| What was my extern experience
like in general? There were many memorable
moments which took place during my one week in
LA. The meetings I had at the company Bunim-Murray
Productions (the creators of Real World
and Road Rules) stick out in my head.
We sat down and spoke with a number of the people
on the business side of creating the Real World,
and then it was on to a tour of the workplace
where the actual footage is edited down into the
product that comes through tubes into our homes.
The workplace was sort of like a play land for
grownups. Many of the people went around the office
without shoes, and there was a variation on the
game of dodge ball taking place in the Road Rules
office.
We entered one cubicle to find a slender late-twenties
guy surrounded by towers of CDs. His office made
my local Tower Records shop look like a garage
sale, and nonetheless, here is this guy, just
a few years older than us, telling us that he
is sitting where he was because of nothing other
than extraordinary luck. Now granted, a great
deal of his luck probably has to do with extraordinary
talent, as this young man had come from a college
much like Georgetown. He said the environment
in which he studied had treated a career in television
as a nonoption, something for people with large
egos and no direction to pursue and probably fail
in. Nonetheless, the young man had come to LA
on nothing more than a feeling in his stomach
that he could succeed. And now, when this guy
talks about "work," he is talking about
putting his favorite music next to whatever images
he thinks the songs will go best with.
What was the most surprising revelation
about the entertainment industry?
I asked one of my extern interviewers, the producer
of such blockbusters as Training Day
and Men in Black, when was it that he
really knew what he wanted to do? The answer from
this figure, whom a large portion of LA County
would pay their year’s salary to sit down
with, surprised me. He said that he still didn't
know what he wanted to do. He said that rather
than modeling his career on some design or track
learned in school, he instead used his career
as a compass for telling him what it was he was
interested in at that particular stage in his
life. He views his career as ever evolving. Rather
than a model he must follow, his career has followed
him, and shown him nothing but great success.
How has the GEMA extern experience helped
me shape my future goals?
I am most interested in writing. Just this past
week, I heard from one of the alums whom I had
met in LA, a screenwriter to whom I had sent pretty
much everything I had ever written via e-mail.
After about a month of not hearing back, I became
discouraged and assumed that I would never hear
from her. After all, she is a young working screenwriter,
and I have completed only one full-length screenplay
and am undeniably an amateur. Then this past week
she e-mailed me and informed me that I had not
heard from her because she had taken the time
to read every single short story, movie review,
screenplay, and stage play I had sent her. She
was extremely encouraging, and offered wonderful
advice and incisive criticism. The post-college
summer is not always an encouraging environment
with regard to following one's creative dreams.
My friends are all getting Georgetown standard
jobs—paralegal, junior investment banker—with
set-in-stone corporate ladders that make my parents
drool. Her e-mail and my entire experience in
LA with GEMA have given me the courage to pursue
the career that most interests me.
What am I doing now?
I'm currently working as a butler at a hotel
called the Soho House in New York City. The hotel
caters to different people in the New York entertainment
industry and has provided a couple of tenuous
contacts, but basically it's an odd job while
I keep writing and sending my stories and scripts
out to contests and publications. I will also
be writing “coverage” (a write-up
which critiques a script) for a Georgetown alum
who works in film development, which is an unpaid
thing, but still I believe a valuable way for
me to learn more about my craft.
If you would like to contact Jack to learn more
about his experience, he can be reached at jco@georgetown.edu
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