There isn't much reason to watch "Good Day, LA" in Los Angeles except for one co-hostess, the mature beauty Dorothy Lucey. She is blond with a beautiful body, great legs and very nice, substantial breasts. I sit through the first hour of the show before I go to work just to watch Dorothy and see what she is wearing that day. Usually she has very appropriate dresses, skirts and blouses, but occasionally she would have an outfit that showed lots of cleavage and watching her I would jack off thinking of fondling her breasts and sucking her nipples. Her chest featured lots of freckles, and I would get off thinking about kissing her freckles starting at her neck and then working down and down until I came to a soft, white breast, which I would kiss, stroke, rub, squeeze and fondle.
Little did I realize that in less than a month I would have that opportunity.
On a Monday morning, the big announcement on the show was that the station was running a contest called "Lunch with Dorothy." You had to write a 500-word (or less) essay on why you should have the opportunity to have lunch with the talk show star. That was great for me, since I was a writer/reporter who was used to putting words to paper. My first draft came quickly, since I already knew quite a bit about Dorothy and her background. But then I spent the next two days reworking the words meticulously. I really wanted to be the contest winner. When I e-mailed my entry to the station I felt I had a very good chance, since I know that most people have a hard time expressing their thoughts through the written word.
The telephone call came the day after the contest ended, announcing that I had been selected. I responded appropriately. I was told that the luncheon was set for the next Wednesday if I was available (I certainly was) at a Hollywood landmark restaurant, the Musso & Frank Grill (which I felt was perfect since it had soft lighting, softer booths and lots of privacy at certain tables).
On Wednesday, I was at the restaurant 45 minutes early. I talked to the maitre d' and learned they were aware who was coming, since Dorothy frequented the place often after work. He showed me the booth reserved for us and I asked if it could be changed to one a lot more private. He not only understood why I was asking, but also understood the $50 bill I slipped him.
Soon after I was seated in the almost secluded booth I was surprised when I saw Dorothy Lucey walking toward me alone. I had expected that a station PR staffer would be with her. I also had assumed she would be wearing a somewhat conservative dress, but she was wearing a leopard-skin dress that I had seen her wear on the show. It was short, fairly tight fitting and had a low, square-necked top that showed a lot of cleavage. I noted that she not only had a great body, but her legs also were spectacular. Up close, as we shook hands, I could see a few lines that on-camera makeup covered up, but Dorothy Lucey was still a beautiful woman.
After we introduced ourselves I motioned her into the booth and was pleased that she moved just far enough in that we would be sitting close together. As I sat, our bodies touched and I could feel the warmth coming from her thigh. We both ordered glasses of white wine and then began talking. She turned toward me and her leg came into even more contact with mine. She was skilled both as a listener and a questioner, and as we ordered lunch and then ate, she soon had almost my entire life story out of me, until I turned the conversation back to her and how she got into the media business after graduation from George Washington University with a Bachelor's degree in political science. I told her that I thought she was the best thing on the "Good Day, LA" show and that her intelligence showed with the questions she asked of guests.
I asked her if she had a "fantasy" guest she would like to interview--someone, living or dead, who she would most like to interview if she had the chance. She actually named three or four persons--none of them celebrities--and that turned the conversation to fantasies. She asked me, "Was it one of your fantasies to have lunch with me?"