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2014 memoir poehler
2014 memoir poehler








You can kind of relegate it to the back shelf near your field hockey equipment and hope that it just stays quiet. I think … you fight against that voice and you have to find a way to live with it, because it will not go away. And then when I started liking boys, it moved into the top bunk and stayed there for a while. The demon voice was around, but it didn't really live in my room.

2014 memoir poehler

On body image and the "demon voice in her head" Poehler talks about fighting the body image "demons," going back to work when her son was an infant and saying goodbye to Parks and Recreation. "And it was easier to share the early parts of my life rather than my own current events." "I'm used to writing in characters and not really writing about myself," she says. Poehler tells this story and others in her new memoir Yes Please.Īlthough she's known for the many characters she has played - including on Saturday Night Live and the NBC comedy Parks and Recreation - she takes off the wigs and the costumes and steps out of character for her new book. "Once I decided that, then it was freeing - not only for my work, because vanity is a tough thing to have in comedy - but I didn't care as much if people thought I was pretty or not pretty," she says. For Poehler, that meant not leaning on her looks to be successful. Poehler says it taught her that the earlier you figure out your "currency," the happier you'll be. "It was almost like an itch being scratched, which was, 'Aha! I knew that you didn't think I was pretty!' … And then it was followed by a real crash because … my ego was bruised," Poehler tells Fresh Air's Terry Gross. When comedian Amy Poehler was in her 20s, she read her boyfriend's journal and found out that he didn't think she was pretty.










2014 memoir poehler