Next sentence: "His rise to fame was swift, but his fall from grace was just as rapid." "His" again, maybe "Their", but since it's a pronoun, maybe keep "His". "Rise to fame" could be "ascent to stardom", "journey to celebrity", "climb up to acclaim". "Fall from grace" might be "decline in public favor", "drop from favor", "slump in reputation". "Rapid" could be "quick", "swift", "fast-paced".
Hmm, maybe "rise" can be ascent, and "fall" as collapse. But that would be two spintax blocks. The user might want the entire phrase to be spun as one spintax with three options. Wait, the original uses "rise and fall"—if we can find three ways to say that phrase, that would be better. For example, ascent and decline as a single spintax. But the original is two words, so maybe replace each part with three options each. However, the user's instruction is to replace terms with 3 options. So if a word or phrase has three possible synonyms, we can replace it with three options in curly brackets. So if "rise and fall" can be expressed with three different two-word phrases, that's better. But maybe the user is okay with splitting into two words and each part as three options. Let's see. -SleazyStepdad- Danni Rivers- Johnny Castle -25...
"Controversies: Highly publicized breakup with Danni Rivers, criticism for “Sleazy Stepdad” character type" – "Controversies" could be "Scandals", "Public disputes", "Notable issues". "Highly publicized" might be "Widely known", "Publicly exposed", "Extremely public". Next sentence: "His rise to fame was swift,
Wait, the user said to convert terms with 3 options as spintax. So if a word or phrase has three possible alternatives, replace it with w3. But I need to ensure that the context still makes sense. For example, "household name" might have synonyms like "common name", but "common name" might not fit. Maybe "well-known name", "recognized name", "established name". "Rapid" could be "quick", "swift", "fast-paced"