Y ou see the person ’ s familiar face in the car next to your s in traffic, across a movie theater lobby(大厅),in the crowd at a football game. Y ou look harder and longer, and wonder: “ Is that who I think it is? ...No, it couldn ’ t be... But it sure looks like... ” C hances are(很可能),the person notices you staring. They ’ re used to it. Certainly ,Sarah Marks of Baton Rouge is. “ Everywhere I go, strangers stop me and say,‘Has anyone ever told you that you look just like...’and I finish for them, ‘Jennifer Love Hewitt,’ ” Marks says. And she is far from alone. E verybody looks at least a little like somebody else, and for people who happen to look like celebrities(名人),the coincidence(巧合)is something they can ’ t escape. Generally, the more popular the celebrity, the more frequent the comments(评论),and if you happen to be one that looks like one of those celebrities, you must be ready for all the comments wherever you go. I n Marks ’ case, comparisons to the popular TV and movie actress happen when she goes to work at the Mall in Louisiana, where she teaches summer cheerleading camps and dines out. W hen she was a senior in high school, a group went to eat at a local restaurant, Marks writes. “ As we were walking out the door, the manager ran after me and asked, ‘Are you her?’I said, ‘What?’My friend translated,‘He wants to know if you ’ re Jennifer Love Hewitt!’After telling him he had been mistaken, he offered me gift certificates(礼券)if I would take a picture (and with Jennifer Love Hewitt ’ s name on it!) to put in the restaurant. ”