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From the New York Times, this is The Interview.
I'm David Marchese.
There are very few celebrity memoirs I've been more eager to read than Lena Dunham's fame-sick.
That's partly because she's such a sharp, funny writer.
It's also partly because her HBO show Girls was a true generational touchstone.
But a bigger part of it is because I knew she 'd have smart things
to say about what exactly she represented to people back in the 2010s.
Dunham, if you'll remember, was a lightning rod for so much discourse.
Her show was divisive and buzzy, sure, but probably not as much as she was.