Quote:Original post by NahoopiiGold! You have a great career ahead of you scamming upper managementconsulting!
Exactly what the sole survivor has to have, the ability to appear invalueable when there is little or no credibility.
Im going to audition for Survivor
Make the speech a little more human-talk. You're going to look strange if you sounds like you are reading what you are saying off paper (even though you remembered it all.)
Also, are you just going to look straight at the obvservers and speek to them? I would recommend taking off your shirt, which is enclosing your sexy, tan chest, and walking around while you talk.
Also, are you just going to look straight at the obvservers and speek to them? I would recommend taking off your shirt, which is enclosing your sexy, tan chest, and walking around while you talk.
This wonderful line hasn't been emphasised nearly as much as it should be.
Quote:Original post by Perfunction
bah, reality tv needs to die...stop encouraging it.
Quote:Original post by fractoidQuote:Original post by NahoopiiGold! You have a great career ahead of you scamming upper managementconsulting!
Exactly what the sole survivor has to have, the ability to appear invalueable when there is little or no credibility.
HA! Im already a consultant.. :-)
Quote:Original post by Crispy
I was one of the casters (the person who casts people in a specific role based on how they adition, just to remove any ambiguity) today at an audition that took ~8 hours (we auditioned ~12 people). It was nice to see things from the other end for a change - oh the occasional nervousness and lack of attention.
My suggestion to you is to keep it cool - if I were casting you, the last thing I'd want to see is another person who's about to freak out. Than again, you probably already know this. Just be prepared for anything.
I'll elaborate, if I may.
Me and a fellow spawn of a director are looking for people to play certain roles (we both already have the scripts and much of the preproduction process behind us). So we decided to hold a joint public auditioning (well, almost public - we simply sent out emails to mailing lists that showed the greatest potential of generating feedback).
This is what we did to them: we divided the audition in three parts - an improvisation, a dialog and expressions of different emotions (along the lines of "say this sentence like you were angry, then like you were sad, then with passion, etc"). All the auditionees knew about was the dialog: we had prepared a short text which they could read and prepare in advance. That was all we told them. When they entered, we told them to chill and "just be someone else" (the room we were auditioning them in was really really official - like in that Geri Halliwell music video, but with REALLY bad acoustics). Then we stuck a camera in their face, a proper Canon XL-1, along with a directional mic. I think this was a real turn-off for many as they probably weren't ready to be filmed during the audition.
The first part was prepared by me (a complete surprise to the auditionees): I had prepared a silly short background story, which went something like this:
You have a friend called Jack. You've been really good friends all your life, but your relationship is quite dysfunctional as you've also always been playing pranks on each other all your lives. The last prank Jack played on you was that he told your new girl/boyfriend that you have left six of your partners over the last month. He also stuck chewing gum in your appartment door's key hole and hung your cat on a clothing line by its tail. You just learnt that Jack was behind this all yesterday. You are now here and Jack enters the room.
You wouldn't believe how many just didn't manage to do anything when I finished the description and stared at them in wait for a response. In other words, as I said above: be prepared for anything.
Of course, auditioning for the Survivor isn't probably much like what we did, but it's still an audition and auditioners often do weird things to see how different you are.
For instance, at one point I had my last frankfurter pie left and I didn't feel like eating it. One of the people there had a weird little doll-thingy (not so much a doll as a stuffed elephant on a large spring kind of thingy) with her, so we stuck a pen through the pie and placed the pie on the elephant's head. We positioned elephant in the middle of the desk (right in front of the auditionee) behind my digital camera, staring outward. Just to see what kind of an effect it would have on the person trying to concentrate. Oddly, she either didn't notice it or was too nervous to realize what she was looking at.
Oh, and here's my third bit of advice: be prepared for anything.
Thanks for sharing! I appreciate it, I have no experience in something like this, so sharing this story was pretty helpful.. I still have no idea what to expect, but at least I know now to be prepared for anything
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