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Movies That Matter Booking for work: [email protected] Hoteli 1 Maji gjendet ne bregun e liqenit te Pogradecit, ne fund te shetitores me te njejtin emer. Sherbim lavanderie.
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Pas ndryshimeve dhe permiresimeve te jashtezakonshme nga ana e bashkise ne zonen e bregut liqenor, pamja ka ndryshuar plotesisht. Hoteli yne gjendet i rrethuar nga gjelberimi i Parkut 1 Maji nga njera ane dhe nga rera e bregut te liqenit nga ana tjeter. Investimet publike dhe ato private kane ecur paralelisht duke e shnderruar Pogradecin nje qender pushimesh eksklusive. Dhomat jane te medha e plo

t drite, me pamje te dritareve dhe ballkoneve qe shikojne nga liqeni ose gjelberimi i parkut. Hoteli ofron gjithashtu sherbimin me te mire ne restorant, bar e parkim pa pagese. Ne kopshtin rrethues ka restorant, bar, piceri dhe qender vallezimi. Hoteli eshte konceptuar me ambjente te ndryshme qe lejojne zgjedhje si per mosha te reja me me shume muzike e kercime por edhe per ata qe duan qetesi e relax. Ne ju ftojme te vini e te provoni kushtet dhe sherbimet ne Hotel 1 Maji ne Pogradec. Sebashku me cfare ofron natyra e mrekullueshme e liqenit tone besojme qe do te kaloni pushimet me te kendeshme ! Ne jemi perpjekur te krijojme mundesite me te mira jo vetem per pushim por edhe argetim, jo vetem per familiare por edhe per te rinj. Ne darke, pista e vallezimit buze liqenit, kthehet ne nje qender argetimi per gjithe naten deri ne mengjes. Parkim i sigurte dhe pa pagese. Shezlonge e cadra plazhi. Sherbim i kamariereve ne dhoma. Bar, restorant e piceri. Qyteti i Pogradecit ofron gjithashtu nje infrastrukture te pasur per pushuesit. Ju mund te shetisni me biciklete ne park, mund te peshkoni ne Drilone, mund te ecni apo vraponi mengjeseve permes luleve ne breg te liqenit, mund te vizitoni Tushemishtin apo pika te tjera turistike qofte edhe ne Maqedonine fqinje vetem 10 min larg qendres sone.

"I CAME HOME ON MY LUNCH BREAK TO CHECK ON MY “SICK” HUSBAND… THEN I HEARD HIM ON THE PHONE PLANNING TO TAKE THE DEED, T...
05/20/2026

"I CAME HOME ON MY LUNCH BREAK TO CHECK ON MY “SICK” HUSBAND… THEN I HEARD HIM ON THE PHONE PLANNING TO TAKE THE DEED, THE ACCOUNT, AND EVERYTHING I OWNED
I came home because the guilt wouldn’t leave me alone.
For three days, Nathan Cole had been “too sick” to work.
Pale.
Weak.
Coughing under a blanket on the couch like standing up might break him.
Every morning before I left for the office, I set water beside him, checked his medication, and asked if he needed anything. Every morning, he gave me that faint, grateful little smile from the sofa.
And every morning, I hated myself for feeling relieved when the door closed behind me and I could finally breathe at work.
So that afternoon, I decided to surprise him.
Soup from the deli.
His favorite ginger ale.
A quick kiss.
A small reminder that even when I was busy, I still cared.
I parked a few houses down so the garage door wouldn’t wake him.
The neighborhood looked normal.
Bare winter trees.
Kids dragging backpacks down the sidewalk.
A dog barking somewhere behind a fence.
Our house looked peaceful from the outside — curtains drawn, porch swept, everything quiet and ordinary.
The kind of house people call calm.
I slipped inside with my shoes in my hand.
Then I froze.
Nathan’s voice came from the living room.
Low.
Sharp.
Intense.
Nothing like the weak, fragile voice he had been using with me all week.
He wasn’t coughing.
He wasn’t struggling to breathe.
He was pacing.
And every word coming out of his mouth made the floor feel less solid beneath me.
“No, you’re not listening,” Nathan said. “I already gave you the timeline. She can’t suspect anything before Friday.”
Friday.
My stomach tightened.
She?
A woman’s voice came through the speaker.
Muffled, but clear enough.
“Then stop stalling. You made promises.”
My mouth went dry.
“I’m handling it,” Nathan muttered. “She’s smart. If I push too hard, she’ll start looking into things. And if she starts looking…”
The woman cut him off.
“And what? You’re going to back out? I’m not waiting forever. I want what you said I was going to have.”
The bag of soup almost slipped from my hand.
I pressed myself against the hallway wall.
My heart was pounding so hard I was sure he would hear it.
Through the narrow opening, I could see him.
Phone to his ear.
Standing straight.
Healthy.
Alert.
Annoyed.
Completely fine.
“Did you transfer the money?” the woman asked.
Nathan stopped pacing.
“I already transferred it,” he said. “That part is done. Just let me finish the rest.”
Money.
My money?
Two nights earlier, he had lectured me about how tight things were until my bonus came through.
He had looked disappointed in me for even suggesting we might be okay.
And now he was calmly telling another woman he had already transferred money.
Her laugh came through cold.
“Transferred where? I want proof.”
Nathan’s voice dropped.
“You’ll get proof after Friday. I’ll send you the papers. The deed. The account. Everything.”
The deed.
The account.
The papers.
My vision blurred at the edges...
(I know you're all very curious about the next part, so if you want to read more, please leave a ""YES"" comment below!) 👇👇"

"I never told my daughter’s school that I was a federal judge… so when I arrived early one afternoon and found my 8-year...
05/18/2026

"I never told my daughter’s school that I was a federal judge… so when I arrived early one afternoon and found my 8-year-old crying inside a locked storage room, her teacher calmly said, “Some children require stricter discipline than others.” That was the moment I realized my child had been terrified of school for months.
The first sign appeared on an ordinary rainy Thursday.
My daughter Emily sat quietly at the kitchen counter peeling cheese off her pizza while pretending not to cry.
Before second grade, she used to fill our home with nonstop stories after school — playground adventures, science experiments, funny questions from class. Her voice used to bounce through every room in our little Connecticut townhouse.
Then slowly… she became quiet.
Too quiet.
I’m Katherine Bennett. In Washington, D.C., people know me as Judge Katherine Bennett of the Federal Appeals Court — a woman whose rulings have terrified corrupt politicians, dishonest executives, and arrogant attorneys for years.
But at home, none of that mattered.
At home, I was simply Emily’s mother.
After my divorce, I made one promise to myself: my daughter would grow up as normally as possible. I didn’t want teachers treating her differently because of my position. I didn’t want parents using their children to impress me.
So when I enrolled Emily at Brighton Hills Academy, I never mentioned my career.
To everyone there, I was just another working mother.
And that decision nearly destroyed my child.
One afternoon, I arrived early for pickup after a court hearing ended sooner than expected.
The front office told me Emily’s class was still finishing an activity.
But something felt wrong.
The hallways were empty.
Too quiet.
Then I heard it.
Soft crying.
At first I thought I imagined it — until I followed the sound down a back corridor near the supply rooms.
That’s where I found my daughter.
Locked inside a dark storage closet.
Curled against a stack of paper boxes.
Crying so hard she could barely breathe.
When her teacher finally arrived, she didn’t apologize.
She folded her arms calmly and said:
“Some children need firmer discipline than others.”
And in that exact moment…
The judge inside me disappeared.
Only Emily’s mother remained.
(What I uncovered afterward exposed secrets the school tried desperately to hide… Full story waiting in the comments 👇🔥)"

"My six-year-old granddaughter called me just before 1 a.m., crying so hard I could barely understand her.“Papa… Mommy s...
05/17/2026

"My six-year-old granddaughter called me just before 1 a.m., crying so hard I could barely understand her.
“Papa… Mommy says the baby’s coming. Please hurry.”
I sat upright instantly.
The glowing clock beside my bed read 12:47 a.m., and the fear in Lydia’s tiny voice erased every trace of sleep from my body.
“Sweetheart, where’s your dad?” I asked while already reaching for my jeans.
For a second, all I heard was sobbing.
Then she whispered something that turned my blood cold.
“He hurt Mommy’s tummy… then he left.”
I was out of bed before she even finished speaking.
Cassidy wasn’t supposed to have the baby for another six weeks. I knew because I had circled the due date on my kitchen calendar months earlier. Six weeks early wasn’t normal — especially not after what Lydia was describing.
“Listen to me carefully,” I told her, forcing my voice to stay calm. “Did you call 911?”
“I already did,” she cried. “The ambulance is coming.”
“Good girl. Stay with Mommy until help arrives. Papa’s on the way.”
I dressed in less than a minute.
For years, I had worked dangerous oil rigs across Montana. Men survived those jobs by staying calm under pressure. Panic got people killed. You focused on the problem first and dealt with anger later.
But this wasn’t a rig accident.
This was my daughter.
And the man I never trusted had finally proven exactly what kind of coward he really was.
The drive to Cassidy’s house usually took over twenty minutes.
I made it much faster.
The entire way, my mind replayed every warning sign I ignored over the years.
Trent’s drinking.
His gambling.
The way Cassidy laughed less and less after marrying him.
The way Lydia had started watching adults carefully before answering simple questions.
And now my granddaughter was standing inside a house full of fear waiting for help because Trent Huxley ran away instead of facing what he’d done.
When I reached the driveway, ambulance lights painted the house red and white.
Paramedics rushed toward the front door with a stretcher.
“That’s my daughter,” I told one of them as I pushed past.
Cassidy looked pale and exhausted lying there, tears filling her eyes the moment she saw me.
“Dad…” she whispered weakly.
“I’m here.”
One of the medics pulled me aside quickly.
“We’re taking her into emergency surgery immediately,” he explained. “The baby is in distress.”
I nodded once, jaw locked tight.
Then I saw Lydia sitting on the couch clutching her stuffed elephant with shaking hands.
For one terrible moment, I couldn’t move.
No child should ever look that frightened.
I carried her to the truck and followed the ambulance through the dark Montana roads all the way to Bozeman General Hospital.
Inside the emergency room, doctors rushed Cassidy through surgical doors while nurses guided us into the waiting area.
A surgeon finally stopped long enough to speak with me.
“She suffered serious abdominal trauma,” Dr. Martinez explained carefully. “We’re doing everything we can for both mother and baby.”
Lydia clung tighter to my coat.
After the doctor disappeared, I sat with my granddaughter beneath the harsh hospital lights and gently asked her what happened.
Her tiny voice barely rose above a whisper.
“Daddy came home yelling about money,” she said. “Mommy told him to stop because he was scaring us.”
I stayed silent.
“Then he got madder,” she continued. “He pushed Mommy down and hurt her while she was crying.”
My hands started shaking.
Not from fear.
From rage.
A few minutes later, footsteps echoed through the hallway.
I looked up and saw Deputy Brock Timmons walking toward us.
And judging by the look on his face, he already knew exactly whose side he planned to take…
👇👇👇
TYPE “YES” IF YOU WANT PART 2 💬🔥"

"Just one day before giving birth, my husband used the $23,000 I’d saved for delivery to pay off his sister’s debt. “She...
05/16/2026

"Just one day before giving birth, my husband used the $23,000 I’d saved for delivery to pay off his sister’s debt. “She’ll die without it—just take something to delay the birth,” he said, then walked out while I went into labor. With my last strength, I called my mother. He had no idea that call would send his life into a downward spiral.
The nursery was painted a soft, hopeful yellow, but as I sat heavily on the hardwood floor, I had never felt so terrifyingly cold. I was 32 years old, and 36 weeks pregnant.
I had been diagnosed with placenta accreta—a severe, life-threatening complication. My doctor warned me I couldn't deliver at a standard hospital. I needed a specialized cardiothoracic surgical team to ensure I didn't bleed to death on the operating table.
The cash deposit for the VIP suite and the team was $23,000. For six months, I had worked grueling freelance drafting projects until my hands cramped, saving every single penny into a restricted medical account.
Today, the day before my scheduled C-section, I opened my laptop to wire the funds to the hospital.
The screen loaded, and the blood violently drained from my face:
BALANCE: $0.00.
Recent Transaction: $23,000 Outbound Wire. Executed 2 hours ago.
""Mark!"" I screamed, my voice cracking with pure, unadulterated panic. ""Where is the surgery money?!""
My husband stepped into the doorway. He was wearing his expensive wool overcoat, casually adjusting his watch. He actively avoided looking me in the eye. He didn't look concerned; he just sighed, a heavy, deeply annoyed, and patronizing sound.
""Chloe was in deep trouble with illegal gambling debts,"" Mark said smoothly, referring to his chronically irresponsible 26-year-old sister. ""They were threatening her. She would literally die without that money, Elena.""
""I am going to die without that money!"" I shrieked, staggered by his sociopathy. ""The surgery is tomorrow! They won't admit me without the deposit!""
Mark rolled his eyes, genuinely irritated by my terror. ""Oh, stop being so incredibly dramatic. Women give birth every day. Just take a cab to the regular public ER. They have to treat you by law. I have to prioritize my sister's life right now.""
He was prioritizing a gambling debt over his wife and unborn child's survival.
Before I could speak, a blinding, tearing pain ripped through my lower abdomen. I collapsed onto my hands and knees. A sudden, warm rush of fluid flooded the floor beneath me. My water had broken. I was in premature labor.
""Mark!"" I sobbed, clutching my stomach in agony, reaching a trembling hand toward him. ""The baby is coming! Call 911! Please!""
Mark looked down at me. He didn't reach for his phone. He didn't kneel to comfort me. He checked his watch again, a deep frown creasing his forehead.
""I can't deal with this right now, Elena,"" Mark snapped, his voice utterly callous and devoid of human empathy. ""Just take an aspirin or something to delay the birth. I have to go calm Chloe down. Call a cab if you really need to.""
He turned his back on me. The heavy oak front door slammed shut with a definitive thud.
He left me alone to die in a pool of amniotic fluid.
But as a second brutal contraction tore through my body, the terrified, accommodating wife completely died. I grabbed my phone. I didn't dial 911 immediately.
Five years ago, when I introduced Mark to my family, Victoria had seen right through him. She was a ruthless, ultra-wealthy, and widely feared corporate litigator in Chicago. She operated in a world of cutthroat billionaires and hostile takeovers. She took one look at Mark's charming, evasive smile and accurately assessed him as a dangerous, parasitic liability. She warned me not to marry him.
Mark, furious that he couldn't manipulate her, had spent the next five years aggressively gaslighting me into believing my mother was toxic, controlling, and detrimental to our marriage. He slowly, systematically isolated me from her, until we barely spoke outside of polite holiday texts.
The phone rang twice.
""Elena?"" Victoria's sharp, authoritative voice answered. There was no hesitation, no warmth, just immediate, focused attention.
""Mom..."" I gasped, the word tearing from my throat, my voice a fragile, dying, unrecognizable thread.
""Elena, what is wrong? Where are you?"" The authority in her voice spiked instantly into high-alert.
""Mom... Mark stole the surgery money,"" I sobbed, struggling to draw a breath as another violent contraction hit. ""He wired it to Chloe. He left. The baby is coming right now. I'm bleeding, Mom. I'm so scared.""
The silence on the other end of the line lasted for a microsecond.
It was the silence of a nuclear reactor achieving critical mass.
When Victoria spoke again, the motherly panic was entirely, terrifyingly absent. Her maternal fury had instantaneously crystallized into absolute, freezing, lethal tactical command.
""I have your phone's GPS location,"" Victoria stated, her voice dropping into a clinical, mechanical register that left absolutely no room for death or failure. ""An elite, private trauma ambulance is three minutes away from your house. Do not try to move. Do not hang up the phone.""
""I can't pay them, Mom,"" I wept, the reality of my empty bank account crushing me. ""He took it all.""...
(THIS IS ONLY PART OF THE STORY, THE ENTIRE STORY AND THE EXCITING ENDING ARE IN THE LINK BELOW THE COMMENT) 👇👇"

"Billionaire Caught the Housekeeper Teaching His Blind Daughter to Fight—Then Her Real Name Exposed the Secret That Near...
05/15/2026

"Billionaire Caught the Housekeeper Teaching His Blind Daughter to Fight—Then Her Real Name Exposed the Secret That Nearly Destroyed His Empire
The first time Dominic Caruso saw his blind daughter strike another human being, he almost reached for the gun under his jacket.
Not because Grace was in danger.
Because she wasn’t.
That was what froze him in the doorway of the old wine cellar beneath his Lake Forest mansion, one hand on the brass k**b, rain still shining on the shoulders of his black coat.
His twelve-year-old daughter stood barefoot on a training mat with a wooden practice baton in both hands. Her pale eyes stared at nothing, clouded since birth, but her face was turned toward the woman circling her.
Evelyn Shaw, the quiet housekeeper he had hired four months earlier, moved with a predator’s patience.
“Again,” Evelyn said.
Then she attacked.
The baton came at Grace’s left shoulder with enough speed to make the air snap.
Dominic stepped forward.
Grace moved first.
She did not stumble backward. She did not raise her hands in panic. She shifted toward the strike, turned her hips, and brought her own baton up in a clean diagonal block.
Wood cracked against wood.
The sound tore through the cellar like a gunshot.
Dominic stopped breathing.
Grace’s cheeks were flushed. Her hair had come loose from its braid. Sweat darkened the collar of her training shirt, and there was a small bruise blooming on her forearm.
But her hands were steady.
“Good,” Evelyn said. “You heard the weight change. But you waited for the sound instead of the intention. Intention comes first.”
Grace nodded, breathing hard. “Again.”
“No,” Dominic said.
Both of them turned.
Grace’s face brightened for half a second. “Dad?”
Then she heard his silence, and the light faded.
Dominic stepped into the cellar. The guards behind him did not follow. They knew better. When Dominic Caruso entered a room like that, he wanted either privacy or obedience, and both were usually enforced the same way.
“What the hell is this?” he asked.
His voice was low, almost calm, which made it worse.
Evelyn lowered her baton. She was a plain-looking woman by design, Dominic realized suddenly. Dark hair pinned tight. Gray sweater. Black pants. No jewelry except a thin silver chain at her throat. In the daylight, she looked forgettable.
Down here, with a baton in her hand and her feet set in a fighter’s stance, she looked like a secret someone had buried badly.
“I’m teaching Grace,” Evelyn said.
Dominic’s jaw tightened. “Teaching her what? How to get hurt?”
“How not to.”
Grace stepped toward his voice. “Dad, please don’t be mad.”
“Go upstairs.”
“No.”
The single word cracked harder than the batons had.
Dominic stared at his daughter. “Grace.”
“I said no.” Her voice trembled, but she stood straighter. “You don’t get to drag me out of every room where I finally feel like I’m inside my own life.”
Pain flashed through him so fast it nearly became rage.
“You are twelve years old,” he said. “You are blind. You are my daughter. You do not get to decide what danger means in this house.”
Grace’s mouth tightened. “No. You decide everything. What hallway I use. What car I ride in. Who can talk to me. Which windows stay locked. Which friends are too risky. Which restaurants have exits you like. You call it safety, but it feels like being buried alive in a beautiful house.”
“Grace,” he warned.
She gripped the baton. “You always say you want me protected. But you never ask if I want to live protected.”
For a moment, the cellar was quiet except for the old pipes humming in the wall.
Dominic looked at Evelyn.
“You put those words in her mouth?”
“No,” Evelyn said. “She had them before I got here. I only stayed quiet long enough to hear them.”
His temper sharpened.
“You’re fired.”
Grace flinched.
Evelyn did not.
“No, Mr. Caruso,” she said calmly. “I’m not.”
The guards outside the door shifted.
Dominic crossed the room in three slow steps. He was tall, broad-shouldered, dressed in the clean black suit that made men at board meetings smile too carefully and men in alleys forget how to lie. His family owned restaurants, freight companies, construction firms, private security contracts, and pieces of Chicago nobody admitted were for sale.
Most people lowered their eyes when Dominic Caruso came close.
Evelyn looked directly at him.
“You should choose your tone carefully,” he said.
“I always do.”
“You came into my home under false pretenses.”
“I came to clean your house.”
“And now you’re training my blind daughter to fight in my cellar.”
“She asked me to.”
“She is a child.”
“She is your heir.”
The word landed between them like a knife placed carefully on a table.
Grace turned her face toward Evelyn. Dominic turned colder.
“My daughter is not part of my business.”
Evelyn’s expression did not change. “Your enemies don’t agree.”
Dominic’s hand curled into a fist. “Say that again.”
—————————————————
Say ""suggestion"" - Part 2 will be updated below 👇"

"🎬 Waiting to Exhale 2 (2026) 💔✨🌟 Starring: Angela Bassett • Loretta Devine • Lela Rochon • Regina King • Viola Davis🕰️ ...
05/15/2026

"🎬 Waiting to Exhale 2 (2026) 💔✨
🌟 Starring: Angela Bassett • Loretta Devine • Lela Rochon • Regina King • Viola Davis
🕰️ Synopsis:
Years have passed, but their bond remains unbreakable. Reunited once again, these women face new chapters filled with love, loss, and the complexities of life. As careers shift and relationships are tested, they find strength in each other—proving that true friendship only grows stronger with time.
🔥 Why You Can't Miss It:
A powerful, emotional continuation of a beloved story—rich with heartfelt performances, real-life struggles, and the enduring strength of sisterhood.
✨ Hook:
Life changes… but friendship is forever.
🍿 Get ready for:
— Deep, emotional storytelling 💔
— Powerful performances from an iconic cast 🌟
— Real conversations about love, growth & healing 🧠💬
— A celebration of friendship that stands the test of time 💫
"

"🎬 OLD MONEY 2 (2026)⭐ Engin Akyürek • Aslı Enver • Dolunay Soysert💎 Drama • Romance • ThrillerPower, betrayal, and ambi...
05/15/2026

"🎬 OLD MONEY 2 (2026)
⭐ Engin Akyürek • Aslı Enver • Dolunay Soysert
💎 Drama • Romance • Thriller
Power, betrayal, and ambition collide once again as old wealth and hidden secrets begin threatening the fragile balance between love and loyalty.
As emotional tension grows inside a world controlled by status and influence, dangerous decisions slowly pull everyone toward irreversible consequences.
In a world shaped by privilege and manipulation, trust becomes the rarest luxury of all. Because money can never erase betrayal.
"

"🎬 DIRTY DANCING: THE ETERNAL RHYTHM (2026)⭐️ Patrick Swayze • Jennifer Grey • Jerry Orbach🎭 Romance • Music • DramaThe ...
05/15/2026

"🎬 DIRTY DANCING: THE ETERNAL RHYTHM (2026)
⭐️ Patrick Swayze • Jennifer Grey • Jerry Orbach
🎭 Romance • Music • Drama
The music and passion return through another emotional story where dance becomes a powerful expression of freedom, love, and personal transformation. Every rhythm carries emotion.
As relationships evolve beneath the pressure of expectations and change, dancing becomes more than performance alone. It becomes a language of connection and courage.
In a story filled with romance and nostalgia, passion continues inspiring people across generations. Because some rhythms never fade away.
"

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