August 28, 2008

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Modeling Schools

Listen to this Commentary!

Nzinga Moore

Intro:
Top international designers just released their fall 2001 lines, and many of the models taking these new looks down the runway were young teenagers. The youth-obsessed fashion industry was badly shaken last week in Milan, when a 15 year old aspiring Slovenian model was allegedly drugged and raped in a night club after a fashion show. But young people from around the world continue to fantasize about the glamorous life of a cover girl or boy. Youth Radio's Nzinga Moore enrolled in a modeling school, where she quickly confronted the reality of what it takes, and how much it costs, to try to make it in high fashion.

TRACK 1: When I was sixteen, with dreams of being on the cover of Seventeen Magazine, I enrolled in a modeling school. But instead of finding myself with a great job in high fashion, I found myself out thousands of dollars. My bad experience made me wonder if all modeling schools are a big scam. I had to investigate further.

FX 1 ROLL UNDER MUSIC- continue until class
Ru' Paul: "You better work, work it girl, do your thing, on the runway. Work, COVER GIRL! Work it girl…"

TRACK 2: To check out mainstream modeling schools, I headed to San Francisco's John Robert Powers. A series of basic modeling classes here costs over a thousand dollars. The curriculum is pretty standard: makeup, hair, photography, fashion, and, of course…runway classes.

FX 2: (Track 13) CLIP OF FAST COMMANDS (SPED UP— "Shoulders straight, neck extended, arms falling to the side just behind you. Got that.")

TRACK 3: So what can an aspiring teen model get out of these high priced classes? It's hard to tell. The John Robert Powers website lists famous graduates such as, Marilyn Monroe, Jackie Kennedy, and Farrah Fawcett. None of the students I met had made it big yet, but they were still idealistic about their prospects. Take Katrina Wong, a fifteen-year-old junior from Alameda High School. Wearing high-heels and a see-through shirt with a push-up bra, Katrina Wong thinks the school can market her unconventional beauty.

AX 2: (15: 0.39 ) Katrina Wong: Everyone is just themselves. Beauty is not only from the outside, it's from the inside too, and everyone's great. They're all wonderful.

TRACK 4: Wonderful on the inside is one thing, but how you look on the outside is what the modeling industry is all about. John Robert Powers' Director Donna Dorsich explains there are standards, and they can be brutal.

AX 3: Director Donna Dorsich: (Track 5 after 0.23 before 2.20) I tell my students, if after six months they don't get any work…they need to sit back and reassess and see, you know maybe their headshots are not good you know maybe they do need to have that nose job or they need to have their teeth fixed or whatever….


TRACK 5: Braces cost about 3 thousand dollars, and a nose job another 4 thousand. That's on top of the money invested in modeling classes. So how can you make any cash if you're spending so much on improving your look? Students I met at John Robert Powers were making just a couple hundred dollars here and there by modeling for phone company and pharmaceutical ads. So who are the teens making the big bucks? A scout for Next Model Management, Corey Singer had some stories to tell…

AX 5: (9: 6.41) Singer: Let's see, there's a girl from Vegas that I scouted and she is doing amazing and she's just about to do even more amazing. One of her first jobs was for $17,000 for the day.

TRACK 6: Although that successful girl was affiliated with a modeling school, the talent scout says often it doesn't take much to get discovered-maybe just hanging out at the mall…

AX 6: (Disc 2- 15: 7.06) Singer: I think they can just take a roll of snap-shots with a disposable camera, nothing fancy… just send it to the agency attention New Faces, with their phone number…and their cost is just a roll of film and a stamp…18:16 Do you need to go to school to become a model? Absolutely not.

TRACK 7: Singer says some schools are just expensive summer camps, although she admits they can build confidence. It makes you wonder - why pay hundreds per class when you can be discovered walking down the street and make 17 thousand your first shoot? I didn't pay those big bucks to find confidence I already have. Like most students who enroll in modeling schools, I wanted a career in high fashion. Still, I haven't totally given up on my hopes for a future in modeling. Dante Ramirez, a teacher at John Robert Powers modeling school, thought I was perfect for his class.

AX 9: (Disk1 11: 5.20) Dante Ramirez: You should be a model how tall are you?

Nzinga: 5'8"

AX 10: Dante Ramirez: That is a pretty good size, height, and you have the body. Because you are slim. You have nice skin color and nice features. I'm not bluffing you look good. You should be in my class.

Track 8: Thanks but no thanks. I think I'll try the disposable camera first.
I'm Nzinga Moore, for Marketplace.

FX3: Right said Fred- I'm too sexy


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