Immediately, she’s welcoming: “Can I make you a shake? I’m having a shake.” I am not about to refuse a homemade shake from Jennifer Aniston. She murmur repeats - part bumbling professor, part conspiratorial best friend. That’s exactly right.” Aniston at her most Aniston. “Our interview can be a dry run,” I propose. “I just have a few pages to learn of a huge interview scene.” “I just had a whole thing happen at work.” She’s in the middle of filming the third season of The Morning Show. “Excuse my frazzledness,” she says, seeming pretty unfrazzled, as we walk into her kitchen. She welcomes me into the house, which looks like a comfortable art gallery and smells like a box of new shoes transported in a Louis Vuitton steamer trunk full of gardenias. When she opens the door - ripped jeans, tank top, barefoot - Aniston looks like she could be the owner’s out-of-town friend crashing here for a few days. Then suddenly, there’s a lot of barking and Aniston’s familiar voice, somewhere inside, reprimanding her dogs. Pruned trees, gurgling fountains, 500-foot-tall front doors. This is what I’m thinking when the gates to her house swing open and I enter onto a pea stone car park. To live here, one assumes, you have to have achieved a certain kind of Olympian status, like having been among the most beloved figures in American pop culture for 30 years. But here, along avenues of impermeable iron gates, among houses hidden behind hedges grown to make sure you know your place, the vibe is pretty intimidating. The girl next door, which is a ’90s euphemism that means she’s unintimidating, approachable. That’s what people called her for a long time. If we’re being literal, the hills above western Los Angeles are actually the only place where Jennifer Aniston is the girl next door.
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