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girls of deal or no deal briefcase model lauren shiohama made a big decision to not take a surgical knife to her beautiful body like so many other girls of deal or no deal have, in the claevage department. lauren is a beautiful and sexy hot asian model who left the boobs to what her parents gave her and the gift of beauty from the creator.
lauren shiohama is a girl of deal or no deal and has not undergone a boob job. they are real, and we love her.
While the girls of deal or no deal may dress alike, with matching dresses and costumes and briefcases, they each are unique individuals. Each girl of deal or no deal, is a sexy, hot babe who is either a model, actress or both. She is good at looking beautiful before the camera. Enjoy the screenshots that were found on myspace by one of the thousands of fans of the girls of deal or no deal.
The New York Times story about the girls of deal or no deal.
What a wonderful story that focuses on the girls of deal or no deal. Very informative, many original behind the scene photos in the original in the NY Times. We think you will learn much in the following story.
You Think It’s Easy to Schlep Those Cases in Four-Inch Heels?
Behind the scenes with the suitcase-holding models of “Deal or No Deal.” Although no contestant has won the $1 million grand prize in its two and a half years, the show is an unqualified success
CULVER CITY, Calif. — Minutes before showtime on the set of “Deal or No Deal,” Wendi San George, the program’s chief stylist, is trying to head off a crisis.
Jenelle Moreno, the bearer of suitcase No. 17, is just back from a beach vacation, and her tan is gleaming under the lights. “Can we just put some powder on her chest?” Ms. San George whispers frantically into her walkie-talkie as 2 of the show’s 14 makeup artists scurry across the stage.
“Lisa has a black dot on her left knee,” Ms. San George reports, referring to Lisa Gleave, the carrier of suitcase No. 3. “Then come over to No. 5,” also known as Ursula Mayes. “Her part is really funky to me. Put it in the middle with no bangs like it usually is. And where is Anya?”
The reply crackles back over the radio: “Wardrobe malfunction.” Soon enough Anya Monzikova, holding suitcase No. 10, rushes onstage pulling at the upper portion of her red sequined halter dress, trying to keep what little fabric there is covering at least a portion of her left breast.
For the 26 women who take the stage each week on the NBC hit game show, life is not all glamour and sequins and witty repartee with the host, Howie Mandel. At this taping in mid-January, for instance, there was the 14-hour workday, 8 ½ hours of which involved some or all of the models standing on an Arctic-like soundstage in short, short sleeveless dresses and four-inch heels.
The models are a popular part of this game show that “has no trivia, no stunts, no skill,” as Mr. Mandel put it. “The first time I heard about it, I thought, there’s no game.” One television critic, Phil Rosenthal of The Chicago Tribune, put it less delicately, calling the program an elaborate version of “How many fingers do I have behind my back?”
The game is played like this: A contestant chooses one of 26 suitcases, each worth an amount of money, from 1 cent to $1 million. Leaving that chosen case unopened, the contestant opens the remaining cases, a few at a time, and the amounts assigned to them are wiped off the board. Periodically a caller known as the banker and working for the producers offers the contestant an amount of money to stop playing and give up the sum in the originally selected case. The trick is, that amount might be $1 million — or 1 cent.
Despite having no contestant win the $1 million grand prize in two and a half years of production, “Deal or No Deal’ is an unqualified success. (In a continuing effort to give away the $1 million top prize, the producers have periodically increased the number of $1 million cases, to 12 of the 26 in Wednesday’s episode, scheduled for 8 p.m.)
The program’s average ratings have fallen only slightly from its first season to its current, the third, when it has regularly drawn 15 million viewers per episode. One measure of the show’s success is a soon-to-come spinoff, a half-hour syndicated version that will air five days a week. Mr. Mandel now calls the show “the most exciting thing I’ve ever done.”
The models are an important part of the prime-time success, said Scott St. John, an executive producer. “There is, of course, the visual appeal they have, but it goes beyond that,” he said. “They have wit and charm, and we let that come through on the show.”
They are a diverse group. Stacey Gardner, the usual holder of suitcase No. 2, graduated from law school and says she passed the California bar exam in 2005. Pilar Lastra, No. 14, was Playboy’s Miss August 2004. Aliké Boggan, No. 20, interprets services for the hearing-impaired at her church. Aubrie Lemon, who usually carries No. 23 but who was No. 6 at a recent taping, plays the harp and says she passed the qualifying exam for Mensa.
“It’s nice to kind of exercise my brain a little bit and show I still have it up there,” Ms. Lemon said. “It can just go numb if you sit here for 10 or 12 hours. But a lot of us here are very smart. You would be surprised because we all have this Barbie-doll facade.”
Models have a long history with game shows. “The Price Is Right” had Barker’s Beauties; “Let’s Make a Deal” had Carol Merrill. And, of course, “Wheel of Fortune” made Vanna White a household name.
But no game show has a veritable army of women that is as much a part of the show as the host and the contestants. And in dramatic terms the producers use them to spectacular effect, with an over-the-horizon march at the top of each episode that is one of the most visually compelling entrances on television.
In a lot of modeling ensembles, particularly those that have the goal of making the women uniform, all the models would have to be a similar height. But here they range from 5 foot 4 to over 6 feet. Their dresses, however, are designed so that their hems form a continuous line across a row of four to six women.
Chosen by Dina Cerchione, the costume designer, the dresses are discovered on the rack at a store and then ordered from the manufacturer in lots of 33. Often they are evening gowns that, over three fittings with each model, are cut to miniskirt length. Shoes too tend to be off the rack, from brands like Alfani, Nina and Aldo.
“I think we want to be sexy, but we are a family show,” Ms. Cerchione said. Sexy often wins out, however. Dresses emphasize certain parts of the models’ anatomy — not their clavicles — and it is not much of a secret that some of the women have been surgically enhanced in those areas. (Others simply receive extra padding.)
But the rest of their features — ethnicity, hair color — make the models individually distinct.
“With 26 girls you can’t have all blondes or all brunettes,” said J. C. Carollo, the model casting director. “You have to spice things up.” More than half of the models have been with the show since its beginning, but there is turnover and demand for new talent. While several of the models said they could live just on what they earn from the show, it shoots only two or three days every three weeks. That leaves plenty of time for them to pursue other modeling jobs — a key practice in a profession where the span of career is often only a few years.
The models themselves dismiss the notion that they are little more than eye candy.
“I would be very upset if someone said that to me,” said Lindsay Clubine, bearer of suitcase No. 26. “The girls here are involved in a lot of different charities.” Like Marisa Petroro, No. 18, for example. She had a tumor removed from her arm on her 19th birthday and underwent a year of chemotherapy and radiation; she now is a national spokeswoman for the Sarcoma Foundation of America.
“The girls here are not like Lindsay Lohan or Paris Hilton,” Ms. Clubine said. “They are pretty, but they have good heads on their shoulders.”
girlsofdealornodeal.com was recently contacted by the casting director for girls of deal or no deal. She said her name is JC Carollo. If you are a beautiful and sexy hot babe and think you would make a great girl on deal or no deal,
please contact JC Carollo at 310-202-3362.
Good Luck, and we hope to see you on TV and on girlsofdealornodeal.com
We do not represent any of the girls of deal or no deal, nor do we have any connection with the production of deal or no deal, nor do we work for their parent company or TV network. We are simply fans of the girls of deal or no deal.
How could you not be a fan of the sexy hot babes of girls of deal or no deal?
If you look at the list of girls photos on the right side of this website / blog, you will not find the photo of this girl. In an exclusive candid photo, we bring you the newest girls of deal or no deal. She is the newest girl of deal or no deal and she is black. We are so happy to find a beautiful girl like this was hired to be one of the girls of deal or no deal. If you have any details of who this girl is, please let us know. (Its not claudia, and its not alike.) Also in this photo is sexy babes aubrie lemon and lyndsay clubine as well as the super sexy newest girl of deal or no deal lina roudiva
Could this be one of the newest girls of deal or no deal? Even if its not a new girl of deal or no deal, this is an exclusive candid photo of 2 very hot babes. Visit us every day for new updates on the girls of deal or no deal.
This girl of deal or no deal is a sexy asian babe named mylinda tov, aka #19. This is an exclusive candid photo backstage of the girls of deal or no deal.
girls of deal or no deal exclusive candid photo of mylinda tov #19 and lina roudiva
Welcome back to our exclusive behind the scenes candid photos and stories of the girls of deal or no deal. We all want to know who Lina Roudiva was replacing, and the full story as to what happened and other changes to deal or no deal. In thew meantime, hear is some candid photos of girls of deal or no deal.