Joyce’s Reviews > The Line > Status Update
Joyce
is on page 17 of 43
She has zero interest in destroying someone’s life—their reputation, their legacy, the public persona they’ve meticulously built across decades. If Porter Sloan really does have Aids, he’s already been served a death sentence,
— Jun 13, 2026 06:29AM
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Joyce’s Previous Updates
Joyce
is on page 41 of 43
It was never about the money, she realizes now.
But the money is all she has left.
— Jun 14, 2026 08:06AM
But the money is all she has left.
Joyce
is on page 21 of 43
Last time I spoke to his agent, she said he’s on a break.”
“Did his agent say why?”
“Because he wants to?”
“That’s what his agent said?”
“No, that’s what I’m saying. … What else is there left to do? He’s won at life.“
— Jun 13, 2026 06:34AM
“Did his agent say why?”
“Because he wants to?”
“That’s what his agent said?”
“No, that’s what I’m saying. … What else is there left to do? He’s won at life.“
Joyce
is on page 20 of 43
the “morgue,” a term real newsrooms use to describe the space in which they store hundreds of thousands of their clippings—
— Jun 13, 2026 06:32AM
Joyce
is on page 18 of 43
Whoever gets there first will be the tip of the spear, the de facto expert, the go-to for comments and commissions, and suddenly Hallie would be on everybody’s radars.
— Jun 13, 2026 06:29AM
Joyce
is on page 14 of 43
Hallie doesn’t enjoy writing celebrity pieces, because it feels even trashier than true crime,
— Jun 13, 2026 06:24AM
Joyce
is on page 12 of 43
“Journalism is about truth. It has weight. The pieces I write are nothing. They’re vapor.”
— Jun 13, 2026 06:22AM
Joyce
is on page 9 of 43
editor told Hallie that she wasn’t tough enough to be a reporter.
“I only just turned thirty and I’m already tougher than you’ll ever be.”
It was only afterwards that she realized what he’d actually meant. She feels too much. She can’t dial it down. stories become too personal for her— and she starts to lose her objectivity.
— Jun 13, 2026 06:20AM
“I only just turned thirty and I’m already tougher than you’ll ever be.”
It was only afterwards that she realized what he’d actually meant. She feels too much. She can’t dial it down. stories become too personal for her— and she starts to lose her objectivity.

