Lynne Austin
The Hooters Icon
(This story was written in June 1989. I believe
it appeared in Tampa Bay Life that year. I also believe that
some of the original text was lost due to computer incompatibility.)
By Bob Andelman
Lynne Austin is ... late.
It's 4:30 p.m. and she's now an hour late for the shooting
of a new edition of Hooters Nite Owl Theater, the weekly movie
she hosts on WTOG-TV Ch. 44. Her lateness is more gnawing to
the production crew because earlier in the day everything was
pushed back from 1 to 3:30 p.m. and Lynne is still late.
When she finally arrives - already wearing the Hooters T-shirt
and day-glo orange shorts she has made famous on billboards across
America - the Ch. 44 staff and Hooters staff go into overdrive.
Lynne does a quick, emotion-less read-through of the script as
lights are pointed and cameras are put into place.
A plate of freshly made chicken wings on a cheap wooden plate
is set before her and Lynne suddenly reaches into her shirt and
adjusts her brassiere to accomodate Tampa Bay's most famous bosom.
Suddenly the red light goes on and Lynne Austin becomes "L.A.,"
the Hooters equivalent of the Gerber baby, Ronald McDonald and
the little red-haired girl from Wendy's. L.A. is Lynne Austin's
Mr. Hyde: quick-witted, sarcastic and effervescent.
"Anybody that can read can do this," says Lynne
between shots.
"Not like you," answers WTOG's Ed Jones.
Lynne Austin is ... not every mother's
dream come true.
But Annette Austin has no complaints. While some parents might
disown a daughter who repeated bares her essentials to national
magazine photographers and videographers, Annette is the true
archivist of Lynne's growing celebrity. A wicker basket beside
the couch in her Sarasota home overflows with her daughter's
newspaper and magazine clippings.
"How did you hear about Lynne?" she asks innocently,
as if six years on billboards, a spin as Playboy magazine's XXXXXXX
1986 centerfold and a platinum Video Centerfold weren't enough.
"I guess I just find it real strange that everybody thinks
she was a real big deal," explains Annette as Lynne laughs.
The Austins - Lynne has a younger brother, XXXXXXXX - are
a close-knit family considering Annette and Bob have been divorced
for more than a decade. They still spend holidays together. And
whenever Lynne has an open weekend in her hectic travel schedule,
she prefers to spend it hanging out with mom rather than partying
with girlfriends.
Annette is Lynne's business manager and confidante - they
speak frankly and bluntly with one another. It is relationship
most mothers and daughters would envy.
Lynne Austin is ... famous.
There was the time in Atlanta she called housekeeping at 6
a.m. one morning saying she needed an iron and the manager -
dressed in a three-piece suit - personally delivered it minutes
later.
Lynne Austin is not a bimbo.
"We get a lot of angry calls whenever we have her on
the air," reveals Bill Murphy, host of WTSP-TV Ch. 10's
"Murphy in the Morning." "I guess that's because
Lynne once opted to take her clothes off."
Ron Bennington has experienced a similar response to her on
the radio.
"She was doing our show, taking calls," says half
of the morning team at WYNF 95 FM. "A lady gave the normal,
right wing attack, 'You should be embarassed about being being
in Playboy!' We took 50 calls defending her. That amazed me.
People in Tampa Bay are proud of Lynne. She's a Tampa Bay icon."
"She's great in bed, can I say that much?" jokes
Ron Bennington, half of the morning team at WYNF 95 FM. Lynne
does frequent promotions with the station. And while Bennington
is just kidding, he does bring up the assumption many people
have that L.A. is promiscuous. I can speak to this first-hand:
a few years ago when I was publishing a struggling local magazine,
Lynne was on the cover. For weeks after the issue occurred,
The idea that any woman who poses in the nude must be a cheap
slut gets no support from anyone who knows Lynne Austin well.
People who don't know her and just see her pictures sometimes
assume otherwise.
There is a certain class and intelligence about this woman
that draws great loyalty and respect from her friends and business
associates. They say sure she's beautiful, but hey, what a mind
on that babe! As if being blonde automatically excludes her from
being bright.
There are dozens of men in the Tampa Bay area who boast of
having dated Lynne. Or their son, brother or nephew has. The
stories are just not true.
Not that Lynne needs anyone to defend her. When a woman called
into a Louisville, Ky. radio station where the model was a guest
and complained that Lynne and all the other women who posed in
Playboy - which her husband buys - were disgusting, Bob Passwaters
recalls her response. "Lynne said, 'Okay lady, how fat are
you?' It ended the conversation."
While debunking the bimbo myth, this may be a good time to
deal with the perception that Lynne Austin is not all Lynne Austin.
Rumors have circulated for years that she is the product of plastic
surgery and breast enlargement.
Pshaw, says the model, who has heard it all before.
Lynne Austin is a vegetarian.
Have you ever actually seen her eat a chicken wing? Not likely;
she hates chicken and only eats it when she's sick. Even then,
only mom's secret recipe will do. And she hasn't tasted red meat
in six years.
Still, a driving interest of hers continues to be the acquisition
of her own Hooters restaurant franchise sometime in the future.
"I've grown up with the company," she says. "I
know all the ins and outs." What she doesn't know, her mother
probably does; Annette is manager of the Sarasota restaurant.
Lynne Austin is an inspiration to young
women.
In the six years since the first Hooters opened on Gulf to
Bay Blvd. in Clearwater and she waited on the first customer,
Lynne has gone where few waitresses have gone before. Without
any formal training she has modeled, acted, hosted a television
program and become a small industry - "Lynne, Inc."
That's why there's rarely a shortage of pretty girls interested
in becoming Hooters waitresses.
"A lot of the girls have tried for Playboy," says
Lynne; while four have made minor appearances, none have made
centerfold or been as much in demand for personal appearances.
"We went through 'Playboy Fever' where every girl and her
sister wanted to be in Playboy. One girl has tried for five years.
I told her it's not for everybody - for some girls, it's just
one big heartache. It's going to hurt her for a long time because
she's not going to give up."
Knowing many waitresses aspire to her success, Lynne doesn't
discourage them. "Go after your own goals," she says.
"Let Hooters help you, but do your own thing."
"In the last five years," she says, "I dated
five guys. I don't date around. I get one, stick with them 'til
they dump me and then I move on."bleach, "These are
the artificial things on my body," she recites in good humor.
"My hair is lightened, my front two teeth are bonded and
I wear tips on my nails."
So has her mother. "They ask me at work," says Annette.
Between ninth and tenth grade I grew to this (she puts her
hands on her breasts) size. I don't know how many times, on the
back of the bus, I had to prove I didn't stuff!
"I couldn't be prouder that she would have the face and
body a national magazine would want," says Lynne's mom.
On the other hand, Annette is still a protective parent. "If
she wanted to know if I wanted all the men in America to see
my daughter without any clothes - no."
end
©2000,
All rights reserved. No portion may be reproduced without the
express written permission of the author.
Free Andelmania E-Newsletter!
Want to hear the latest about the Andelmans? Join
our mailing list!
You'll get updates about the family and professional news, too.
Enter your email address below, then click the 'Join List' button:
|