Agent suggestions?

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bigugly

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Sep 27, 2006
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I am looking for a new agent that can handle TV and print. Can any of you recommend someone that you have had great success with?

Thanks
 
[He was] willing to do just about anything he could to get the biggest possible contracts for his clients, plus a nice commission for himself. Then, one day, he suddenly has second thoughts about what he's really doing. When he voices these doubts, he ends up losing his job and all of his clients, save Rod Tidwell, an egomaniacal football player. Can Jerry resurrect his career while still staying true to himself?

GO WITH THIS GUY.
 
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This question – serious? I can't tell for sure – probably invited this sort of response.

The best advice on the subject I have ever heard, suggested independently by two successful writers, is to target agents who already handle clients doing the kind of work you want to do. It shouldn't be that hard to figure out which agency represents, say, Michael Lewis. His agent isn't going to take you on, obviously, but there may be a newbie agent in the firm who's looking for new clients.

Maybe not.
 
bigugly said:
I am looking for a new agent that can handle TV and print. Can any of you recommend someone that you have had great success with?

Thanks

Sorry, next question.
 
bigugly said:
I am looking for a new agent that can handle TV and print. Can any of you recommend someone that you have had great success with?

Thanks
No. Can we be of service with anything else?
 
In all seriousness, I was reading that Michael Wilbon signed a new contract with ESPN that will mean less time at The Washington Post.

You might want to try and find out who his agent is.
 
I wouldn't try to use the same agent for both TV and print (and not too many people use an agent for print, unless you mean books...you can use a lawyer if you're in a newspaper contract situation).

TV agenting is a specialty....ask around, and use someone who does specifically what you're looking for (type of media, geographical area, etc). Print is a specialty too--generally, you wouldn't use a TV agent to make a book deal. There are big agencies that do both (ie, IMG) but you work with different agents for each specialty...and success in one area doesn't mean success with others.
 
To echo 21, I wouldn't get one agent to do all things. Literary agent for books; film agent for film; Satan for TV.
 
Are you suggesting that Satan couldn't handle all of that hisself?
 

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