ha-ha! you're right! I thought it too!

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From: Martin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 
Keith, neither did I. Maybe it's wrong of us to always think that actors can 
always get work, when the only place they can work is in acting, where they 
need writers to craft scripts for them.

I hope that all goes well for her. And, in all honesty, when I saw the subject 
line of this, an old Babyface song came to mind. 

"I'll pay your rent..." Don't look like that, Keith. You thought it, too...

[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Okay, here's a side effect of the writers' strike I 
couldn't have anticipated...

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Carpenter Says She Needs Help from Estranged Husband

According to Charisma Carpenter, the writers strike is slaying her earning 
capacity. The former Buffy the Vampire Slayer and Angel star claims that the 
ongoing Writers Guild of America walkout has left her unemployed, and therefore 
without the means to afford the attorneys' fees pertaining to her current 
divorce proceedings, according to court documents filed Dec. 4. In turn, 
Carpenter has requested that estranged hubby Damian Hardy be required to pay 
her legal bills. Per her declaration, the last work the 37-year-old actress had 
was a Nov. 26 appearance on a TV show that has not yet been renewed or picked 
up. The nearly seven-week-long strike could go on for months and, even if it 
ends, the Screen Actors Guild contract is up for renewal in June and could 
prompt further labor action, she said. 

Carpenter briefly guest-starred on Fox's Back to You as the single mother of a 
bully who has been terrorizing the daughter of the bickering news anchors 
played by Patricia Heaton and Kelsey Grammar. Grammar's character, Chuck, wants 
to give the kid's mom a piece of his mind until he sees how hot she is, of 
course. The sitcom's status is still up in the air, along with the fate of 
myriad other freshman series, thanks to the strike. 

"At the present time, [Hardy] has the ability to work full time and make more 
money than I am currently making," Carpenter states. "[He] should be paying my 
attorneys' fees and costs. The court should uphold the spousal support waiver, 
but if it does not do so, it should award spousal support to me." 

The 2004 Playboy cover girl says that her and Hardy's prenup includes a waiver 
of spousal support by both sides in the event that their marriage fails to last 
seven years. But Hardy, who stated in a declaration filed Nov. 27 that he quit 
working for awhile to be a stay-at-home dad for their four-year-old son, 
Donovan Charles Hardy, maintains that he wasn't fully aware of what he was 
getting into before he agreed to the premarital arrangement. 

"I do not recall any discussion regarding the waiver of spousal support, and no 
one explained to me what rights I was giving up regarding spousal support by 
signing the premarital agreement," Hardy stated. He claims that before the 
couple swapped vows in October 2002 he earned $18,000 a year working as a hotel 
bellman and supervisor. Meanwhile, Hardy stated, Carpenter is capable of making 
up to $500,000 a year (what he says she earned in 2004) as an actress. 

"I have recently returned to work, but I am making less than $2,000 per month 
and I cannot afford to go to school at this time," Hardy, a high school 
graduate, said. 

A hearing on custody and financial issues is scheduled for Jan. 9

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"There is no reason Good can't triumph over Evil, if only angels will get 
organized along the lines of the Mafia." -Kurt Vonnegut, "A Man Without A 
Country"

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