I sat outside the office until they were ready for me. Then I sat with three leaders of the bureau. The questions were more or less typical. The second half of the interview, I was put to test: I sat in a room where written instructions were given to me. I had to read them within 10 minutes. Prior to the interview, I had been warned that there'd be a filmed portion to the interview, where I'd act out a scenario. The instructions repeated this, but also included a 2-3 page form that I had to somehow fill out during the acting scenario. A woman asked if I was ready for the next part, and I said sure. I was given a pair of heavy gloves. I had no idea what they were for--the instructions, nor the lady, explained. I then was led to a room, where another woman stood, several large recycling and trash bins overflowed, and a tripod with a camera was already rolling. I was stunned that there was not even a moment to be oriented to what was going on. The woman then started "acting," in the role of a business owner. Except, she came of churlish and confrontational--more like she was acting the role of a teenager sent to bed, than a business owner. All-in-all, except for the typical panel interview, the whole experience was altogether odd. The only ones friendly to me were the three people in the first half of the interview. The front-desk personnel, and the women in the second half of the interview, were quiet and indifferent. After I was done "acting," I was shown the door, and no one gave me any of the standard professional salutations.