Dozens of hopeful future actors and models lined up in front of a camera recently at an open casting call in northeast Minneapolis.
They posed for photographs standing, sitting, lying down and perched on a table as a talent scout evaluated them for possible work as models for print ads or actors in commercials, television shows and even movies.
You might think they were motivated by the potential for fame and fortune, but most of them probably were there for the dried beef lung treats.
That's because these would-be thespians and wannabe models were dogs.
The audition was an event held by the Twin Cities Obedience Training Club to give pet owners a chance to show off their animals in front of Debi Pool, longtime owner of Animal Talent Pool, a Twin Cities animal talent agency.

The canines — plus at least one cat and a couple of rabbits — strutted their stuff before Pool with talents that included balancing toys on their heads, wearing funny glasses, speaking or waving a paw on command, fetching a can of soda out of a cooler and generally just looking adorable.
Several dogs — and their owners — took it seriously enough to spend the previous six weeks getting ready for their shot in showbiz by taking a new class offered by the Twin Cities Training Obedience Club.
The class, "Camera Ready: Green Room," was sort of a four-legged version of "Fame" in which dogs learned skills that would come in handy when the time came for their close-up.