Where's my Look Alike?

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By Ruchira



This earth has a billion population of men living on different continents of this planet. I always wonder where my look-alike is right now? Am sure my look alike is living his life as normally as I am here today.

However, Had I been a celebrity, he would have popped up from one of the places on this earth. Being a celebrity changes everything. You get fame, money and so-called respect. Why wouldn't my look-alike like all the above. All he needs to change is his accent, his style, and his perspective in life. Once all that is done, by reading all about me, Voila! he has it all there. He can gain respect, and fame in that far away continent he is living in or he could also surface on this side of the world and be called a celebrity impersonator.

These celebrity impersonators call themselves an actor. They work hard in studying the person whom they want to be like. There is a battle to be the number 1 impersonator because if he wins it, there is a lot of money involved. A classic example is Tim Watters. He is the world's greatest Bill Clinton impersonator and has made more than a million dollars annually and owns properties.

Good Presidential impersonators are worth millions annually. They make impersonation their living and work hard to make themselves worth millions while their look alike is in the White house. Currently there are two men competing to be impersonators for President Obama.

I guess with this era of making money and living well. Some really don't care if it's right to imitate others and make money out of it or be living with a strong back bone. However, some may argue that whatever profession that person has opted for, he is working hard to make money. So, hard work is involved. Thus, the ultimate goal at the end of the day is to fill the bank account under your name and live happily ever after.

Where's my Look Alike? in the News

  • All dressed up and nowhere to goTimes Online6 days ago

    Inevitably in a life of hackery, it is the deceptively frivolous assignments that end up becoming the most Sisyphean of labours. Viz, an ostensibly innocuous call from my editor back in October: “We’d like you to get hold of a sparkly party frock. Go to a few Christmas bashes.

  • 'A Christmas Carol' by Charles DickensThe Winchester Star6 days ago

    As a special treat to parents and young readers, the Winchester Star presents “A Christmas Carol,” written by Charles Dickens, now in the public domain and just as he penned it in December 1843.


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