Pretty
Girls, Risky Business: A Peek at Modeling's Dark Side
"Primetime Nightline" goes behind the scenes of the modeling business in the "Celebrity Secrets" special, "A Model Life," airing Wednesday, Sept. 14, 2011 at 10/9c on ABC. (Getty Images) |
That's the modeling
dream -- to the public and to the young girls themselves. The reality is much
less pretty.
"The impression
is this smooth, beautiful, dream-like experience for everyone, you know? And
it's not that at all. A lot of people don't like to talk about the
negative," said aspiring model Ehren Dorsey.
Like most new
arrivals, Dorsey is beautiful and broke. She lives in a bare-bones "model
apartment" with several other girls, whose names and faces change all the
time, as models come in and out of New York City vying for modeling jobs. They
share twin beds -- and a dream.
Dorsey has been here
just over two months. Her new roommate is 16-year-old Hayley Wheeler, whose
mother has brought her to New York City. Haley will be finishing high school
online so she can give modeling a shot. Her mother plans to stay a few weeks to
help her settle in.
Wheeler has a lot to
learn -- not so much about fashion and posing, but about the tough business
she's entering.
New models lucky
enough to get work start by shooting editorials, which don't pay a dime but
help build a portfolio.
"When I make
money I just pay [the agency] back. Right now I am basically unemployed,
so..." Dorsey said. She gets $120 per week for food and other essentials
-- money she'll have to pay back with interest.
Fashion Industry Secrets
Lonely and low on
cash, many models fall prey to a tempting but dubious lifeline: party
promoters, perhaps the biggest and best-kept secret of the modeling world.
"It's almost
like a secret society, so if you're not in it you don't understand it,"
said a promoter named Isaiah.
It appears to work
like this: Party promoters befriend young models. Nightclub owners pay
promoters to bring models as young as 15 to their clubs to attract rich men.
Rich men go to the nightclub because young models go there, then spend lots of
money partying with them. The club owners pay promoters a cut of the
nightclub's profit.
Some might liken
party promoters, many of whom are college-educated, to pimps.
"You get paid
based on your quality of what you can bring to the table," Isaiah said.
Quality of what? "Girls."
Whatever they're
called, they certainly make a lucrative living off the attractiveness of young
women.
"There is a
[customer] who spent $500,000 in a club three different nights in a week,"
Isaiah said. Isaiah's link in the value chain connecting the big spender, the
club and the girls is worth enough to pay for a $6,000-per-month apartment in Soho,
he said. "If you're not making six figures, you're not doing it
right."
Agencies play down
the role party promoters play in their business, wary of its seedy image, and
urge the girls not to go out with them.
"Yet we're poor
and it's a free meal, and it's a chance to have fun, and so it's just like, how
do you choose?" said Dorsey, who added she had two promoter friends.
Nights out with
promoters often begin with a free meal at an upscale restaurant. "We all
look like we're rich ... continuing that fantasy. We pretend we're not hungry,
but we'll just eat it slowly, so it doesn't look like ... we need this meal,"
said Dorsey.
"You see these
girls in magazines, and you think they're millionaires. ... We actually know
they have $50 in their bank account. We know that if it wasn't for us they
wouldn't eat every day," said Isaiah.
0 comments:
Post a Comment