Ina Garten Speaks Out About Martha Stewart Amid Rumors of Conflict
Ina Garten he saw no need to compare himself to him Martha Stewart – despite what everyone around him said.
“[I learned] just trusting your vision,” said Garten, 76, during a podcast appearance on Tuesday, December 24. “I think the thing that works is if you’re true to who you are. The more you believe in it, the more you believe in it.”
He added, “It’s true. It’s not, ‘I’m going to be this bad guy … people will just love him.’ Just show who you are and do the best job you can and I think people will trust that. They respect that and they believe in that.”
Garten says he sees his life as a train ride.
“People tried to get me out of the train and I just sat on the tracks,” he explained. “When I feel like, I’m sure what I’m doing is right, I don’t let people take me out of my game.”
The two lifestyle students first crossed paths in the early 1990s when Stewart, now 83, went shopping at Garten’s now-closed Barefoot Contessa store in East Hampton, New York.
“My desk was in front of the cheese box and we just finished the conversation,” Garten previously said TIME in the 2017 interview. “We ended up doing benefits together when it was at his house and I was the one who fed, we became friends after that.”
One day, Stewart brought a printer to the Barefoot Contessa military base that helped secure Garten’s first cookbook deal. Each has since published numerous recipe compilations and hosted cooking shows.
Almost two decades later, it was reported that Stewart and Garten were dating. Stewart said so The New Yorker in September that Garten “stopped talking to me” after he was released from prison. (Stewart was convicted of felony counts of conspiracy to tamper and making false statements to federal investigators. He was sentenced to five months in prison and released from prison in March 2005.)
However, Garten denied that the alleged disagreement was due to Stewart’s prison term.
“Well, let’s just say his story isn’t exactly true,” Garten said earlier this month at a book event, promoting his recently released memoir. “You know, that was 25 years ago. I think it’s time to call it quits.”
Garten also noted Tuesday that he surrounds himself with “really smart, smart people” to help make the best decisions for his career.
“What I usually do is I talk to everyone at the beginning and I get everyone’s opinion,” Garten explained. “I hear and we talk and we, sort of, create something. But, at the end of the day, it’s my job to choose and once I get all the information … I know exactly what to do.”
Source link