I personally will tweet gigs in a vague professional way. Meaning. I will only post what is allowed. Each job is different. But I DO NOT POST celebrity anything until there are photos/video released to the public. I just saw a tweet from an unseasoned artist that is working for free to be able to work with celebrities. I really have a love/hate with social media. But does anyone else think celebrity name dropping via social media is tacky? What happened to client confidentiality between mua/hair and talent? Thoughts anyone?
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It's definately a rock and a hard place. I've been there. But I just cannot do it. I won't ask for photos either. I guess I would rather get attention from my work being good, rather than boast and name drop on twitter for attention anf followers. Maybe I don't wanna play in the sandbox with them. Lol.
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I think it depends on the situation to some degree. In some cases it may be good for both the celeb and the person tweeting. I am cautious to make too much of a general statement about it. Part of celebrity stuff is the element of being 'star struck'. Plenty of people would tweet that they waited a table with some celeb or other. I think it depends also on what exactly is tweeted. I would think a lot of celebs may appreciate the mention if done right. Celebs mention each other all the time on tv - I was having dinner with ______, or I did a show with ______ and...
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My statement was coming from someone bragging about doing a celebs makeup while walking out of the gig. With hastag "celebritystylist" directly after. If she was a celebrity stylist. She wouldn't be tweeting any of it. Especially when it's for a man. Some men like to stay quiet about that. Just my random thought. Maybe I shouldn't have started the topic. Being a makeup artist is a very different job from alot of other crew jobs. We hear and see things we aren't supposed to discuss. But then again, we live in a TMZ driven world. And there's my answer. (Shrugs)
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I think it is a very valid inquiry and I appreciate you bringing it up, for the record. Also knowing it was a make-up artist for a male, I can appreciate that that could be different than a writer working with a certain actor or whatever, which I see little bits talked about or tweeted about, mostly talked about on podcasts, since I am not much of a tweet follower. Anyhow, don't feel judged from my view for bringing it up. I can be open sometimes when others are not and closed sometimes when others would be more open. I haven't been in that situation too much, so I may have to make a mistake here or there, hopefully nothing too major, if ever in such a situation.
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Thanks David. I didn't feel judged. But having a better mental/verbal filter might be nice. Lol. Practice makes perfect. ;-)
I guess I am prone to think that concerns/issues are good to discuss in such settings to think through things a bit further. So I certainly don't mind you bringing the thought process to the community in some form and having us all think a bit more consciously about things. I don't always have the best filters either. :)
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Jessi, that's a really interesting one. I tend to think, like David suggested, that if the celebrity has cleared it, there's no harm at all. But I would always be hesitant to do so without checking. I have heard stories from acting pals where people have nearly lost TV gigs because one of their friends tweeted about them on a show before it was announced. All social media are wonderful, if used carefully (and professionally) and in a fun, non harmful way.
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It's the vibe it gives off that determines the tack. If celeb client public listings are about transparency and giving newcomers to the business a chance to see who's who in the zoo - that's good. If the business is obviously basking in some reflected glory to promote themselves instead of their client base, then that moves into the tacky side.
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In that particular case, it's building expertise. It wasn't 'zomg, I'm on the same set as blah' - it's 'see the makeup in this interview/photograph? I did it!" I don't see any problem there.