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Reese Witherspoon says being anxious was her biggest career advantage


Reese Witherspoon.
Reese Witherspoon says her anxiety and the pressure she put on herself to perform played a major role in her professional success.

  • Reese Witherspoon says the pressure she put on herself helped her find career success.
  • “I was probably successful because I had so much anxiety. They go hand in hand,” she said.
  • Despite her achievements, Witherspoon said that there were still people in the industry who doubted her abilities.

Reese Witherspoon, 49, is an Oscar-winning actor and a leading Hollywood producer. She says the relentless pressure she put on herself is the reason behind her professional success.

“I was probably successful because I had so much anxiety. They go hand in hand,” Witherspoon told Harper’s Bazaar in an interview published Monday.

“I had pressured myself to extreme levels to show up at work in a perfect way. We all now know — perfect is not attainable. It’s not sustainable. I stressed myself out in service of my job, and it got me really, really far. I’m rewarded for my anxiety and perfectionism,” she said.

But now that she’s getting older, the “Legally Blonde” star says she’s learning to slow down and be content with what she’s already achieved.

“I mean, I’ve had an abundance of good fortune, great work opportunities, and worked with some of the greatest people on Earth,” she said.

Witherspoon began acting at a young age, landing her first major acting role in “The Man in the Moon” in 1991. She went on to star in a string of films over the next two decades before turning her attention to producing, with notable projects including “Gone Girl” and “Wild.”

In 2016, she founded a media company called Hello Sunshine. Since 2019, she’s been producing and starring in Apple TV’s “The Morning Show,” alongside Jennifer Aniston.

Despite her box-office success, Witherspoon said that others in the industry still doubted her abilities.

“Even when ‘Gone Girl’ and ‘Wild’ had grossed over $600 million at the box office and I got three Oscars, it still wasn’t a guarantee that I could get things made,” Witherspoon said. “People were still questioning whether I was a real producer or was just doing it as a vanity project.”

This isn’t the first time that Witherspoon has talked about how anxiety has impacted her work.

Speaking on the “Las Culturistas” podcast in September, Witherspoon told hosts Matt Rogers and Bowen Yang that she’s “a high-anxiety person.”

“It can be really highly performance-based,” Witherspoon said. “Like, you have to perform. You have to show up, which is a lot of my anxiety. I used to have panic attacks, bad panic attacks, like crying.”

A representative for Witherspoon did not immediately respond to a request for comment sent by Business Insider outside regular hours.

She also isn’t the only Hollywood star who’s credited anxiety with pushing them forward.

In January 2024, Emma Stone told NPR that she sees her anxiety “as a kind of a superpower.”

“And if you can use it for productive things, if you can use all of those feelings in those synapses that are firing for something creative, or something that you’re passionate about, or something interesting, anxiety is like rocket fuel because you can’t help but get out of bed and do things, do things, do things because you’ve got all of this energy within you,” Stone said.

Speaking to People in May 2024, Ryan Reynolds said he’s learned to use his anxiety as an advantage at work.

“My job benefits greatly,” Reynolds said. “People who have anxiety are constantly thinking into the future. You’re constantly, ‘What if this happens? What if that happens?’ You’re always telling yourself stories.”

Read the original article on Business Insider

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Ukraine’s drone-on-drone war is kicking into high gear


Two Ukrainian crew members of an interceptor squad prepare a Sting drone from within a truck.
An interceptor crew prepares a Sting drone from their civilian vehicle. The pilot who spoke to Business Insider is the man on the left.

  • Zelenskyy said Ukraine can make up to 800 interceptor drones in a day by the end of November.
  • It’s yet another sign that Ukraine thinks it’s ready to roll out the new technology at scale.
  • Once a novel concept, interceptor drones are quickly becoming a new pillar of air defense.

Ukraine finally looks like it’s about to build the interceptor drone arsenal it needs, shifting the world closer to a new type of air defense battle in which waves of drones fight each other.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said on Monday that his country should reach a daily production of 600 to 800 of the inexpensive but speedy quadcopters — designed to destroy Russian attack drones in flight — by the end of November.

The new estimate is under Zelenskyy’s initial target of 1,000 a day, which he announced in July, but represents a more concrete gauge of what can be expected soon.

“I said that in the fall, there will be up to 1,000 interceptors produced per day. Of course, it’s not an easy story,” Zelenskyy told reporters. “We believe that by the end of November, there will be 600 to 800 interceptor drones produced per day, if nothing goes wrong.”

That’s as long as there aren’t any disruptions from Russian attacks or sabotage, the Ukrainian leader added.

“Because sometimes, as you know, there are strikes — not only on our energy facilities,” he said.

A serviceman from the SQUADRON interceptor unit of the 3rd Army Corps of the Ukrainian Armed Forces prepares a Sting interceptor.
REUTERS/Anatolii Stepanov

Interceptor drones are uncrewed aerial systems specifically made to be maneuverable and fast enough to chase and crash into an incoming attack drone, sometimes while carrying an explosive payload.

They’re a far cheaper alternative to Western surface-to-air missiles, which can cost up to millions of dollars each, and that’s why Kyiv wants more of the high-speed drones. Russia is increasingly trying to overwhelm Ukrainian air defenses by launching hundreds of Shahed attack drones and Gerbera decoys in one night, often also firing advanced missiles in tandem.

A man holds up the Sting for a size comparison with a downed Shahed drone.
The Sting is far smaller than a typical Shahed drone.

Ukrainian and Western sources estimate that the Iranian-designed Shahed-136 costs between $20,000 and $70,000, so Ukraine needs a more cost-effective way to destroy them.

Drone manufacturers have been pushing the limits of their interceptors over the last year or so, making them faster and more responsive while trying to keep costs down. Meanwhile, Ukrainian cities suffered from repeated bombardment, with weekly reports of damaged energy infrastructure and residential buildings.

After months of development, Zelenskyy’s new timeline and estimates indicate that local companies and Ukraine’s military are now confident enough in their interceptors to move toward mass production.

Like with dozens of other systems used in the war, the heightened use of interceptors will likely be closely watched by militaries around the world that are developing or procuring their own interceptor drones.

Bavarian officials hold a Quantum Systems Jaeger interceptor drone.
Western companies have been building their own interceptor drones, such as this German Jaeger (Hunter) drone.

Taras Tymochko, a project lead for interceptor drones at the Ukrainian crowdfunding organization ComeBackAlive, told Business Insider in late summer that local drone manufacturers charge roughly $3,000 to $6,000 per interceptor.

The price often depends on the systems received and the level and availability of technical support offered, Tymochko said.

It remains to be seen if increased interceptor production will provide the relief to air defenses that Ukraine has hoped for. Some interceptors are already reportedly finding success in battle.

The Sternenko Foundation, a crowdfunding organization that supports manufacturing for an interceptor called the Sting, said in a message to donors on October 26 that its funded interceptors destroyed nine out of 90 Russian drones detected in one night.

More broadly, Zelenskyy said in September that interceptor drones were responsible for 150 hits on Russian Shaheds and Gerberas in one night, out of a total of 810 drones.

Read the original article on Business Insider

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