Enter the inner sanctums of Hollywood’s power-brokers and learn how they influence what pitches get bought, what projects get sold, and which writers get hired. Find tips from top-level executives, agents, managers, producers, and writers to help you maximize your own representation and kick your career into overdrive!
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A Writer’s Guide to Hollywood Representation. Chad Gervich, Television writer/producer, Beverly Hills, CA, USA
Key Features:
- Includes advice from top-level executives, agents, managers, producers, and writers
- Very prominent author who’s sat on both sides of the fence: the business and the creative, given him unprecedented access and insight
Have you written the script for the next box office blockbuster or hit TV show and just need the right agent to sell it? Not sure whether to accept an if-come deal or a script commitment? Debating which manager is the right choice to steer your career? Well, worry no more...
How to Manage Your Agent is a fun, friendly guide to the world of literary representation. Enter the inner sanctums of Hollywood’s power-brokers and learn how they influence what pitches get bought, what projects get sold, and which writers get hired.
Find tips from top-level executives, agents, managers, producers, and writers to help you maximize your own representation and kick your career into overdrive! You’ll learn:
- How agents prioritize their client list... and ways to guarantee you’re at the top
- ?When to approach new representation... and what you need to capture their interest
- Hollywood’s secret buying schedule... and how to ensure you’re on it
- The truth about packaging... where it helps and when it hurts
- Which agents are best for you... and where to find them
- Advice on acing your first agent meeting... and why so many writers blow it
- Managers’ tricks for creating buzz... and when to use them yourself
- How to fire your agent... without killing your career
- When you don’t need representation... and how to succeed without it
The value of good representation is undeniable—especially in a world where agents and managers control which projects (and careers) live or die.
How to Manage Your Agent puts you on the inside track to get your work the attention it deserves!
"The writer/representative relationship can be tricky for writers
and representatives to navigate. But thanks to Chad’s book, it just got a whole lot easier!"?
-- Noah Rosen, Manager, Circle of Confusion; Producer,
Dan in Real Life
"All eager, creative hopefuls should have a clear understanding of an agency's place in the entertainment industry and what an agent truly does before picking the person who will be representing their creative voice around town. Simply put, anyone who has the questions: ‘Why doesn't my agent call me back; what does s/he do all day??’, ‘My agent is telling me that I need another new sample!! What should I write and why?’, or ‘How do agents pitch me to executives?’ should read this book."
--Christel Miller, Network Executive, Current Programming, NBC
"Chad is that rare writer that not only has written for series television and sold pilots, he has the ability to take a confusing subject and make it accessible and understandable to writers and aspiring writers of any level. This book is AWESOME. Do yourself a favor, buy it, read it, then read it again."
-- Aaron Korsh, Creator/Executive Producer,
Suits
"The author has produced a veritable 'bible' on every aspect the role that agencies fulfil, truly the work of a man who has been there, done that, worn the tee-shirt and made the film!"
--Wendy Laybourn, Network Nine
Contents:
REPRESENT: No Vocation Without Representation; Types of Representation; Anatomy of an Agency; FEATURE AGENTS: Quick Overview of the Feature Business; Original Material—Specs and Pitches; Writers-for-Hire—Development, Open Assignments, and Rewriters; TELEVISION AGENTS: A Quick Overview of the TV Business; Staffing Season…or, How Agents Help Clients Get Hired; Development Season…or, Selling Your Own TV Show; Reality Agents; OTHER TYPES OF LITERARY AGENTS: Book Agents; Theater Agents; Video Game Agents; Digital Media Agents; YOU AND YOUR AGENT: Finding and Agent; Working with Your Agent; Parting Ways with an Agent; Networking in Hollywood; Getting Your Own Job in Hollywood; APPENDIXES: Glossary, Agency Contact Info, Professional Orgs and Associations; Schools, Classes, and Workshops; Contest and Festivals, Books & Periodicals; Websites, Chatrooms, & Blogs