Fashion and food can be guilty pleasures
Pass the Funyuns and Sweet Valley High books
Ah, lifestyle guilty pleasures, a true catch-all for everything and anything we're just a wee bit embarrassed by.
Shopping indulgences. Favorite junk-food treats. The cheap paperbacks we hide behind our college textbooks, pretending we're just saving them for that next airplane ride.
Even the most straitlaced, politically correct vegan among us gives in to temptation from time to time. Guilty pleasures put color in life, and who are we to deny ourselves?
![]() |
Larry Crowe / AP file |
If you’re pressed for time, you can belly up to the lo mein bar the second you get seated. But the best part is they're just so accommodating. If you're craving variety, you can eat your way from one end to another. (And I actually did once. For a review, I ate literally one of everything on a restaurant’s buffet.) Or you can have a bunch of whatever item you prefer — and nothing else. Forty plates of crab legs? Nobody in the place will even glance sideways at you. And all for under $10 bucks? Pinch me. But not in the general region of my stomach — I’m very full. Oh, man, is that shrimp? —Brian Bellmont
Funyuns
Usually, when a friend or loved one expresses horror at something I'm snacking on — and it happens frequently, given my love of anchovies, toxically stinky cheeses, and peanut-butter-and-tomato sandwiches — I try to defend my choice. "It's an acquired taste," I'll say, or "don't knock it 'til you've tried it."
![]() |
When it's a bag of Funyuns, however, I have no defense — primarily because Funyuns have such an odd, cakey texture that they wick all the saliva away from my tongue, and even if I want to stick up for Frito-Lay's strangely addictive "onion flavored ring," I can't speak at all until I cleanse my palate with a swig of Diet Coke. (Yes, I see the paradox there. No, I don't care to examine it more closely.)
|
![]() |
Katie Cannon / MSNBC.com |
|
Sour makes us love it. Chewy makes us its slaves. —Jon Bonné
Hats
It started in childhood, at Disneyland's "Mad Hatter" shop, my fascination with funny hats. Mickey Mouse ears were not enough, I had to have the Donald Duck cap with the squeaking bill.
I learned the dark side of hat messages when my employer went broke in the '80s junk bond collapse, and held a meeting to warn us it might not be safe to wear their company logo clothing in public. So I'm choosy with the messages my headwear send. I put away my '40s fedora after Matt Drudge made it his trademark, and Michael Moore has made me reconsider baseball caps — at least when I'm overdue for a haircut. The pride of my collection are souvenirs of my teenage employment at McDonald's: paper hats designated "Trainee," "Employee" and "Supervisor" (the last one acquired without authorization).
But the hat I most enjoy came from a Los Angeles celebrity garage sale: a multi-colored umbrella hat that a rock DJ claimed had been once owned by Woodstock's Wavy Gravy. It had no autograph or letter of authenticity, but I can't wear it without yelling out for "Breakfast in bed for 400,000!" —Wendell Wittler
Manicures and pedicures
My ultimate guilty pleasure, sitting in the large vibrating massage chair, my feet soaking in a warm, scented whirlpool while one woman pampers my tootsies while another tends to my hands. Clean, trimmed cuticles. Callouses removed. Finely shaped nails covered with a pretty shade of pink.
![]() |
Katie Cannon / MSNBC.com |
Apart from being aesthetically pleasing, a mani-pedi is really a mini massage treatment. Your hands are soaked, cleaned, lotioned and massaged. In the finer salons, you also have your hands dipped in paraffin wax, which makes them as smooth as butter. During your pedicure, your feet and calves are massaged with sea salt and lathered in scented lotions. I have been known to fall asleep during a mani-pedi. Hmmmm, wonder if Michelle can fit me in today. —Denise Hazlick
![]() |
Katie Cannon / MSNBC.com |
|
![]() |
James Cheng / MSNBC.com |
Like all true shoe mavens, I covet the true jewels — Prada, Jimmy Choo, Christian Louboutin and, of course, Manolo Blahnik. My ultimate guilty pleasure: A pair of strappy, spike heeled silver Manolos. So I skipped lunch for a month to pay for them, but I sure looked stylish while I was warming up those Cups O’ Noodles. —D.H.
![]() |
|
In a sort of twisted ritual, every summer I give myself over to the original 60-some books my older sister and I collected. It's disturbing how frantic I get when the responsible, sweet, and honest (read: dull, dull, DULL) Elizabeth sustains a concussion from a motorcycle crash and undergoes a major personality revision. I still haven't worked out how that's medically possible. Even at 30, I still view the 16-year-old Wakefield Twins as being so much older than I am. Maybe it's because I never really reached the age where I thought could pull off the wet-look bikini Jessica was so fond of picturing herself in when she should have been conjugating French verbs. —Stephanie V. W. Lucianovic
Thrift-store dishes
I rarely meet a plate I don’t want to buy, or a wine glass I don’t covet. I have thrift stores lined up on my route home, stopping at each every day. I am breathless when I happen upon a glistening set of cut-crystal wine and champagne glasses for $25. Or find a set of Harmony House “Scroll” china with calligraphic black scrollwork (soup and berry bowls, dessert plates, sugar bowl, creamer, etc, for $35). I can just imagine the place card in calligraphic handwriting to match! My brain is overheating and I have the table set in my head before I leave the store.
With no place to store them in the house, and not wanting to explain why I HAD to buy the Knowles ‘Scandia’ with a sweet bunch of pastel flowers arranged on berry bowls and plates, I drive around for weeks with my purchases in my car. Visitors might encounter a spring table of eclectic antique floral plates, cups, saucers and linens — with Chinese lanterns hung from the ceiling in a great mass of floating pastels. For our “fall” china I found Noritake Helene with beautiful silver and brown leaves. I discovered them at my favorite antique store for a bargain, and at once begin collecting more for the big Thanksgiving dinners we host. I think my next obsession is going to be buying big old china cabinets in which to store the first obsession. —Kim Carney
Trashy Cheese
I'm a part-time cheesemonger in a shop where cheeses go for $24 per pound, and quite often I tote home oozing rounds from Jura or wedges of bandage-wrapped Poacher. I stow these foreign visitors next to the cheeses that have a secretly permanent home on my dairy shelf: a package of Kraft singles and a bag of Sargento shredded cheddar.
|
You see, underneath my washed rind, I'm at heart a cheese whore, and I will give it up for trashy cheese if the craving strikes. My plasticky Kraft singles are consumed only one way: stashed firmly between two pieces of bread and grilled to maximum oozing. Dipping in ketchup is optional.
![]() |
Katie Cannon / MSNBC.com |
Many are the late nights when the noshing mood hits me hard. It's much too late to make something fabulous, but I am perfectly happy to settle for something quick and trashy. All it takes is a pile of Triscuits carefully arranged on a plate to maximize their cheese coverage, which are then sprinkled with handfuls of the pre-packaged shredded cheddar. If I'm feeling fancy, I might toss scallions on top before irradiating the plate for 45 seconds. Now excuse me, I feel a craving coming on. —S.V.W.L.
![]() |
True-crime books are easy to find even in a mega-bookstore: Most of them have black covers decorated with slashes of red and promise "16 PAGES OF NEVER-BEFORE-SEEN PHOTOS!"
Of course, I have some standards— I shun the books that are excessively gory or violent, preferring established authors like Ann Rule to those fly-by-nighters who seem to have put their book together in the back seat of their Geo Prizm. But that said, if it's about the Menendez brothers, Betty Broderick or Laci Peterson, you're likely to be able to borrow a copy from me. —G.F.C.
- Discuss Story On Newsvine
-
Rate Story:
View popularLowHigh - Instant Message
MORE FROM ENTERTAINMENT |
| Add Entertainment headlines to your news reader: |
Sponsored links
Resource guide













