Lunch with Lydia
Lunch With Lydia | She's, like, so not like that
Related Content
By LYDIA MARTIN
lmartin@MiamiHerald.com
Paris Hilton, willowy in a floor-length dress, speaks in a certain sing-song that comes and goes as she munches on fruit at the Shore Club's Ago.
She can so speak in that little girl high-pitched thing where everything ends, like, in a question mark? And she can speak straight, punctuating thoughts with periods, her voice a normal grown-up pitch.
The shifts are not so pronounced you notice them right away. But they're definitely there. The stuff about one of her Chihuahuas just having three puppies, all ``reaaally cute,'' named Dolce, Gabbana and Prada? High-pitched. The stuff about her new CD, Paris, produced by the super-hot Scott Storch and dropping Tuesday? Normal voice.
After lunch, you ask her to record a shoutout for MiamiHerald.com and she obliges: ``Hey, what's up Miami? It's Paris Hilton . . .''
Afterward she tells you, in a tone markedly less heliumy, that she has just used her TV voice. ``I think my real voice is too low. I use the higher-pitched voice because, I don't know, I think it's sexier.''
You assure her her regular voice is not too low at all, and sexier. And she thanks you. Because Paris may play at being a wild party girl, but she's also proper. She offers a firm handshake, looks you in the eye the whole time she's talking, answers questions thoughtfully.
Even questions about the infamous sex video - and this new thing about her staying celibate for a year.
``I decided to be single for a year. But I have never been the type of person who would just sleep with someone. I'm just not that way.''
Yes, it still bothers her that people thought of her ``that way'' after the sex video made the Internet rounds.
``I hate that people think a certain way about me because of one situation with someone I had been with for three years. It's not fair. It hurts my feelings that people think I'm like that. I want little girls to know I'm not like that. It was the most horrifying thing that has ever happened in my life. But I'm stronger now. I've learned not to trust everyone.''
You've clocked her at endless South Beach parties with her peeps. You were expecting the kind of disaffected that seems epidemic among The Young and The Somehow Famous.
But sitting here in a quiet corner at Ago, her hair a long mane of luminous blond, she seems far from her VIP room persona. She's easy enough to talk to. She may be a 25-year-old caught between girlhood and adulthood. She may still be searching for her voice, literally. But at least she's real enough to expose that about herself.
ON THE RECORD
And real enough to acknowledge what people say about her. She's in touch with all the disses, the stuff about her being famous for nothing. That's why this is a huge moment for her. She's excited about her work in the studio with Storch, who has produced everyone from Beyoncé and Christina Aguilera to Eminem, 50 Cent, Fat Joe, Snoop Dogg.
Paris, queen of the tabloids, doesn't have a problem telling you she hopes her musical debut will bring her some needed cred.
``People might be, `Oh, Paris Hilton is doing a record.' And I understand that. But at the same time people shouldn't prejudge me,'' she says gently. ``With this record, I really feel like I'm gonna show people that there's a lot more than they think and read about me. They're gonna see that I do have talent and I can do something.''
Early response to the CD has been favorable, and Paris is psyched about that. The tracks are cute enough, and deftly produced. Something the tweens and teens might just eat up. But more importantly, something Paris can be proud of.
Join the discussion
Note: If this is your first time using our NEW commenting system, you will have to LOG OUT and then LOG BACK IN.
The Miami Herald is pleased to provide this opportunity to share information, experiences and observations about what's in the news. Some of the comments may be reprinted elsewhere in the site or in the newspaper. We encourage lively, open debate on the issues of the day, and ask that you refrain from profanity, hate speech, personal comments and remarks that are off point. In order to post comments, you must be a registered user of MiamiHerald.com. Your username will show along with the comments you post. Thank you for taking the time to offer your thoughts.
More Lunch With Lydia
Lunch With Lydia | Lydia Martin
- The Gentleman: Hot R&B crooner/songwriter Ne-Yo aims to resurrect the Rat Pack's cool
- Rita Moreno overcame Hispanic stereotypes to achieve stardom
- Now he really is Jahn the Man
- Filmmakers turn focus on Godmother
- With help of a little magic, former understudy morphs into Celia on the stage
- Cooking up a neighborhood: Can three food guys who helped ignite South Beach work the same magic in the Design District?















My Yahoo
@Nyx.CommentBody@