I don't give ★★★★★ lightly. '#TheInvite' is the first time in 8 years I've felt compelled to. Olivia Wilde, Seth Rogen, Penélope Cruz & Edward Norton are superb together. Riotous & ruthless. My @SydFilmFest review for @maketheswitchAU… https://t.co/KOYAuD5u09 @VVSFilms_ANZ
ppl can troll and pick apart Olivia Wilde all they want, but she has two things most of them don’t have. grace to laugh at herself and the self confidence to never feel threatened by others
like yall just can never shame this kind of woman 🙂↕️🙂↕️
"They found the coats on Thursday morning.
Fifteen winter coats. Good ones, not garbage. Hanging on the chain-link fence outside Lincoln Elementary. No note. No explanation. Just coats, zipped up like ghosts waiting for bodies.
Principal Morris freaked out. Called the police. "Could be stolen," she said. "Could be some kind of prank."
But then Kayla Martinez, eight years old, said her mom worked nights cleaning offices and couldn't afford a winter coat this year. She'd been wearing three hoodies layered up. She touched a purple one on the fence, the right size, and whispered, "Can I?"
Mrs. Alvarez, the PE teacher, said yes before anyone could stop her.
By lunch, all fifteen coats were gone. Fifteen kids who'd been shivering through recess were warm.
The next Thursday? Twenty coats. Different fence, same neighborhood, outside the community center. Then thirty coats appeared at the downtown shelter. Then blankets. Then winter boots.
No cameras ever caught who did it. No social media claims. Just... coats. Every Thursday. All winter long.
The news picked it up. Called them "The Fence Angel." Interviewed grateful families. But nobody knew.
Until March.
Old man died, Earl Hutchins, seventy-one, lived alone in a basement apartment on Fourth Street. When they cleaned out his place, they found receipts. Thrift store receipts. Hundreds of them. He'd been buying every decent winter coat he could find, spending his entire disability check, and hanging them up at night.
His nephew found a journal entry, "Lost my son to exposure in 2004. He was homeless, prideful, wouldn't take handouts. Froze to death behind a dumpster wearing a T-shirt. If I put coats on a fence, nobody has to ask. Nobody has to admit they need help. They just take it. Dignity intact."
I'm Kayla Martinez. I'm sixteen now. That purple coat got me through fourth grade. I never knew Earl. Never got to say thank you.
But last November, I took my babysitting money to Goodwill. Bought six coats. Hung them on that same fence.
My friends saw. They bought coats. Then their parents did. Then the high school started a coat drive, not for a bin, for the fence.
Last Thursday, there were 200 coats. Scarves too. Gloves. We call it "Earl's Fence" now. There's one in Detroit. One in Manchester. One in Vancouver.
I never met the man who saved me from freezing. But I'm becoming him, one coat at a time.
Because the best kind of help doesn't ask for credit. It just hangs there, quiet, waiting for cold hands to find warmth."
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Let this story reach more hearts....
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Ai image is for demonstration purpose only.
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By Mary Nelson
Be here December 11 for a 35mm screening of EMILIA PÉREZ featuring Q&A with Jacques Audiard, moderated by filmmaker and actor Olivia Wilde!
Very limited tickets remain:
https://t.co/4fx2U5ri5W
EXCLUSIVE: Just before the holiday break, Universal Pictures has found an exciting package under its tree as sources tell Deadline, the studio has landed the rights to the Christmas comedy ‘Naughty’ that has Olivia Wilde directing and LuckyChap producing https://t.co/fbsL41rOGN
Olivia Wilde to direct Christmas comedy ‘NAUGHTY’ with Margot Robbie’s LuckyChap set to produce.
The film is described as “Bridesmaids in the North Pole.”