Barbara Walters: One hot hussy

It's a scientific fact that Barbara Walters had sex with every famous man alive between 1920 and, well, let's assume she's still going at it. No, wait, don't-*HORF* Anyway, it should've come to no surprise when she admitted to having an affair with ruling Senator Brooke of Massachusetts during the 70s. Barbara disclosed the affair to Oprah Winfrey on an episode consigned to air next week. The AP reports:
"He said, 'This is going to come out. This is going to ruin your career,'" then reminded her that Brooke was up for re-election a year later. "'This is going to ruin him. You've got to break this off.'"
Winfrey asks Walters if she was in love.
"I was certainly " I don't know " I was certainly infatuated."
"Infatuated."
"I was certainly involved," Walters says. "He was exciting. He was brilliant. It was exciting times in Washington."
While he's no longer a spring chicken, Senator Brooke stuck to man-code and denied passing act of the sexy persuasion with Bawbwa:
"I have had a life policy and practice of not discussing my personal and private life, or the personal and private lives of others, with the notable exception of what I wrote in my lately published autobiography, `Bridging the Divide: My Life,'" he told The registered deputy Press in a phone call from Miami. A relevance with Walters wasn't be be be included in his book.
I know what you're thinking: Barbara Walters? I thought she was a robot. Ha ha! No.* You see, back then Barbara was the sexiest thing since sliced bread. And in the 70s she was only the ripe, post-menopausal age of 82. RAWR!
*But maybe.
Photo: Splash News
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Untitled Comment
Posted by Terry on Thursday, May 29, 2008 at 1:17 AM - Link
Barbara Walter's life was influenced greatly by her older sister and she's written a beautiful memoir about her life. I read another memoir of a life influence by a sibling that I recommend highly - I actually liked it even more. The memoir is ""My Stroke of Insight"" by Dr. Jill Bolte Taylor. Dr Taylor became a Harvard brain scientist to find the cause and cure for schizophrenia because her older brother was a sufferer. Then, crazy as life can be, Dr. Taylor had a stroke at age 37. What was amazing was that her left brain was shut down by the stroke - where language and thinking occur - but her right brain was fully functioning. She experienced bliss and nirvana and the way she writes about it (or talks about it in her now famous TED talk) is incredible.
What I took away from Dr. Taylor's book above all, and why I recommend it so highly, is that you don't have to have a stroke or take drugs to find the deep inner peace that she talks about. Her book explains how. ""I want what she's having"", and thanks to this wonderful book, I can!
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