Tuesday, December 1, 2009

A Letter and a Girl

The script I am currently working on is a special project of mine. I will not lie to my very impatient mind. This project will take years to complete. Though the sound of that doesn't sit well with me, I always keep in mind the end product. And for me, the amount of years it will take will be worth it for the final piece. The story is a drama and it tells a tale of life, death, and the reviving power of second chances. Stay tuned for updates on this touching tale that I would like to share with audiences the world over!

Visions of Ardor: From My Vitamin Energy Spec Commercial





Photoshoot with Nastassia A. Davis

So I showed up at a photography studio on the 16th of November with my compact 04 Vitara crammed with loads of props for my photoshoot “close-up”. I was kinda in this, “Oh I’ll just bring that too!” mood that day. After meeting with the talented photographer Nastassia Davis, in the studio, our minds got busy contemplating on how to create some interesting images. After viewing the result of our collaboration, I think we are looking forward to future collaborations. It was a fun experience working with her, since she has this adept and innate ability to transform what’s in my head into reality. I spoke of what my ideas were, and she, like a magician, made it happen out of thin air. In the end, she did an amazing job. She is an up and coming artist with a unique vision and I invite you to take a look at more of her photography at blogspot or on facebook.




Friday, September 25, 2009

Emmy-Winning Actor to Lead Hollywood Union

September 24, 2009

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LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Character actor Ken Howard was elected president of the Screen Actors Guild on Thursday, the union said, four days after he won an Emmy for the HBO TV movie "Grey Gardens."

Howard, representing a moderate faction in the bitterly divided union, won 47 percent of the vote in a poll to replace Alan Rosenberg, who did not seek a third two-year term.

Rosenberg belongs to a hardline faction that unsuccessfully opposed a new employment contract with the studios earlier this year. He backed Anne-Marie Johnson, who won 33 percent of the vote for the unpaid post.

Howard, 65, has proposed closer ties with the smaller Hollywood union AFTRA (the American Federation of Television and Radio Artists) in order to give actors more clout at the bargaining table. SAG members narrowly scuttled a merger in 2003, when Melissa Gilbert led the union.

"Despite the sharp differences that those of us active in guild affairs sometimes have over strategy and tactics, we need to continually remind ourselves that we're all on the same team, fighting for the same thing -- and by pulling together, we'll only grow stronger," Howard said in a statement.

Howard was honored on Sunday for his supporting role as Phelan Beale, ex-husband of "Big" Edie Beale in "Grey Gardens," a project based on the documentary about a pair of eccentric socialites who lived in squalor.

In other races on the ballot, moderates tightened their overall control of the union by winning more seats on SAG's 71-member national board.

(Writing by Dean Goodman)

Copyright 2009 Reuters News Service. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Twitter Funded by Investors including T. Rowe Price

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By Brian Womack and Joseph Galante

Sept. 25 (Bloomberg) -- Twitter Inc., the social-networking site used by everyone from Oprah Winfrey to British royalty, received a “significant” round of venture capital financing from firms including T. Rowe Price Group Inc.

Other investors include Insight Venture Partners, Institutional Venture Partners, Spark Capital and Benchmark Capital, Twitter said today on its blog. Twitter’s previous round of funding was $35 million in February, bringing its total at the time to more than $50 million. The company has yet to report any significant revenue.

The company could use its latest investment for acquisitions and product development, said Charlene Li, an analyst with Altimeter Group LLC in San Mateo, California. Twitter also could be preparing for an eventual initial public offering, rather than trying to be acquired by a larger company, she said. The Wall Street Journal reported this week that Twitter was close to raising $100 million in funding, valuing the company at about $1 billion.

“It’s interesting to see almost 10 years since we had the first Internet bubble that we’ve now got billion-dollar valuations on companies that haven’t defined how they’re going to monetize their traffic,” said David Garrity, principal at GVA Research LLC in New York. “It would be nice to see how the company is going to: one, generate revenues, and two, generate profits.”

Revenue Plan

A $1 billion valuation would make Twitter about the size of bookseller Barnes & Noble Inc. and about twice the size of online travel agent Orbitz Worldwide Inc.

Twitter, founded in 2006, is now preparing a revenue plan. It intends to add services for businesses that will generate sales in the fourth quarter, co-founderBiz Stone said earlier this month.

The products might include an “analytics dashboard” that would help companies monitor Tweets about their business, or verified corporate accounts on Twitter, he said. The San Francisco-based company also is leaving the door open for advertising, Twitter said on its blog earlier this month.

Twitter attracted 25 million users in August, compared with 2.2 million a year earlier, according to Nielsen Co. in New York. The site, embraced by celebrities such as Britney Spears and Ashton Kutcher, lets people post messages of up to 140 characters.

“Where you have audiences, you will make money,” said Ellen Siminoff, a former Yahoo! Inc. executive who last year co- founded education Web site Shmoop University Inc. in Mountain View, California.

Venture Slump

The latest investment round comes in a slow period for the venture capital industry. Venture investments declined 51 percent last quarter to $3.7 billion from a year earlier, according to PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP and the National Venture Capital Association.

Venture capitalists have put fewer dollars into early-stage startups and invested most of it in their existing portfolio companies to keep them afloat while the IPO and acquisitions markets remain blocked.

Twitter, founded by Chief Executive Officer Evan Williams with partners Jack Dorsey and Stone, rejected an offer to be acquired by Facebook Inc. last year,Todd Chaffee, general partner at Institutional Investors, said in an interview earlier this year.

Twitter’s investors plan to retain it as an independent media company, he said.

“They could still be acquired by somebody, but when you get into valuations at that level, acquisitions get harder and harder” because the investors are looking for an exit price that is “higher than anyone would be willing to pay for it,” Altimeter’s Li said.

To contact the reporters on this story: Brian Womack in San Francisco atbwomack1@bloomberg.netJoseph Galante in San Francisco atjgalante3@bloomberg.net

Last Updated: September 25, 2009 13:57 EDT 


Wednesday, July 22, 2009

Getting Started

Alright so I have a production idea and I'm preparing a presentation for it. Hopefully it will get some traction and some funding. Wish me luck!

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