Our Mission
I spent years in New York City pounding the pavement as an actress and a singer; from theater to musicals, to commercial, and film and television auditions, all over the city. Sometimes I had three appointments in a single day. And no matter how good I knew my work was, something felt off. Was it me? Was it the fact that as an Asian American woman, the industry is harder for my demographic? Probably. But, what else wasn't clicking?
Even in my dating life, I had to battle negative stereotypes from the men I met and struggle to love the body and face I was born with. Eventually, New York felt like a dead end to me. Maybe I just needed a vacation?
It's hard to protect and isolate your energy in a city like New York, which can feel like a swirling cesspool of everyone else's neurosis. How does one use the Law of Attraction to their advantage when the entire L train is swimming around in your auric field?
So I moved to Los Angeles. The bright sunshine, the seventy degree clear days, the ocean and the gorgeous sunsets helped me heal; physically, emotionally and spiritually. Los Angeles is where I learned that our inner energy, often influences our outer manifestations. Los Angeles mirrors all the parts of myself, the witchey woo, the nature lover and the spell caster, that felt stifled in the Big Apple.
I listened to Abraham Hicks ad nauseam and added meditation, Reiki, and other wellness practices to my daily routines. Los Angeles helped me expand as a woman and an artist. And my friendship with Tricia Brooks has been a consistent mirror of my spiritual progression and growth. With her, I learned that happiness takes work.
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I wrote Two Girls, One Candle, with the intention to show the world, that we all have the power to raise our vibration and attract what we desire, if we do the work on ourselves, from the inside out. All it takes is a little honesty and courage to access and own that alignment.
It's my mission to make our audience, and their inner child, laugh all the way down to their lower chakras. The series is also a bridge between my work as an actress and my work as a stand up comedian. There is a profound silliness and child-like humor between Tricia and I, that is reflected in the dynamic between our characters, Wendy and Lucy. I wish for everyone to access that part of themselves and feel free and accepted. Sisterhood, spirituality (not religion), and sexiness! Be the light for another, and you'll both shine like stars.
Had I known how to be more deliberate with my energy, how to deliberately transform my vibration who knows what could've shifted for me in New York? Two Girls, One Candle (Season One) is just the beginning of this journey of self love, empowerment, and the invaluable friendships that help take us there. I hope to take the audience there too. - Ann Hu
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Target Audience
We believe that “Two Girls, One Candle” has the potential to appeal to a wide net, inter-generational audience.
Singles
More modern women are remaining single. Articles and studies of dating difficulties have become newsworthy in The Guardian, The New York Times and LA Times. Our show will mirror those experiences.
Millennials
Millennials prefer original content to remakes, and genre-bending stories that feel authentic with relationships that reflect deep, nontraditional bonds. They love comedies with quirk and flirt.
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LGTBQ+TRANS Community
Two Girls, One Candle, is committed to embrace and represent the beloved Los Angeles LGBTQ+ community in its series. This community seeks stories that reflect their identities and celebrate their self-expression, and transformation.

Los Angelenos
Los Angelenos love to see their home in stories that mirror their West Coast identity, while reflecting the city’s trademark blend of dating, and spirituality.
Gen X
Generation X values nuanced character-driven, stories with authentic complexities, and interesting story arcs.
They grew up on cult classics that still resonate.
They are loyal viewers, especially if the story has a ‘hook’ that connects with a social zeitgeist.
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Spiritual New Age Community
The spiritual new age community is growing in mainstream popularity with global spiritual products and services (apps, retreats, crystals, meditation tools) profiting $16.7 billion USD in 2025. *Maia Research
And 21% of the American population prefer to be spiritual over religious. *Pew Research Center
Inve$ting in Women
According to a 2018 study by CAA and Shift7, female-led films outperformed male-led films at all budget levels, worldwide.

Gender-balanced teams
yield higher revenue:
A 2025 analysis of the 100 most popular films found that films with at least 50% of key creative roles (writer, director, producers, etc.)
held by women, averaged double the worldwide box office revenue compared to
films without a balanced team.
- Study by IMDBPRO and Reframe

The conventional ‘wisdom’ that it’s financially more risky to feature female protagonists is not backed up by data.”
— Christy Haubegger.
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