I was browsing the "Bodypainting Day" website for the event and discovered that to be "painted" you had to audition as a model. At one point they "closed" the auditions.
I guess I understand why, but for me it cast a bit of a scripted sheen over the activity. Between the logistics of having it open to any volunteer, to wondering whether you are getting some whacko, it would be a real headache. You never CAN know who you are getting with a genuine random choice from someone wandering the streets of NYC.
Were these working models? Not clear. Were they enthusiastic? Sure seemed that way. Were they a random selection of Americans offering up an opinion of what and how "normal" nudity can be dealt with in a city in America? After reading that, not sure. Maybe they were randomly selected, but the "auditions closed" notice was what caught my attention. Likely that was done in advance, not the day of.
But, the event went as planned and overall seemed to be a good response. Maybe at some point they could do a concurrent smaller staging of truly random people selected right off the street. Sufficiently skilled screeners with the right questions could weed out the weirdos. Or maybe the weirdos would be tolerable. Who knows?
At any rate seeing how someone, that would never in their wildest dream stroll around the City starkers, would react to the prospect of being in downtown* NYC completely naked, would be a wonderful contrast to watching models simply doing their job.
It would add an element of surprise to the day.
Duane
* Not being a NYC resident or native I've never mastered the differences between "downtown", "uptown" and "midtown", or any other "*town" used in the Big Apple. They sound intuitive, but I've always suspected I haven't quite "gotten it".