Kept waiting an hour-and-a-half, lots of people there running around making phone calls and whispering about things, including people I recognize like Jeff Greenberg and director Gil Junger. It gives the impression that they are excited about somebody and they are trying to make a deal but can't get it all together. As a result, the audition process comes to a halt while calls are made and people are reached. For the growing number of actors in the waiting room, there is a sense that we are no longer needed. They obviously have put together their cast in the last 10 minutes, and they just need to get through the rest of us so they can go home and prepare for their pilot. It doesn't help matters that once in the room, both people I know, Jeff and Gil, are not in the room. I know they are in the building, and I have to assume they have taken part in casting decisions prior to my reading, but for this appearance before the writers, it's just me and them and the casting assistant reading the scene with me. And yet, despite all of that, I thought I did a really good job with the scene. I had a couple of interesting bits that it seemed the writers liked, they laughed at things, I did all the things I wanted, and yet it appears to be going no further. Timing.