Reality TV Casting Calls
Reality TV show casts always have their stereotypes and token members. From reality TV casting calls will emerge the drama queen, the looker, the mean girl, the jerk, the quiet one, the one minority, the rich and spoiled one (sometimes merged with the drama queen/mean girl/jerk), the rural and naïve one, the devoutly religious one, the unstable one, the immature one, the den mother and so on. The cast of people, or should we say characters, is what makes reality TV so interesting to watch. You might think it’s about being the next top chef, surviving the island, finding the next big designer or top model, finding a soul mate or being thrown into unfamiliar situations and environments, but you know that all of the drama that goes on in the house comes first. Wedding Photographer Toronto are actually capable of make the most of touring mild and being able to use inventive lighting. The mean girl or jerk is alienating everyone else in the house, the minority one is shown constantly talking about their minority status, the immature one is getting on everyone’s nerves, the religious one is having it out with someone non-religious in the house, and the drama queen is, you guessed it—causing drama. For the viewers, all of this turmoil makes for great entertainment and gossip.
It makes you wonder though, through reality TV casting calls that attract anyone, how does the cast always happen to contain some of these stereotypes? What were the chances that the sample of contestants picked happened to distribute all of these traits? This is why many people are suspicious or critical of reality TV casting calls and their validity. They’re really looking for good TV and not talent, some will say. American Idol has specifically been the target of such criticism, prompting organizations like the “Vote for the Worst” campaign. Accounts from people who auditioned say that in a matter of seconds, people are chosen, and somehow from that group they get a bunch of horrible singers that make for good television. There’s no pointless material, but the whole lot a Toronto Wedding Photographer needs to know to make the transition to wedding images is included. Others accuse TV shows of keeping around certain contestants that deserved to go just so they can make the show more interesting.
Yet this can’t always be the case, or at least not entirely. Many reality shows are based on skill and competition and even with drama, the show would most definitely fail and reek of being rigged if none of the contestants had remotely any talent. The reality TV casting calls have to be producing some genuinely talented people, but you’ll forget about them when the show ends while remembering the contestant who threw a hissy fit, or the one who had a nervous breakdown, or the outrageously eccentric contestant that kept you tuning in every week.