After a five-year hiatus, no decent scripts have come my way. My agent, selective as ever, arranged for me to appear on a reality dating show. Once it was officially announced, the critics emerged.
"Wasn't Abigail too proud to do variety shows before? Seems like she's just coming back for the money. How pathetic," one commented.
"Who wants to watch an old woman on a dating reality show? Unbelievable," another scoffed.
The more they criticized me, the more attention I received. I yawned out of boredom.
But what exactly was a dating reality show? Before filming began, I did some research on this type of variety show, and it was hard to judge.
The show had already aired three seasons, each breaking norms and surprising viewers. In the first season, a guest started dating the head director. In the second, two male guests fell desperately in love.
This time, everyone was looking forward to what surprises would unfold.
I was quite curious myself.