Bbcparadise.24.08.28.riley.rose.milf.stuffs.her... -

The landscape for mature women in entertainment and cinema is currently a mix of deep-seated underrepresentation and a powerful "renaissance" led by established icons. While statistics often show a sharp decline in roles for women after age 40, a growing list of high-profile projects is proving that stories centered on aging women are both critically and commercially viable. The State of Representation

"Here's what Hollywood doesn't understand," she continued. "Maturity isn't a loss of value. It's a change in currency. A 25-year-old actress sells longing. A 55-year-old actress sells knowing. The audience has changed. The women in the audience—the ones who buy the tickets, who stream the content, who raise the children and manage the households—they are starving to see their own knowing reflected back at them. They don't want to watch a 50-year-old woman pretend to be 35. They want to watch a 50-year-old woman burn down the house that trapped her." BBCParadise.24.08.28.Riley.Rose.MILF.Stuffs.Her...

Storytelling is evolving to reflect the reality that life doesn't end at 40. Key trends include: The landscape for mature women in entertainment and

"The kiss," Lena said, standing up and smoothing her blouse. "Tell me, Kyle, when two 60-year-old men kiss on screen, does anyone call it 'brave'?" "Maturity isn't a loss of value