Problem: Write an article based on this summary: Freeze 1 1⁄2 cups (350 ml) of Coca-Cola for at least 4 hours. Refrigerate the remaining 1 1⁄2 cups (350 ml) of soda. Put the frozen and refrigerated Coca-Cola into a blender with ice. Add cherry juice if you'd like to make cherry Coca-Cola slurpees. Blend the mixture until it's smooth. Serve the Coca-Cola slurpees right away for the best texture.

Answer: Pour the soda into a shallow dish and put it in the freezer. Freeze the Coca-Cola for at least 4 hours or until it's completely hard. If you prefer, substitute diet Coca-Cola or store brand cola. Keep in mind that diet Coca-Cola has a lower-freezing point, so it will freeze faster than regular Coca-Cola. Put the remaining Coca-Cola bottle or can into the refrigerator so it stays cold while the other Coca-Cola freezes. It's fine if the Coca-Cola in the refrigerator loses some of its carbonation. Remove the frozen soda from the freezer and scoop it into a blender. Then pour the refrigerated Coca-Cola into the blender and add about 8 ice cubes. To add a slighty fruity taste to the slurpees, measure 1⁄4 cup (59 ml) of maraschino cherry juice drained from a jar. Pour the juice into the blender with the frozen and liquid Coca-Cola. For an even easier variation, leave out the cherry juice and replace the regular Coca-Cola with Coca-Cola Cherry. Put the lid on the blender and pulse the mixture until the frozen soda blends with the liquid soda. Stop pulsing it once the slurpee is as smooth as you like. For thicker slurpees, add more ice a few cubes at a time. To thin your slurpees, mix in additional liquid soda. Divide the slurpee mixture between 2 glasses and stick spoons or straws in them. Then garnish the drinks with the optional maraschino cherries. Serve the slurpees before they begin to melt and separate. The slurpees won't keep in the refrigerator, but you can freeze the leftovers. When you're ready to use them, just blend the frozen slurpee with a little liquid soda until it's smooth.


Problem: Write an article based on this summary: Dress your age! Don't wear baggy,too tight,low or dirty clothes. Wear clothes that compliment your skin tone  Always smile, not a cheesy fake smile, think of anything that makes you happy for a natural attractive smile.

Answer: Don't wear belly tops, WAY too short shorts, fishnets(unless they are in a costume), or anything that a hooker would wear. Wear clothes that hug you, but not too tight.


Problem: Write an article based on this summary: Get an entry-level job in the industry. Start networking Take the work you can get. Be a professional. Get an agent Recognize the breaks when they come.

Answer: The first and in many ways the most challenging aspect of being a star is to get noticed. Make the initial contacts with the people who matter in your industry by starting out on the bottom. Just get your foot in the door and have the confidence that your talent will carry you the rest of the way.  Want to crack into making movies and get your name in lights? Get a job working as a gaffer. Seat-filling, extra-work, and tech-crew stuff is all a common part of Hollywood. You may want to act, eventually, but if you could put your skills to work as a make-up artist, as a back-up cameraman, as a lighting crew member, you'll be that much closer, and you'll be working. Politicians generally start out working for other campaigns. Volunteer your time for politicians you believe in and make contacts that will help you in your political career.  Athletes should work in coaching, or work in stadiums fulfilling other jobs. Work as an usher to get into the games for free, or work the concessions. Tear tickets at Yankee stadium and you may be on the infield someday. Musicians would do well to work for and with other bands. Learn to run live sound and help out at a venue, or get a job selling merch for a band you like. Be a roadie and learn what life on tour is like. Stay close to the action. . As you work your way into the industry, make sure to stay in touch with everyone you meet on the way up. Try to meet people who are in the same boat as you, aspiring musicians, actors, politicians, or other athletes, who are at the same level as you are and who have similar goals. Help support each other and celebrate your friends' successes and accomplishments. Work together on your mutual goals.  Stardom can get pretty competitive, and it's true that there's not a whole lot of room at the top. But getting locked into petty rivalries can bring you down a lot quicker than it can lift you up. Be positive. Make yourself easy to get in touch with. Start a LinkedIn page or a professional social networking "fan" page for yourself so you can keep your industry contacts and your personal contacts separated and more manageable. A job stumping for a politician you don't particularly like in Des Moines? A third-string job on a team that's the worst in the league? An ad for hemorrhoid cream? These might not sound like ideal situations for a budding star, but work is work. Think of it as building experiences that'll make for a great rags-to-riches story somewhere down the road. Use each opportunity as a chance to prove yourself and to transcend the circumstances with your star-making abilities. Be the star you are. Amateurs show up to an audition half-prepared, hungover, barely getting it together; movie stars show up well-rested, rehearsed, and ready to get the scene done. Rock stars don't party the night before the show, rock stars make sure they'll be on point for a great performance. Go into every job with professionalism and poise. Behave as if you belong there. Act like a professional, and you'll act like a star. . Making all the contacts you need to in the industry can be very difficult to do alone. In most entertainment fields and in politics as well, you'll need to get in touch with an agent who can help to represent you and set you up with auditions, contacts, and jobs while you focus on the more important work of being the best you can be. Usually, agents will take a percentage of what you make, but sometimes not at first. You may have to be willing to make periodic installments to pay your agent to get you to work at first. Be judicious in picking an agent who'll work with you and get you the contacts and the work that you need. Whether or not you believe in fate, it's true that a star needs to learn to recognize the breaks when they come and embrace every opportunity as a chance to increase their star power. Check your ego at the door every now and then and give yourself the chance to succeed. A single opportunity may be the difference between regular work and full-on stardom.  A small, one-line part in a movie with a well-respected director may seem like a pittance, but it means you're working with the best. That's an opportunity. An opening gig for a big band might seem like a step down if you've been touring on your own, but the chance to open for a hero? That comes along once in a lifetime.


Problem: Write an article based on this summary: Support other people's dreams. Be overly confident. Be patient. Put in the work. Don't listen to anyone.

Answer:
How many people can you name who have made it and made it with their friends? Ben Affleck and Matt Damon? Vince Vaughn and Jon Favreau? Often struggling actors, writers, and directors band together and inadvertently make each other famous. You'll probably know dozens of people in your same boat. Instead of hoping they fail, jump on their gravy train – they could be your ticket to win it. Keep in mind the people that helped you if and when you hit it big. They supported your dreams, so you support theirs, too, even if you've already made it. Hollywood is a surprisingly tight-knit circle, and getting in good with its residents is a wise plan for the future. You know all those no's you're drowning in? You can't give 'em the time of day. If you do, you'll quit. Logic will take over, feelings of inadequacy will take over, and you'll abandon this road you've put so much work into. You've gotta believe that you're awesome that no one else has realized it yet. That's all there is to it. Those that make it in Hollywood might be viewed as a little crazy by those that have never tried. Day in and day out is going to be rough until you start realizing that things are happening. You get an agent, you land an audition, you get a bit part in a commercial, and it keeps you going. It may not be much, but it's a sign. Let these little things keep you afloat. Rome wasn't built in a day, and neither will your career be. These things often take years. There are few souls who move to Hollywood and jump right into success. It's like any other career – you gotta work your way up the ladder. And if you dedicate yourself, you will. Stick with it. You're going to have times when you think about how great you were at accounting or how easy it would be to move home and live with mom. Those are just fugacious temptations that will go away. Be patient and stick with your resolve. Otherwise you'll just be left wondering "what if" for the rest of your life. When you do finally start getting gigs, work hard. Spend hours getting your lines down perfectly. Throw back six cups of coffee refining your script. Attach your computer to your side like its your Siamese twin and leave practically no time for eating and sleeping. Each gig that you do your best at may mean another gig down the road. True, there will be glamorous red carpet moments, but it's work, too, after all – especially when you're just beginning out. You have to take the good with the bad. Putting in the work will make it easier to realize just how much you've earned this. You're going to have people that tell you you're crap, even when you're at the top. You're going to have people tell you that you have to do it this way, that you have to suck up to these people, and that you have to jump through the hoops they tell you to jump through. But the truth? They're all wrong. There is no one way to make it but to keep trying. Don't listen to anyone, especially the naysayers. They're just out to bring you down or to make a buck off of you. They don't deserve a second of your time. There will never be a time when everyone is a fan of your work. We all have different tastes, and that's a good thing. It makes the world diverse. So even when you're at the top, ignore the naysayers. They don't really matter anyway. You have your success and happiness – who needs them?