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Couldn t be ed ie 11
Couldn t be ed ie 11









couldn t be ed ie 11

When it comes to date nights, Lambert and Levine-who met on a Seattle-to-Sacramento Southwest flight in 2005-keep it simple.

couldn t be ed ie 11 couldn t be ed ie 11

“It’s fun to play tourist in your own hometown,” she says. Fun family hot spots include Effie Yeaw Nature Center, Crocker Art Museum and lunch on the Delta King followed by a walk around Old Sacramento. Lambert’s hectic schedule-she doesn’t get home before midnight most nights-makes having quality family time important. I’m very grateful for my village and my tribe,” she says. I feel we can be there for each other in some really unique ways. We understand the unique pressures of our schedules. Lambert relishes having close friends in her industry. The girls enjoy their time together while the moms are able to connect. The two sets of girls have shared everything from nannies to clothes to books. Carlie and DeMarco’s daughter, Piper, were born 10 days apart. Alise and Simoes’ daughter, Gabriella, were born five weeks apart. Two of those neighborhood friends are KCRA-TV co-anchor Kellie DeMarco and former KCRA-TV anchor/reporter Kristen Simoes. I love that we have such a nice neighborhood feel.” “I can walk to so many of my friends’ homes in five minutes. I am able to come home and put my girls to bed every night.”īut the short commute is not the only reason Lambert loves the neighborhood. “Where I live is part of what enables me to have the career that I have. Lambert credits living in East Sac with making her life as it is possible. “Truly, with some of these homes you feel like you are a caretaker for the time you are there,” she says. The trees in Lambert’s backyard are more than 100 years old. A section of wrought-iron fence in her front yard is a gift from friend Patty Roberts, who lives on the Fabulous 40s property that Ronald Reagan and his family lived in while Reagan was serving as governor of California. Edie Lambert appreciates the history of her home and surroundings. The couple moved into their house a little more than four years ago when Lambert was pregnant with Carlie. Rounding out the family are Zeus, a 90-pound black lab chow mix Bitsy, who Lambert and Levine bottle-fed after Lambert’s coworker found the kitten with her head stuck in a fence and pet rabbit Simon, a gift to Alise and Carlie from Santa, who “may or may not have worked with the Sacramento House Rabbit Society,” reports Lambert. Lambert lives a short drive from KCRA-TV’s Downtown studios in a 1935 two-story Dutch Colonial-style home in East Sacramento with her husband of 10 years, former state Assembly member Lloyd Levine, and their daughters, Alise, 7, and Carlie, 4. Sacramento and could be in the heart of state politics, I jumped at it.” She has anchored the 5 p.m., 6:30 p.m.











Couldn t be ed ie 11