Tag Archives: audition

Make TV With Us

See original here:
Make TV With Us

That’s Gay: Bryan Safi Auditions for The A List

When Logo’s gay tastemaker show announced it was casting a Los Angeles edition, Bryan Safi filmed this audition tape to make his dream of appearing on a real TV show come true. (Oops, sorry; we forgot about infoMania .) TONIGHT 11/10c

More:
That’s Gay: Bryan Safi Auditions for The A List

‘Jersey Shore’ — New Girl Is a Season 1 Reject

Filed under: Snooki , Jersey Shore , You Might Want to Rethink The newest guidette on ” Jersey Shore ” knows all about rejection — producers kicked her overly-tanned ass to the curb when she tried out for Season 1 … and TMZ has obtained her audition tape . The foulmouthed Snook-alike — 23-year-old Deena Nicole… Read more

Read more:
‘Jersey Shore’ — New Girl Is a Season 1 Reject

Contessa Brewer: MSNBC Audition Like ‘Marine Corps Obstacle Course;’ Whines About Guests ‘With An Agenda’

In an interview on MediaBistro.com’s ‘Media Beat,’ MSNBC anchor Contessa Brewer told TVNewser editor Kevin Allocca about the cable network’s high standards in its audition process: “…it’s got to be like the Marine Corps obstacle course in order to land this job.” She later complained about “difficult” guests: “When someone comes on with an agenda and their agenda is to take you down.” Allocca asked Brewer about some her toughest interviews. She responded by describing certain guests who “come on and they are prepared to be challenging and to be difficult.” Two examples came to her mind, former Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff and Republican Senator Judd Gregg. In recalling a January interview with Gregg, Brewer whined about how “it was a difficult interview to conduct.” In reality, Gregg simply pointed out Brewer’s liberal bias on the issue of government spending, after she equated Republican calls for less spending with cutting off funding for schools. Gregg pointed out that she was “being fundamentally dishonest” in her reporting.     During the Media Beat interview, she said of guests like Gregg: “…when you have guests on who are difficult or if they’re – if they’re sticking they’re heels in the ground and they’re really – you just end it, you move on.” Here is a transcript of the first part of the Media Beat interview posted July 5 on TVNewser.com: KEVIN ALLOCCA: Hello, and welcome to MediaBistro.com’s Media Beat. We’re here today with Contessa Brewer and I’m Kevin Allocca, the editor of TVNewser. Thanks for joining us, Contessa. CONTESSA BREWER: I have never heard you’re name pronounced, I’m glad to know it. ALLOCCA: Really, Allocca? BREWER: Yes. ALLOCCA: So, Contessa is an anchor at MSNBC and we’re going to talk a little about you’re career and how you got there. BREWER: Okay. ALLOCCA: And like a lot of newscasters, you sort of spent some time making the rounds at some local stations, and I’m kind of wondering how did you make that jump to a major network? BREWER: Um, I went through unemployment first. That was – that was a big part of getting the job at MSNBC. Because, I had applied for a lot of jobs at stations in Boston and Los Angeles and Houston and Phoenix and there were – some of those stations, I thought, would have been a good fit for me and it just – it didn’t happen. And then my agent said MSNBC was interested and I went through a wicked audition process. I mean, this audition at MSNBC, I think, has become famous, because it is – it’s like – it’s got to be like the Marine Corps obstacle course in order to land this job, yeah. I re-wrote a lot of my scripts for this, I’m thinking I’m big stuff, right? I’m tackling the scripts for this audition and as soon as you launch into the script they’re in your ear and they’re throwing breaking news at you and they want you to jungle [juggle] it. And the thing is, is that in local news, you don’t juggle breaking news like you do in cable news. So – well, I must have – I finished the obstacle course because I landed the job, but I’ll tell you, I’ve never been through an audition like that. ALLOCCA: Really? BREWER: Yeah. ALLOCCA: I read that you had an academic background in politics, also. Do you think that that’s been an asset for you since you’ve been there? BREWER: Absolutely, I mean, you know, I studied politics in college. I went to Europe and I studied European politics. And I never – once you were in local news – I never really anticipated that I was going to use it. Here, there are – there’s really an opportunity to dive in and to see politics in action and see the storyline develop and get to know the players in a way that I just never could have imagined. ALLOCCA: I’m sure you’ve used – put that to use a lot in a lot of interviews that you’ve done and I’m kind of wondering which do feel like was one of the toughest ones that you’ve had to do? BREWER: Political interview? ALLOCCA: Or any sort of interview, actually. BREWER: Well, I think – I mean the hard thing is I do have some guests who are – they come on and they are prepared to be challenging and to be difficult, those are always the hardest interviews. When someone comes on with an agenda and their agenda is to take you down. You know, it’s challenging when you’re dealing with someone who is so well-prepared on a specific topic, you know, that they’re the expert and they’ve spent they’re whole lives diving into a certain subject and you have to play Devil’s advocate with them and challenge them on something that, you know, you spend, at best, hours preparing for. You know, I had a pretty intense interview with Michael Chertoff, back when he was the Homeland Security secretary. I had – you know there was an interview with Judd Gregg recently, where I think, you know, I think what he was expecting out of the interview and what we – and my partner at the time was Melissa Francis, when we were doing ‘It’s the Economy’ – I think that was a – you know, it was a difficult interview to conduct. But you know, usually, when you have guests on who are difficult or if they’re – if they’re sticking they’re heels in the ground and they’re really – you just end it, you move on.  

Go here to see the original:
Contessa Brewer: MSNBC Audition Like ‘Marine Corps Obstacle Course;’ Whines About Guests ‘With An Agenda’

Would America’s Got Talent’s New Singing Star Have Fared Differently on Idol?

Kalamazoo, Michigan native Debra Romer took the America’s Got Talent stage at Chicago’s auditions last night, and the results were — well, passable. Literally. Piers Morgan and Sharon Osbourne praised her vulnerability while Howie Mandel fist-bumped her with a “no.” But Debra’s reception shows just how different the audition criteria are between America’s Got Talent and American Idol , where she might’ve been championed (or rejected) for qualities not even mentioned by this triumvirate.

Continue reading here:
Would America’s Got Talent’s New Singing Star Have Fared Differently on Idol?

9 Actors Who’ve Threatened to Quit Acting

Angelina Jolie’s reported decision to quit acting has dominated headlines this week, but please forgive me for taking it with a grain of salt. The superstar is only the latest actor to claim that retirement is imminent, though if her forebears are any indication, that plan will surely be shredded soon. Here are nine actors who’ve famously threatened to leave Hollywood (and then, in most cases, didn’t):

Read more:
9 Actors Who’ve Threatened to Quit Acting

French Maid TV – Audition

Author: frenchmaidtv Added: Fri, 08 Dec 2006 12:04:53 -0800 Duration: 30 Add to your iTunes, iPhone or iPod at:http://frenchmaidtv.com/itunes Amanda Auditions for Frenchmaidtv.com. If you would like to audition to be a Sexy French Maid just visit http://www.frenchmaidtv.com/auditions/

http://flash.revver.com/player/1.0/player.swf?mediaId=115949

See the rest here:
French Maid TV – Audition

Buzz Break: Betty White Plots Escape from You Again Poster

TV Bites: Olivia Munn Auditions For the Daily Show

So You Think You Can Dance’s Best: The Cute and the Courageous

So You Think You Can Dance ‘s audition caravan rolled into Chicago and Los Angeles last night, the proud homes of the Sears Tower and eye-searing towers of pollution. Overall, the ladies earned more direct tickets to Las Vegas, but the two most memorable auditions of the night swung towards the XY half of the audition pool. Prepare thy proudest “That’s my baby! ” shrieks for two adorable gents — one who exemplifies small-town values, and another who won’t let deafness stop him from dancing.

Read the original here:
So You Think You Can Dance’s Best: The Cute and the Courageous