After answering an Obama administration's Craigslist ad for a stenographer, the then-25-year-old Dorey-Stein quit her five part-time jobs after she was hired to work in the White House in 2012 - joining a pool of 13 reporters from the White House press corps to travel with the president, recording everything he said and then transcribing it for the press office and presidential archive.
'Traveling with the president is like summer camp on steroids - a week on the road is like a year at home', Dorey-Stein writes.
The "steroids" in this case would be a steady supply of pharmaceuticals - which staffers were constantly taking while cheating on their significant others on the road - such as senior staffer Jason Wolf.
Boarding Air Force One for the first time with an overstuffed duffel because she didn't know what not to pack, she thought she saw actor Jim Carrey sitting near the front of the plane.Of course, Obama is no stranger to lewd behavior on a plane, proudly displaying his erection during a flight in a #MeToo moment (we sure feel violated).
He turned out to be the man she fell hopelessly in love with, Jason Wolf - the man she left her hotel room door ajar for in foreign cities.
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Wolf never talked about his serious relationship with his girlfriend Brooke back home in LA whose father was a famous producer.
She'd leave her hotel room door open for him so he could sneak in at night.
They carried on across the globe while Beck tried to keep her boyfriend Sam out of her mind.
She describes experiencing 'the best sleepover party ever' where everyone took their drug of choice on long flights - Sonata, Xanax or Ambien - which made any 'awkward intimacy with colleagues suddenly just funny and bizarre,' she writes. - Daily Mail
Beck recalls listening to "old-timer boozy party animals" regail each other with stories about the different administrations, presidents and international affairs - such as George H.W. Bush barfing on the Japanese prime minister, or Reagan falling asleep in front of the pope.
'Pinch me because how is this scene my real life'? Beck writes.
She also notes in her book how, despite traveling to some of the most poverty-stricken countries in the world - the scene when the U.S. delegation arrived was always the same.
'We do not see the slums or hear the screams. No matter where we are in the world, Dar es Salaam or Indianapolis, the field always looks the same: red carpet, white tent, blue velvet drape'. - Daily MailBeck stayed on with the Trump administration - which she describes as the "insane clown posse," adding "What was once joy has become 'a waking nightmare. I'm now a stenographer in the Trump administration."
We're sure that can be fixed.
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