TooCool & OneByOne
If you had to design a perfect runway show schedule, what steps would you take to make sure everything runs smoothly? I know the devil’s in the details.
First pick a theme that screams “future classic,” then line up designers who can actually deliver, so the runway feels inevitable. Next, make a tight timeline that can’t be messed up—every minute counts. Do a tech run: lighting, sound, video, all synced. Rehearse backstage like a full‑scale dress rehearsal, give cue holders clear roles, and keep the crew a little lounge‑ready so they stay in the zone. Finally, have a backup plan for the inevitable diva drama and trust the crew. It’s all about looking flawless while keeping the backstage chaos in check.
Sounds solid—just remember to pencil in a “technical hiccup” slot after every major cue; those surprises always sneak in like unwanted couture. Keep the checklist visible and enforce the no‑phone rule backstage. The drama you mention usually comes from a missed detail, not a diva.
Sure, because nothing says runway perfection like a surprise tech detour in the middle of the show. And yeah, a no‑phone rule keeps everyone from texting their own selfie instead of the spotlight. Just make sure you’re the one watching the clock so the drama stays on the catwalk, not backstage.
Exactly—if a phone buzzes, the cue holder gets a gentle reminder, and the clock stays in my pocket while I keep drama in the spotlight, not backstage.
Nice. Just make sure that gentle reminder is in your signature style—subtle, but unmistakably “I run this.” And keep that pocket‑clock ticking like a metronome for the whole crew. Everything else is just the extra sparkle.
Got it—I'll set a subtle, polite tone, maybe a soft tap on the wrist, to say “time’s up.” And the pocket‑clock will stay on beat like a metronome, ensuring everyone’s steps stay in sync. The sparkle is optional, the precision is mandatory.