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I’m a 6-time surrogate who wasn’t fulfilled in my finance career. I quit to start a surrogacy agency and make more money now.

For years, I balanced two very different worlds.

By day, I was climbing the corporate ladder, eventually leading large operational teams at companies like Bank of America and later serving as a senior executive overseeing multimillion-dollar programs.

Outside the office, another calling was quietly shaping my life: surrogacy.

I spent years climbing the corporate ladder

My time at Bank of America culminated in 2014, when I led a 100-person team as vice president of program operations. I thrived in the fast-paced corporate environment and felt challenged every day. I next worked as the chief project management officer for a finance company and, at a consulting firm, managed technology projects with an operational lens.

My background as a state-qualifying debater and my natural inclination toward systems and structure made my work intuitive. Much of my time at BofA was spent rebuilding inefficient programs and redesigning broken processes. By every traditional measure, I had “made it,” but something from my past kept pulling me away.

While my career was stimulating, I found myself still chasing fulfillment.

I was 26 when I delivered my first baby for another family

I became a surrogate for the first time after having three children of my own and while attending night school to become a nurse, which was my career plan before BofA.

As an adopted person, my definition of family had always been broader than most. When my brother came out as gay, I vividly remember the day he confided in me that one of his greatest fears was not being able to become a parent. That moment left a lasting impression.

For me, becoming a mother had come easily — but I knew that wasn’t true for everyone. I wanted to help people like my brother experience the life-changing joy of parenthood. I loved being pregnant, met all the medical criteria, and applied to be a surrogate.

Over the next 13 years, I carried six children for three families

I helped expand two families through egg donation, and completed my own family — with my IVF-assisted daughter — at 37.

Carrying another person’s child is as intimate as you might imagine. Every intended parent I met was kind, generous, and deeply invested in the process.

What troubled me was the industry itself. I often saw surrogates treated as a means to an end, with inconsistent support and lax standards. Looking back, I shouldn’t have been approved for as many journeys, or as close together, as I was.

Yet despite those flaws, my experiences with third-party reproduction — witnessing new parents hold their babies for the first time and knowing people like my brother had options — affected me in a way I couldn’t shake.

After each journey, I felt called back. Despite my corporate success and the joy I found in motherhood, that pull only grew stronger. After a particularly grueling year in my consulting job, I decided to act on it and quit.

I started my own surrogacy company

In 2019, after years of envisioning what an ethical surrogacy agency could look like, I launched Alcea Surrogacy. My goal was to create a company that prioritized transparency, care, and integrity for everyone involved.

At the time, my children were 1, 13, 17, and 20 years old. Balancing their needs while launching a business felt like climbing a mountain in heels. I often rocked my youngest to sleep while answering client emails late into the night.

As the business grew, I strategized in the quiet hours, a toddler on my lap, while I spoke to clients on two hours of sleep.

The early days were unforgiving

Starting a business is never easy, and launching one during a pandemic made it harder. In 2021, I was flying back and forth between my home in Texas and New York before officially relocating my family there in 2022. I faced skepticism from an industry wary of disruption and judgment from people who didn’t understand my choices. I didn’t let that deter me.

Alcea has since grown into four channels: a referral network connecting surrogates and intended parents with ethical partner clinics; Alcea’s core surrogacy services; a private client division supporting high-profile families seeking discretion; and a philanthropic program assisting intended parents with financial need.

We’ve grown to 23 employees and $5 million in annual revenue, and I’ve surpassed the highest corporate salary I ever earned.

Some things just feel like kismet

From day one, it was clear that the combination of empathy, systems thinking, and grit I’d developed in the corporate world would serve me well as a founder. My healthcare background, repurposed for leadership and project management, taught me how to streamline processes, manage people, and anticipate challenges — lessons that proved invaluable in navigating the complex surrogacy landscape.

Launching Alcea wasn’t just a professional risk; it was deeply personal. I promised myself I’d always put my family first, but I also refused to let fear or expectation dictate my ambitions. Returning to work days after deliveries, breastfeeding while speaking with clients, and managing a growing business while raising four children taught me that determination, focus, and grit can overcome almost anything.

I haven’t found work-life balance, but my career satisfaction is immense. If I say I’ll do it, I’ll do it.




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Chappell Roan leaves Casey Wasserman’s talent agency after he appeared in the Epstein files

Chappell Roan is leaving talent agency Wasserman Music. Last month, the agency’s CEO and founder, Casey Wasserman, appeared in a trove of Department of Justice documents related to child sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.

“I hold my teams to the highest standards and have a duty to protect them as well,” Roan wrote. “No artist, agent, or employee should ever be expected to defend or overlook actions that conflict so deeply with our own moral values.”

The “Good Luck, Babe!” singer said she respected and appreciated staff at the agency but that the decision reflected her “belief that meaningful change in our industry requires accountability and leadership that earns trust.”


Chappell Roan's Instagram story about Wasserman Music.

Chappell Roan’s Instagram story about Wasserman Music.

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Roan did not explicitly mention Epstein in her post, but it comes after The Wrap and The Hollywood Reporter reported about turmoil inside the agency over the CEO’s appearance in the files.

Representatives for Wasserman Music did not respond to a request for comment. The CEO has previously said he regrets the association.

Wasserman appeared in the most recent tranche of Epstein-related documents released by the DOJ. Appearing in the files does not necessarily suggest that a person has engaged in wrongdoing.

The documents included flirtatious email exchanges between Wasserman and Ghislaine Maxwell from 2003.

Maxwell was convicted in December 2021 of five counts related to a sex trafficking scheme involving minors with Epstein. She was sentenced to 20 years in prison in 2022.

Wasserman, who is also the chairman of LA28, the organizing committee for the 2028 Olympics in Los Angeles, apologized in a statement on January 31.

“I deeply regret my correspondence with Ghislaine Maxwell, which took place over two decades ago, long before her horrific crimes came to light,” he said. “I never had a personal or business relationship with Jeffrey Epstein. As is well documented, I went on a humanitarian trip as part of a delegation with the Clinton Foundation in 2002 on the Epstein plane. I am terribly sorry for having any association with either of them.”

Roan, whose name is Kayleigh Rose Amstutz, has been repped by the talent agency Wasserman since 2023. She is the latest star to leave the agency amidst the Epstein fallout. The artists Beach Bunny, Wednesday, and Bethany Cosentino from Best Coast walked away from the agency in the past week. In 2024, Billie Eilish left the agency for other reasons.




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Trump taps a longtime agency economist as the next Bureau of Labor Statistics commissioner

President Donald Trump’s monthslong and contentious search for a new commissioner to lead the Bureau of Labor Statistics may be ending.

On a Truth Social post on Friday, Trump announced that he intends to nominate Brett Matsumoto, a longtime agency economist, to lead the BLS.

The BLS commissioner role has been vacant since August, when Trump fired Erika McEntarfer after the release of a jobs report showing weak employment growth. Trump alleged, without providing evidence, that the data had been politically manipulated. The allegation and removal have since undermined public trust in one of the federal government’s most closely watched statistical agencies, which is supposed to remain nonpartisan.

The agency has roughly 2,000 employees, and the commissioner is its only appointed position. The commissioner’s role carries a four-year term and requires Senate confirmation.

Before Matsumoto, the White House previously nominated EJ Antoni, a Heritage Foundation economist, for the job, but later withdrew the nomination after it became clear Antoni lacked sufficient support for Senate confirmation.

Who is Brett Matsumoto?

Matsumoto is a career economist with deep ties to the agency he would lead if confirmed.

Based on Matsumoto’s LinkedIn profile, he earned undergraduate and master’s degrees at the University of Delaware before earning his doctorate in economics from the University of North Carolina in 2015. Since then, he has been working at the BLA as a supervisory research economist. Multiple academic papers under his name can be found covering issues such as consumer expenditure and inflation measurement. Over the past year, he has been on assignment at the Council of Economic Advisers.

Matsumoto is not very active on social media. A Facebook account under his name shows that his profile picture used to be a photo with Ivanka Trump back in August 2020. His most recent profile photo features him alongside a tabby cat.

In a post on Truth Social late Friday, Trump said he was confident Matsumoto had the expertise to “QUICKLY fix the long history of issues at the BLS on behalf of the American People.”

Several economists posted online that they believe Matsumoto could be the right choice.

Claudia Sahm, Chief Economist at New Century Advisors, posted on X that Matsumoto is an “excellent choice” for the commissioner position.

Skanda Amarnath, Executive Director of Employ America, echoed the sentiment on X and said that Matsumoto is “a very thoughtful person who understands the nuts and bolts of data measurement and estimation.”




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