskEJean.com 2007
- ^ a b c "Journalist E. Jean Carroll accuses Trump, Moonves of sexual assault". UPI.com. June 17, 2019. Retrieved June 21, 2019.
- ^ E. Jean Carroll. "An Excerpt from E. Jean Carroll’s ‘What Do We Need Men For?’". Thecut.com. Retrieved June 21, 2019.
- ^ Mangan, Dan (June 21, 2019). "Donald Trump sexually assaulted E. Jean Carroll in the mid-1990s, writer says in new book". CNBC. Retrieved June 21, 2019.