Badmilfs - Kat Marie - Curiosity Gets You Spitr... Link

For decades, there was an unspoken expiration date on actresses in Hollywood. Once a woman hit 40, the scripts dried up. She was either relegated to playing the "nagging wife," the "eccentric aunt," or the "wise grandmother"—if she was lucky. The ingénue was celebrated; the woman was shelved.

The door has been cracked open. Now, we need to kick it down. As a woman navigating my own forties, watching cinema finally catch up to reality is a balm. I want to see the crinkles around the eyes that tell a story of laughter and loss. I want to see the stretch marks, the scars, the silver hair. BadMilfs - Kat Marie - Curiosity Gets You Spitr...

Hollywood is finally realizing what we’ve known all along: For decades, there was an unspoken expiration date

Where are the stories of working-class women over 70? Where are the queer rom-coms starring women in their 60s? Where are the action heroes with gray roots and knee braces? The ingénue was celebrated; the woman was shelved

We aren't just surviving in Hollywood anymore. We are leading the charge. Let’s look at the evidence. In 2023, The Lost King gave us Sally Hawkins as a complex, obsessive everywoman. Nyad featured Annette Bening (64) and Jodie Foster (60) portraying endurance, trauma, and triumph without a drop of filler-magazine gloss. On the television side, The Morning Show pits Jennifer Aniston and Reese Witherspoon against each other—not over a man, but over power, legacy, and journalistic integrity.