You may have to Search all our reviewed books and magazines, click the sign up button below to create a free account.
Camera Ready by P.G. Kain is the first in the fresh new series, Go-See Chronicles, about girls involved in the cutthroat world of commercial castings!
While attending a summer academy, Dorie decides to conduct her own social experiment and gives "cool" lessons to her overbearing lab leader, a geek named Igor, in order to set him up with her beautiful roommate, an actress named Tiffany.
Reluctantly doing commercial work to finance her training at a famous drama academy, Isobel is horrified when a product only distributed in Japan arrives in America, causing her image to appear on television and in ads throughout the country.
When she moves from California to New Jersey, Dorie Dilts studies girls her age at the mall to collect data on what it takes to become popular and discovers that if she wants to be part of the in-crowd, she must date--and be dumped by--the cutest boy in school.
When her family is selected to star in a scripted television program where they have an ideal life together, Cassie, who has recognized that her parents are having relationship problems, wonders if a happy family life is possible.
When she moves from California to New Jersey, Dorie Dilts studies girls her age at the mall to collect data on what it takes to become popular and discovers that if she wants to be part of the in-crowd, she must date--and be dumped by--the cutest boy in school.
A teen actress has to wonder: In the cutthroat world of commercial modeling and acting, can a happy family be reality? On camera, it’s easy to be part of a perfect family: A director has hand-picked your parents after a week of callbacks, and the right things to say are printed on cue cards. Off camera, reality is a bit more complicated. Cassie Herold knows her parents are having problems. Her dad basically lives on the road and sees her more on TV than he does in real life. Her mom, a math professor who would rather balance an equation than get a manicure, is nothing like the energetic, perfectly groomed f.m.’s (fake moms) she sees at auditions for everything from snack cakes to energy water. If only Cassie could get her real life to be a bit more like her commercial life, then maybe she could get a date with Rory Roberts—the cutest boy in both the commercial and the real world. But will her family ever get back on track and be picture perfect?
None
None