Molly MacDonald was between jobs when she was diagnosed with early stage breast cancer in 2005. Unable to work to pay the mortgage and other bills while undergoing two surgeries and six weeks of daily radiation treatments, the mother of five felt completely overwhelmed.
Then her house was foreclosed and she began to visit food banks for help. “I thought, ‘I am a complete loser,’ ” she tells People. “I can’t feed my family.’ “
After returning to work full-time in sales and marketing and once again able to support her family, MacDonald, 66, of Beverly Hills, Michigan, decided to help other women...
Then her house was foreclosed and she began to visit food banks for help. “I thought, ‘I am a complete loser,’ ” she tells People. “I can’t feed my family.’ “
After returning to work full-time in sales and marketing and once again able to support her family, MacDonald, 66, of Beverly Hills, Michigan, decided to help other women...
- 10/5/2017
- by Diane Herbst
- PEOPLE.com
Kimberly Cooper has confirmed that she will be returning to Home and Away as Gypsy Nash. The young actress made her last appearance on the Australian soap in 2002, when her character held a symbolic wedding to Will Smith (Zac Drayson) before moving to Queensland with him and their daughter Lily. Commenting on her comeback, Cooper revealed that she returned to the show's set last month after moving back to Australia from Los Angeles. "I left at 21 and now somehow (more)...
- 6/4/2011
- by By Daniel Sperling
- Digital Spy
If any of you have talked to me for more than 10 minutes in the last year or read any of my Facebook updates, you know I have become obsessed about a certain indie rock band and their certain album. For those of you not in the know, I have become a budding drooling hipster over Neutral Milk Hotel, a former Indie Rock band from Athens, Georgia.
This book, written by pop culture writer, Kim Cooper, who has edited Scram-- a journal of unpopular culture--and co-edited two books, Lost in the Grooves and Bubblegum Music is the Naked Truth.
Ms. Cooper's task here is to chronicle the sudden rise and fall of Neutral Milk Hotel, indie rock legends. If you are not familiar with the band, the book sets up the tone for what would become such a holy grail to their fans. Jeff Mangum, the lead singer/songwriter, has become...
This book, written by pop culture writer, Kim Cooper, who has edited Scram-- a journal of unpopular culture--and co-edited two books, Lost in the Grooves and Bubblegum Music is the Naked Truth.
Ms. Cooper's task here is to chronicle the sudden rise and fall of Neutral Milk Hotel, indie rock legends. If you are not familiar with the band, the book sets up the tone for what would become such a holy grail to their fans. Jeff Mangum, the lead singer/songwriter, has become...
- 3/23/2011
- by Tamatha Uhmelmahaye
On a summer day in New York City, former co-workers Kimberly Cooper and Rodney King bumped into each other on the corner of 57th street and Ninth Avenue in Hell's Kitchen. This chance meeting was unlike the pleasantries they'd exchanged before and the two native New Yorkers saw each other in a whole new light. After talking on the sidewalk for over an hour they set a date. As their courtship progressed, the two fell head over heels in love. On April 15, 2010 Kimberly and Rodney joined forces in a fabulous wedding with a "contemporary royalty" theme. Share their love.Here's what you had to say:Faith commented: "I wish you two the best in the years to come. Hold on to her Rodney."Sheshe wrote: "I've read most of these bridal bliss stories, but this is by far the sweetest."...
- 6/23/2010
- Essence
New Moca director Jeffrey Deitch might have just accepted the art world's most controversial position, but if there's one thing everyone can agree he's great at, it's throwing a party. And now, he's got a bright, blank new L.A. canvas to work with. We asked artists, curators and critics to provide some guidance for Deitch's new gig.
Time to pitch a Moca reality show to one of the major networks now that you're in L.A. The concept is your life: "Ack! The economy's gone to shit so now I'm a newbie museum director." During this 13-episode series viewers will watch you navigate museum politics, get lost in L.A. and schmooze with celebrities and art glitterati. Show title: Sink or Swim! The prize: Glory--and the USA's best museum stays open.-Paddy Johnson, Art Fag City
Deitch should expand his plans with James Franco and General Hospital and embrace Los Angeles' soap opera scene.
Time to pitch a Moca reality show to one of the major networks now that you're in L.A. The concept is your life: "Ack! The economy's gone to shit so now I'm a newbie museum director." During this 13-episode series viewers will watch you navigate museum politics, get lost in L.A. and schmooze with celebrities and art glitterati. Show title: Sink or Swim! The prize: Glory--and the USA's best museum stays open.-Paddy Johnson, Art Fag City
Deitch should expand his plans with James Franco and General Hospital and embrace Los Angeles' soap opera scene.
- 1/14/2010
- by Alissa Walker
- Fast Company
The photos by the late architectural photographer Julius Shulman traced the evolution of the built environment since 1936, giving insight into construction techniques, urban development, the advent of tourism in the jet age, and the history of Los Angeles. We bring you 17 of Shulman's architectural images narrated by L.A. architects, designers, artists, writers, filmmakers, and curators.
When photographer Julius Shulman passed away July 15 at the age of 98, he left behind a trove of images that immortalized modern residential architecture. Without Shulman, you might not have known the work of Richard Neutra, Rudolph Schindler or John Lautner. But Shulman's images represent more than just the swanky modern scenes he was most famous for. His photos trace the evolution of the built environment since 1936, giving insight into construction techniques, urban development, real estate, the advent of tourism in the jet age, and, of course, the history of Los Angeles. In association with...
When photographer Julius Shulman passed away July 15 at the age of 98, he left behind a trove of images that immortalized modern residential architecture. Without Shulman, you might not have known the work of Richard Neutra, Rudolph Schindler or John Lautner. But Shulman's images represent more than just the swanky modern scenes he was most famous for. His photos trace the evolution of the built environment since 1936, giving insight into construction techniques, urban development, real estate, the advent of tourism in the jet age, and, of course, the history of Los Angeles. In association with...
- 7/22/2009
- Fast Company
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