Filming Begins For CBS Reality Series
MUNCIE — A stretch limousine provided a backdrop for camera crews filming five celebrities in front of City Hall this morning.
Erik Estrada, Latoya Jackson, Wee Man, Jack Osbourne and Trish Stratus appeared in public for the first time in Muncie this morning for an upcoming show involving famous people who become city police officers.
Cameras rolled as officer Scott O’Dell stood at the door of City Hall barking orders at celebs on the sidewalk below.
“You the new recruits?” he asked them as they stood in front of the limousine. “You got what it takes to be Muncie’s finest?”
Producers filmed three or four takes and then moved the celebrities inside City Hall, which was off limits to media and public.
O’Dell, an investigator with the Muncie-Delaware County Drug Task Force, rarely wears a uniform and is more likely to be seen wearing a T-shirt with the sleeves cut off or a hooded sweatshirt.
His friends, Natalie Gibbons and David Long, watched from across the street. They guessed he became the face of the Muncie Police Department because of his funny personality and intimidating stature.
Gibbons and Long were part of about a dozen gawkers along High Street at 11 a.m.
“The only ones I really knew about was Wee Man and Jack Osbourne,” Gibbons said. “But my mom was really excited about that other man (Estrada). She said he played a police officer along time ago.”
by nick werner
source: thestarpress.com
Erik Estrada, Latoya Jackson, Wee Man, Jack Osbourne and Trish Stratus appeared in public for the first time in Muncie this morning for an upcoming show involving famous people who become city police officers.
Cameras rolled as officer Scott O’Dell stood at the door of City Hall barking orders at celebs on the sidewalk below.
“You the new recruits?” he asked them as they stood in front of the limousine. “You got what it takes to be Muncie’s finest?”
Producers filmed three or four takes and then moved the celebrities inside City Hall, which was off limits to media and public.
O’Dell, an investigator with the Muncie-Delaware County Drug Task Force, rarely wears a uniform and is more likely to be seen wearing a T-shirt with the sleeves cut off or a hooded sweatshirt.
His friends, Natalie Gibbons and David Long, watched from across the street. They guessed he became the face of the Muncie Police Department because of his funny personality and intimidating stature.
Gibbons and Long were part of about a dozen gawkers along High Street at 11 a.m.
“The only ones I really knew about was Wee Man and Jack Osbourne,” Gibbons said. “But my mom was really excited about that other man (Estrada). She said he played a police officer along time ago.”
by nick werner
source: thestarpress.com
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