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Cynthia McFadden Went Into the Triangle of Death


The next morning she strapped on three watches—one set to local time, one to New York City, and one to L.A., where Spencer lives—and boarded the plane.

McFadden visits a makeshift school inside Kaga-Bandoro.

Courtesy of NBC News

While some journalists say their job is only to inform, McFadden believes her responsibility goes beyond that. “The goal of the work is to ultimately make a difference. I don’t want anyone to be able to say they don’t know,” she says. “If we turn our backs on these people, we do it knowingly now. We know what’s happening.” She makes sure we don’t look away from women coping with trauma, children listless and starving, men taunting with guns. “You’re seeing humanity at its worst in many ways,” she says.

Still, there are moments that disarm McFadden while she’s in the field. She finds girls playing a trust game in the street, dancing in a circle and falling back into each other’s arms confident that someone will catch them. There’s the group of boy scouts, who, unlike their own government, bravely go into some of the most dangerous areas and spread everything from optimism to hand-washing techniques. “You can prepare yourself for the suffering,” she says. “But preparing yourself for the joy is another thing entirely.”

Even without the riches of diamonds, there is promise here, she shows us. When Noah Oppenheim, the head of NBC News, watched the scene of the children playing, he teared up. Viewers who saw it were moved to open their wallets—more than $1.5 million has poured into UNICEF since the first report aired.

Some of the boy scouts who've made it their mission to save CAR with McFadden and Caryl Stern president and CEO of UNICEF.

Some of the boy scouts who’ve made it their mission to save CAR, with McFadden and Caryl Stern, president and CEO of UNICEF.

Courtesy NBC News

McFadden grew up in Auburn, Maine, in the house her mother was born in and that her grandfather built. She credits her parents, who adopted her as a baby, with teaching her that she could have anything she wanted—as long as she was willing to work for it. What she wanted, she realized at 17 as she watched the Watergate hearings from the living room floor, was to report the news. “I thought, I want to cover this. I didn’t know a journalist, to say nothing of how to become a journalist,” she says. “But I knew I wanted to tell stories.”

Not sure how best to achieve that dream, she applied to Columbia Law School. The director of admissions saw her application and called her at home in Maine. “We’re inclined to admit you,” she recalls him saying, “But you say you want to be a journalist, and I just want to tell you there are many easier ways to become a journalist.” She was frank: She didn’t know those ways. “I told him, ‘And if I want to cover the law, then I think I should know something about it.’” He essentially admitted her on the spot.

McFadden enrolled in Columbia’s journalism school at the same time, but never got her journalism degree because she landed a job first. (She graduated law school in 1984.) It wasn’t your typical interview: She had been in a class with the legendary newsman Fred Friendly, and one of her assignments was to argue the landmark New York Times v. Sullivan case, which in a 9-0 decision ruled in favor of the free press. Her task—to argue for the government and against the Times—was difficult enough; then just before class she learned Floyd Abrams, the lawyer for the Times, would be observing.

McFadden nailed it. Afterward Abrams issued Friendly a challenge: “Either you hire her as a journalist, or I’m hiring her as a lawyer,” McFadden recalls. “I always say I was won in a bet.” She did go to work with Friendly, though not before trying to negotiate her pay. “I said, ‘You know, Fred, I think you’re paying me half of what you paid the guy who had the job before me.’ And he said, ‘You don’t have the experience the guy had; you don’t have a family like the guy has. I’m taking a chance on you. Take the job or not.’” She tells the story with a cranky newsman’s voice, and the wisdom of a woman who has learned to pick her battles. “He had a point, and I had a point,” she says. “I took the job.” She has zero regrets, and calls working for him one of the great experiences of her career. “I’ve been so, so lucky,” she says about many of the opportunities she’s had. “But the harder you work, the luckier you become.”

Charm also helps, and friends call McFadden “magnetic” and “wickedly smart.” And even celebrities were not immune. While still an undergrad at Bowdoin College, McFadden became close with Katharine Hepburn “through a whole series of misadventures” (Hepburn was in her late sixties at the time). She can do a fantastic impersonation of the late actor, reciting some of Hepburn’s lessons that were wise—and unwise. (There’s this one: “‘Sometimes you just have to be too dumb to get it.’ Man, that helps. Because sometimes somebody says something that hurts your feelings, or we don’t get the assignment,” McFadden explains. “Instead of responding to every situation, sometime you have to be ‘too dumb to get it’ and just keep smiling.” But also: “Never buy firewood; steal it or chop it yourself.”) McFadden was also a bridesmaid for Liza Minnelli (for her wedding to David Gest), and longtime friends with the gossip columnist Liz Smith.



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Cynthia Nixon Promises to Keep Fighting After Losing Her Bid for Governor


Activist and actress-turned-gubernatorial candidateCynthia Nixon lost her highly publicized bid for New York governor on Thursday night, with her opponent and incumbent governor Andrew Cuomo cinching about 65 percent of votes.

Despite the defeat, Nixon left her supporters with a rousing concession speech, in which she urged progressives to continue fighting for change and pushing for equality in New York and across the rest of the country.

“This is not a time to settle for the way things are, or sit back and hope for things to change,” she said. “This is a time to fight. As long as New York remains the single most unequal state in the country, we will keep fighting.”

Nixon had positioned herself as a progressive alternative to Cuomo and promised to change the status quo. Had she won, the former Sex and The City star would have been the state’s first female and openly gay governor, and her platform included championing LGBTQ causes, as well as solutions for racial and economic injustice.

In a statement to Glamour after announcing her candidacy, she explained how the election of Donald Trump was a “wake-up” call to women who have launched political campaigns this year in unprecedented numbers.

“I’ve been humbled and inspired by the thousands of women who are running for office for the first time. And today, I am honored to join their ranks,” she said.

Nixon, like recent progressive candidates such as Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, had pledged not to take any corporate campaign money and eventually secured a record number of small donors that helped her pull 30 percent of votes. She ended up raising about $2.5 million—just a fraction of the $25 million Cuomo reportedly spent on television ads and mailers, according to the New York Times. Buzzfeed reported that Cuomo’s spending per day was almost the same amount of Nixon’s total.

In her speech on Thursday, Nixon praised the gains her campaign had made despite being up against Cuomo’s hefty budget, and said she was inspired rather than discouraged.

“Before a single vote was cast, we have already won. We have fundamentally changed the political landscape in this state,” she said. “This campaign changed expectations about what is possible in New York state.”

She also evoked the achievements of recent progressive candidates, such as Ocasio-Cortez and Ayanna Pressley, who have toppled long-standing incumbents and represent a new era of progressive politics. She urged Democrats to “stand for something” and take back the party while encouraging a new generation to keep pushing forward.

“This is an incredible moment for progressives, but it is not just a moment. it is a movement, and this movement is only growing stronger… To all the young people. To all the young women. To all the young queer people who reject the gender binary. Soon you’ll be standing here, and when it’s your turn, you’ll win,” she said.

MORE: With Letitia James’ Primary Win, New York Could See Its First Black Female Attorney General





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If You're Freezing in Your Office Right Now, Cynthia Nixon Can Relate


If you’ve ever had to drag a space heater into your cubicle or resort to that workplace Snuggie tucked under your desk to beat the office chill, New York gubernatorial candidate Cynthia Nixon understands how you feel.

Nixon, the SATC alum up against Governor Andrew M. Cuomo, sparked a conversation we didn’t know we needed over office thermostats when her team requested that event organizers turn up the heat (literally) at Wednesday night’s scheduled debate between the two, hosted by New York station WCBS-TV.

Cuomo reportedly prefers his AC blasting high, but because Nixon refuses to shiver through her first and only debate with New York’s current governor, she’s asking for a comfortable 76 degrees. According to The New York Times, Nixon strategist Rebecca Katz wrote to WCBS-TV with the request, noting that working conditions are “notoriously sexist when it comes to room temperature, so we just want to make sure we’re all on the same page here.”

In other words, blame the patriarchy for your chattering teeth.

The idea of sexist room temperatures has now ignited a Cold Room War of sorts. The conversation is, in part, a matter of workplace attire deemed appropriate for men and women: Men can usually don a suit and feel perfectly comfortable in an arctic room. But for anyone who shows up for a 9-to-5 in a dress or a skirt, office climate quickly becomes an issue.

Kerry Howley, a professor at the University of Iowa, shared her perspective on Twitter and with the Times, saying that she feels like “cold office temperatures are a burden that are placed on women.”

“I feel like it affects performance in a way that is surprising to people. I become less effusive, less articulate, less extroverted when I’m uncomfortable with the temperature,” she added. Other women also chimed in quickly: “Cynthia Nixon asks for the debate hall to be 76 degrees, and I’m sitting here in my work Snuggie wondering if this is actually the opening salvo of the revolution,” writer Monica Hesse shared.

Still, plenty of people (both men and women) dismissed Nixon’s 76-degrees request as simply too hot.

While the discussion may feel heated on the Internet, Governor Cuomo’s camp responded to the whole situation with a statement that can be best described as, well, chilly:

“Unlike Cynthia Nixon, the Governor has more important things to focus on than the temperature of a room,” Lis Smith, a Cuomo campaign spokeswoman told The Hill.

Nixon, for her part, isn’t letting this get in her way. She told Refinery 29 that she’ll debate Cuomo in a parka if she has to. We’re sure anyone sitting at their desk, wrapped in a blanket while doing their job effectively, can relate.

MORE: Cynthia Nixon Releases Sex and the City–Themed Campaign Merch





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Cynthia Nixon Releases *Sex and the City*-Themed Campaign Merch


The Sex and the City premiere turns 20 on Wednesday. And the real-life Miranda Hobbes, New York gubernatorial candidate Cynthia Nixon, has found quite the appropriate way to commemorate the occasion: by launching campaign merchandise inspired by the HBO show.

“Are you a Miranda voting for Cynthia? In honor of #SATC20, here’s a line of Miranda merchandise designed by the team behind the ‘Every Outfit on Sex and the City’ Instagram account… because, well, we should all be Mirandas who vote for Cynthia,” Nixon tweeted on Tuesday. Such a Miranda move.

The collection features hats, T-shirts, tote bags, and more featuring variations on the motto, “I’m a Miranda and I’m voting for Cynthia.” (The toddler merch reads, “I’m a Miranda Future Governor of New York”; a baseball cap says, “I’m a Miranda Governor.”) Now, you can’t help but wonder: What about those of us who are more of a Carrie who’s voting for Cynthia, or a Samantha or, god forbid, Charlotte? A bit of a missed opportunity… but, that’s beside the point.

PHOTO: Cynthia for New York

PHOTO: Cynthia for New York

PHOTO: Cynthia for New York

This isn’t the first time Nixon has proven she’s a master at branding. Her official campaign store also sells a tee styled after the “unqualified lesbian” jab from former mayoral candidate Christine Quinn, as well as another inspired by her vocal critiques of incumbent governor Andrew Cuomo’s handling of the New York City subway system.

While we’re still waiting for the t-shirts that read “I drink coffee, have sex, buy pies, and enjoy battery-operated devices,” these will suffice. Hey, they’ll pair white well with our overalls and puffer coats.

The special anniversary-edition Cynthia for New York T-shirts are $35 each, while the tote goes for $30; a cap will set you back $38.

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Sarah Jessica Parker Knew About Cynthia Nixon’s Governor Run Weeks in Advance





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