Monthly Archives:September 2018

The Standard Minimum Rate for Actors in Thailand

First off, there is currently no ‘Standard Minimum Rate for Actors’ in Thailand.

Because the system is the way it is, actors are given whatever is deemed right for them – and whatever they accept as their wage.

Actors in thailand
Actors in thailand need to fight for their money – and their rights

Supply and demand:

There is a never-ending influx of Russia, Eastern European, and Iranian models that come from an industry where rates are much lower than here. Some are trained, some are not, all have a dream and want to survive. This influx of talent pushes the rates down, because: They Just Don’t Know what people are being paid here.

So the question is:

What are you willing to work for?

This is the big question and the hardest to answer.

Standard Minimum Rates for Extras:

For extras the going rate right now is 2000,- baht for a day’s work 12hrs). If it is below that it is too low. Some agents post jobs for 1500 baht, and even lower. You don’t want to go there.

The going rate is 2000,- for one day of work.

This is for commercial, film, thai tv, everything.

I start off with extras because it is the easiest. The most straight forward. Everything else is more tricky and more complicated. It always depends on your negotiating skills, their budget, your skills and how bad they really want you.

There is room for argument about flexible rates, but I will write about that in another article.

Standard Minimum Rate for Actors in Commercial Work / Advertisement

The widest range we probably have in Commercial Work / Advertisement. Producing a commercial gets cheaper and cheaper, you need less equipment, less crew, less lighting, it takes less effort to upload something. So we have more commercials, but each gets less exposure. Hence the rates for actors are going down. Especially in a market-based system without regulations or Unions.

In commercials they differentiate between: Online / TV / Worldwide + Pictures

The following are rates that I have received and that I think are fair.

Online

The cheapest rates are nowadays ‘online’ or what they like to call ‘viral’ commercials. These are low-budget productions usually done by small advertisement firms. Sometimes the term is also misleading, used to push the budget down.

Featured Extra

Any advertisement the featured extra part should pay 10,000 baht. Minus commission that is around 6,500-7,000 baht into the hand of the talent. In my opinion for featured parts that should be the absolute minimum.

Not including the buyout. See more about the buyout below.

Main

Main parts should start from 20,000 baht. Yes, also for virals / online ads. Minus commission of your agent that is between 13,000-14,000 baht in your hands. And that is low.

Worldwide / All Media

All media means all media, tv, online, social media. You will get paid extra if they want to use it on billboards or printed media as well. That should multiply your budget by 2. Always check the region as well. If it is a big advertisement the budget goes up exponentially with each region added. For example: region 1: France; region 2: Germany; Region 3: US/UK. You will get paid extra for each region. The biggest buyout is worldwide since it covers all regions.

Featured Extra

Again, the feautured extras should get paid no less than 10,000 baht. If it is worldwide it should really be 20,000 baht per day or more.

Main

The budget for the main for worldwide exposure should be at least 20,000 baht, but really more like 50,000-100,000 baht up. Up means, for a big campaign it should be more than that.

Remember: For all commercials, there is usually a buyout.

That buyout should be anywhere from 200-2000% of the original budget. This buyout is limited for a certain area and for a certain period of time and is being determined in your contract. So if your budget is 10,000 baht, the buyout can be anywhere between 20,000-200,000 (or more) baht.

If you have a main part in a worldwide ad your budget may be 50,000 baht per day. The buyout should be 100,000-500,000 plus an extra buyout per region, and if they want to use stills for billboards or printed ads you should again be paid a certain amount.

In Thailand a lot of that money ‘disappears’. Talents never see it. You get to see the final budget which is being watered down.

The Standard Minimum Rate for Actors in TV Work

The rates are different for Thai or Foreign TV. Foreign TV usually pays better.

Thai Tv / Film

It really depends on your negotiating skills. I would not work in a speaking part for Thai TV for less than 3,500. That is my minimum. I usually try to aim for 5,000-6,000. If they really like you, you can get 10,000 or more, especially if you can do stunts.

Thai films usually pay a bit less than Thai Tv. The production value or Thai Gilms is higher, the acting better, but there is less money in it. Most of the Thai Films are independent movies. The exposure in the cinemas is low, since Thai people usually prefer to watch the latest Hollywood Blockbuster than a local production with possibly less quality entertainment for the same price. Between 5,000-6,000 Baht per day is common for a speaking part in aThai film.

Foreign TV / Film

Usually I aim for around 10,000 baht per day for a speaking part. But depending on the production and your name it can be 20-30k or even 50,000 baht per day or more

If you are looking for the standard minimum rate for models please click here

If you are looking for the standard minimum rate for dancers please click here

No Selfies, please!  – Using Selfies as a tool for Self promotion is a bad idea!

No Selfies, please!  – Using Selfies as a tool for Self promotion is a bad idea!

Recently I came across a number of people that posted selfies on public boards as a means to getting acting jobs. This is a big No No!

Why?

The main reason is simple: Using selfies makes you look unprofessional.

“You cannot afford someone to hold the camera and take a picture for you”

There are a lot of other reasons I can list here, but they all come back to one thing: a selfie, even a good one is not professional.

It should be an absolute no no to send selfies to casting directors / agent or post them on public boards, such as, but not only the Actors Association.

It sends a message to everyone: you are not willing to invest even the slightest bit in yourself – like having professional pictures taken, which in Bangkok you can do for free at Mikael Ranta’s Studio. Check out his webpage and get in touch with him here: http://rantaimages.com/   

Who wants to hire someone like that?

no selfies for self promotion
no selfies please

Compare this to that:

Portraits

A professional headshot shows that you are serious about what you are doing.

I takes time to have a good picture taken. You need to go to a studio, you need to hire a photographer, the pictures need to be edited, all of this takes work. Work that will show in the final product.

A selfie just shows that you are too lazy to do any of that.

But why?

Your face is your first step into the door of castings. If you want to be an actor, get training, if you want to be a stunt man, get training or stay in shape and if you want to enter a highly competitive industry you need to have something to show for. A good picture can open doors, whereas a selfie can close them just as fast.

Even better would be posting a comp card with all relevant information about yourself and maybe a short bio.

You can easily make your own comp card here: http://compcard.actors-thailand.com/

comp card is better than selfie for self promotion
comp card for self promotion

Where is it acceptable to post selfies?

On your private profile / Instagram it may be ok to post some cool looking selfies. And it is a definite yes for self promotion if you get to work with a star or someone who has a big online / social media following.

If you post a reel of your work, or pictures in different characters / costumes to give people an idea of what you can do. That is perfectly acceptable.