
A male friend of mine asked me the other day, “what’s so great about Kelly Cutrone after all?” My question to fellow fans, “how are you supposed to explain this to a guy?”
Kelly Cutrone is a role model for women of my generation for several reasons. She’s kicked some serious ass by creating renown PR firm, People’s Revolution. How did she do it? She’s smart and she knows what she wants. The title of her first book alone, If You Have to Cry, Go Outside: And Other Things Your Mother Never Told You, explains why all in itself.
In today’s world, many women most likely agree that our own moms got married at the age of 23, had kids and raised them. Although we might have wonderful parents many of us are raised with the notion there is a natural societal evolution of “grad high school, go to college, get married, have kids, and if you have a true calling of life maybe get a job too.” It doesn’t help that we’re living in a paradox; while women are becoming more successful in the work force, many think that a quick read of Cosmo is liberating and that plastic surgery will fix their problems.
Regardless, we chase our dreams. Many of us have been lucky enough to have great mentors in our lives. Yet, the natural ebb and flow of today’s world works against us. My own mother has suggested that I should work for the government instead of chasing my goals in journalism. Although her suggestion is probably well intentioned it matches the advice that many mothers would most likely give their daughters. Try hard, but not too hard just to be safe so you don’t get hurt. Oh, and earning money, at the end of the day, is more important than happiness.
Kelly Cutrone’s book gives you the opposite sort of advice. For this reason, she’s the role model that many of us have never had. In fact, her book oddly gives me solutions to most of the problems I have in my life. In many ways it’s hard NOT to perceive this in stark contrast to the media. Unlike the usual culprits like Elizabeth Gilbert’s wishy washy book, “Eat, Pray, Love,” Cutrone has a get real style that’s easy to relate to. Like her, she encourages women to relinquish power over their goals with brains AND beauty, a beacon of hope for those who are frustrated by today’s sullen admiration of Ke$has and wannabe Madonnas.
Kelly Cutrone embodies the type of a woman I want to become, quite frankly. She doesn’t take any crap from any guy, no matter who he is. For god’s sake, she had the chance to work with Donald Trump but didn’t because she disagreed with that fact that he associates with men who degrade women. She’ll tell you the truth but she still has a heart. She hasn’t allowed her success to change her. She, herself, moved to New York on a whim and made her way owning next to nothing even though her parents told her it was a terrible idea. She is a selfless person.
Whether we like it or not, we’re still living in a world that generally subsumes a woman’s achievement within the political sphere as a ground breaking event. Sure, Alison Redford became the first female premier of Alberta but am I the only one to think “um, hello, it’s 2011?” This should have happened well before the 70s. This is heartbreaking to me, and perhaps that’s why I like Cutrone so much. As she says, “We as women are accepting crumbs, when we should be feasting at the buffet.”
When you Google “women to look up to,” not much surfaces. Kelly Cutrone should.