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You spend hard-earned money on new acting headshots, and happy day, everyone loves them! Mom, friends, even your enigmatic new agent is pleased. You get your shots up on the casting sites and online profiles, on your IMDB page, your website, and self-submit like crazy… and then, “cricket, cricket.” 

Nada. Zippo. Months go by. Your phone rings 5 times a day but the screen usually warns “scam likely.” That’s about right, you think. Scam likely indeed. $600, plus hair and make-up fees, that new outfit, and days of prep, wasted. Maybe you get an audition or two, but they’re not exactly setting your world on fire. The pain is real. You found your chosen headshot photographer after diligently doing research and comparing different portfolios. The phrase “voted best headshot photographer in Los Angeles” was right at the top of their website, quoted from a reputable professional actors’ publication. You chatted with the photographer on the phone, they seemed great, competent, and personable. Your friend in class said they were the best.

The shoot went well you thought, you reviewed your proofs and felt sure you got the goods, picked your winners and Casting Office doors would surely fly right open. 

So… what the heck happened?

Most of us have been there, some of us, more times than we’d ever admit. Many actors neverreally get an effective headshot. Some manage to audition and book work anyway, but many rarely, or never do. They just don’t get in the room enough for the odds to even out, and real consistent bookings to occur, momentum to build. They’re lost in the sea of average, on the Casting Director’s big iMac 4K high definition screen, where a hundred actor headshots scroll past with every mouse scroll, the size of postage stamps. 

95% of them are never even clicked on. It’s enough to turn your stomach.

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You found your chosen headshot photographer after diligently doing research and comparing different portfolios. The phrase “voted best headshot photographer in Los Angeles” was right at the top of their website, quoted from a reputable professional actors’ publication. You chatted with the photographer on the phone, they seemed great, competent, and personable. Your friend in class said they were the best.

The shoot went well you thought, you reviewed your proofs and felt sure you got the goods, picked your winners and Casting Office doors would surely fly right open. 

So… what the heck happened?

Most of us have been there, some of us, more times than we’d ever admit. Many actors neverreally get an effective headshot. Some manage to audition and book work anyway, but many rarely, or never do. They just don’t get in the room enough for the odds to even out, and real consistent bookings to occur, momentum to build. They’re lost in the sea of average, on the Casting Director’s big iMac 4K high definition screen, where a hundred actor headshots scroll past with every mouse scroll, the size of postage stamps. 

95% of them are never even clicked on. It’s enough to turn your stomach. You found your chosen headshot photographer after diligently doing research and comparing different portfolios. The phrase “voted best headshot photographer in Los Angeles” was right at the top of their website, quoted from a reputable professional actors’ publication. You chatted with the photographer on the phone, they seemed great, competent, and personable. Your friend in class said they were the best.

The shoot went well you thought, you reviewed your proofs and felt sure you got the goods, picked your winners and Casting Office doors would surely fly right open. 

So… what the heck happened?

Most of us have been there, some of us, more times than we’d ever admit. Many actors neverreally get an effective headshot. Some manage to audition and book work anyway, but many rarely, or never do. They just don’t get in the room enough for the odds to even out, and real consistent bookings to occur, momentum to build. They’re lost in the sea of average, on the Casting Director’s big iMac 4K high definition screen, where a hundred actor headshots scroll past with every mouse scroll, the size of postage stamps. 

95% of them are never even clicked on. It’s enough to turn your stomach.

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