A collection of offbeat, funny, and often moving backstories of the many entertainers and athletes covered by award-winning Newsweek journalist Allison Samuels, Off the Record reveals the inner worlds of today's A-list black celebrities.
With anecdotes on everyone from Snoop Dogg, Shaquille O'Neal, Denzel Washington, Eddie Murphy, and Whitney Houston, this "all-access" book is filled with insightful stories that never made it into the pages of the mainstream press.
From her start at CAA's infamous agent training program—which included tasks such as blowing up 200 dinosaurs for the lobby when Steven Spielberg made a quick visit, and picking up Ted Danson's half-million-dollar weekly paycheck—there was no chore too small. But these humble beginnings gave Samuels access to Hollywood's A-list and led to her eventual focus on the world of black entertainers.
Allison Samuels is an award-winning Newsweek correspondent who has covered sports and entertainment since 1996. Samuels is a member of the National Association of Black Journalists, the Big Sisters of America, and the UCLA Black Studies Department board of directors. She lives in Los Angeles.
This book is annoyingly full of errors. Sorry, but I find it hard to believe that a book has gotten this far in the publishing process despite several brazen, glaring mistakes. Seriously. How embarrassing is it that a "celebrated" Newsweek reporter doesn't have a copy editor or a fact checker?
Case in point: I highly doubt Eddie Murphy regretted making "Beverly Hills Cop IV" while being interviewed by the author just before "The Nutty Professor" came out. You know why I doubt this? BECAUSE THERE WAS NO "BEVERLY HILLS COP IV."
Another irritating error was her constant misspelling of Bill Cosby's daughter's name. Despite claiming that she "knew" Cosby's daughter in college, she spells the damn woman's name wrong over and over again. Granted, it's an odd spelling, but if she knew the woman, she should know this. Did no one check this???
Also, I just don't care for journalists who talk about how they help their subjects win Oscars. Even if this did happen, and even if Denzel did hand you his Oscar and tell you that you were part of the reason he won, shut up about it already.
I wrote a review of this book for my j-o-b, so I won't reprint that here. I'll just say that this was a quick, (mostly) entertaining read about "off the record" moments with black celebrities...with A-Rod thrown in for good measure. The funniest moments are when Samuels talks about Snoop. He seems to be quite the character. There might be a few angry celebs out there who won't appreciate a detail or two in this, but for the most part there's nothing particularly salacious or mean. It's a good subway ride read.
This was a good, quick read about Newsweek entertainment reporter Alison Samuels experience covering the black celebrity elite over the past decade. By no means a "tell-all" but interesting tidbits nonetheless.
A series of essays by a writer from Newsweek. I found some interesting, but some were superficial and lacked insight. She seems to have an interesting life, but was promoting herself as much as the subject of her interviews.
I liked it. It was a decent, fast-paced read. It's tidbits of the author's time with black celebrities. It's not a tell-all, but it is still entertaining, nonetheless. I enjoyed the Snoop stories especially.