Nothing was off limits apart from commercials for meat, milk and junk food (they were vegans). "There are so many beautiful things about the industry as well as really hideous things it was almost like having an insider." All five siblings were signed up to an agent, schooling became a jumble of tutoring on film sets, home teaching and stints in traditional classrooms, and their careers began. "In her job my mum learned a lot about the good and bad aspects of Hollywood," says Rain. They moved to LA where Arlyn got a job as a secretary with a casting agent at NBC, right in the heart of the slippery Hollywood talent pool, and they embarked on a course that would set about turning their children into stars. Arlyn and John ditched ordinary old Bottom as a surname and picked Phoenix – with its connotations of a magical bird rising up out of the ashes. Then in 1979, after the birth of their fifth child, things took a slightly different course. I get fidgety if I'm in one place for longer than three months." "In some respects I can't help but be a bit of a gypsy as an adult. "Travelling was a big part of my childhood and one that I value very much," says Rain. Each of their children was born in a different American state (Rain in Texas) and much of their early life was spent on the road. It was a laid back, free-spirited, hippy existence. In 1973, just after River and Rain were born, they joined a religious sect called the Children of God for which they worked as missionaries, supporting themselves by fruit picking and other odd jobs. The couple were archetypal flower children. While she was hitchhiking in northern California, a young songwriter called John Bottom picked her up. In the late 60s she got wind of the counter-culture movement that was spreading across America, and set off on a voyage of discovery. "At times it's been a source of solace, just knowing that's my name." Their mother, Arlyn, was born in the Bronx to Jewish parents who had emigrated from Russia. ![]() "I feel honoured they chose to give it me," she says. The city will get a slight “break” from the heat Monday and Tuesday as the threat of monsoon rains rolls through, but highs will be back up above 110 degrees by midweek, possibly making it to 116 degrees by the weekend.With names such as these it's no surprise to hear that the Phoenix parents were both bone fide, flowers-in-their-hair hippies. If Phoenix receives rainfall Monday, it would be the third latest monsoon rainfall on record. Phoenix has yet to join other parts of the state with measurable monsoon rain, something that the city is desperately counting on to cool temperatures down. “It’s been a year of abnormalities and streaks, so it’s just a testament to just how strange this year has been,” said Ryan Worley, meteorologist for the National Weather Service office in Phoenix. It goes to show this heat has been exceptional even for one of the nation’s hottest cities. It’s been so hot for so long the average temperature for Phoenix for the month of July set a record at 103 degrees, shattering the previous one by 4 degrees. All of those streaks will have ended by Monday if Phoenix hits its closer-to-average forecast high of 108 degrees.
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