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  • Error type: "Forbidden". Error message: "The request cannot be completed because you have exceeded your quota." Domain: "youtube.quota". Reason: "quotaExceeded".

    Did you added your own Google API key? Look at the help.

    Check in YouTube if the id UC4y6NK7UjIeDMBbCXlPNhsw belongs to a channelid. Check the FAQ of the plugin or send error messages to support.
  • Error type: "Forbidden". Error message: "The request cannot be completed because you have exceeded your quota." Domain: "youtube.quota". Reason: "quotaExceeded".

    Did you added your own Google API key? Look at the help.

    Check in YouTube if the id UC1c32cPA23NvaP0qkhBFDpA belongs to a channelid. Check the FAQ of the plugin or send error messages to support.
  • For Your Best Performance, Throw Out Your Plan

    When an actor comes to study with me for an audition, the first thing we do is “kill the plan.” Somewhere in their preparation, they’ve had what I call the “performance fantasy.” Instead of imagining the world of the character and really exploring those lines and what they mean, they’ve imagined how they will play the scene.
    Among early-career actors, there’s a perception that their power is in direct proportion to their ability to be emotional. As a result, their audition usually consists of some histrionics, a big dramatic moment, and a “button” at the end of the scene. (Usually an ad-libbed line or bit of behavior.)
    The problem here is that it limits possibilities and ultimately leads to a predictable performance. The audience starts to see the plan: the actor has everything lined up just right and if they’re any good, they will deliver an energized and possibly entertaining performance.
    But it’s not the real stuff; it looks like acting. We don’t pay $20 at the movies or hundreds of dollars at the theater to watch acting that looks like, well, acting. We want to see living, breathing human beings we can relate to, that move and inspire us,

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    For Your Best Performance, Throw Out Your Plan

    When an actor comes to study with me for an audition, the first thing we do is “kill the plan.” Somewhere in their preparation, they’ve had what I call the “performance fantasy.” Instead of imagining the world of the character and really exploring those lines and what they mean, they’ve imagined how they will play the scene.
    Among early-career actors, there’s a perception that their power is in direct proportion to their ability to be emotional. As a result, their audition usually consists of some histrionics, a big dramatic moment, and a “button” at the end of the scene. (Usually an ad-libbed line or bit of behavior.)
    The problem here is that it limits possibilities and ultimately leads to a predictable performance. The audience starts to see the plan: the actor has everything lined up just right and if they’re any good, they will deliver an energized and possibly entertaining performance.
    But it’s not the real stuff; it looks like acting. We don’t pay $20 at the movies or hundreds of dollars at the theater to watch acting that looks like, well, acting. We want to see living, breathing human beings we can relate to, that move and inspire us,

    Go to Source

    Leave a Reply

    « | »