Gossip Girl: Stupid And Contagious . . .
And here they are now to entertain us:
Posted: December 1st, 2007 | Filed under: Arts & Entertainment, Cultural-Anthropological, ManhattanYou could tell the tribes apart by variations in dress: the tartan kilts and pleated skirts of Nightingale-Bamford, Sacred Heart and Spence; running shoes on the girls who had made their way over from Chapin and Hewitt; leggings and anoraks for students at Dalton, with its relaxed dress code.
Beyond that, the girls looked a lot alike, particularly when it came to accessories: pendant earrings, orthodontia, camera phones. All this week and part of last, the cast and crew of “Gossip Girl,” the CW network series based on the young adult novels, have been camped out on 93rd Street between Madison and Park Avenues. They are shooting an episode at the grand Georgian complex that in its workaday life houses the Synod of Bishops of the Russian Orthodox Church Outside of Russia.
. . .
Three from Hunter College High School, the public magnet school a block away, edged toward the gates of “St. Jude’s.” They said they had been taking all their free periods, plus lunch, here. “Not that we’re obsessed or anything,” Alexa Levy said.
“We saw the person who plays Dan,” said her friend Sophie Zucker. “He’s actually, notoriously, like, nice.”
“It’s really refreshing to see a star who’s like that,” said Charlotte Weiss.
“Because she knows so many, of course,” Miss Zucker said, teasing her.
“Do you want to know the honest truth?” Miss Weiss said. “It’s based on private school girls, and they’re very superficial. The woman who wrote the novels said it’s based on Nightingale. We go to Hunter. It doesn’t relate.”
“So these girls –” Miss Levy gestured around her. “These are the girls it’s making fun of.”
“And I think they’re proud of it instead of being ashamed,” Miss Weiss said.