Category Archives: Modeling

Frigid Beaches, Hot Bikinis

Every so often I make a trip up to Chicago (LOVE that city!).  While I’m there I usually try to make the most of my visit by scheduling some photo shoots.  The last time I was there was in early May.  I decided it would be a good idea to do a beach shoot at sunrise to get some swimwear shots in for my book since summer was right around the corner.  Well…a few numb toes and purple lips later…I was wondering if maybe that wasn’t such a good idea!

Since I was already out in the windy cold waters, I figured I might as well go through with it.  After all, if I would’ve decided to end the shoot, then I would’ve endured the icy coldness for nothing!  I’m going to get at least one good shot out of this damn it!  (Besides, it’s common that most swimwear shoots happen in the spring time – if not earlier – because that’s when all the ads for summer fashions come out.  I seemed to have initially learned that from watching America’s Next Top Model…I believe it was the very first season and they made the models do that swimwear shoot on top of the building in the freezing cold wind!).

So anyway…I shifted into some serious mental focusing and endured the frigid Chicago beach.  So you better frickin’ like these photos! Lol :)

(I’ll be posting more on my Facebook)

 

Here are some more we did.  I was wearing a jumpsuit by Nikki Blaine Couture.

Do you like my literal interpretation of modeling a “jumpsuit”? haha :P

 

 

 

 

 

 

Last set of the day!  It had warmed up a little by then :)

 

(photos by Joseph William)

 

Here’s some we took just goofing around:

FREEZING! (…and so was Sugar Bear!)

“It’s High Fashion”


So You Want To Be a Model

So you want to become a model …or maybe an actor.  Welcome to the club!

I’ve had many people ask, “How do I (or get my kids) into the business?”  So, I figured to make this easier for everyone, I’d write a blog series about what I’ve learned in my pursuit of modeling and how to get started.  (Some of what I’ll be covering can also be applied to the acting and entertainment industry). In this article I’ll paint a general picture of what the industry is like to help you decide whether or not it’s for you.

Before you read on, consider the following:

  • Can you handle rejection? …I mean a lot of rejection…on a consistent basis?
  • Would you be able to accept never knowing the reason you were rejected?
  • Are you ready to be judged and rejected solely based on your appearance?
  • Are you willing to invest years before you reach the professional level you’d like to achieve?
  • Are you willing to invest years with the possibility of never even making it?

This is the toughest industry to break into.  Everyone wants to be a model or an actor …and a lot of those people are beautiful and talented, which makes it a very competitive industry.  You will not realize how difficult it is until you’re on your merry way.  But then it won’t be as merry as you thought…and there will be tears at some point.  I promise.

Growing up people would always tell me I should be a model.  In early 2008, I decided to try out for America’s Next Top Model.  I needed photos to submit. Well…I didn’t have any because I’d never done any modeling before, so I found a photographer to take some pictures of me.  I remember feeling extremely awkward and had no idea what I was doing!  (But that’s beside the point).

So I went to the casting call, did what was required of me and handed off my packet of information with my pictures.  Even though I knew there was a chance I wouldn’t make it (after all, thousands of girls try out for this every year), I left the casting with high hopes.  I felt good about my submission.  And since I was always told I could be a model, I wouldn’t be surprised if they called to tell me I made it.  Well…they never called me.  Apparently…all the other hundreds of girls at the casting were told the same thing at some point in their life, “You could be a model” – and most of them probably could be.

That’s when I learned lesson #1:  You’re not as special as you think.

Sorry, I don’t mean to be rude but that’s just how it is in this industry.  You are replaceable.  For every one model or actor, there are at least hundreds of others that are equally qualified.  If you can’t handle this then don’t waste anymore time reading this article.

Lesson #2:  You will face rejection.

Being rejected doesn’t necessarily mean you aren’t qualified to be a model or an actor.  It just means you weren’t right for that job.  You’re just not what the designer or casting directors are looking for.  It could be a variety of factors. Maybe you nailed your runway walk at your go see or performed your audition perfectly.  But even then it doesn’t mean you’ll get the part.  Perhaps it’s simply because you don’t have the right “look”.  I was surprised once to find out I didn’t get a job because my look was “too glamorous”.  Regardless of what people think, modeling isn’t always about “who is the most beautiful”.  Modeling is really only about one thing – selling a product or idea.  It’s a business.  Which brings me to a side note:  leave your ego at the door.  No one wants to work with a diva.  Be professional.

This next piece of advice will save you a lot of heartache.

Lesson #3:  Don’t take it personally.

Save yourself the time and energy.  Don’t try and figure out why you didn’t get the part.  If you are lucky enough to learn why you were rejected, take that information as a learning opportunity and move on.

Lesson #4:  Be persistent.

Some people in the industry were discovered right away.  Others (…others being the majority) had to work at it for years …and years before they got their big break.  Don’t count on being the exception.  As the saying goes, it all comes down to right place, right time.  It usually takes going to hundreds of auditions before a beginning actor is offered a single role.  Just keep at it.  You’ll never have your “right time” moment sitting at home.

I’d like to leave you with a bit of inspiration and something to think about.  Let’s talk about Heidi Klum.  Most people know her from being one of Victoria’s Secret’s most-famous Angels and most recently as the host of Project Runway.  She’s gorgeous, right? … One of the top supermodels of our time.  Designers were knocking down her door at the chance to work with her.  If you thought that statement was true… actually… it was quite the opposite!  In an interview with Allure, she tells the magazine of her early years of modeling, “No one would book me … I was too curvy and too busty and a little too short” (Allure, May 2012).  But she didn’t let that stop her and paved her own way.  “I always wanted first to be a model.  So I had to say, ‘OK, you’re going to find other things to do in this industry, or it’s maybe not my industry.’”

Klum’s modeling career began when she won a modeling contest.  Five years later she debuted on the catwalk for Victoria’s Secret.  A year later she got her big break when she landed the cover of Sports Illustrated.  It took her six years before she earned top model status and 15 years into her modeling career until she was named by Forbes as third on the list of the World’s 15 Top-Earning Supermodels.

After reading this, and you think you have what it takes, read my next article about how to get started in the industry.

In my next So You Want To Be a Model article, I’ll be talking about how to get started in the industry of modeling and acting. Make sure you’re subscribed to my blog to receive a notification by email!
Resources:
http://www.heidiklum.de/Frueher.aspx
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heidi_Klum
Allure Magazine

Rumor Has It …I’m Posing for Playboy. Find Out the Secret I’ve Been Keeping!

There have been rumors going around that I’m posing for Playboy.  Sorry, not today boys!   It was fun though keeping everyone wondering while I prepared to make my big announcement!  Well, my secrets out:  I’m coming out with my very own line of vodka!  (I think that’s better than Playboy…don’t you?) ;)

Watch my “Official Announcement” and behind-the-scenes video of the photo shoot I did as part of the process in creating my label:

At the very beginning of the year, I stated in another blog post that one of my goals for 2012 was to come out with a line of something.  I always thought someday I’d have my own line of beer…since my last name IS Beers after all!  But…the vodka came first…so we’re just going to go with it!

Here’s the back story of how this came to be (in case you’re curious):

Heartland Distillers is one of the sponsor’s for Nightlights TV (the show I’ve hosted for the past four years).  They supply the limo we take to our shoots with Indiana Vodka…so everyone can have a good time.  :D

… One casual day I was taking a tour of the distillery and meeting the maker of the vodka, Stuart Hobson, for the first time.   In the back of my mind I always knew I wanted my own line of alcohol (again, it just seemed appropriate).  I did NOT, however, have in mind on this particular day to pitch the idea of creating my own line of vodka, nor did I have any specific ideas simmering on the back burner.  For some reason…perhaps due to some mysterious force… it just struck me like lighting, and I think I literally had a light bulb appear above my head!  “Hey Stuart!  What do you think about this!?”  And then all this sudden energy welling up inside me proceeded to come out in the form of an idea he really liked!

I’m extremely excited to be coming out with my very own line of vodka!  I can’t wait for it to hit the markets!  I think you guys will really like it. :)  We’re still in the beginning phases.  I’ll be talking with the VP of Sales at Olinger Distributors next week about the direction the label needs to take visually and then I’ll be sending off the photos to the artist who’s going to create a pin-up style illustration of my image.

*Subscribe to my blog if you’d like updates on my vodka’s progress.  You can also follow me on Facebook and Twitter!


The Toughest Industry to Break Into: There’s No Business Like Show Business!

I received some disheartening news this morning.  The movie I was supposed to be in officially shut down production due to their investors backing out of the deal.   I was really excited to be in this movie because it would’ve been my first “legit” movie with my new agency.   I had speaking parts …was getting paid a “real” actor’s wages…everything.   I felt like this was the next step towards a successful acting career.  Well I guess…maybe not.  At least not for now.

On set at the Vogue in Indy for the VISA Super Bowl Commercial. I was an extra …I don’t think any of what was shot that night made it in!

I began hosting Nightlights and pursuing modeling and acting back in 2008.  One thing I’ve learned is the lesson of not getting your hopes up.  In a recent conversation with my friend Erica (who’s pursuing acting right now out in L.A.) she made a good point; you can’t be excited about landing a role until the actual final product is released.  Just because you get the role doesn’t necessarily mean anything.  (The investors, for one, could pull their money from the budget!)  You could even get booked, do the work but then the director decides to cut your scene in the editing room for whatever reason…maybe it’s just that particular scene just isn’t fitting in and making sense with the rest of the content…or maybe there’s time constraints and that was the first shot or scene to get cut out.   Or…maybe the production decided to go in a whole other direction.  There could be a million different reasons.

The entertainment industry is the most difficult industry to break into.  Everyone it seems wants to be a model or an actor, and a lot of them are very beautiful and talented.  It’s extremely difficult to get that “big break” that EVERYONE is hoping to get and striving for.  Regardless of what the media portrays, no one is “suddenly discovered” and becomes an instant overnight success.  (There are of course always exceptions…but that is very rare).

George Clooney, often thought of as an immediate (and lucky) sensation for example, got his first role as an extra in a TV series in 1978.  He finally took off for L.A. in 1982 and struggled for two years before landing his first major role …which ended up being an unsuccessful, short-lived sitcom.  He’s often quoted for, “having done a lot of terrible TV shows and was really terrible in them, but no one really noticed.”  It wasn’t until 1994 (over ten years after moving to L.A.) that he achieved stardom when he appeared in the hit TV series ER as Dr. Doug Ross.  From there the rest is history.

It takes a lot of persistence and hard work mixed in with right time, right place, right look…and a million other possible factors.  It doesn’t always just come down to simply looks and talent…or even if you’re the best.  (Maybe you’re perfect for the role but you remind the casting director of their ex that they hate!)   It’s those little steps and continual improvements that add up to a successful career.

This industry is riddled with rejection and lost hopes.   It’s definitely easy to get down on one ’s self and if you’re not careful…you can go crazy trying to figure out why you were rejected or why it didn’t turn out like you thought it would.   But focusing on those aspects will do nothing but drag you down.  (And I’m preaching to myself here!)  It’s the ones who want it bad enough and believe enough in themselves to continue being persistent that eventually end up making it.

There’s no business like show business!

*Here’s some screen shots from a movie I was in last year.  It was called Judgement Day and I played the female antagonist (MUAHahahaha).  The movie was for the 48 Hour Film Festival…but it wasn’t finished in time to make it in.  I’m not sure anyone’s even seen it (it’s incomplete anyway…and will probably remain that way.)  It was still a good experience.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

____________________________________________________________

Clooney Sources:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George_Clooney

http://www.thequarterroll.com/Celebrity/george-clooney-career

http://www.talktalk.co.uk/entertainment/film/biography/artist/george-clooney/biography/33?page=1

http://www.gclooney.com/biography.htm


I ♥ Chicago & Some Things to Consider if You’re an Aspiring Model

I love Chicago!  My heart always skips a beat that moment when I first drive up over the Skyway and catch that first glimpse of the city.  Someday I’d love to have a summer home there (I try to stay clear during the winter months…it gets ridiculously freezing in the Windy City!)

I’m always thrilled when I book jobs in Chicago.  This past week I worked two tradeshows and had three photo shoots.  It was an exhausting five days!  Not to mention the sunrise shoot where I had to get up at 2:00 a.m.!  That was crazy! I will be posting about that experience with photos in an upcoming blog post …so make sure you’re subscribed! ;)

It was a goal of mine at the beginning of the year to get signed with an agency and recently I signed with Heyman Talent.  My first acting gig through them is coming up in June!  It’s a small speaking role in an independent film.  Anyway, my next move is to sign with an agency in Chicago.  It’s a bigger market and would give me more work opportunities.

Kris, one of the photographers I worked with on this trip, was very helpful in giving me some direction on where to focus my modeling career.   Unfortunately, the Midwest isn’t a major market for high fashion work.  It does, however, have a lot of opportunities for commercial and lifestyle.   So part of my goal is to build up more of that style of work in my book (my portfolio that potential clients would look at to help determine if they’d like to hire me).

Kris also used to model and was out in NYC for a year but decided she’d rather create images as a photographer.   She said most high-end clients want to see clean, minimal style images when deciding to book a model.   So…hopefully the shots we did together will not only be helpful in signing with an agency in Chicago but also will be very useful for my book.

By the way…I had a really great conversation with Kris as we were driving back from the last location of our shoot.  Since the beginning of my pursuit of modeling I’ve wanted to do high fashion work.  I’ve learned a lot about the industry since then and one of the things I was disappointed to find out is that most fashion models’ careers are coming to an end at my age.  I’ve always been very strong-willed (just ask my mom haha) and wasn’t about to let the status quo keep me from pursuing my dreams (there are always exceptions, right?)  It was something I really wanted.  I’ve battled for years with this notion and often would find myself feeling depressed with thoughts wondering if I’d ever make it.  It sometimes seems like this impossible thing and maybe I was spinning my wheels.  There have been times where I’ve felt almost panicked because I feel like I’m racing against time.

Upon learning about Kris’s modeling ventures in New York…I wanted to pick her brain.  She said the industry out there is very competitive…and you basically have to be 14 years old and a size 0 (if not 00…and at the height requirements…that’s skinny).  And even then, only the top models really make any money…the other 80% make an average $30,000/year…if you’re lucky and book a campaign.   Plus, she said the agencies pretty much encourage eating disorders.  At one of her modeling gigs in NYC, she said there were girls eating cotton balls!  It can be fun, but it’s not as glamorous as people might think…  It’s not for everyone she explained.

I suddenly felt a ton of weight lift off my shoulders and I could finally breathe easy!  I never thought I would be, but I feel good about the decision to not hold on so tightly to the dream of a career in high fashion.   I’m not “giving up” …I think sometimes as you go along in life, you realize some things are just not realistic or obtainable  and you have to adjust your goals to maintain a sense of sanity (obviously I can’t compete with 14-year-olds who are size 0…I wouldn’t want to anyway…I’m already skinny enough at size 4!).  Just doesn’t seem worth it to me considering the chances of being a top fashion model in NYC.  And besides, I’ve read and heard that there’s more money to be made doing commercial and lifestyle work (and in lifestyle, depending on if the gig is for a vacation magazine for example, they’ll fly you to an exotic resort for the shoot).   So, I’m still pursing modeling…just not in the high fashion realm.  But hey…certainly I wouldn’t turn down a high fashion gig if the opportunity presented itself. :)

 


A Night of Sophisticated Bar Hopping!

Food Meets Fashion is that part of Midwest Fashion Week where a group of us venture to different restaurants and eat a bunch of fashion inspired food and sip on fashion inspired cocktails…rubbing it into the models faces who’ve been starving themselves for the finale runway show the following day. Haha…just kidding! But seriously…

This season we all packed into the Hummer Limo from A Class Act Limo Service …fully stocked with Indiana Vodka of course!  Our first stop was Fujiyama Steakhouse of Japan where the food was prepared right in front of us!  (ps…I wore chop sticks in my hair…I felt it was appropriate for “Food Meets Fashion” HA! …read about my look in my “Look of the Night” blog)

Next we went to Chef Joseph’s at the Connoisseur Room on East Ohio Street in Indy.  Chef Joseph has traveled all around the world learning the art of cuisine.  The food was impeccable and the atmosphere was equally remarkable.  I always love discovering new places!  I don’t think they’ve been open for long. Go check it out!

Libertine was the next stop for some fashion inspired cocktails.  We each ordered our own cocktail from what I thought was an interesting menu…definitely not what I usually see when I’m ordering a drink.  I talked the founder of Midwest Fashion Week, Berny Martin, into ordering Absinthe lol…he’d never had it before ;)

I’m not sure we had room but our last stop for the night was the Winner’s Circle for dessert!  Yum!  As always it was a fun night!  Can’t wait for October’s Midwest Fashion Week!  I wonder where we’ll go and what’ll be on the menu!

Follow me on Facebook for more photos!

(c) Photos by Casey Photography


Midwest Fashion Week – We Closed it Down!

 

This past Saturday was the finale runway show for Midwest Fashion Week.  DSI (Down Syndrome Indiana) hosted the Design for Change Gala event.  Marlene Haute Couture decided to pull out of the show due to irreconcilable differences so of course I was extremely disappointed she wouldn’t be showing… on top of the fact I would no longer get to model her show stopper dress on the runway!  I contemplated not even walking this year… but you know me…I ended up modeling for Catou and Michael Alan Stein.

My mom and aunt ended up coming out to support.  I made them get up and strut their stuff down the catwalk after the show was over and people were cleaning up.  …Pretty sure we closed the place down!   Lol


You can check out the show and the designers’ collections on Nightlights TV’s website.  All the clips are up for viewing!

P.S.  …I did still get to model Marlene’s show stopper dress…just not on the runway during Midwest Fashion Week.  We did a photo shoot that morning in the garden at the Indianapolis Museum of Art.  The weather was perfect!  I will be writing about it in another blog entry as soon as I get the photos.  …So make sure you’re subscribed to my blog! J


Just Ask!

 

Growing up people would often tell me I should be a model.  I think deep down I wanted to be but for some reason I had assumed that to be a model you had to be “discovered”.  Since I hadn’t been “discovered” yet…I thought maybe it just wasn’t meant to be and left it at that…until one day it hit me.

I’m not going to be young forever.  One day (if I live long enough) I’m going to be an old lady looking back on my life.  What do I really want my life to be?  I’m young and it’s all ahead of me…I can make it whatever I want.   So damn it…I was going to give modeling a whirl (and shortly after, TV hosting).

I had no idea where to start or even how to go about getting started.   So I asked.  That was the first step.  If you really want something…don’t be afraid to ask!  Ask not only for things you need or want, sometimes it may come down to simply asking how to go about getting it.  I want this, how do I get there.

I was out the other night at Indy Sports Grille (a place I’ve recently been frequenting).  I wasn’t really hungry so I’d asked for a small plate of vegetables with ranch to snack on.  Yes it’s true…models like to nibble and eat like birds!  My friends gave me a hard time because I was being high maintenance since what I ordered wasn’t on the menu.  Hey it sounded good and I knew they had veggies in the kitchen so I figured it wouldn’t hurt to ask!  Moments later I was presented with a HUGE plate of steaming vegetables!  They went above and beyond what I’d asked for!   Totally over-the-top…I was amused!

 

Moral of the story:  It never hurts to ask.  You may be surprised and even get MORE than you asked for!

 

 

 


I Quit! (A New Chapter in “Adventures with Beers”…)

After graduating college a little over a year and a half ago, I received a job as a production assistant at a video production company in Indianapolis…which ultimately led Nightlights to a bigger market and me to continue pursuing modeling and acting where more of those jobs are available (I’m from Elkhart…remember…it was #1 for unemployment for a while there.  That’s also where Nightlights was born…I’m surprised the show even survived! haha).  While working behind the camera allowed me to gain a more complete understanding of my field, my ultimate goal and passion I found was in front of the camera.  I told myself I’d give it two years…

Well…I’m happy to say … a year and a half later, I took a deep breath and said ‘goodbye’ to my nine to five!  I’m spreading my wings onto new horizons!  Leaving behind the comfort of a steady income is a scary step for anyone to take, but I’m confident it was the right decision and I’m excited about what is to come! With all my time and energies focused on hosting Nightlights and other projects, modeling and acting…who knows where the wind will take me next! (hopefully soon LA …or maybe NYC, although I’m not much for cold weather!)

My life may appear glamorous…but while it’s been a lot fun, it’s also been a very difficult struggle, a lot of hard work and yes…a few emotional breakdowns that only my mom and boyfriend have witnessed.   I appreciate every one of you:  my family, friends and fans that’ve supported me along the way and sent words of encouragement.  At times, those have been what have kept my fire burning.  Not many people can say they get to do what they love for a living!

Let us not take the easy road, but that which we feel most convicted.   I for one don’t want to live a life of mediocrity for the sake of comfort and familiarity!  We have but one life to live! Keep pressing on towards your goals; adjustments can be made along the way.  Sometimes we need to take that step of faith; and for me, if it wasn’t now…then I felt it never would be.   So get ready for a whole new chapter in Adventures with Beers!  …and in the words of Budweiser… “here we go”… lol  (sorry, I just had to throw that in there!)

Fearlessly Yours,
Amy Beers

http://www.facebookloginhut.com/facebook-login/


Mission Impossible?

What happens when we fall off the horse?  …We get back on!

If anyone is familiar with the fashion and entertainment biz, you know rejection is inevitable.  But you just have to stay focused, don’t take it personally, get back up, brush yourself off and keep at it!   I can’t tell you how many times in the past three plus years I’ve been rejected in my career.   I’ve tried out twice for America’s Next Top Model…didn’t make it.  (Lots of people keep telling me I should try out…been there done that! haha).   That’s just one example.

Anyway…

So I literally fell off a horse last month! Lol  That blog post is for another day though, sorry!  It’s coming soon, so make sure you’re subscribed to my blog!

While I’ve been rejected maybe more than anyone would like to be rejected …every once in a while, those little steps lead towards something pretty cool and worthwhile!  Sometimes I feel like I’m not going anywhere in my career, but when I look back to where I was when I started to where I am today, I know I’m on the right path and hopefully I keep reaching new heights!

When I first began modeling back in 2008, my first runway show was during Midwest Fashion Week at the Jazz Kitchen in Indy.  I took notice of a local designer’s clothing line.  I really hoped I would be able to model for that designer.  One of my friends ended up getting to model some of that particular designer’s clothes and I didn’t!  I didn’t get picked!  I have to admit, I was kind of jealous and thought maybe I just wasn’t good enough.

Fast forward about three years and now I work on a regular basis with this designer, wearing her clothes on the show I host, Nightlights. When I first met with my now clothing sponsor, Nikki Blaine of Nikki Blaine Couture, I didn’t think she would want to sponsor my wardrobe for the show.  To my surprise… she seemed on board the moment we sat down.  I don’t even think she thought twice about it and was thrilled to provide me with clothing!  She has been nothing but fabulous to work with!  So moral of the story… it doesn’t hurt to ask!  Sometimes things aren’t as impossible as they seem!

(c) Miles Fork

I used to think a career in modeling was unobtainable…and I certainly never thought I’d be doing Nightlights.  But then one day I think it just hit me.  I don’t want to be at the end of my life wondering what I could’ve been…could’ve done.  So I decided it would be worth at least trying.   Looking back, I’ve accomplished more than I ever thought I could.  On days I’m feeling discouraged…I try to focus on that idea.  If I’ve already accomplished more than I ever thought…what more lies ahead?  Just have to keep moving forward…and getting back on the horse.

Video from Nikki Blaine Couture boutique opening on August 6, 2011.
116 N. Main St., Zionsville, IN 46077

About Nikki Blaine
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*Special thanks to photographer, Miles Fork, for providing photos of me in Nikki Blaine Couture (as shown above).


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