Former Malibu resident Carole Raphaelle Davis gives the inside look of being a Hollywood wife in her first book "The Diary of Jinky, Dog of a Hollywood Wife," told through the eyes of her dog.Life And Arts
Living a dog of a Hollywood life
Carole Raphaelle Davis with Jinky. The dog is the inspiration for "The Diary of Jinky, Dog of a Hollywood Wife," which gives the inside scoop to what it's like to live with a neurotic Hollywood couple. Photo by Maximillian Canepa
By Melonie Magruder / Special to the Malibu Times
"To think that I was on death row... and now I've got a house in the Hollywood Hills with a pool, sports cars and a hot blond girlfriend," Jinky, the ex-con bragged. "She's fixed and I've got no balls; we're the complete Hollywood couple!"
No, these are not the confessions of the latest rap artist or the newest plot for HBO's hit series "Entourage." These are merely the musings of Jinky, as told by his mistress, author/actress/singer Carole Raphaelle Davis. Hot off the presses from Andrews McMeel Publishing, "The Diary of Jinky, Dog of a Hollywood Wife," was penned by just such a wife, who has an ear for the tawdry and the divine in a one-industry town.
Jinky's true-life story is the perfect Hollywood plot line. Abandoned to an animal shelter in San Pedro, Jinky was slated to meet his maker (or, as Jinky terms it, be "murdered") within hours, when a supervisor at the shelter intervened. Noting Jinky's signature appeal, Hal Moore called a friend who called another friend and Jinky ended up with an organization called Chihuahua Rescue, whose passion for rescuing animals evidently is not limited to small Mexican dogs.
"Jinky was with a bunch of other dogs at a pet adoption event in Burbank," Davis recounted. "My husband spotted him in a cage and said he looked just like a fruit bat."
The dog was promptly adopted and christened "Jinky," after the name of a character-who happened to be a fruit bat-in a television series written by Davis' husband, Kevin Rooney, a political comedy writer who writes for "The Dennis Miller Show" and "Bill Maher."
As Jinky says in his diary, "Just when you think you're going to get the noose around your neck, your whole life can turn around."
He ended up in the pampered laps of a comedy television writer and a shrewdly observant Hollywood wife. (Before Davis became a Hollywood wife, she lived in Malibu many years.)
In his new life in Laurel Canyon, Jinky learns a great deal about the "Biz," performance anxiety, out-of-control spending and blanket neuroses. Which doesn't make a lot of sense to him because his priorities involve the simple things-two squares, a soft pillow to sleep on and an open field to run in.
However, Jinky's quest for the simple life is confounded by inexplicable human foible: people who "spend thousands of dollars on a fake rain-shower head for their fancy bathrooms so they can have the feeling of rain," but who then complain about needing an umbrella when it actually does rain.
Davis, who started a Jinky blog before the book, tells her Hollywood tale through the eyes of her dog with remarkable candor.
"My husband was a bit nervous," she said. "My Jinky blog was getting so popular, showing us with warts and all, but Kevin was pretty brave about it. The book takes an honest look at our marriage. We may be neurotic, but in Hollywood, we definitely aren't the only ones. There are a lot of readers who will say, 'Ha! That's nothing!' Jinky's diary is a humorous indictment of the excesses of Hollywood society and the status quo."
A French-born actress and model, Davis didn't write "The Diary of Jinky" merely to offend self-obsessed film industry cognoscenti.
"In Hollywood, we can be so pampered that we lose sight of what is important in life," she said. "Family, friends, appreciation of a walk on a beautiful beach. These are all the things dogs enjoy and we can learn a lot from them."
Davis also wanted to highlight the work of animal rescue agencies and the challenges they face. Depending on whose statistics you accept, "shelters kill between four million and twelve million animals a year, and yet, you have these pet stores that sell over-bred puppies for hundreds of dollars!"
Davis said she believes it is immoral not to choose a pet from an adoption center. "For the price of one pair of Jimmy Choo shoes, you could save nine dogs from being killed. And they would all be neutered to try and break this cycle."
"The Diary of Jinky" has a book launch and special reading offered by Book Soup in West Hollywood on Saturday, between 2 p.m. and 5 p.m.
Davis said the book was accepted for a launch party when she was showing a copy to the store's owner and pop star Elton John was visiting.
"Elton and [his partner] David Furbish were in the store and bought a copy immediately. They said they had an adopted dog at their home in London!"
Read my new review in Fetchdog by Julia Szabo!
Jinky makes the front page of the Arts Section of the Jerusalem Post. Click here to read the article.
Hey! Check out my friend Molly at Molly's Mutts and Meows! She saves homeless guys like I was and gets them great humans in LA! (She's got talent because it's hard to find good humans in Hollywood.)
Read my interview in The Pampered Puppy Magazine where I blast zoos.
Click below to see how horrible my wife Finley is. She stays fit by recycling her lunch.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FKDBBWZdQVc
The Jewish Journal of Los Angeles
Review by Jay Firestone
"The Diary of Jinky: Dog of a Hollywood Wife," by Carole Raphaelle Davis (Andrews McMeel Publishing, $12.95).
All dogs go to heaven, but quick-witted terrier Jinky wasn't ready to wag his tail one last time. The former San Pedro dog pound "death row" inmate was fortunate enough to be rescued by a beautiful woman during an adoption event in Burbank. The hardened canine was able to trade his former life on the streets for the lap of luxury in the form of a Hollywood Hills mansion. Amazed by his sudden reversal of fortune, Jinky documents his story in "The Diary of Jinky."
Jinky's brutal honesty makes for a nice contrast to the friendly, polite shell of his Hollywood pet parents. "Dad had a birthday and he is seven and a half in dog years. In people years, that's nearly dead. In Hollywood, that's a rotting corpse," he writes.
When Jinky shares his unique perspective and gratitude for things that people typically take for granted, his off-the-collar insights help us gain a better appreciation for our world and enable us to truly respect our lives.
As told to actress and animal rights activist Carole Raphaelle Davis, this doggy diary illustrates the two-way relationship that can be created through saving an animal.
"Now that my dog has surpassed my wildest dreams by writing a book, I hope that people will read it and then go out and do a mitzvah. I hope they do something nice for someone, even if that someone has four legs," said Davis, who added that it's important to adopt animals from a shelter, rather than buy them from a pet store.
I just farted. I launched an atomic gas missile in the general direction of Hollywood.
Please visit AwarenessDay.org to learn where your cute dog might come from. Ever wonder what Fluffy's Mom looks like? |