I hope that you’ll go through the plan of action together with me and lots of other people all over the world. My book, Side Hustle, provides a step-by-step, 27-day plan of action to help you chart your own success. That’s how I think of side hustles: income-generating projects that will make your life better. The best side hustle ideas aren’t projects that steal your time and drain your energy, they’re assets that earn money for you while you sleep. And many times, the type of hustle they pursue makes a huge difference. In most cases, these people start their side hustle using the skills they already have. My goal with the show is to tell stories of regular people-perhaps just like you-who’ve all found ways to create a new source of income without quitting their day jobs. If you like this, watch: Better Call Saul (Netflix), Hustle (DVD).That’s the philosophy of Side Hustle School, a daily podcast that I started on January 1, 2017. Standout episode: The pilot has the near-impossible task of cramming in a ton of exposition while making you side with Ribisi’s character even though he is an arsehole. Length: Ten episodes, all available from 13 January. So begin 10 episodes of pacey intrigue, very occasionally cliched dialogue and, above all, thumping good fun. Can he walk away from the past when Cranston’s tux-wearing thug is threatening to chop bits off Marius’s brother unless he gets his money? Of course he can’t. You can’t help but root for him, the scoundrel.Īs Marius’s old life becomes tangled up with his new one, he finds himself stuck between the two, waiting to be found out. He even has a Bond-style Q in the form of old friend Joseph (CS Lee), who runs a one-stop swindling shop for the busy con artist on the go. Marius’s impressive ability to lift a wallet here or steal a mobile there offers endless opportunity for cute set pieces. All ducks present and correct for future romance, then. Julia, a single mum, is beautiful and independent, but with a weakness for “the wrong men”. Before long, the pair are combining their ass-kicking and confidence trickstering skills to great effect on the trail of a dangerous bail-hopper with an overprotective mum. Of course, this is a knockabout crime caper with a charismatic male lead, so there is some believable sexy tension with Julia (Marin Ireland), Pete’s childhood friend, who now works for his grandparents’ bail bond business. Plus, Audrey (Martindale) is no dummy and starts to suspect her “grandson” is not all he seems. But he is a conman so it is meat and drink to him. Marius’s first few days with his new family are, of course, peppered with moments where one of them will pull that, “Remember that thing we used to do?” trope and “Pete” will search desperately for a conversational exit. The moment when Marius knocks on the front door at Pete’s grandparents (played by Peter Gerety and the marvelous Margo Martindale) and says, “Hi, it’s me, Pete”, is make or break in terms of whether you are going to enjoy the ride. This is where you will either leave Sneaky Pete, tutting about suspension of disbelief, or climb aboard for a happy canter around Cranston and co-creator David Shore’s mind-paddock.
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