Tuesday, April 14, 2020
Melissa McCarthy Makes $12 Million a Year, Wakes Up at 430 A.M., and Doesnt Use Her Phone on the Weekends
Melissa McCarthy Makes $12 Million a Year, Wakes Up at 430 A.M., and Doesn't Use Her Phone on the Weekends Melissa McCarthy is one of the highest-paid women in Hollywood. She went from having major credit-card debt as a 20-year-old just starting her comedy career in New York to earning $12 million in 2018 at age 47. Today sheâs worth $60 million, according to Forbes. But you wouldnât know sheâs a top-earning celebrity by her daily routine, in which she practically eschews everything related to âbeing busyâ â" the hallmark of Hollywoodâs elite â" in favor of a more âcarefully curated day,â as revealed in a New York Times profile by Taffy Brodesser-Akner. McCarthy rises at 4:30 a.m. whether sheâs in her Los Angeles or Atlanta home, according to The Times. She tiptoes around the house to avoid waking up her family, makes coffee, and spends her morning watching TV â" typically âKnight Riderâ or âThe Incredible Hulk.â McCarthy is hardly the only household name whoâs gone on record as waking up before the sun. Richard Branson wakes up at 5 to plan out his day, eat breakfast, and spend time with his family. Mark Wahlberg wakes up at 2:30 for a morning that involves prayer time, two meals, a workout, a shower, and golf, all before 8 a.m. However, McCarthy isnât trying to maximize her time. âShe hates how the entire world is set up to make people more efficient. She hates the trend that every home needs an open-concept design of one room leading to another,â Brodesser-Akner reported. âShe sees what itâs really about, which is not you spending time with your kids while you cook and they watch TV but you being able to be everywhere at once.â âWe are literally knocking down walls to help ourselves multitask,â McCarthy told The Times. âMaybe Iâll start a business called âWalls,â and my specialty will be putting walls in, because in 10 years weâre all going to want them again because weâve made our houses into studio apartments.â McCarthy also resists having her phone out at all times. Brodesser-Akner described McCarthyâs approach to technology: âShe sees why phones are necessary, she accepts their existence, but she thinks the world got much worse and more apathetic and less willing to say âYes andâ and âWhy not?â the minute everyone had a smartphone. Sheâll post on Instagram but she wonât read Instagram. She wonât even do email. People can text her or they can call her. Email will drown her.â As part of her morning, she reads The Los Angeles Times and National Geographic the old-fashioned way â" in print. She makes an exception for The New York Times, which she reads on her iPad. The iPad also makes an appearance at night, when she uses it to peruse Pinterest and Etsy while taking a bath. Weekends are for friends and family and involve even more technological disconnect â" McCarthy and her husband, Ben Falcone, put their phones aside and have friends over for dinner on Sundays. This article originally appeared on BusinessInsider.com.
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