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candy prada perfume Rebecca Loos have boosted their bank balances, writes Jill Lawless in Edinburgh.Monica Lewinsky says she has struggled to move on from her notorious relationship with former US president Bill Clinton but has no regrets about accepting payment to talk about the affair.Speaking at the Edinburgh International Television Festival at the weekend, Ms Lewinsky imparted the hard won lesson of six years of intense scrutiny by the US judicial system and the world's media: "As the commodity in the interview, you'd be crazy not to get compensated."The former White House intern, a panellist for a debate about the widespread British practice of chequebook journalism, or buying stories, received a reported 400,000 $A1.03 million the highest payment in British television history for a 1999 interview with Britain's Channel 4."The reality was, I didn't have a choice," she said. "I had enormous legal bills, and I hadn't been working for a year. I needed to put my life back together and I needed to pay those bills."Ms Lewinsky said the interview "helped me to close a chapter, definitely" and that there would be no more. "That's not my agenda and that is not what I want to do," she said."I'm not interested in talking about the past. I have a publicist now basically to turn down requests."Organisers said Ms Lewinsky was not paid for her appearance at the festival.The revelation of Ms Lewinsky's affair with Mr Clinton led to his impeachment in 1998. Ms Lewinsky has tried to move on, turning her hand to TV hosting and designing handbags."It's been a struggle ever since, and it still is," she said.The story, which dominated US politics and riveted the world's media in the late 1990s, resurfaced in June with the publication of Clinton's memoir, My Life. In it, the former president wrote that the affair with Ms Lewinsky revealed "the darkest part of my inner life". Ms Lewinsky countered with an interview with Britain's ITV News for which she received an undisclosed sum in which she accused Mr Clinton of lying about their affair in his autobiography.Chequebook journalism is practised by most of Britain's broadcasters and newspapers. Both Ms Lewinsky and Rebecca Loos, whose claim of an affair