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CHELSEA CLINTON


'Chelsea Victoria Clinton' (born February 27, 1980) is the daughter and only child of former US President Bill Clinton and United States Senator Hillary Clinton. She was born in Little Rock, Arkansas. Her name was inspired by her parents' fondness for Judy Collins's recording of the Joni Mitchell song "Chelsea Morning".
In Arkansas, Chelsea attended Forest Park Elementary School, Booker Arts Magnet Elementary School and Horace Mann Junior High School. In Washington, she attended Sidwell Friends School. She received her undergraduate degree in history from Stanford University and a graduate degree from Oxford. She has made few public comments on her upbringing but has said that her parents were "firm but fair."

Contents
Teenager at the White House
Absorbing criticism
Life after the Clinton Presidency
References in popular culture
References
External links

Teenager at the White House


Chelsea with her parents in the 1997 inaugural parade.

Chelsea Clinton moved into the White House on the day of her father's inauguration on January 20 1993, when she was twelve years old.
Clinton spent her teenage years there and attended the Sidwell Friends School, where she was on the varsity soccer team. Before Chelsea came to Washington, D.C., some people debated over whether the president should choose a public school or a private school for her. Debarah Fallows wrote a 1992 editorial for the ''Washington Monthly'' asserting that the Clintons should enroll Chelsea in a public school.[1]
She was a National Merit Scholarship finalist in 1997. Having taken dance classes since she was four years old, Clinton began taking ballet courses at the Washington School of Ballet in 1993. She played the role of the Favorite Aunt in the Washington Ballet's 1996 production of Tchaikovsky's The Nutcracker. During her early schooling years, Clinton participated in Model United Nations conferences.
In August 1998, a few days after President Clinton's address to the nation in which he admitted to an inappropriate relationship with Monica Lewinsky, the teenage Clinton was placed prominently between her mother and father as they walked towards the Marine One helicopter to take them on their family vacation. On February 5, 1999, just before the Senate's vote on impeachment, ''People'' magazine ran a cover story on Chelsea Clinton. The cover story irked the First Family, as well as the Secret Service.[2]
Clinton assumed her mother's White House Hostess responsibilities from January 3 to January 20, 2001, the period during which Hillary began her term as a U.S. Senator from New York until the end of her father's presidency. Chelsea did not assume the style of First Lady, generally accorded unofficially to the wives of Presidents who serve or have served as the White House Hostess.
Absorbing criticism

The mainstream media generally saw her as "off limits," with a few notable exceptions. On a 1992 post-election ''Saturday Night Live'', the characters Wayne and Garth compiled a list of 10 reasons they were happy Bill Clinton had been elected. After raving about the Gore daughters — the next item on the list read "Chelsea," regarding whom Wayne said "While it's true that adolescence has been thus far unkind, we think she's gonna be a future fox."[3] SNL producer Lorne Michaels apologized to the Clinton family, as did Wayne actor Mike Myers,[4] and subsequent rebroadcasts were edited to remove that part of the dialogue. Also, on the January 16th, 1993 broadcast of the show, actress Julia Sweeney did an impersonation of Chelsea, which mocked her awkward adolescent attributes.
Critics of the Clintons have also criticized Chelsea.
Conservative talk show host Rush Limbaugh compared 13-year-old Chelsea to a dog:

★ On November 6, 1992, three days after her father won the elections, when Chelsea was still in braces, Rush Limbaugh said the following on his television show: "Everyone knows the Clintons have a cat; Socks is the White House cat. But did you know there is also a White House dog?"[5][6] He then pointed to a video monitor, which switched to a picture of Chelsea. Limbaugh has claimed that it was a technical error, despite the fact that the show was taped in advance of its broadcast, giving Limbaugh ample time to fix the "error."
Chelsea's other press encounters include the following:

★ In 1997 Stanford University senior Jesse Oxfeld was fired for writing an article about Chelsea for ''The Stanford Daily'', after the paper stated a policy of not writing about the new freshman unless she did something newsworthy.[7][8]

★ In 1998 the ''New York Post'' ran a story about Chelsea breaking up with her boyfriend of the time and seeking treatment for stress. The White House objected to this level of attention.[9] The ''Post'' later apologized.

★ In 1998, ''Salon.com'' criticized the mainstream media for not directly quoting an off-color joke made by Sen. John McCain at a Republican fundraiser, in which he ridiculed Chelsea (who was a teenager at the time) along with Hillary Clinton and Janet Reno.[10]

★ In 2001, as President Clinton was leaving office, ''The National Review'' contributing editor John Derbyshire authored a column specifically attacking Chelsea, in which he wrote "I hate Chelsea Clinton", and "Chelsea is a Clinton. She bears the taint."[11]

Life after the Clinton Presidency


Seeing her mother Hillary Clinton sworn in as United States Senator, January 3, 2001.

Clinton turned down Yale, Harvard, Princeton, and Brown to attend Stanford University. She majored in chemistry with an interest in medicine before switching to history after 2 years.Jodi Kantor, Primed for a Second Stint as First Daughter, ''The New York Times'', July 30, 2007. In 2001, she graduated with distinction from Stanford; her undergraduate thesis topic was her father's mediation of the 1998 Northern Ireland peace agreement. She went on to earn a Master's degree at University College, Oxford University in international relations.Jodi Kantor, Primed for a Second Stint as First Daughter, ''The New York Times'', July 30, 2007.
In 2003, Clinton joined the consulting firm McKinsey & Company in New York City, reportedly earning a low six-figure salary; she was the youngest person hired in her class, hired alongside those holding MBAs.[12]Jodi Kantor, Primed for a Second Stint as First Daughter, ''The New York Times'', July 30, 2007.
In the fall of 2006, she left McKinsey and went to work for Avenue Capital, a hedge fund run by Marc Lasry, a loyal donor to Democratic causes generally, and heavy supporter of the Clintons.Jodi Kantor, Primed for a Second Stint as First Daughter, ''The New York Times'', July 30, 2007.
She is currently dating Marc Mezvinsky, a Goldman Sachs employee and the son of disgraced former Congressman Edward Mezvinsky (D-Iowa) and Marjorie Margolies-Mezvinsky, also a former member of Congress from Pennsylvania.Jodi Kantor, Primed for a Second Stint as First Daughter, ''The New York Times'', July 30, 2007.
The 2004 film ''Chasing Liberty'' was said to be inspired by a photograph of Clinton at a Stanford basketball game, trying to blend in with other students.
Clinton has since made occasional appearances in gossip columns for her associations with celebrities, including Madonna and Gwyneth Paltrow.
Clinton is a vegetarian.[13]
Clinton has never publicly commented about any of her parents' policies or public statements. On May 15, 2006, Hillary Clinton apologized to Chelsea for critical remarks she made about young people's work ethic, after the younger Clinton privately took exception to her mother's comments.[14]
Since 2005, Clinton had lived in the mid-Manhattan west side neighborhood of Chelsea. The neighborhood north of it, Hell's Kitchen, has been referred to as Clinton by real estate agents attempting to avoid the neighborhood's traditionally poor image. The two Midtown West neighborhoods are sometimes lumped together by real estate agents as "Chelsea Clinton" and there was a local weekly newspaper "Chelsea Clinton News" before she became the famous first daughter. As of 2006, Chelsea had moved to a building in the Gramercy area of Manhattan (just east of Chelsea). During the November 2006 mid-term election, in which her mother was running for re-election to the Senate, attention was drawn to her residence when it was discovered that an error at her 20th Street polling station had resulted in her name not being on the voting books. Clinton was allowed to vote via a paper ballot.[15]
She serves on the board of the School of American Ballet.Jodi Kantor, Primed for a Second Stint as First Daughter, ''The New York Times'', July 30, 2007. She has also served as co-chairwoman of a fund-raising weekend for her father’s Clinton Foundation.Jodi Kantor, Primed for a Second Stint as First Daughter, ''The New York Times'', July 30, 2007.

References in popular culture



★ In an episode of Pinky and the Brain the head of Camp Davy a camp for the leaders of the world children head counsolor is Chelsea Clinton.

★ In the 1998 film ''Rush Hour'', protagonist Detective James Carter (Chris Tucker) responds after hearing a pricey ransom demand from a villain, "50 million dollars? Man, who'd you think you got? Chelsea Clinton?"

★ In the 1999 TV movie '', which takes place in the future, a professor in a classroom makes reference to "President Chelsea Clinton".

★ Chelsea Clinton was portrayed by Julia Sweeney in a 1993 sketch on Saturday Night Live.[16]

★ In the animated movie ''Beavis and Butt-Head Do America'', the two title characters end up wandering around the White House. Butt-Head walks into a room and encounters Chelsea, greeting her with "Hey, baby," and making a comparison between the braces they both wear. The next shot we see is of Butt-Head being thrown out of the window and landing some three stories below.

★ In the British comedy series ''Drop the Dead Donkey'' a journalist mentions a supposed phone conversation between President Clinton and Prime Minister Major, where Major says he is watching Chelsea 'take a hammering'. He is referring to watching a football game where Chelsea Football Club is losing.

★ In the film ''BASEketball'', a potentially terminally ill child is approached by the "Dream Come True Foundation" (Which represents the Make a Wish Foundation in the movie) and is asked what he wants more than anything in the world. He replies, "Chelsea Clinton?" Trey Parker's character remarks, "That's a pretty tall order, dude" with Matt Stone's character adding, "You'd have a better shot at Bill."

★ There are numerous references to Chelsea in the Katie Holmes film, ''First Daughter''.

References


1. First choice: why Chelsea Clinton should attend a public school Debarah Fallows
2. Secret Service concerned over Chelsea Clinton cover story John King
3. No Chelsea treatment for you Debbie Schlussel
4. Just ask Chelsea, Jenna and Barbara C. W. Nevius
5. 16 Candles for Chelsea Roxanne Roberts
6. Lyin' Bully Molly Ivins
7. Stanford student columnist fired; broke 'Clintonian' rule
8. The First Daughter and the Press Nat Hentoff
9. Open Season On Chelsea? Tabloids Say She's Now Fair Game Howard Kurtz
10. A joke too bad to print?
11. Be Very Afraid: Clinton’s legacy John Derbyshire
12. Chelsea Clinton lands six-figure job
13. Biography for Chelsea Clinton
14. Sen. Clinton Apologizes To Chelsea
15. Mother's on ballot, but daughter's not in voting book J. Barron
16. No one said life would be fair, even for the now-public Chelsea Philip Terzian

External links







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