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#Jennifer aniston voice change series#
'Saturday Night Live' Review: The Best and Worst of Simu Liu's Hosting DebutĮmmy Predictions: Best Actress in a Limited Series - More Than a Two-Horse Race 'Succession' Review: Episode 6 Paints a Scary Future, While Sins of the Past Prey on Two Patsies But her white, middle-aged boss still has a soft spot for Alex, and more importantly, he has a vision. Alex’s return isn’t Stella’s idea - she doesn’t see the logic in courting a former star who represents the old regime rather than embracing new voices on the company’s biggest news platform. Young and hungry, Stella isn’t here for your bullshit, but she still faces a never-ending stream of it: Her boss won’t listen to her ideas, her coworkers don’t trust her and, oh yeah, the anchor whose co-host and best friend turned out to be a sexual predator is being brought back to the very office she abandoned nine months prior. Despite prolific anchor Alex Levy ( Jennifer Aniston) and newcomer Bradley Jackson ( Reese Witherspoon) oh-so-publicly outing the company’s noxious culture following a slew of #MeToo-related allegations, UBA is still operating under institutional systems of discrimination, and that cannot stand. When she speaks, she does so with a purpose befitting her mandate as the network’s new president of news, sent in to help UBA President Cory Ellison (Billy Crudup) change their toxic workplace. As the distressed anchors and flustered producers scurry about The Morning Show’s Manhattan newsroom, Stella (played by Greta Lee with a poise that barely reveals her umbrage) watches and listens more than she runs or shouts.