Monday, May 27, 2013

DEE JOSEPHINE PICS HEADSHOTS




DEE JOSEPHINE PICS HEADSHOTS

DEE JOSEPHINE PICS HEADSHOTS I like those pics Easy for me thats all,they are very Pro.I  finally got it right and smiling.thx beauty. you did me solid. castings up. now for the auditions. come by when youre in the neighborhood. we're at warner now. miss seeing your face.Photography from your guys was simple and thanks for letting me use your discount. HANGING WITH JUSTIN IS SICK!!!
  • show up at the set in burbank by 6:30
  • be ready for hair and make up by 8:30
  • in costume for party scenes then to green screen
  • crew lunch 1:30 then table read in my trailer
  • back on set for final scenes before tomorrows wrap party
  • be with Selena and I before the premiere 

DEE JOSEPHINE PICS HEADSHOTS

DEE JOSEPHINE PICS HEADSHOTS Yes, I’m writing about why you DIDN’T get the part. Yes, even though your audition was amazing and you were totally on your game and you lit up the room with creative acting genius, you still might not get the part. I know, I know…you’re probably thinking, but Amy, you are always so positive. Why are you talking about something negative?
First, it’s not negative to understand why you didn’t get a job because it will free your mind of all that monkey-mind chatter that happens when you find out you didn’t get it. Second, and this is the important part so pay attention, it doesn't matter. By the end of this article, I hope you understand that.
Since this is one of the most frequently asked questions I receive and the one that hangs you up the most and twists you into knots as an actor and a creative being, let’s get into it.
Based on my years and years of experience as a casting director in film and television, these are some of the reasons you didn’t get the part.



DEE JOSEPHINE PICS HEADSHOTS

DEE JOSEPHINE PICS HEADSHOTS  news programs concern themselves with justice Tuesday night, and the one people are less likely to watch is clearly the more worthy and extraordinary. A PBS “Frontline” production, “Outlawed in Pakistan” deals with the alleged gang rape of a young girl, and the devastating consequences on her and her family. CBS News, meanwhile, plays the good soldier with “Brooklyn DA,” a by-the-numbers docu-series offered as original summer filler, in much the way ABC News steadily delivers such alternative fare to its network. If it’s an either-or choice, the verdict here isn’t close.
Written and directed by Habiba Nosheen and Hilke Schellmann, “Outlawed” chronicles the story of Kainat Soomro, who claims to have been kidnapped and repeatedly raped by four men at the age of 13. Instead of outlawing her or putting her to death, her family stands behind her, in a culture where the woman is blamed and labeled “impure” simply for leveling such charges.
Still, the evidence is hardly cut and dried, inasmuch as none was collected, and there’s no DNA testing to prove Kainat’s case in the face of denials from the accused. Yet as her lawyer puts it, given the stigma associated with such claims by young women (we’re told matter-of-factly Kainat will never be able to marry), “Why would this girl lie?”

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