Musician Archive

Thread: AFK'ers the only 'Bad Ents'?

Kanubis
Wed Jul 07, 2004 5:33 am
#1

A year ago I started this game having never played anything else online. Like many, I loved the idea of fighting for the rebellion and so on, and never gave half a mind to content other than the fighting. Then a long time before the holo-grind that killed the cantinas so badly, I looted a Sith Holo - and used it without even knowing what it did. It said Entertainer... despite being still quite shy in the game I decided to give it a go, and loved it. I mastered it shortly after Christmas, and meant tokeep it, but we know what happened then...


...disheartened by trying to perform in a room of zombies, I concentrated on the GCW again. Entertainer was dropped box by box to make way for the skills I needed here. I was quite passionate about the war; on the Chimeara forums there are many threads in which I've had instense but good-natured debates with the Imperials on the server.


Whilst the war heated up, Ibecame more confident in-game socially. I was heavily enough involved with the GCW that I wasoften sent to track Imperials back to their cities to ensure that no follow-up strike was planned. Instead of getting into arguments with them, I found that increasingly I was sitting in their cantinas, reflecting on the battle, talking to them, and basically getting on with them. At the same time I noticed that many of the 'good guys' I fought alongside were people for whom I had no respect. The GCW was a roleplaying thing for me - I wanted to fight alongside hounorable people and defeat evil people - turns out it just isn't like that.


Eventually I couldn't stomach it any more - a coup[le of weeks ago on an impulse I dropped my PvP template and feeling a bit lost looked for a new purpose in the game. I realised easily enough that the aspects I'd come to love were the community ones.. talking to people, roleplaying, gossiping even. And I remembered how much I'd enjoyed Entertainer.


So now I'm slowly working up Musician. Slowly, but never seeing it as a grind. Because I love playing in the cantinas, talking to people who come in, either in character or out, depending on what seems appropriate. My character has a history I haven't even had to make up - I was lucky enough to have been there for all the major GCW events on the server. My jaded view of the war makes for excellent roleplaying.


Ok... onto the point (yes, everything up to now has been me droning on irrelevently)...


We're musicians, we perform alongside dancers, but all of us are extensions of Entertainers. And Entertaining goes beyond playing an instrument or doing a dance. Especially when the variation in these is so painfully limited. What I've noticed is that many of the performers around me may well be ATK, but they don't try and engage their audience, no attempt to talk to them, communicate with them any further than putting out some notes, reducing their BF and healing their mind. I wonder what the difference is between this and being AFK? I know for set bands, it's about putting together a well-planned performance, but I'm talking about cantina playing, putting yourself in the spot-light in a social, public place...


Have I got the wrong idea about the profession? Maybe it's an aftershock of the AFK era, which thankfully seems to be dieing - but has it left an emptiness inside entertainers, a loss of the charisma that I remember so well from my early days watching performers in the cantinas?






Ka'nubis I'onia {SFR} - MIA, presumed dead, 20/10/04


THE DEEPEST CIRCLE OF HELL IS RESERVED FOR TRAITORS AND L33T-SPEAKERS (AND PEOPLE WHO PARODY MY SIG...)

DarkY0da
Wed Jul 07, 2004 10:26 am
#2

Quite simply... I believe it's because even when those people are ATK they just don't know how to entertain. What Greet people... Try and talk to people that come in ? Ask them what they have been doing or what they are heading out to do ? Pass the local gossip of how those darn Rebels blew up Aldaraan....


Lets take a quick look at what they most likely learned in their time playing...


Spam is ok.

Half the People are just grinding and going to drop it.

It's ok to go AFK for hours on end or even all day.

If you do talk don't have it on spatial and use groupchat.(So they are even less likely to see if anyone tries and talks to them)

What's a Mandoviol ?

that /bandflo is bad and evil.

That Masters get the money(lie) and get watched instead of your lowly group.

That buffbots are ok. Tons of people coming through using them = validation by the community.



Hmm that to me looks like a great recipe for making all of the current "entertainers" not have a freaking clue about how to play as "entertainers". Instead they will go off what they learned and do those things. New people will come in and see them doing it. And do the same things...




Oh-Orb Rizo Twi'lek
Just hanging out... watching with interest what changes do or don't happen.

I support the NDE. (New Drygo Experience)
Server Pop Snap-Shot Feb. 06 link















Miravlix
Wed Jul 07, 2004 10:29 am
#3

I can only agree with your observation that there is a profound lack of entertainers that entertained beyond what there char does with game mechanics and that it is a much bigger issue than afk'ers (As long as they don't use speech macros).

I'm finding less and less reason to play my entertainer attended as days go by, since there is no one to talk to most of the time and watching my char doing the same music peace for a few days to level, isn't excatly fun.

I'm prolly going to dump Musician as soon as I hit Master and go tailor instead for customer interaction instead. Put up some harvesters while I'm finishing Musician so I have a large supply of resources for when I go tailor and can make stuff on the spot for people.



There is no emotion, there is peace.
There is no ignorance, there is knowledge.
There is no passion, there is serenity.
There is no chaos, there is harmoney.
There is no death, there is only the force.
OrionsByte
Wed Jul 07, 2004 11:36 am
#4

I'd like to respond to both parts of your post... the irrelevant part and the actual point...


I had a similiar progression through Musician. In the beginning, I took up novice entertainer mostly because the game was still new, and I didn't know any better than to hang out on Talus, where there were only entertainers in the cantina 50% of the time (now I'd be surprised if I ever saw one there at all). I took it up, honestly, so I could heal my own BF without having to rely on someone else to be there.


But I quickly found out how much I really really liked it. I didn't dance - I thought that my character, who is slightly overweight, looked a little silly doing tapdances. But I loved the music, even though the songs got kind of repetitive rather quickly. I loved it when someone came in with a new instrument (back when someone walked in to the cantina with a bandfill and it was the first time anyone in the group had ever heard one). I loved how cool it sounded when everyone was doing their own flourishes, even if sometimes they didn't quite sound right together.


My character was destined to become a droid engineer, and was also quite interested in fencing. For a while, he also developed his rifleman skills. Eventually, though, as I started running out of skill points, I realized I'd have to start focusing on my final template. So rifleman went away. And then, slowly, painfully, I started to drop the entertainer boxes (I hadn't ever trained up to even novice musician). I hated doing that - I dropped the healing line first, and tried to keep the music line as long as possible.


Then something happened. I realized I was really fed up with the game's combat system. I just didn't enjoy it all that much... I mean there are some things that are cool - I like going hunting in groups and being able to defend myself against a sudden attack, but mostly I just found it kind of boring. So I made a decision. I started dropping my fencing skills and concentrated once more on music.


Now, my character has no combat ability whatsoever, but he's a Master Musician and nearly a Master Droid Engineer. And I couldn't be happier.


What's interesting about the similarity between our two character's history is that we both liked entertaining and took it up because we had so much fun with it. We kept it until it was blocking our progress elsewhere, but once it was gone, we realized that we were having the most fun while RPing in the cantina.


I think a lot of the other entertainers don't have that perspective. They might take it up because it looks interesting, but they don't have the appreciation that you and I (and others) might have. That could be a contributing factor.


Another factor is that a lot of people really don't know about all the cool stuff you can do with musicianship. For instance, targeted-instrument bandflourishes is one of the most unused features of the entire game. I've written some really cool arrangements using targeted bandflos that sound SO much better than a simple bandflo...


Hopefully as the game starts to put the hologrind behind us, we'll start seeing more dedicated entertainer professionals. But there are always going to be people that either don't know how to or don't care to actually entertain the other players, and I guess the responsibility would fall on the rest of us to "mentor" those folks in to some of the brighter points of the profession...





Checking your spelling (and punctuation, too) will ensure that you're making sense to more than two people.
- +----=X Biranno Runningstar X=----+ -
Master Musician | Master Droid Engineer | 4020 Artisan | 0/0/3/1 Fencer | Alliance Ace Pilot
Emerald Ridge, Naboo ~ Naritus

-I support ATK play!
Eufack
Wed Jul 07, 2004 2:08 pm
#5

This will make 3 of us who started musician, went combat didn't like it and started music again.


And I do belive that its as bad, or worse to be ATK but not talking. Just the other day i was in Dearic with a master muscian playing just for some xp, when a group had come in from raiding a local Imperial Base. And so being the nice guy i think i am, i talked to them bout what they did, how they did it, and congradulating them on doing such a good job. all the while the master musician was just standing there playing, not saying a word. So lo and behold i got a total of 30k credits in tips from these guys, while the master musican got none at all. And i asked them, if they would have tiped me such a large sum if i would have just sat there. And they said they never tip people who don't talk.


So to answer your quetion, You do get more if you socialize with the people in the cantina. I know that i won't get that much from people in a long time, but people do enjoy talking bout thier battles while getting healed.



MORCHIMISPET P RANGER Forever!

Captin of Dark Insanity - Complete, total 100% 'leagal' Transportaion for you and your 'Cargo'


NewJedi
Wed Jul 07, 2004 6:48 pm
#6

I've never left music, but I have dabbled in combat. For me, the core of the entertaining game is more fun. Combat in SWG is okay, but it doesn't often seem to involve much in the way of tactics. Everyone just blasts away, and occasionally the doctor heals. My Jedi on TC2 was mildly interesting, if only because the light saber makes such a cool sound. But I can get that combat stuff anywhere. The entertaining game in SWG is unique.

Tarnak_Archvold
Wed Jul 07, 2004 7:37 pm
#7

I do not se why chatting to the combatants should be end all be all of entertainers. If that was so all the healing abilities of entertainers could be removed and instead people could be slowly healed when they was sitting in a cantina.
Chatting to the combaters we are healing, makes us socialises, not entertainers.

Putting chains of flourishes together in series to create songs that sounds good, coordinating several musicians with band flourishes and matching the outfits of the hole group, are part of entertaining.
When the combats watch the performance for the same of the performance, we are entertainers.
If you just chat with them, then they will likely leave as soon as thair BF is gone and the mind buff is applied.

The fact that that kind of entertainment only is carried out at specific arranged parties, and not every day is a shame. Cantinas should be one big never-ending party. Not a place where combatants go to get entertainers to tell them how kewl they are, or ask them questions about how much "Phat Lewt" they have gotten on a trip. Sucking up is not entertainment, even if it does give bigger tips.




"Once upon a time Rangers roamed the galaxies... Before the dark times, before the NGE. "
Once a Ranger, Always a Ranger.
Kreistor
Thu Jul 08, 2004 6:15 am
#8








Tarnak_Archvold wrote:


If you just chat with them, then they will likely leave as soon as thair BF is gone and the mind buff is applied.





Hmm, that's hardly been my experience.


I've had times that people have come to me, looking for a buff or wanting a heal. And I start to talk to them. About thir profession, about the places they've been. I know ALOT about professions that I've never even been, and I've heard of places that are not on my POI list.


The point is these people will still be there talking to me LONG after I stopped receiving messages about Entertainment Healing. They weren't sticking around for any other reason than the chatting at that point. Sometimes I even get a "Wow, is my BF gone already?!?"


I've been tipped for nothing more than my chat. Being at a Starport where Heling and Buffing don't work and I still get tipped pretty much proves that.


Does that mean that chatting is the only way to make tips? Of course not. It's just another of the services that we offer. I just tend not to discount it.





Ub-ick Esava
----------
Bria - Working towards Master Dancer one fall at a time

Lowca - Master Dancer Extraordinaire
*CENSORS* Cantina, Honor's Keep, Corellia,
OrionsByte
Thu Jul 08, 2004 9:24 am
#9

It's true that sometimes people don't really care if their entertainer is talking or not... some players just want to come in, get healed, get buffed, and get the heck out of dodge. A lot of these players joined up during the hologrinding craze, and as a result, their primary experience with entertainers has been with AFKers and buff-bots. They don't consider interaction with entertainers to be part of the game.


There's another unfortunate side effect to this. I was in a cantina a month or so ago, getting ever closer to my Master Musician title. I asked if I could join the band. They let me in, and I thought my ears were going to explode. There were at LEASTthree different songsbeing played at oncein that group, and it sounded absolutely aweful. What made it worse was that one of the songs was ballad, I think, which if I recall has 5-second cycle, while the rest of the songs that were being played had 4-second cycles. As a result, it was clipping off the last second of each of the ballad loops, making it that much more irritating.


I asked in groupchat if we could please change the song so that we're all playing the same thing, and I got no response. I figured everyone was AFK. So after asking a couple more times I went ahead and changed the band to starwars1. Suddenly it appeared that everyone was ATK and I got reamed for changing the song (I'm not upset with them for that - I may have been out of line). Slowly all the different songs started coming back in to the mix and it sounded aweful again. I protested, "But it sounds aweful!"


You know what they said? They said, "You mean you grind musician with the sound on? You're crazy!"


So anyway the point of that story was to illustrate that some people don't even have the player music turned up. They have learned that if there are more than a few musicians in one spot, it's going to sound bad. Either that or they won't be flourishing, and then it will sound bad because of that. So just putting on a good show or playing a good tune isn't going to be enough to get people to stick around and appreciate you, because they've already learned not to appreciate entertainers.


Interacting with the cantina patrons isn't about getting huge tips - it's about fostering respect from other players who previously had none. It's about making someone's visit to a cantina a pleasurable one, and putting the RP back in to this RPG.


Does it make you a bad entertainer if you don't constantly interact with people? Not necessarily, but it can certainly is a lot more fun for everyone if you drop the AFK impersonating and chat a bit.



Checking your spelling (and punctuation, too) will ensure that you're making sense to more than two people.
- +----=X Biranno Runningstar X=----+ -
Master Musician | Master Droid Engineer | 4020 Artisan | 0/0/3/1 Fencer | Alliance Ace Pilot
Emerald Ridge, Naboo ~ Naritus

-I support ATK play!
Aleyo
Thu Jul 08, 2004 9:30 am
#10

It's an unfortunate reality that many musicians have their game sound off (I understand it more from non-musicians who might want some combat music while they're off kicking ass).
I've always kept my sound on while playing (aside from while on the phone, of course), and I find that with a little patient pressure, I can usually convince my fellow musicians to play something pleasing to the ears.
I don't think that playing different songs in the same group can happen anymore except when someone is bugged, but if it's possible, and the people have their sound off anyway, you can kindly remind them that as long as they have their best instrument equipped, the song they're playing won't affect their xp. That seems to calm people from insisting on playing the higher level music (although I must say that as a player with the sound *on*, I often felt like playing something other than starwars1 for the variety ).




Scipionus Mentus
Master Musician, Master Entertainer, Master Dancer - Tempest
-I support ATK people and playstyles.

"Only a Sith deals in absolutes."

DarkY0da
Thu Jul 08, 2004 12:14 pm
#11

Sitting in a cantina DOES heal you slowly. There is a very limited amount of entertaining that can happen from 10 songs, 17 dances( Of which like really only 4-6 get used and most of the rest are just better versions of crappy dances) and 8 flourishes. Now I have some very entertainer shows large amounts of bandflourish songs and clothing changes for dancing + changed knowledge.


Entertaining IS about interacting with those coming into the cantina. It's knowing which ones to not talk to after the first Hi (insert fully typed out name here). And which ones you can banter with and quickly deciding do you flirt a little do you RP a bit or what not... Yes there should be more "shows" in cantinas... it's just a bit hard to do when ever one thinks bandflourishing is evil. Or when no one is there.. or they don't really want to move from their "prime" spot...


We are supposed to be the psst did you hear about this ... people in the cantina... The this guild is getting ready to war this guild.... sort of people... the Do you know where I can find a good (insert prof name).... It's all interaction...


I love it when I go out to eat and the waiter/waitress is friendly and engaging. The best concerts are the ones that just have a great give and take from the audience. The feeding off each others energy.


You know I love watching Star Wars movies...


But I was forced at the start of my day and at the end of my day(and some times in between) to sit down and watch the movies randomly picked each time(so I could end up watching Ep. 1 for weeks straight) I would get really rather tired of them. And would sleep or something through it. Now if as I was watching I had friends over going through the same forced movie viewing as me. And if they talked with me about the movies... or about what I was doing later that day or what I did over the weekend... well that really wouldn't all that bad.

I really have no idea what I'm saying now... or even what I was repling to. So I'll stop typing.



Oh-Orb Rizo Twi'lek
Just hanging out... watching with interest what changes do or don't happen.

I support the NDE. (New Drygo Experience)
Server Pop Snap-Shot Feb. 06 link















Springbok
Thu Jul 08, 2004 5:04 pm
#12



Tarnak_Archvold wrote:



I do not se why chatting to the combatants should be end all be all of entertainers. If that was so all the healing abilities of entertainers could be removed and instead people could be slowly healed when they was sitting in a cantina.
Chatting to the combaters we are healing, makes us socialises, not entertainers.


No one has said it is the end all. However PART of entertaining IS socializing. And while it seems not many entertainers even do that...you want the whole shabang, lets get a bite before we reel in all the way, eh?

Putting chains of flourishes together in series to create songs that sounds good, coordinating several musicians with band flourishes and matching the outfits of the hole group, are part of entertaining. When the combats watch the performance for the same of the performance, we are entertainers. If you just chat with them, then they will likely leave as soon as thair BF is gone and the mind buff is applied.


Your absolutely correct. But given the recent past since holocrons left (as per keeping with the beat on this post) finding elite profession entertainers out there is uncommon. If a combatant walks in to heal his BF and get buffed, and in the process laughs a few times, recounts a story he/she wants to share? then I AM entertaining. Is he/she not entertained? Did I not give out and perpetuate that entertainment? As for your last above sentence....they may leave, but they can still be entertained....and thats what we do.

The fact that that kind of entertainment only is carried out at specific arranged parties, and not every day is a shame. Cantinas should be one big never-ending party. Not a place where combatants go to get entertainers to tell them how kewl they are, or ask them questions about how much "Phat Lewt" they have gotten on a trip. Sucking up is not entertainment, even if it does give bigger tips.


I don't think until now, and in only to quote you, but "Phat Lewt" has never escaped my lips. And "kewl"? rofl. ok mate. However given that i know my songs, know my instruments, know every square inch of just about every static city cantina....I certainly don't want to talk about those things, however I am an RPer, so what then may I talk about without what you would deduce as "sucking up"? I am a wookiee, While i can admire how "kewl" someone looks in that duster or composite armor, since I can not wear it, i CAN tell them I envy that. That is not sucking up. I don't know about you, but I have never looted a force crystal or music healing 10 tape off a mob in a cantina. The fact that someone does interests me, its not sucking up.


You call it sucking up. Not entertainment. I call it entertainment, what you want, is showmanship. That too, is a part of the Master Musician/Dancer/Entertainer cookbook.




Tiaga
Thu Jul 08, 2004 5:39 pm
#13

I've had a similar experience in why I am still an entertainer, but with a bit of a twist. I've been an entertainer for nearly a year now. My first character was an entertainer, and that was about a week before I registered on the forums.

The twist is that it's on a bit grander of a scale for me. Instead of it being entertainer that I picked up then started to drop, and realized it was what I like.. It was SWG.

This isn't my first MMORPG. Not by a long shot. Club Caribe has that honor, though I doubt many have heard of it. It is likely THE first graphical MMORPG ever. More recently, Ultima Online, then Everquest. I never stayed with either for long. The only time EQ held me was after the RP server opened, I started again for about a year, and got decently high level.

But I was starting to get tired of it. I hadn't seen everything or done everything, but it felt like I had. Every new thing was just more of the same.

It was about this time SWG came out. A few people I knew were talking about it. About a week after release, I was at a local bookstore with a video game store attached, and I decided to pop in on an impulse buy to pick up SWG. It was something different, and maybe it would hold me over until the next thing came along. They were sold out.

So I stuck with EQ a few more weeks. Then again a few weeks later I found myself in the same position, and a friend was interested in trying it out as well. I figured I could try it with someone I knew. They had them in stock this time. Since I wasn't planning to stick with it, I didn't get the special edition. I kind of wish I had the shades now, but I'm forever stuck without.

I didn't know anything about the game at all when I picked it up, besides that it was based on Star Wars. I think my idea of what it would be like had been closer to SE than to the base game. When I saw that you could play an entertainer, that intrigued me, so I gave it a try. I forget where I started the first time. I'm sure if I looked around I could figure it out. I do remember being in some sort of square with a fountain. Somewhere on Corellia I believe. I decided to try some music, not knowing that I needed to find a cantina. Some of the local NPCs stopped and started clapping along with my music. No flourishes, because I didn't know what they were yet. But at that moment, I was hooked.

I created a new character the next day on a different server. Same name, roughly the same look, and again an entertainer. Bestine this time. I don't remember much of what happened then. I started with dance, not sure why. I made it most the way to dancer then. I'd taken a trip to Mos Eisley a few times, as I'd heard that's a good cantina to visit. And.. Well, it's Mos Eisley. Then I discovered these message boards, and read about this "city" on Naboo that was forming. Long before player cities, of course, as this was just a month after release. But it was a city out in the middle of Naboo (Literally, just a little over 1km off 0,0). That was my introduction to the concept of player owned houses. I found this fascinating that people were forming a city. Apparently there was a cantina there opening soon, as well. So I saved up my credits and bought a ticket to Naboo. I didn't venture out into the wild to find this city, though. Not for another week. I made Novice Dancer first.

I did finally visit the city a few times. There was, as promised, a little settlement out in the middle of nowhere. But it lacked people whenever I stopped by. Finally someone introduced me to one of the people who ran the cantina there, and I got myself a position as one of the dancers a few weeks later.

I was having a lot of fun in the cantinas, but what happened once I took that gig I wasn't prepared for at all. It started just two afternoons a week. Saturday and Sunday, 4 hours each day. Customers were rare, but they were there because they wanted to be. Considering how dangerous a trek it was, they kind of had to be.

The one thing I will always remember, was the first time we went out as a troupe on a gig. The biggest imperial guild on the server (At the time - since disbanded and moved on, though I still have a WP to their PA hall) was throwing a ball. They wanted entertainment, and at the time, we had quite a name on the server. So they hired the cantina's management to provide entertainment. We worked out what music to play and what dances to do ahead of time. I was to direct the dancers, not just bandflourishes, but as far as where to go, what to do, and the like. This ball is, to this day, the biggest event I've ever performed for. It was in a generic style PA hall, and the main room was packed wall to wall. To put it in other terms, doing Knowledge I level content (Dancing popular2, but imagine playing Ballad) I was getting well over 300xp. I made most of Tech III in those 2 hours, and I wasn't even the one doing the flourishes the whole time.

From that point we started doing more and more gigs, even some regular performances for other people's venues. For a good two months we were hot, and all over the place. Some weekends we had 3 or 4 events booked. As you can imagine, people were getting burned out. The troupe started to break up in November. About that time, player cities were new, and being one of 3 master dancers in the city, I ended up being the owner of the cantina. So as the old went out, I refocused on the cantina, and getting it to be one of the most fun places there was.

I spent nearly the next month in my cantina, rarely going anywhere else. If I was alone, or there were no musicians about, I'd play some music. I had already been master entertainer, but was not picking up some musician skills, since I had all the extra xp. In the end, my efforts payed off. The cantina was a very lively place. I had some of the best entertainers on the server in my cantina. To these people, it wasn't about talking to the audience, or hitting flourishes, it was about putting on a performance. It was always a performance, and it drew people. Even non entertainers couldn't help but get into things. One day in one of the side rooms, a couple people were quietly discussing some secret information. Quickly, however, the discussion turned into the type of thing you'd hear between Abbot and Costello. The place was truly alive.

Still, without the troupe about, I was finding myself losing interest. This is where the twist comes in. A few people I knew were starting to look at Horizons. So on another impulse buy, I picked up Horizons. While it wasn't actually giving up skills, in a way I was bit by bit giving up entertainer to try something else. For about a week I barely even logged into SWG.

I was on the verge of leaving SWG. When I finally did log in again, though, everything was happening at once to remind me why I should stay. I had logged out in my cantina. When I logged in again, I found things were as lively as ever. I hopped on the Omni Box, and joined what then became a full band. Exactly one of each sound. The place was packed, and everyone was having a good time.

I never logged into Horizons again.

Those days have passed. People were taking a break for the Holidays, and one by one the entertainers disappeared. Some of them never came back. Those that did, didn't stick around in the empty cantina. To make things worse, hologrinding had already started to take it's toll and was in full force with all the free holocrons floating around.

It was then I took up a combat profession. It was a hard choice to drop master musician. I loved playing the Nalargon, and jamming. But I was a dancer, not a musician. The few gigs I was still involved on seemed to forget that, and tried to get me playing music. So I went with the profession that had intrigued me - TKA. I even made master. I don't regret it - I had a good time with it. And if I'd not done TKA, I wouldn't have been able to beat up one of the server's big name griefers when he decided to drag my nalargon around the cantina. Once I got master, though, it was just .. dull. I was able to take on a pair of rancor and not be scratched. As I recall, I dropped master TKA within an hour of learning it. Instead I picked up tailor. That was in January, and I'm still a tailor/dancer.

Entertainers back then and entertainers now just aren't the same. I quickly recognized that people play entertainers the way they are taught. More and more, that was was a macro. So much community knowledge was being lost. That's why I started a community web site for entertainers - in an effort to capture that community knowledge, so entertainers wouldn't forget.

People say there is no content or end game for entertainers. I say those people have never looked. For me, the content is performing and the end game is making a name for yourself and your group.



Inside my heart is breaking, my make-up may be flaking
But my smile still stays on
My soul is painted like the wings of butterflies
Fairytales of yesterday will grow but never die
I can fly - my friends
SWG Entertainer.com Fashions by TK

Page 1 of 3
Previous Next