Hilton's
Resisted Title of New Reality Series Because they Didn't Want Name on it
6/13/05
'It Does Sound a Little Obnoxious' Says Paris's Father Rick Hilton.
NEW YORK, June 12 /PRNewswire/ -- Paris
Hilton tells Newsweek that maybe when she was younger, "I thought
it was cute to play a dumb blonde. On TV, I do it because it's funny. I
consider myself a businesswoman and a brand." When Senior Editor Marc
Peyser, who spent a day with the Hilton family to talk about their new NBC
reality series "I
Want to Be a Hilton," tells Paris she's a lot smarter than the
woman who once wondered if Wal-Mart was a place to buy walls, she replies,
"I know exactly what I'm doing."
She's certainly managed to turn herself into an icon and a conglomerate
for essentially being a party girl -- that is, for doing nothing. And
she's planning to give up her public life in two years, by which time she
expects to become a mother with fiancé Paris Latsis. "I don't enjoy
going out anymore," she tells Peyser in the June 20 issue of Newsweek
(on newsstands Monday, June 13). "It's a pain. It's everyone saying,
'Let's do a deal! Can I have a picture?' I'm just, like, 'These people are
such losers. I can't believe I used to love doing this'."
Peyser reports that for the new series, the Hiltons actually fought
with NBC about the show's title -- because they didn't want their name in
it. "We thought it was too cheeky," says Paris's father Rick
Hilton. "It does sound a little obnoxious." Paris's mother Kathy
Hilton is the host of the show, in which she plays a Southampton Pygmalion
who coaches 14 rubes, hicks and homegirls in taste and etiquette.
Peyser brings up the recent scandals over the girls' difficult
boyfriends, the guy who hacked into Paris's Sidekick and, of course,
Paris's homemade sex tape. "Well, that was very painful. Very
painful. Very painful," says Kathy Hilton. "But it taught me
that I really can't trust everybody."
So then why sign on for the reality show? In addition to acting being
in Kathy's blood and famous actress relatives, another possibility may be
the money, Peyser reports. Despite whatever trust funds they may have,
Rick isn't on the family payroll. His day job is developing and selling
real estate; he recently sold Cliff Robertson's $19 million house in La
Jolla. "My father, like his father, always felt that the children
should make their own way in life," Rick says. "We really have
been taught to row our own boats."