It was such a balancing act. I feel like when I was on reality TV - I started when I was 25 - it feels very, like, that was my 20s. Obviously, I'm in charge of my own decisions and stuff [now]. So it's nice to be able to decide what I share and what I don't [with] personal stuff.
A washed-up reality star and her live-in entourage of misfits scramble to rehab her image and reboot her career. When her estranged daughter unexpectedly moves into their crumbling Manhattan townhouse, the TV has-been is confronted with the one role she's spent her entire life avoiding: motherhood.
On Thursday, the House passed the Health Care Affordability Act in a 230-196 vote, which would provide a three-year extension to the Affordable Care Act, thus extending the pandemic-era subsidies that expired on December 31. And while the bill is pretty much guaranteed to be dead-on-arrival in the Senate (especially since it's already been rejected by the upper chamber and Sen. Majority Leader John Thune (R-S.D.) vowed to ignore it), that didn't stop Rep. Lauren Underwood (D-Ill.)-who introduced it-from performing a little celebratory dance.
In their scene, Charli and Jenner have a brief conversation about fame and how to navigate the ever-shifting power dynamics of celebrity. Charli's on the rise, and, Jenner reveals, accidentally just stole a director away from the Kardashian family member. The subsequent discussion is peppered with some of the movie's slickest punchlines, which Jenner delivers naturally.
"A lot of training. I already do a lot of functional football training and work out with guys that are either on their way to becoming football players or they play in college or [are] off season,"
"I really struggled over some of the things that happened, and that was something that was slowly depleting me, chipping away at my soul,"
A '90s runway coach who taught supermodels like Naomi Campbell and Kimora Lee Simmons how to walk a catwalk, Alexander shifted careers in 2003 when one of his pupils, Tyra Banks, tapped him to join her on a little UPN show called America's Next Top Model. As a judge and runway coach for a passel of wannabe supermodels, he transformed into "Miss J," bringing drag to the screen at a time when queerness was vanishingly rare on American TV screens.