Is it a normal thing to struggle like shit to write a compelling second act or am I the only loser whose second acts are always borderline boring? It makes me so sad.

seen from United States
seen from Poland

seen from Norway
seen from United States
seen from China
seen from China

seen from United Kingdom

seen from Netherlands
seen from China
seen from Türkiye
seen from Germany
seen from United States

seen from Libya

seen from Pakistan

seen from Suriname

seen from Bangladesh

seen from Netherlands
seen from Russia

seen from France
seen from Russia
Is it a normal thing to struggle like shit to write a compelling second act or am I the only loser whose second acts are always borderline boring? It makes me so sad.

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
Free to watch • No registration required • HD streaming
For second acts.
On the 28th day, I’m grateful for second acts. I’ve debated which story to tell to illustrate this concept, but here is one example: I have friends who were pressured as kids to be certain things – their future already set out for them, as clear as a road map. They were not children, but future accountants, future farmers, future lawyers, future truck drivers. I knew lots of people with that…
View On WordPress
“I was tumbling into love with a woman and I didn’t have any guideposts.”
Pandemic Publishing Roundtable: "I Used to Be Somebody" - Planning Your Next Act With Carl Landau
Pandemic Publishing Roundtable: “I Used to Be Somebody” – Planning Your Next Act With Carl Landau
By, Linda Ruth Editor’s Note: The “Pandemic Publishing Roundtable” started a few weeks after the closing of most Barnes & Noble stores instigated a smattering of new articles proclaiming the end of that storied chain and the end of magazines at retail. While it is true that prior to the pandemic the future of single copy sales of magazines was at best a tenuous proposition, it’s death didn’t…
View On WordPress
When you launch a solo business in your 50s or 60s, you may not expect to bring in $1 million or more a year. Meet three entrepreneurs doing just that.

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
Free to watch • No registration required • HD streaming
'Ball don't lie.' This former Cleveland Cavalier is going to tell you how a well-known basketball term applies to your life.
"Perhaps even your dreams need examining. Perhaps even your hope. . . needs some doubt."
Longtime members of the Virginia Weidler Remembrance Society know that I often compare Virginia's career and life to those of more modern child stars. In one post, I decided that Quinn Cummings was probably the most "like Ginny" for her role in THE GOODBYE GIRL. In another, I compared Mara Wilson's comments of her rough transition to adult roles with what Virginia seemed to have gone through.
Yesterday, I sat down and watched a film from about a dozen years ago, and I saw someone who was all over the small screen in guest roles and commercials-and TV movies-in the late 1990s through the 2000s. Hallee Hirsh won two Young Artist Awards and may be best remembered as Mark Greene’s troubled daughter on ER or as one of the castaways on the Discovery Kids series, FLIGHT 29 DOWN. She was popular enough late in the decade that she was still working steadily as she started classes at UCLA.
After she graduated in 2011, at age 24, she did web series, shorts, and indie films. She also got married and had a child. This is where it gets interesting.
She and her husband, actor Ryan Martin, got tired of waiting for the phone to ring. They packed up their family, moved across the country to Asheville NC, and bought...a doughnut shop. No Dunkin' or Horton's, a fancy, well reviewed, artisan D-O-U-G-H-N-U-T shop.
I don't know if either one would still take an acting job if one were offered, but by all indication this is really what they want to do from here on out. Hallee's final film, shot in 2016, is still in post-production according to IMDb.
Hole Doughnuts is on Facebook if you want to take a look.
Here is the local paper's article on their arrival. https://www.citizen-times.com/story/life/food/2016/11/11/hollywood-haywood-acting-couple-buys-hole-doughnuts/93481316/