North Dakota's most famous restaurant critic has been eating at home lately. It's not that there's nowhere to go in and around Grand Forks, where she lives and writes. Her governor, Doug Burgum, has allowed restaurants and bars to stay open even though the state has had the third-highest death rate from COVID-19 over the past week.
It is not that Marilyn Hagerty is running out of steam at 94, either. She files three columns for the Grand Forks Herald each week, even though she has officially retired from the paper "two or three times," as she puts it. She had already been retired for at least two decades when, in 2012, she wrote a column that chronicled the arrival of her town's first Olive Garden.
Hagerty's account, written in her usual style of valuing factual data above critical appraisal, sent the internet into convulsions. An overnight sensation in her 80s, she appeared twice on Anderson Cooper's syndicated talk show and signed a book deal with Anthony Bourdain's imprint.
Today she calls this whirlwind period "the time when I was viral." That has a different ring this year, though, which is what led her to think twice about the wisdom of sticking to her usual busy dining calendar.
Hagerty has lived alone since the 1997 death of her husband, Jack Hagerty, who had been editor of the Herald.
"She was going on as normal," said her son, James R. Hagerty, until about a month ago, when she told him during a phone call that she had gone to a truck stop for breakfast.
This was around the time that North Dakota's COVID-19 outbreak was becoming the worst in the country.
"You know, that's probably not a good idea," he remembers saying.