Paul having a little fun
found on tiktok rammfun1, listen with sound 😊
Paul making his own fun 😊


#interview with the vampire#iwtv#amc tvl#jacob anderson#sam reid




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seen from Italy

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seen from Türkiye
seen from United Kingdom
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seen from Türkiye
Paul having a little fun
found on tiktok rammfun1, listen with sound 😊
Paul making his own fun 😊
hmm
How to you can Craft Compelling Podcasts
In the latest episode of ‘Practical Digital Strategies‘, host Guy R. Cook explores the booming podcast industry. He outlines essential elements for creating engaging podcasts, including topic selection, audience targeting, and high-quality production tools. The episode also delves into scripting techniques, audience engagement strategies, and growth tips, with a wealth of resources available on…
Ad-libbing, the art of making it up as you go...not!?
Ad-libbing, the art of making it up as you go…not!?
Ad-libbing is having to make things up on the fly, in the middle of a performance, in real time, right in front of everybody with lot of opportunities to stumble or get tongue-tied, freeze up, go blank, on stage or in the studio . That’s exactly why most professionals don’t, and you shouldn’t either. The “skill” is a nice one to have, but it’s importance is way over-rated. It’s way more important…
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Hooray for Frank Ferrante and An Evening with Groucho
In a quiet moment during the second act of An Evening with Groucho, Frank Ferrante, now in his 30th year portraying the great Groucho Marx, recounts the meeting between a woman and Groucho.
“You’re him, aren’t you? Groucho,” she says. Putting her hand gently on his arm she then says the most powerful words a person can demand of a comedian: “Never die.”
Sadly, it’s been thirty-seven years since…
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FOR YOU MORAHOLICS
GO WATCH THE SHOW AT PDS, 9 JANVIER 2011
YOU WILL NOT REGRET IT, I PROMISE
To start you off, here's the beginning: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dc8Bf2H6jQo
It really bugs me when people talk about unscripted scenes in movies that resulted in "actual reactions" by the actors. Prompted by this post about Johnny Depp in Pirates of the Caribbean. They say it about Gene Wilder's character in Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory, too.
Unless it's a really, really sudden/startling/scary thing that causes a true out-of-character reaction, the statement about it being their true reaction isn't right. (I think a movie did that once - scaring the shit out their actors for a true reaction shot. Can't remember what film.) Actors don't just drop character because someone's ad-libbing. They are still reacting in character. Are their reactions colored with a bit of their own natural reaction? Maybe. But that can be the case even if they know what's scripted and the other actor is just doing a good job.
Just because something isn't scripted doesn't mean that the reacting actors drop their characters. It doesn't mean it's a natural reaction. They are still in character, still thinking and reacting the way their characters would. If it was truly a natural reaction, they'd be breaking character and in most circumstances, the reaction would not be appropriate to the scene and therefore would be cut.
THIS IS MY FAVORITE THING