This is very interesting and shows a huge jump in popularity.
The previous videos had gotten between 50,000 and 100,000 views after a week,
but this one logged 50,000 in its first two hours.
Goodfried's advice was simple. "If anyone asks point-blank if you're real,
don't answer the question," he said. "Don't lie to people. The answer is no
answer. In my mind, it's the equivalent of not lying. But if people talk to Bree
like she's Bree, that's fair game."
This is something that happens all the time were someone is asked a question and they just don't answer it or they change the subject. I had never thought of it from a legal stance though.
This to me is something that would seem very weird. I do not think film is that expensive so i would not see why he would do this. I would probably have a bad feeling about it.
When he got to college, Flinders dreamed up an alter ego – an awkward, geeky
homeschooled girl. As a camp counselor, he told fireside tales about her
experiences. He wrote short stories about her, and when he tried to make it as a
writer in Hollywood, he put her in his screenplays.
Being that he was beat as a kid you would think that he would have made his character cool and not awkward a geeky. This would be a way he could escape what happen to him.
But nobody bought his scripts: Agents and producers didn't think much of the
character he had created. After working a few years as an assistant to an
independent director and struggling to stay out of debt, he left town and moved
in with his grandmother in Merced. He supported himself by writing a draft of a
film for an aspiring producer in Maryland; it was about a serial killer.
This seems like it would be something that would be very stupid to do I would like to know who some of the people are that viewed this to ask them why!
#4
The
YouTube community was sucked into the plot and speculated endlessly
about
Bree's
faith. Some thought she was Mormon; others insisted she was a
Satanist.
Another
group tried to figure out where she lived: The leading guess was
somewhere
in the Midwest. Viewers spent hours Googling the possibilities
and
posting
their results on YouTube.
This is a great way to keep people comming back alway make them wonder what is going to happen next.
"I don't want you to ever set foot in another TGI Fridays," he said,
explaining that he'd pay her #14
$500
a week to play Bree full time
. #13
In
return, she had to stay home as much as possible and wear sunglasses and a hat
when she went out. For Rose, it was a dream come true – she was a working
actress. She just couldn't tell anyone.
This is something that I would have a problem with I could not stay home that much. Plus i would want to tell everyone.
so his father, a marketing executive at an IT company, agreed to invest in the
newly formed Lonelygirl15 production company. Beckett immediately called Rose
It is a good thing that his father gave him the money because if not she would have started to work at Fridays and they could not have used her in the series.