Children in Film
Sept. 29th, 2010|Children In Film Newsletter|Archive|About Us
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09.29: Manager seeks PA and NY area talent

09.27: Casting Director seeks kids for PSA

09.24: Casting director seeks teens for print work

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The Sprayberry Blog

Parent blogger, Carl Sprayberry, reports on his experiences parenting child actors


09.27:
Desire + Endurance = Success

9.10: Inspired - The Butterfly Room

08.27: Preparing for School on Set

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The Reality Behind Reality Television
 
Is Reality TV a way in to the biz?...and other answers to Reality-related questions

Once thought to be a fad, Reality TV is now a main staple in our TV-viewing diet.  With so much talk of Kate's eight, kids who run their own nation, and Octo-TV, it's no wonder some parents think that Reality TV may be an in for their kids' careers. And because there is no set precedent for Reality TV production, crucial rules and laws are often being broken and minors have been injured. In New Mexico, for example, an 11 year old was rumored to have been burned with grease while filming a cooking scene for the reality TV show "Kid Nation."

"The great fiction is to pretend that these children are not performers," said Paul Petersen, president of A Minor Consideration, a group lobbying to overhaul child labor laws.

The reality is that reality-TV stardom and Hollywood stardom are two very different things. There are little known cases where a child-participant of a reality show or game show has parlayed his or her appearance into a full-fledged acting career worthy of the big screen.

"Most kids who appear on reality shows are not trained actors and will return to their regular lives the minute the reality show has wrapped," explained Toni Casala, President of Children In Film.  It's often difficult for children, emotionally, to return to a normal routine after their lives have been publicly exploited.

"Parents can be seduced by the industry to let kids do things that are dangerous," said Screen Actors Guild general counsel Duncan Crabtree-Ireland.

Parents who are serious about the craft of acting and their child's image should tread lightly upon Reality TV participation, and for producers, a knowledge of laws, rules and regulations is more necessary than ever before.

Consider this...

  • when it comes to CA law, an appearance on a reality TV show is no different than that of a sitcom.
  • even if a child is just on camera during "normal, everyday activities" he/she could be considered to be working.
Children In Film encourages parents and industry pros alike to know and understand the realities behind reality television, before working with minors on any production.


To read more
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