I Get Paid to Cuss at Cops: Jen Potcher on Acting & Female Film Slayers | The Essence of You Podcast
In this episode of The Essence of You, host Steph Lokelani sits down with Jen Potcher - an actor, singer, and karaoke host based in Boise - for a wide-ranging conversation about the many lives of a working actor and the power of women supporting women.
Jen pulls back the curtain on her work as a "standardized patient" and role player: an actor who steps into realistic scenarios for nursing schools, police academies, the Department of Correction, genetic counseling telehealth sessions, and even fair housing discrimination testing. She talks candidly about the emotional toll of playing victims, perpetrators, and everything in between, the validating moments that remind her why the work matters, and the hustle of piecing together a living as a working actor.
The conversation then shifts to Jen's proudest accomplishment: founding Female Film Slayers, a Boise-based community of women in film born out of a need for connection, safety, and support in an industry that can be tough on women both in front of and behind the camera. Jen walks through the group's evolution, from karaoke nights and a living-room makeup class to four award-winning short films: "#Ded," the 13 Stories musical "A Pack of Cigarettes and 11 Cents," the festival-winning "Pinky Promise," and their most ambitious project yet, "Bluebird," a mob-and-trafficking thriller shot at the Egyptian Theater (complete with a real fire alarm scare that may have saved the historic building).
Steph and Jen close out with a reflection on identity beneath the titles, and a peek into Jen's life as a karaoke host at the Balcony Club, where - as she puts it - everyone is a rock star.
About Jen Potcher:
Jen Potcher is a local actress, singer, and filmmaker who has spent more than three decades honing her craft in theater and film. Audiences can catch her solving crimes in The Dinner Detective Interactive Murder Mystery Show or performing the National Anthem at sporting and community events throughout the Treasure Valley.
By day, Jen brings realism to nursing and law enforcement training programs through simulation-based acting. Her proudest accomplishment, however, is founding The Female Film Slayers of Idaho. What began as a social and support group for women in film has evolved into an award-winning team of fierce female filmmakers dedicated to creating original stories and uplifting one another's voices. Their latest film, Blue Bird, was recognized with multiple awards at the Idaho Film Family Festival, where the team earned honors for directing, cinematography, and acting, including Best Actress, and Best Supporting Actress for Jen. Bluebird is currently on the festival circuit.
A passionate advocate for the arts and a proud ally, Jen can also be found hosting karaoke every Sunday night at The Balcony Club, Idaho's premier LGBTQ+ nightclub.
Key Takeaways:
* "Standardized patient" and role-player acting work is a legitimate, ongoing career path. Jen acts in realistic training scenarios for nursing schools, multiple police academies, the Department of Correction, genetic counseling telehealth sessions, and fair housing discrimination testing.
* This kind of acting carries real emotional weight. Running the same intense scenario dozens of times in a day - crying, screaming, playing victims or perpetrators - is exhausting in a way people outside the industry rarely recognize.
* Validating moments (a former police trainee crediting a scenario for a life lesson learned, or being asked to demo a technique no one had seen a role player do before) help combat the imposter syndrome that even experienced actors constantly feel.
* Acting careers are built through relationships and persistence, not a single break. Jen's path started with a friend's tip about River City Entertainment in 2018, then snowballed through referrals into Boise State, Grand Canyon University, multiple police academies, and beyond.
* Female Film Slayers was born from a real, felt need: women in the local film industry needed a safe space to support each other, share information, and combat the isolation of working with the same talented women without ever really getting to know them.
* Big creative projects don't require expertise up front, they require a willingness to learn together. Female Film Slayers' four films show a clear and rapid growth curve in production quality, built one project at a time.
* Inclusion was a deliberate choice. On "Bluebird," every single person who auditioned was offered a role, with the team finding creative ways to weave in extras, fight performers, and first-time crew members.
* Community accountability matters. Female Film Slayers exists in part to give women a place to bring concerns about harassment on set and figure out, together, how to respond and support one another.
* Karaoke hosting, much like Jen's other work, is about giving people their moment. Her hosting philosophy: "everyone at my show is a rock star," regardless of skill level.
Chapters:
00:00 – Cold open: dollar movie nights and the joy of going solo
00:52 – Welcome to The Essence of You & meeting Jen Potcher
01:00 – How Steph and Jen met, and the staged reading "Being Jane Eyre"
06:57 – You don't have to go to Hollywood: becoming a "standardized patient"
09:15 – Police academies, the Department of Correction & telehealth genetic counseling
12:58 – Scripts vs. improv in training scenarios
17:08 – Getting into role-player work, quitting her day job, and her first paid gig
20:25 – Fair housing testing and hosting The Dinner Detective murder mystery show
24:21 – The hidden exhaustion of playing different people all day
26:19 – The craziest characters she's been asked to play
28:58 – Why Jen started Female Film Slayers
32:49 – First gatherings: karaoke nights and a community makeup class
34:30 – Future class ideas: gun safety, horses, and harassment protocols
36:27 – How the group got its name
37:08 – First film, "#Ded," and the 13 Stories musical
44:03 – Second film, "Pinky Promise," and its festival wins
50:50 – Fourth film "Bluebird": inspired by The Godfather and Commando
56:02 – Behind the scenes: 31 cast members, fight choreography & cinematographer April Frame
1:01:50 – Why the film is called "Bluebird"
1:02:08 – The Female Film Slayers screening night and the Egyptian Theater fire scare
1:09:44 – Reflecting on the group and what's next
1:12:01 – Closing question: Who are you at your core?
1:13:42 – Life as a karaoke host: "everyone's a rock star"
1:16:52 – Closing thanks and an invitation to join Female Film Slayers