Do you hire women outside the United States?
Yes. We welcome applications globally wherever adult performance work is lawful. Projects may involve travel or platform rules tied to your country—we spell that out in individual offers.
Professional casting desk for performers and dancers
Straight answers about applying, safety, money, privacy, and timing—across castings, jobs, and creative work.
This FAQ complements the career guide and privacy notice on this site. Read them when you want more detail on pay, travel, and red flags.
Quick map of how money moves on this platform. Details stay in the FAQ and career guide.
Browse castings, jobs, events, or shows with compensation notes. Apply free. If you are selected, the producer sends scope, rates, and travel in writing before you say yes.
Register a creator desk, share your public wishlist, and receive gifts or tips from fans. Your net balance can be requested for manual payout—separate from casting wages.
Yes. We welcome applications globally wherever adult performance work is lawful. Projects may involve travel or platform rules tied to your country—we spell that out in individual offers.
Absolutely. Many opportunities suit motivated newcomers. Be honest about experience on the form; professionalism, communication, and clear boundaries matter more than a long résumé.
We write to the email address on your application first. We do not ask for nude images in introductory messages. Later steps may require ID verification as law or platforms demand.
Rates depend on scene scope, brand, geography, and your profile. We quote numbers only inside formal offers—never ambiguous DMs—with rate sheets attached before paperwork.
Yes. Negotiated limits are foundational. Declining an offer that mismatches your boundaries should never invite retaliation from professional partners.
Yes. Apply step two includes optional casting preferences: scene types (on the performers path), travel posture, regions, hair/makeup or look notes on any path, and hard limits where relevant—visible only to casting internally.
No. Applying is free. If anyone asks you to pay to “join a roster,” “unlock priority,” or “reserve a shoot date,” that is a common scam pattern—stop and use the FAQ on red flags.
No. First contact should stay professional and text-based. Later steps may require ID checks where the law or platforms require them—handled with clear explanation, not surprise pressure.
Look for a verifiable business identity, written scope and rates, and patience for your questions. Be wary of instant decisions, vague company names, and requests for explicit media before any professional introduction.
Registered 18+ creators can publish a public wishlist of shop products they want. Visitors see product titles and notes—not the creator’s email or shipping address. When enabled, supporters can gift items via checkout on our platform. Colleague casting referrals remain a separate program with no cash affiliate.
Timing swings with active productions. We prioritize substantive replies when there is overlap with casting needs; quiet stretches simply mean fewer outbound mails.
No. Stage one stays textual. If imagery matters later, we request it only once introductions have happened with clarity.
Some gigs remain regional while others involve reimbursed itineraries spelled out in writing—never prepaid traveler gimmicks.
Stage identities belong on initial correspondence; eventual contracting verifies legal identities discreetly.
Reputable studio days usually include glam support. Confirm crew lists in advance and ask us to clarify with the producer if anything is vague. Listings may note on-set glam when the producer provided that detail.
They should. Ethical sets recap blocking and intentions. If someone refuses to articulate what is being shot, pause and loop in your casting liaison.
Studios, insurers, and locales differ—some allow backstage guests, others do not. Raise the request early so call sheets or travel manifests can reflect approval.
That is fine. You can note it in the application or leave travel fields blank and follow up by email. You should never pre-pay travel to “hold” a date.
You will see a confirmation screen, we store responses securely, optional notification emails fire if mail is enabled, and casting reviews when projects align—no automated mass blasts.
Yes. Use the referral form to introduce performers, hair/makeup artists, videographers, or crew you have worked with—only with their permission. We do not pay cash affiliate commissions; referrals get a fair read and we credit your intro when we book someone you named.
We list a small curated wardrobe & prep shop with performer reviews. Some items can be bought on our platform (we ship); others link to partner retailers. Nothing in the shop is required to apply for casting, and we moderate reviews before they publish.
Yes. Home, FAQ, guide, apply, catalog pages, and more include Share tools—copy link, QR code, email-a-friend form (with anti-spam check), social apps, OS share sheet, or print/PDF.
We use submissions strictly to evaluate casting suitability and correspond about opportunities. See the privacy notice for retention timelines and privacy rights.
This site and application flow are oriented toward women applicants 18+ for the roles we recruit. If that is not you, the general safety advice in our guide may still be useful elsewhere.
Mandatory instant decisions, explicit media before contracts, random fees to “join books,” and faceless companies refusing verifiable addresses—all walk-away signals.
Ready to apply? Go to the secure application form. Still researching? Read the career guide.