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- <text id=93TT0448>
- <link 93TO0136>
- <title>
- Nov. 01, 1993: For Two Mouths, A Megaphone
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Nov. 01, 1993 Howard Stern & Rush Limbaugh
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- COVER, Page 66
- SOCIETY
- For Two Mouths, A Megaphone
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> "I am an easy target," says Judith Regan, "because I have a
- big mouth and people don't always agree with me." It is fitting
- that the editor who brought both Rush Limbaugh and Howard Stern
- between hard covers is, in her own world, as controversial as
- either. A former reporter for the National Enquirer, she joined
- Simon & Schuster in 1988 without a lick of book-publishing experience.
- Yet she showed a nose for hot celebrities, bringing in books
- by Kathie Lee Gifford, Hollywood executive Dawn Steel and even
- (her next project) MTV superstars Beavis and Butt-head. To admirers,
- Regan is a passionate editor with keen commercial instincts;
- to detractors, an abrasive publicity hound; to readers of gossip
- columns, the most entertaining book editor in New York City.
- Three years ago she spent five hours in jail after an argument
- with a police officer who, she says, taunted her cab driver
- (the charges were dropped). Last year she picked a fight with
- Madonna over the singer's book of erotic photos (Regan claims
- it was her idea). Now she is involved in a nasty divorce from
- her husband of five years.
- </p>
- <p> What was it like to work with the bigmouths of radio? No problem,
- says Regan. Limbaugh "is impeccable in his work, requires next
- to no editing. He is a gentleman, and I do mean gentle. He treated
- me like a queen." Stern, on the other hand, is "a slave driver."
- To crash-edit his book last summer, Regan spent weeks living
- in the guesthouse of his Long Island home. "It was pressure-cooker
- intense, very creative and very interesting. He is an extremely
- driven man. I needed a permission slip to go to the bathroom.
- He is a maniac, this guy."
- </p>
- <p> Editing both authors' often inflammatory prose didn't seem to
- faze her. "My position is not to take a position," she says.
- "I sell books, and allow people to have their say." Yet she
- admits that some of Stern's material bothered her, especially
- his verbal assaults on her other clients, like Limbaugh and
- Gifford: "It is not my job to censor Howard Stern, although
- I have to say it was very painful to sit there and deal with
- the fact that he had some nasty things to say about some of
- my friends."
- </p>
- <p> Regan, 40, grew up on a Massachusetts farm, moved with her family
- to Long Island and went to college at Vassar. After flirting
- with a music career, she got a job at the Enquirer, chasing
- down stories about Siamese twins and celebrity divorces. She
- moved on to TV as a producer for Geraldo! and Entertainment
- Tonight before Simon & Schuster hired her to revitalize their
- Pocket Books division. "I didn't come up the traditional way,
- but I paid my dues," she says. "I am a maverick, and people
- can't stand other people's success. How dare I appear to have
- it all? Believe me, it is just an appearance. I'd trade places
- with just about anybody at this point."
- </p>
- <p> Yes, it's not easy being the hottest book editor in New York.
- Regan, who has custody of her two children (ages 2 and 12),
- is contemplating a move to Hollywood, but only "if I can get
- out of the most hideous, disgusting marriage to the biggest
- a---who ever lived. I tell you, the pain and agony I have been
- through professionally is nothing compared to getting a divorce.
- Sure, they hate me and want to kill me, but try getting a divorce
- from my husband. It pales." Next to Judith Regan, so does practically
- everything.
- </p>
- <p> By Richard Zoglin. Reported by Elizabeth L. Bland/New York
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
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