April 2009

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Hello Papi!

Oh Papi!

 

This morning, while procrastinating at work, I was reading some of the comments on a recent post and noticed that DABA has become somewhat of an international phenomenon. Later in the day, as I stared mindlessly at my Bloomberg screen, something caught my eye and made me think (a rarity these days). With the bulk of the world markets posting either negative or anemic returns, there were two indexes bucking the trend… Stockholm and Brazil, up 16 and 25 percent respectively. I slowly began putting two and two together. If the world loves DABA, then shouldn’t the women in pursuit of “the life” be reciprocating?

DABA should be willing to go global! Just think, instead of chasing some Wall Street clown (yes, that includes me) to Brother Jimmy’s for dollar beer night, you could be sitting on a beach in Rio, drinking a caipirinha with your FBF, a commodity trade that’s a spitting image of Jesus Luz). Don’t like the beach? How about a night out with your strapping FBF, Sven, working down the tasting menu at Edsbacka Krog. Either way, with the Rosetta Stone IPO (Ticker: RST) a success you’ll be all set to seduce your future FBF.

Tchau, Hej då

Your inside trader.

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Humm, I wonder what kinda of hair product he uses

Humm, I wonder what kinda of hair product he uses...

Just in time to keep our FBFs from completely losing faith in Wall Street Hollywood has decided to re-inspire them. Turns out our Inside Trader and co. will shortly have new fodder for their fairytale endings. Personally we’re hoping the movie will hire a great costume designer and breath a little life into the blue button down, black square toe shoe, big watch uniform we’ve become kinda (/really really) sick of. As reported on hollywoodreporter.com:

Wall Street’s all the rage again — literally. And Oliver Stone and Michael Douglas have decided they have more to say about it.

Stone has just closed a deal with Fox to direct the follow-up to “Wall Street,” now tentatively called “Wall Street 2,” with Douglas starring. This would provide an unusual amount of continuity since Stone directed and co-wrote, with Stanley Weiser, the original 1987 exploration of the inner workings of the finance sector and its complicated relationship with greed.

The plot line for the new “Wall Street” iteration has not been divulged, but it will pick up with corporate raider Gordon Gekko, the character for which Douglas won a best actor Oscar more than 20 years ago. Gekko’s larger-than-life presence will once again loom over a younger upstart looking to navigate the shark-tank world of today’s Wall Street.

Shia LaBeouf is in talks with the studio to take on the younger role. Stone and Co. hope to begin production over the summer.

Allan Loeb (”21,” “The Baster”) was hired to rewrite the long-developing project in the fall and has apparently turned in a script strong enough to corral Stone, who reportedly was very cool to the idea of a sequel. Ed Pressman, who produced the original film, is producing the follow-up as well.

The CAA-repped Stone most recently directed the biopic “W.,” and before that helmed the Sept. 11 disaster drama “World Trade Center,” which itself was a kind of tragic bookend to “Wall Street’s” greed-is-good mantra. The new “Wall Street” project, with its up-to-the-minute placement in the context of the current global financial mess, should provide Stone with an ample palette for his typically provocative cultural commentary.

**thanks for forwarding the link DABA Girl K.C.

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Yes mom and dad, this is where I was Friday night. But I swear, New York is totally not corrupting me.

Yes mom and dad, this is where I was Friday night. But I swear, New York is totally not corrupting me.

 

When the invite to Sapphire’s opening party arrived I forwarded it to J faster than you can say “neon green g-string.” I knew out of all my friends she’d be up to check out the new strip club in town, I mean Samantha Ronson was DJing according to the invitation. We RSVPed and input it into our blackberry calendars (Monday, Lap dances with J, 9 pm, Sapphire). I had an inkling that it would be good blog research.

Friday night, out of the blue, J was invited to a distant GIRL friend’s bday party at the very place we were going Monday. She insisted that I come. We said “What hell, we’re getting a sneak peek, it’s like we’re VIP (or something).” and headed up to 60th street. We strolled into Prime, the steak restaurant attached to the club (because obvi streak and stripers are the perfect combo meal). I was promptly seated next to some hedge fund guy. He started a fund and some online liquidation thingy and he’s so stressed out and he needed another scotch and he hurt his knee and he just wanted to go to bed and blah blah blah.

After dinner the bday group moved into the strip club. We settled into the back, which was perfect for spying on everything going on. This was a first for yours truly and I was fascinated. My observations: 1. my lame hedge fund dinner partner suddenly perked up once we got inside (shocking), 2. the whole place was FULL of 20-30 somethings year olds in suits (bankers? Bankruptcy lawyers? I didn’t dare ask), and 3. these girls were hot. Needless-to-say, J and I didn’t make it to the opening party last night. Sorry Sam and Li Lo- ironically it was just a little too much reality for moi. Ladies, Scores may have closed, but Sapphires has opened and I have a feeling it’s going to be doing juuussst fine, recession and all. It may in fact be the new It spot.

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Dear DABA Girls,

You probably haven’t received a lot of emails from DABAs in Boston - want to know why? Totally different scene. The financial world here is a boring 9am-5pm kind of hours, much less opportunity for sexy night time overlap at the latest hot spots with potential FBFs. I suspect that for this reason, I am having my first experience with FBF. Unwittingly, within the last few months I have become a DABA girl in Boston. My prior loves were generally intriguing international trust fund types whose undivided attention I was able to relish since they really didn’t have to work. Not so with my current amour -  mid-30s, brilliant, great looking, total mover and shaker in the bio tech and financial world. But guess what? He is never around.

While I suffer from lack of attention on dates due the dreaded crackberry syndrome, rescheduled dates because of emergency meetings, etc.- that mostly doesn’t bother me. I get it, he’s busy, international deals are going on all day and all night. But after dating him for about five months now, I am not getting the impression he really wants to get serious. What’s a girl to do? I have my first date with someone other than him on Monday night, please advise!  Should I develop  - as one of my friends called it ‘the multiple crush plan’ - so if this whole thing blows up in my face I have other options? If so, I need serious advice, I am train wreck when it comes to balancing multiple guys, DABA Girls expertise is needed! Or is it time for the ‘big talk’  and just take the risk?

~Beantown DABA

Beantown,

Emotionally unavailable, noncommittal FBFs are the worst! Before you start juggling multiple crushes (which can wreak havoc on a girl’s waist line with all the dinners out and result in sleepless nights over whether you’re going to have a dreaded run-in) have a drink. We have a scrumptious, fool-proof cocktail that is sure to take the edge off.

The DABA-tini

Yield: 4 servings

Ingredients:

2 1/4 cups chilled brut Champagne

3 1/4 first dates with other equally exciting men

¾ rendevous with ex-boyfriend with whom you have amazing chemistry

4 nights out with your Single Ladies (with your hands up!)

3/4 cup fresh pink or ruby grapefruit juice

1 visit to the spa for a body scrub and spray on tan

6 cleavage baring, a** hugging dresses worthy of a rap video.

1 drunk emotionally infused conversation with FBF.

First, combine your newly tanned bod with your sexy dresses. Do not over mix, you’re looking to be the best you can be, not like you just walked off the pages of Playboy. Next, add the nights out with your SLC (Single Ladies Crew). Cool. Slowly fold in the dates with the other fabulous men (you already have one lined up and you can meet more out with your SLC). Now whisk in make-out session with your ex-boyfriend. In a separate container stir together grapefruit juice, Champagne, and drunk emotional conversation with your FBF (note: make sure he gets drunker than you). FBFs are inherently unwilling to acknowledge their emotions and need alcohol to activate them, so feel free to add more Champagne as needed.

The combination of the flavors from your dates, party nights, and the fact that you look amazing will typically get your FBF to profess his love. If you want to spice it up a little bit feel free to season accordingly with stilettos, new lingerie, etc.

Warning: This drink is hella strong. Note that this recipe makes 4 servings. Normally just being a little distant is enough to make a guy miss his DABA, so imagine what would happen if you drank all this at once! Remember, FBFs are competitive, that’s what makes them so successful, let him compete for your attention and pursue your fabulous self. No need to get black out, make out!

 

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You put a lime in the coconut...

You put a lime in the coconut...

 

Just like all the flashing stock prices on my Bloomberg screen, the weekend warning level is once again green.  I’d thought this rally would have run out of steam a long time ago, but alas the Gods (read: government money) are on your side, and just in time to start sprucing up your Hamptons wardrobe.  Hopefully your FBF received a nice chunk of change from Obama & Co. in the form of a tax refund recently (aka, a personalized TARP payment) that he is willing to stimulate the economy with.  Maybe a classy Eres bathing suit and Hermes beach towel? 

The weather is going to be fabulous in NYC (yes, it’s a big deal, this isn’t L.A. people, New Yorkers don’t know what to do with themselves and are literally freaking out) and there aren’t too many more weekends left until you will be lounging poolside in the Hamptons or guzzling down multiple B.B.C.’s (Bailey’s Banana Colada) at Cyril’s.   Not to mention, it’s only been 6 weeks since the world was ending and the S&P was below 700 – we could be back there faster than the weather gets bad in New York, so take advantage now. 

Brought to you by Anonymous Finance Guy (and occasional DABA Girl Sympathizer)

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We give you the TARP wife, courtesy of Portfolio.com. At long last we hear from a MABA.

I am a TARP wife.

In keeping with the unwritten code of this new sisterhood, I have taken a vow of financial abstinence. I returned the presents my husband gave me for Christmas (but didn’t tell him, since he’s already awash in gloom) and am using my credit balances at all the major department stores for important gifts and other necessities.

I haven’t even looked at spring clothes; God forbid someone catches me out in something new. Keeping up with fashion seems somehow decadent in this new era, like getting Botox injections or catered dinners. Like so many others, I’m shopping in my closet. I’ve bought exactly two things this year—makeup and panty hose. If I buy a present for someone, I have the package sent to their home. I don’t want to be spotted climbing into a taxi, laden with Bergdorf Goodman shopping bags.

As you can see, being a TARP wife means, in short, making decisions according to a complex algorithm: balancing the need to look like your world hasn’t crumbled beneath you—let’s not alarm the investors!—with the need to appear duly repentant for your subprime sins. It also means we’re part of the community of more than 400 companies that have received government bailout funds, whose fall from grace has been swifter and harsher than any since Mao frog-marched intellectuals into China’s countryside.

Hitting the perfect note isn’t always easy. For instance, for the past 15 years or so, I have thrown my husband a birthday party. We traditionally celebrate with about 30 friends, mostly New York pals we’ve known for decades. We’re not talking an end-of-an-era Stephen Schwarzman-type $10 million blowout. Ours is a pretty sedate affair.

This year, of course, entertaining our crowd at our usual multi-star Michelin hotspots would simply not do. Extravagant is out; conservative is in. But not hosting a birthday dinner would have spurred rumors that we were broke, not a welcome thought either. Juggling these conflicting impulses, I decided on a slimmed-down party. Choosing Versailles to host World War I peace negotiations could not have been more complicated than my attempt to select the perfect spot for our annual dinner. Naturally, every restaurant I contacted was willing to meet my reduced budget; now that Wall Street firms are no longer entertaining clients or hosting events, New York eateries are struggling.

At the end of the day, it came down to a choice between an especially accommodating (and well-known) high-end restaurant and a less expensive, clubbier spot. We ultimately picked the cozier restaurant—even though it ended up costing us more, so eager was the more chic outfit to host the party. Why spend the extra bucks? Because our chosen place is distinctly low-profile and rarely mentioned in the press. We did not need a snarky story about a “Wall Street bigwig living it up while taxpayers wonder where their money went.” Really, not even President Obama spends this much time looking after his image.

It wasn’t long ago that America celebrated successful companies and the people who run them. My husband, CEO of one of the biggest TARP recipients, has received more than his share of accolades (in my opinion, well deserved). But because of a few tin-eared nitwits who failed to notice that their industry was under siege, the entire country now thinks that TARP bankers are greedy incompetents dedicated to ripping off taxpayers. Fancy wastebaskets, under-the-rug bonuses, lavish junkets—these are Exhibits A, B, and C in the people’s case against Wall Street. Even the Octomom gets better press.

Here is the reality: TARP managers are scared to death. The executives of these companies are desperately trying to hold their businesses together while complying with a slew of damaging bills flooding out of Congress. My husband has battled the shutdown of the credit markets and a deteriorating business environment for two endless years without respite. He’s exhausted, terrified of losing the company, and beaten down by the constant criticism hurled at him.

I’m trying to buck him up and not complicate his life. The last thing he needs is unpleasant publicity, so I’m learning to fly so far below the radar that I have perpetually skinned knees. We’ve picked up new habits, like making donations anonymously and sneaking in late to black-tie galas after society photographer Patrick McMullan has packed up his camera and gone home. We now regularly turn down the invitations we receive from museums and arts organizations that will inevitably be followed by a request for funds. No point in getting their hopes up.

I get it that I may not win much sympathy. Why should I? I’m not pleading poverty. We still live in relative luxury, we can afford almost everything we need, and we aren’t facing the prospect of losing our home or having to turn to our families to support us. But we are getting squeezed.

Like most Americans, we are worried about money. Our net worth is tied up in stock that is down 95 percent. Last year, before it became fashionable to do so, my husband refused a bonus. Because of the new restrictions, his pay this year will be a fraction of what it was. The combined swoon in our income has caused us to cut spending drastically, in hopes that we can hang on to some remnant of our former lifestyle.

In an effort to conserve cash, we are eating out less frequently, meaning that I’ve been turning out some pretty dreadful lasagna. Actually, staying home and watching Law & Order reruns has become our new guilty pleasure. It’s a far cry from opening night at the Metropolitan Opera, but it’s not bad. I drive the family crazy by switching off the lights every time we leave a room. Needless to say, we fly commercial. Using the company plane is now out of bounds; we’ve heard there are reporters staking out the private airports.

I have become oddly superstitious. On some level, I feel I’m being punished for too many thoughtless years of assuming that the trappings of success were earned and not given. I’m constantly knocking on wood or offering little good-citizen sacrifices, like manically recycling or chatting with telemarketers.

I’m struggling with how to communicate all this to our children. We’re thankful that they’re intent on making their own way in the world, but at the same time, they confidently rely on us for help. One daughter recently mused about going back to business school. I hope she didn’t notice my instantly negative reaction, stemming completely from concern about the cost. I cannot bring myself to shake her foundation. The collapse of the world economy has already crushed the confidence of young people just starting out. Meanwhile, retirement is like a rainbow, a beautiful mirage that we’ll probably never reach. To some people, these may seem like luxury problems, but to us they are painful.

I’ve watched the skin under my husband’s eyes take on a yellowish hue, and his hair turn from gray to grayer, as he tries to lead his company through this mess. He’s up every night for hours at a stretch, and for the first time, he has health issues. For a person whose life has been punctuated mainly by success—from perennial class president and high-school sports star to Ivy League MBA—failure is the worst of all nightmares. He seems off balance, as though self-confidence were a physical ballast that he is slowly losing. It’s heartbreaking how often he apologizes to me for losing so much of our money, for making so many mistakes.

I know people are angry—angry at those they view as responsible for the subprime crisis and the subsequent economic meltdown. I don’t blame them. I’m angry too. But my fury extends to any number of culprits: to Alan Greenspan, who encouraged the loose-money policies that undermined the pricing of risk; to Barney Frank, who cudgeled Fannie Mae into supporting loans to unfit homebuyers; to the rating agencies that were ethically compromised; to the subprime-mortgage brokers who chased fees and ignored any accountability; to the investors who didn’t do their homework and absurdly leveraged up their balance sheets. I’m an equal-opportunity blamer.

And yes, I blame those who were in charge of the big banks—including my husband—for not seeing the default tsunami coming. But almost no one did. Everyone knows this, yet financial CEOs have replaced the Mob as the most despised group in the country.

The good news is that Americans have short attention spans. Before long, some other group will come along to absorb all the frustration and anger.

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DABA Shops

Click here for today’s DABA beauty insight. Sorry boy’s, this one ain’t for you (unless you’re metro, which is tots cool- we don’t judge (slash we try not to judge)).

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"Yoohoo! FBFs! Up here, it's moi, your favorite DABITs Linds!"

"Yoohoo! FBFs! Up here, it's moi, your favorite DABITs Linds!"

 

Bonjour DABAs and DABITs! Linds here with some updates for those of you longingly searching for the FBF in NYC.

My most recent discovery, ma cheries, comes to our fair Island from far, far away. Think back to your study abroad days. Those European boys were exciting, they were fun, they knew how to have a good time. Yes, they wore the same skinny JBrand’s as you did and had some interesting ideas on male ‘dos, but remember how much fun you had with them at Queen in Paris until 4 a.m.? When you let Marco walk you home and buy you late night chocolate croissants? And then that fantastically wonderful rendezvous behind the hotel….? No? Was that just me????

Oh, ladies, you remember. It was fun and exciting because they were foreign, they were mysterious, and they ADORED American girls. Well, good news bébés!! They have come to New York!!!

I was recently set up with a French guy, we’ll call him Pierre.  Pierre is here for a year on an amazing exchange program from his office in Paris, and is working in the New York office of an insurance firm. Upon meeting him, I was completely thrown off by his très European style, but 3 dirty martinis later, VOILA! I realized what a catch Pierre was! NYC FBFs have been totally down in the dumps since the recession. They hate their jobs but are holding on to them for their dear lives. They don’t know what else to do with four years at Yale and an apartment in Chelsea that father dearest would rather die than help their son pay for. But these Europeans, chickies, they are fab. They LOVE New York and love New York City girls. Take Pierre:

Moi: So are you enjoying your time in NYC?

Pierre: Mais oui chérie! New York is the most fabulous city in the world!

Moi: [Blusing, because I take credit for this] Oh no… J’adore Paris! Paris is far more wonderful!

Pierre: Non non non! I never want to leave New York. The restaurants, the nightlife, the girls!!!

Moi: [Blushing again] Oh Pierre, promise me you’ll never, ever leave!

The last part I said to myself… I hope.

Well, Pierre wants to do everything and anything in NYC. In the past week he has suggested Chloe, La Esquina, Rose Bar, and the likes. I may have to drag him to Bloomie’s for some appropriate denim wear, but that’s nothing a little helpful DABIT push can’t fix. 

Tata for now DABITS, and bon chance!

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Yes, I am surprised too, but  this is my second Green Weekend Warning in as many weeks.  I guess it’s not really a warning for you ladies - more like encouragement. I really should be warning your FBFs and their wallets.  But after the last couple weeks, they should be more than thrilled to spend a little (or a lot of) dough on you.  By now, he may actually have convinced himself that a bonus is in store at the end of this year. And let’s face it, after everything that you ladies have been through this past year, you deserve a night out on the town (and maybe a sparkly gift).

Not only are the markets heating up, but so is the NYC weather.  How can your FBF deny any of your requests after the large banks have reported strong first quarters, and it’s going to hit 70 degrees tomorrow! I suggest starting out the gorgeous day with brunch and a long stroll (maybe past Prada?) destination LES, for a nice recession friendly art crawl - after all, you do want to show him that you realize that we are still in a recession, bonus or no bonus.  Check out the specs on the $15 art crawl (drinks included!) at http://artlog.com/collectles.  Maybe I’ll see you there!

Brought to you by Anonymous Finance Guy (and occasional DABA Girl Sympathizer)

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truelifeMaybe it’s because “True Life: I’m on a Diet” really spoke to us. Or maybe it’s because MTV defined our formative years, showing us how to shake it thanks to Sir Mix-a-Lot. Or maybe it’s because they launched reality tv. Regardless, we’ve agreed to post their open call for their latest True Life. So, if you or someone you love is being affected by the recession give our homegirl a call at the number below. 

 

MTV True Life:   My Family is Broke

Are you and your family being severely affected by the recent economic downturn? Have you lost your home or your job?  Are you afraid you could lose everything? Then MTV would like to hear from you. 

MTV’s award winning documentary series “True Life” is producing a new episode about young people whose families are being hit hard by what’s being called “The Great Recession.”  With nearly 20 million people expected to lose their jobs at the end of this year, families all across the country are struggling.  This hour long documentary will follow each person and the obstacles they and their families face in the current economy such as unemployment and losing their home. 

Who We Are Looking For: 

True Life is looking for young people who appear between 14 and 25 years old and are in any of the following economic situations: someone who is part of a family facing foreclosure, someone who is part of a family who has been hurt by the downturn in the auto industry or manufacturing, and someone who once made their living in the financial industry on Wall Street.   

About True Life: 

True Life is a documentary series that’s been running on MTV for 10 years.  Each episode of “True Life” is about a different topic.  Most of the topics have some social or personal importance, like this one.  Some of them are more frivolous aspects of youth culture, like episodes about gamers or cheerleaders.  All episodes aim to tell deeply personal stories. There is no host, reporter or narrator.  The young people featured will tell their own stories in their own voices. 

Our goal, as with all episodes of True Life, is to put young people across the country in our subjects’ shoes.  We hope that, by portraying the most intimate moments of our subjects’ lives, we will help young people understand complex personal and social issues.   

How We Make “True Life” & How We’ll Shoot This Episode 

Once we’ve determined whom we’re going to follow, we begin filming them at moments and events that are important to their story.  We don’t film them all the time and everywhere – we try to select dates that are important to their economic situation and film those.  We try to be as unobtrusive as possible by filming with only a two-person crew and a small digital video camera.  Our goal is for people to forget we’re even there.  We try not to influence our subject in any way – we simply try to capture their real lives as they’re living them.   We typically film between 25 and 35 hours of each person we’re following.  We’ll get those hours two or three days at a time over the course of three to four months.  We always allow our subjects to stop filming if they become uncomfortable or if there’s a problem.  We edit the stories ourselves, with input from three executives at MTV.  We have total creative control over the process, and the executives never ask us to include anything that isn’t thoroughly fact- checked and true. 

Punched in the Head Productions 

We are a small independent production company that’s been contracted by MTV to produce certain episodes of “True Life.”  We’re usually asked to produce the more “weighty” episodes, like “I’m Home from Iraq,” “I Have Autism,” “I Have Schizophrenia,” and “I Have PTSD.” Many of our previous episodes are online at truelife.mtv.com in the “Videos” section of the site.  

Contact Information: 

If you or someone you know may be interested in speaking with us about participating please contact us at: 

tlbrokefamily@gmail.com  or  718.422.0706 

Please include your name, contact information, and a description of your story. 

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