Bring Your Daughter to Work Day is a bad idea when you work on a set full of drugged-out actors. Also bad influences are a star who busted her weave and an anti-Semitic speaker. We learned it by watching them.

1. "Which Celebrity mom and network TV star with a teenage daughter just walked in to find her underage little girl doing a line with one of her adult co-stars? Not Teri Hatcher." [BuzzFoto]

2. "A few years ago, it seemed this actress was cast in nearly every project. However, after an initial burst of fame, she wasn't very discriminating about which roles she picked. A few bombs later, she fell out of the limelight. Wanting to make a comeback with a strong new look, she cut her long hair into a shorter, more contemporary style. Bad move. She was now too boyish looking to land anything. So she had hair extensions put in using a glue bonding process to return her to a more feminine look. Prior to one audition, she made the mistake of using a hot iron to straighten her hair. During the audition, she ran her fingers through her hair a little too roughly and pulled out a couple of the extensions right in front of the director. She was left standing there with a fistful of hair and a very red face, babbling about how she couldn't understand how this could possibly happen when she paid so much money for the extensions, etc." [BlindGossip]

3. "This past weekend this C list cable reality star who had his own show spoke at an event addressing tattoos, taboos and Jews but he did talk a bit about his TV show as well. As an admittedly non-practicing Jew he was asked if he had any Jewish tattoos. His reply? "I have a dollar sign on my hand." Some in the audience laughed, most did not. Know your audience dude. He recognized how reality TV had changed his life financially for the better and that it opened many doors for him, but he also spent considerable time complaining about the show. He did not enjoy it and never wanted to do subsequent season(s) but was tied to obligations in his contract. He complained about how the producers wanted to make each episode about death. He felt less like an artist and more like he was playing psychiatrist to the customers. He seemed very bitter about the experience." [CDaN]