![]() ![]() But more than that, it's about solidarity. I always tell my friends, text me when you get home. Every woman I asked about the title when we were figuring out what to call the book said, I say that. It's become almost an instinct for women to say that to each other. ![]() GARCIA-NAVARRO: (Laughter) Explain the title of the book. GARCIA-NAVARRO: Any excuse to play a clip of "Dynasty," I must say. But the way we see and are experiencing female friendships is evolving, argues Kayleen Schaefer in her new book "Text Me When You Get Home: The Evolution And Triumph Of Modern Female Friendship." She joins us now from our studios in New York. And they were always fighting over the big prize - men. The idea was that the women were competitive, jealous and undermining. GARCIA-NAVARRO: That, of course, is the '80s TV show "Dynasty" and one of the many of what had been called catfights between Linda Evans and Joan Collins. So if you've quite finished.ĮVANS: (As Krystle Carrington) I haven't. Well, I didn't cause your accident, Krystle, just as I didn't cause your baroness. JOAN COLLINS: (As Alexis Colby) No, no, you're jealous because Fallon's had her baby. LINDA EVANS: (As Krystle Carrington) You were jealous, jealous because I was going to give Blake a child. ![]() For a long time, women's relationships on TV and in the movies were mainly portrayed like this. ![]()
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