I- I THE CALL, ROBERT R. McELROY-NEWSWEEK Appetite for the unexpected: Seal was chosen from among1,200students who tried out MTV's New Anarchic Force Giving up engineering for the video limelight I our average man will shave before a job interview, but Kevin Seal is not your average man. As the tape rolled for his audition to be a veejay on MTV, he smeared himself with shaving cream. Then, shaving wildly, he spread the stuff around his face, his hair and his tie. The accompanying spiel included references to Richard Nixon's beard, disposable razors and a roommate at the University of Wash- ington who had steamed up the mirror back at the dorm, preventing Seal from shaving there. "Remember 1960?" he asked. "I don't." The audition ended abruptly as Seal shifted to the slow, dweebish whine favored by sitcom account- ants: "I also have experience in cost estima- tion . .. and project a-nal-ysis." Seal got the job. MTV picked his anar- chic personality from among 1,200 would- be veejays who auditioned on 10 campuses around the country. "He jumped out of the screen," explains Lee Masters, the music channel's general manager. "MTV has got to have that percentage of programming that's weird, unusual and unexpected, and Kevin represents something new and dif- ferent." That he does. An engineering ma- jor who did not graduate after six years in college, Seal sometimes treats MTV as abig science project. Smirking, he has donned goggles to smash a radio with a hammer (joking about "breaking new music") and held a Suzanne Vega album near the danc- ing flames of a barbecue grill. "It's true," he says. "I don't take this job that seriously." One thing Seal does regard with a meas- ure of seriousness is music. The 24-year-old favors bluegrass and Elvis Costello and Husker Du and The Clash, but he's not wild about the commercial stuff that dominates the radio waves-and MTV. "I find it a bit of a yawn," he admits. "I guess I am endors- ing it by my presence, but it wasn't my idea to put it there." Pushing more mainstream fare makes him rich but not proud. "It's a sales job," he says plainly. "You have to sell things you otherwise wouldn't buy." Seal's boss says that style makes the veejay more appealing. "I am delighted that his tastes are more avant-garde than commercial," says Masters. "It makes him a more inter- esting person." Dam the Amazon: Others see promise, too. Seal began getting calls from agents and movie producers after a month on the job and a promotional appearance on the "To- day" show. But if nothing in show business should develop and MTV lets him go after, his one-year contract, the would-be engi- neer promises to fall back on his academic training. How? Seal says he could dam the Amazon ("No, someone else is working on it!" he suddenly recalls) or patent a table- top paper shredder to take care of credit- card carbons ("We'll call it the Fawn"). And should that not work out, there's always what led to his current job. He could be- come a barber. MARK D. UEHLING fl od's call . .. it still happens. It's not always the clearest connection-there can be a lot of static on the line. You have a sense of urgency to serve the needs of your sisters and brothers. But it takes a sensitive ear, a compassionate heart to hear that call. The Missionary Ohlates of Mary Immaculate, as a congregation of priests and brothers, try to attune themselves to God's call. They can help you with that sensi- tive ear and heart so you can understand more clearly God's call. Write them today. A IS;SIONARY of MARY IMM CULATE P.O. Box 377781, Chicago, IL 60637 1 SEPTEMBER 1987