Page 167

By Jack Joseph Smith

/53 He had ‘epened the door to the penthouse efficess The receptionist had ‘been startled te see that: he no-longer -dtessed like his pictures; She montered’ in that he wasstherey putting upon her tonque an accent, and upon her lips Looking back up te him, a worried smile, He accepted her with the grace-of* his palms turned ‘outward’ at the slant ef relaxed’ ‘ wristss A door opened, and'the usher lea them in a slow walk through the troops, An army of secret= ary's embracing their machines with clicking finge erg;: their singular actions multipling into waver lengths, the embodied’ roar of a: metal seas He reflected’ laying ‘back now laying back on: his: : bed reaching a stone, reaching something te hold “ — om te acsurate-enough to justify this last’ exper ience -ef rejection, His mind was: remaining en the opening walk through. these type preferming delles' x "Shit mar," he said to himself aloud, his ‘back arching up from the bed’ pulling his muscles, his: mouth and ‘eyes:in a-thin smile his acting could have easily: turned into wicked; "that place-wasn!'t: tibte or comity not classic or romantics that was: a Wilsire-Bulvdj Wall: street," Walking through the huge reen, with the far wall sidéd’expansively im glassy he had winked'at one ef the smartly dressed ‘working girls, Through the

Original Scan

Page 167

AI Interpretation

GPT

The audition memory turns the office into a mechanical theatre of power, where Jiven Joe recognizes that rejection comes from being too fully formed to fit the commercial machine.

Its strongest image is the office as an army of secretaries and metal-sea noise. The page makes talent less important than institutional moldability, and Jiven Joe's wounded pride comes from knowing that what disqualifies him is precisely what feels most real about him.


Claude

Jiven Joe's audition memory turns the office into a mechanical theatre of power, where he recognizes the script before it is spoken. The page is his first long internal monologue.