DOES IT MAKE SENSE TO APPLY TO BE A CONTESTANT ON GNTM?!
GNTM is first and foremost a TV show. Reach, drama, personality, and storytelling are just as much a focus as traditional modeling skills. It’s important to recognize this objectively.
For a new model, this means that anyone who participates isn’t just signing up for a modeling competition, but for a public TV show with a clear narrative structure. Your own personality becomes part of an entertainment show. This can bring enormous visibility and accelerate growth on social media. At the same time, your image is strongly linked to the show, and you have only limited influence over how you are portrayed.
The direct route through a modeling agency works differently. Here, the focus is on long-term development: portfolio development, test shoots, initial castings, market positioning, and a clear strategic direction—for example, in the commercial, beauty, or high-fashion sectors. This path is slower but more controlled and often more sustainable.
Whether GNTM makes sense therefore depends heavily on personal goals. Those who want to quickly build reach, media presence, and perhaps influencer potential can benefit from the show. Social media and participating in GNTM do not automatically lead to the same level of success. Even among winners or finalists of the TV show, there are often significant differences in their growth on Instagram and other platforms. While one contestant builds a large and stable community after the season, another’s growth remains significantly lower despite finishing in the same position. This shows that TV exposure alone does not guarantee a sustainable social media career. What matters is whether someone truly understands social media and uses it strategically. Regular content, clear positioning, brand recognition, storytelling, and community engagement play a major role. Those who rely solely on short-term hype often quickly lose relevance. On the other hand, those who develop a clear identity and consistently offer value can benefit in the long term. There is another factor to consider: the audience’s sympathy. Perception and public image in reality TV are heavily shaped by editing, dramaturgy, and storylines. As a contestant, you have only limited influence over this. Nevertheless, it is precisely this public image that determines whether people follow, interact, and stay. This means: visibility through a show can be a springboard, but sustainable success comes from strategic action, personality, and the ability to build a genuine connection with the target audience.
On the other hand, those aiming for a classic, long-term modeling career with an international focus often fare better with a professional agency structure. If you really want to view this decision strategically, you mustn’t think from a model’s perspective, but from that of a creative director: A new TV campaign is on the horizon, the budget is high, and the positioning is clearly defined: exclusivity, elegance, flawlessness. The creative director bears responsibility for the brand’s visual identity. Every casting choice either contributes to the brand image or undermines it.
In such a context, a casting team would weigh very carefully whether a model who has attracted negative attention through TV editing, staged conflicts, or provoked disputes is a viable candidate. A face that has polarized emotions for months on a reality show comes with a media history. In contrast, there is a fresh, neutral face without socially discussed associations that can be fully integrated into the brand’s world.
In the luxury fashion and high-end beauty segments, classic TV faces are comparatively rare. The reason lies in the mechanics of luxury: luxury doesn’t sell volume, but projection. A high-end brand wants the product and its aesthetics to take center stage, not a pre-existing story from an entertainment format. The less pre-existing baggage a face brings, the more it can become a projection surface for the brand.
In the drugstore or mass market, however, name recognition can be an advantage. There, reach, recognition, and personality work well because the focus is on volume and broad attention. In the high-price segment, distance, desirability, and controlled presentation take center stage. Here, image clarity matters far more than TV reach.
Ultimately, it comes down to a strategic positioning question. Anyone who wants to serve the luxury market must understand that perception is capital and that not every form of brand awareness automatically adds value to a premium brand.
What matters, therefore, is not which path is “better,” but which one aligns with one’s own personality, resilience, and professional vision.
