Mar. 15, 2025
Sarah Greene.Photo:Kristina Bumphrey/Variety via Getty
Kristina Bumphrey/Variety via Getty
WhenSarah Greenewas offered her role inBad Sisters, her life looked a little different than it does now.
“I was pregnant when Sharon offered me Bibi. Heavily pregnant,” Greene says of creator Sharon Horgan. “And then he was like 6 months old when we started, but luckily he and my partner kind of came with me everywhere. So at least I would see him when I got home from work every night.
Mar. 15, 2025
Sharon Horganis careful about how much real life she infuses into her writing.
TheBad Sisterscreator and star, 54, is the first to admit that when she was starting out, she was a “magpie for people’s stories” and would pull from the real experiences of those around her to infuse into her writing.
“When I grew [up] some more, I was like, ‘Oh, you can’t do that,'” she tells PEOPLE in this week’s issue.
Mar. 15, 2025
Bailey Zimmerman.Photo:Chris Ashlee
Chris Ashlee
Bailey Zimmerman would not be where he is today without perseverance.
And as his star continues to rise, the CMAs Best New Artist nominee wants to inspire hope in listeners with his new song, “Holding On.”
“I really hope it just gets people through something,” Zimmerman tells PEOPLE exclusively. “I do this to connect with people and show people that they’re not alone and that they can get through anything.
Mar. 15, 2025
Abi Caswell captures herself making cake for customer.Photo:Abi Caswell
Abi Caswell
WhenAbi Caswellreceived a call from a customer in August looking to place a complex cake order just three days before it was needed, the baker jumped into action right away. The 6-in., double-layer vanilla cake, featuring a blue and orange design, cost $70 in total and took Caswell, the founder ofBATTER a bakery X NOLAin New Orleans, more than an hour to make.
Mar. 15, 2025
Vamarr Hunter, 50, of South Shore, discovered at 35 that he was adopted and was curious to meet his birth mother. But he never would’ve imagined she was the woman whose bakery he had been a customer of for years, according to local ABC affiliateABC 7 Chicago.
After submitting for genetic testing, Hunter was informed that his mother was Lenore Lindsay, 67, who owned the Give Me Some Sugah bakery and resided in the same South Shore neighborhood as the son she placed for adoption when she was 17 years old.