♫ Oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh ♫

The new thing in the world of acting seems to be casting ‘real people’ instead of actors who can just as convincingly play the part. Whilst I like to think I am both a real person and an actor I’ve actually lost out on two auditions in the last couple of weeks for not being part of a couple. The first one was for a ‘soccer’ commercial where the casting director had emailed me asking me to submit a video audition because I’d auditioned for them before (in the previous one I'd said I wouldn’t pretend to be a Man Utd fan for all of the money in the world, it turns out that’s what they were looking for!) I ignored the email because they were looking for millennial couple, football fans. The couples had to tell embarrassing stories about each other and talk about their pre-match rituals. I could maybe pass as a millennial on a very good day but I knew it was a stretch asking the Scot to pretend to like football as well as say he was my other half (I’m not sure what he would find more difficult!) The casting director then text me to ask why I hadn’t submitted so I found myself sending a reply that said ‘I’m really sorry but I don’t have a significant other’ 

For some reason when I saw a breakdown for a real couple in a Google Home ad a few days later I thought it would be a good idea to submit me and the Scot. It was paying over $4000, it was a Google commercial, how bad could the couple stuff be? I wish this was the story that would make you laugh with all of the cringey coupley stuff we had to do at the audition and then in the commercial itself but sadly not. Yes we got an audition but the Scot politely declined the offer of pretending to be my significant other. He said he would do it as a 'massive favour' to me but when he text to say ‘I’d really love it if I didn’t have to do this today’ I felt like I couldn’t beg him any more!  

Maybe this could be an opening line on a new dating profile. I haven’t moved on that far from the ‘happy ending’ of 2015’s blog post so maybe I could try ‘want to earn money by pretending to be my significant other’ Hmmm I think there’s probably already a different kind of website for that though so maybe not!

Scot Free

So we had our own little Scottish referendum in LA. I'd like to say the decision was unanimous but there were only two of us voting and I lost! The Scot has left me. Ok I’m being dramatic. He’s moved out. A whole 3 miles away to the bottom of the hill. 

He called it ‘conscious uncoupling’. I know that's what Gwynnie & Chris did so I googled it and found out that 'it brings wholeness to the spirits of both people who choose to recognise each other as their teacher….without the process being a miserable and traumatic experience through and through’ Hmmmm. I hope he hasn’t found spiritual fulfillment just by not living in the same place as me. As for what we’ve taught each other, mainly an appreciation for better wine (him to me) and that margaritas can be a great substitute for the aforementioned wine (me to him) 

Was the process miserable and traumatic? Actually it wasn’t as bad as I thought. Instead of barging into his room and throwing myself on his bed to chat to him I just do the same with his apartment and couch. And if I can’t be bothered driving the three miles down the hill (or more to the point find parking!!) then I FaceTime him instead. This is probably why he hasn’t found his spiritual fulfillment, he actually sees more of me than he ever did. 

I am a little envious of his shiny new apartment and I did threaten to set up a bed in the living room but he quickly put a dining table there instead! I also miss his help around the house. I’m not sure what I’m going to do the next time a lizard gets into my bedroom (Chris Pratt was no help whatsoever last time) although I did manage to capture one of the cats I let escape last week. I realized quite quickly that shouting ‘Ellie stop being a t**t’ at her as she spat and hissed at me from up a tree was not going to work and as the Scot was not there I had to deal with it, so I did. 

He’s only got 8 months left on his lease so I think he will have got it out of his system by then and I can consciously couple myself back on. Or I will have found my own swanky apartment and he’ll be begging me to take him back. 

Miserable and traumatised? Who me? I’ve not given it a second thought!

The Travelling Circus

It’s always so difficult coming back to LA. I’m not talking emotionally or metaphorically (that’s an entirely different blog). I’m talking literally. Maybe someone is trying to tell me something but the last couple of trips back have been a little bit ridiculous.

After nearly a year I think I’m finally ready to write about my journey back from Africa. Where I was held under suspicion of being a terrorist! Ok maybe that’s a slight exaggeration but hmmm not really!

At 27 hours (airport to airport) the journey was never going to be much fun. The 11 mile journey from the hotel to the airport which took a couple of hours in crazy, standstill Nairobi traffic should have been an indication that it wasn’t going to be straight forward, although that’s a bit like my daily commute to Santa Monica (minus the roadside extortion and the donkeys!) I thought I had never felt so stressed on one journey. Until I got to the airport. I don’t know what vibe I was giving off that day but I was stopped at the entrance to the terminal and my case was searched. All good. At the gate you have to go through more security scanners and they did a spot check of my hand luggage at this one. And decided I had been handling explosives! Of course I told them I hadn’t (because I hadn’t!) but they insisted I had and wanted to know if I had spent time with the army whilst in Africa or been underground. No to both of those questions. If they had seen me trying to have a wee in one of those huts with a hole in the ground they would have known I’m not really your underground venturing, explosive handling kind of girl!

The next hour and twenty minutes were spent with them determined to get to the bottom of where and how I had been handling explosives. At one point there were 14 of them and little old me. I must have appeared quite a risk sitting there crying with no shoes on! My defence was me saying things like ‘I’ve been on Safari, maybe its elephant poo’, ‘I don’t know anyone in the African army’, ‘You can’t just keep me in Africa’. After speaking to somebody in London and deciding that maybe I wasn’t a terrorist after all they decided I could get on the plane. On one condition. I had to leave behind my belongings that they believed had come into contact with explosives. Funnily enough the item they were most interested in was my iPad. I got all brave then and said I was not leaving that so they checked again with London who of course said give her her iPad back! I finally left Africa minus my iPad case, glasses case, sunglasses and a hair bobble which they said I could retrieve from lost property in Nairobi at a later date! I must remember to do that the next time I’m passing through Nairobi airport!

I do remember thinking after that trip that travelling back to LA from England was going to be a breeze. A whopping 4373 miles and 12 hours shorter, what could possibly go wrong? Hahahahahahahaha! 

Cut to this week and my journey from Manchester to LA. I mean what is there to say other than what fool would decide to travel via the East Coast in January?

42 hours, 4 different time zones and temperatures ranging from -9 in New York and Minneapolis (with no coat, I live in LA, we don’t wear coats) to 17 in LA (at night, in January, that’s why we don’t wear coats)

Of course it wasn’t quite as traumatic as the African experience however it was still pretty dire. I do think it’s always important to learn something from experiences like this though. This is what I learnt;

1 - I would prefer to be tortured through starvation than sleep deprivation.
2 – A member of airline staff saying to me ‘Don’t you think I would like to go home too?’ will not make me feel any better.
3 – Drinking wine does not help. Maybe it helps get you through the first 12 – 15 hours. After that? Not so much.
4 – Having a Green Card does not get you through immigration any quicker (especially if you suspect you’re on some sort of underground venturing, explosive handling watch list)
5 – My daily commute to Santa Monica is not a long journey.

My next holiday is to Orlando. I might even drive.