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‘Idol’ Cook has friends in the kitchen
Jeff Barnard
SELMA(Ore)—Desiree Eddy cooks for the folks who crowd the Country Folks
Restaurant on “American Idol” night, but she doesn’t let that keep her
from the telephone. Dialing as fast as she can, Eddy figures she can
vote 600 times for local contestant Kristy Lee Cook — if the toll-free
phone lines don’t jam up, that is. “We stay up and vote non-stop,” said
Eddy, who has to get up long before dawn to start the grill for
breakfast. “She comes from such a small town that we have to vote twice
as hard to keep her in.”
The Deer Creek Valley around this small rural crossroads only has about
3,000 people, but on “Idol” night, many of them are poised to vote as
many times as they can for Cook. Country Folks owners Alicia and Stan
Kinsey, Eddy’s mom and dad, keep the restaurant open past their normal 3
p.m. closing so folks who don’t have satellite TV can come and watch;
for those who can’t, they put Cook’s voting number on the reader board
outside. “It just kind of grew,” said Eddy. “Now it’s huge. The
customers are really cool. They come about 7 and order so we can get
everything out by 8 o’clock and we all can watch. It’s like family.”
Selma is an unincorporated community on the edge of the Rogue-Siskiyou
National Forest; the community was in the heart of Oregon’s gold rush in
the 1850s and the timber boom after World War II. Both have gone bust,
leaving Selma with a handful of businesses mostly focused on drawing
passers-by off the two-lane blacktop, and a scattering of rural homes
ranging from mansions to singlewides. Horses, llamas and goats graze in
grassy fields and snowcapped mountains ring the valley. In 2002, Selma
feared for its very life as the Biscuit fire, the biggest in the nation
that year at 500,000 acres, bore down. Born in the Seattle area, Cook,
24, moved to a log house here as a 14-year-old, when her parents, Larry
and Carlene Cook, were looking for a place that split the distance
between Reno, Nev., where one daughter was a swimmer at the University
of Nevada, and Eugene, Ore., where a son was a wide receiver at the
University of Oregon.
None would comment for this story because “Idol” has confidentiality
agreements from family and friends of contestants. The Grants Pass Daily
Courier has followed Cook’s career, reporting that she got her big break
in 1998, when she opened at a nearby music festival for Glen Campbell.
That led to a record deal and an album. |