News & Updates
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NALIPster Filmmaker Becomes First Puerto Rican to Produce National Distributed Film by AMC Independent
Posted by NALIP on February 19, 2016
Moras Productions and M&F Entertainment announced today the release date for 30 Days With My Brother. The independent film will open on April 8, 2016 with limited distribution in select markets through AMC Independent™. The emotional drama directed by Michael May, stars Adrian Nuñez and Omar Mora who also wrote and produced the film. 30 Days With My Brother is also being distributed in Puerto Rico by Caribbean Cinemas.
Omar Mora is the first Puerto Rican from the island to produce a film resulting in national distribution in the states through AMC Independent™. A feat not to be taken lightly, Mora has been working towards this goal since he began his writing career in 2012 with the intention of documenting his stories and producing them into feature films. As a member of the National Association of Latino Independent Producers (NALIP), Mora has benefitted from their programs and workshops and has learned the ins and outs of independent filmmaking. It was at the 2015 NALIP Media Summit where Mora learned about AMC Independent™ through the workshop, The Big Screen: How Tech Enhances Movie Distribution presented by AMC Theatres. Led by AMC Theatres' Nikkole Denson-Randolph, the workshop provided Mora with the knowledge and tools needed to successfully distribute his film in the US.
"The AMC workshop I attended last summer was one of the best experiences ever...I received so much valuable information which is currently helping me market my film," said Mora about the workshop. He added, "I attended so many workshops and conferences at The Summit and learned so much, that it gave me the confidence to self-distribute my film, something I never thought I would do."
A heart-warming drama, 30 Days with My Brother is the story of two brothers who are forced to confront their past, themselves and try to restore their relationship as brothers. Starring Omar Mora and Adrian Nunez, 30 Days... is a highly emotional look at the lives of two brothers from Puerto Rico who are separated by a tragedy at a young age. After 17 years they reunite, one a doctor with a secret, the other a dark, somber character holding on to the past.
AMC Independent™ dedicates over 20% of their theaters to showing independent films throughout the year, including AMC-exclusive releases. Their goal is to engage and inspire audiences and at the same time, give distribution to independent filmmakers.
30 Days With My Brother also star Stefy Garcia, Evelyn Michelle, Amy Schloerb and Enrique Fosse. The film was written by Omar Mora and produced by Moras Productions and M&F Entertainment.
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Netflix Buys Sundance Film 'White Girl,' Featuring NALIPster Adrian Martinez
Posted by NALIP on February 19, 2016

Sundance Film Festival
The Sundance Film Festival ended more than two weeks ago, but Netflix continues to buy. The streaming giant has closed deals on the ground in Berlin at the European Film Market for a pair of splashy Sundance titles.
Netflix picked up worldwide SVOD rights to Elizabeth Wood's edgy drama White Girl. Starring Morgan Saylor (aka Dana Brody to fans of Homeland) in a breakout performance, the film centers on a hard-partying college girl who falls for a Puerto Rican drug dealer (Brian "Sene" Marc). When he gets arrested, she is left with a cache of cocaine. A source pegged the deal at seven figures.
White Girl will get a theatrical release from distributors to be determined.
Netflix drove the sales agenda at Sundance, snapping up six films each before the festival ended Jan. 31 (among the highlights were Netflix's acquisition of the Paul Rudd starrer The Fundamentals of Caring for nearly $7 million.) With White Girl, the company now can boast seven films from Sundance. Surprisingly, the company has not bought any titles in Berlin — a festival that tends to offer more presales and promo footage than finished films, which is Sundance's bread and butter.
White Girl earned strong reviews following its world premiere Jan. 23. The film, which played in Sundance's U.S. Dramatic Competition section, marks Wood's feature directorial debut (she also wrote the screenplay). Justin Bartha, Chris Noth, India Menuez and NALIPster Adrian Martinez co-star. Gabriel Nussbaum produced White Girl, while Christine Vachon, Henry Joost, Ariel Schulman and David Hinojosa executive produced.
CAA repped the White Girl filmmakers.
Featured in HollywoodReporter.com
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The Walter Kaitz Foundation to Host Hollywood Creative Forum
Posted by NALIP on February 19, 2016

The 7th Annual Hollywood Creative Forum will take place on February 23-24, 2016, at the Hyatt Regency Century Plaza in Los Angeles.
The Hollywood Creative Forum has become one the leading conferences and gathering place for scripted and unscripted content in media for people of color. The event has grown significantly over the last few years and has been expanded to include both scripted as well as unscripted and attracts production companies, network executives, creators and distributors of content from across the country.
The mandate of Hollywood Creative Forum is to foster business collaborations through both structured and informal networking opportunities, to provide practical business and creative intelligence, as well as to continue the debate about diversity, through a variety of high level keynotes, workshops and panel discussions.
Further information on the program can be found on their website at walterkaitz.org.
Tuesday, February 23
TIME EVENT 8:00 a.m. – 9:00 a.m. Registration & Continental Breakfast 9:00 a.m. – 9:10 a.m. Welcome & Opening Remarks 9:10 a.m. – 9:45 a.m. Opening Keynote 10:00 a.m. – 12:45 p.m. Credentialed Meet & Greet 10:00 a.m. – 10:50 a.m. “Building your Brand through Social Media” 11:00 a.m. – 11:50 a.m. “Distribution for the Creative Eye” 12:00 p.m. – 12:50 p.m. “From Writing Programs to Hit Shows” 1:00 p.m. – 2:30 p.m. Structured Luncheon 2:30 p.m. – 3:45 p.m. “The Latino Paradigm Shift” 3:45 p.m. – 5:00 p.m. “Writing for Unscripted” 5:00 p.m. – 7:00 p.m. Opening Reception Wednesday, February 24
TIME EVENT 8:00 a.m. – 9:00 a.m. Registration & Continental Breakfast 9:00 a.m. – 9:10 a.m. Remarks 9:10 a.m. – 9:45 a.m. Keynote Address 10:00 a.m. – 11:15 a.m. “Becoming a Top Showrunner in Hollywood” 11:15 a.m. – 12:30 p.m. We’re not in Kansas Anymore” 12:45 p.m. – 2:00 p.m. Luncheon & Keynote – A Conversation with Sanjay Sharma 2:00 p.m. – 3:15 p.m. “From YouTube to Primetime” 3:15 p.m. – 4:30 p.m. “Best New Practices for Pitching and the Things That Still Work” 6:00 p.m. – 7:30 p.m. Evening Panel (By Invitation Only -
Alejandro G. Iñárritu: Hollywood's King of Pain
Posted by NALIP on February 19, 2016
by Mark Binelli

Martin Schoeller
How the director of "The Revenant" pushed his stars and crew to the edge of sanity – and created a modern epic.
Late one afternoon in November, only two days after wrapping up final post-production tweaks on his sixth film, The Revenant, the director Alejandro González Iñárritu walked into a screening room at the corner of Alfred Hitchcock Drive on the Universal Studios lot in Universal City, California. He was dressed entirely in black, his typical uniform – today, a couture-looking hoodie with extraneous silver zippers, worn over black jeans – and he greeted the assembled audio crew with fist bumps and apologies for his tardiness. He'd driven up from his production office in Santa Monica, where he also lives, and hit traffic, which he normally avoids by zipping around town on a Vespa. Somebody got him a Coke.
Iñárritu, 52, moved to Los Angeles from Mexico City, his hometown, after the wholly unexpected global success of his first film, 2000's Amores Perros, which in English roughly translates as "love's a bitch" – U.S. distributors eventually decided to stick with the Spanish title – and which convinced him to leave the safe confines of the Mexican film community, where he'd spent years as a highly successful director of TV commercials, building a production company with more than 100 employees, and make the move to the big leagues, to Hollywood. When would the timing possibly be better?
He landed at LAX with his wife and two children four days before September 11th, 2001. "All the neighborhoods started getting all these flags," Iñárritu says, speaking in heavily accented English. On two occasions, walking his dog, he was stopped by police officers. The cops told Iñárritu, whose swarthy complexion had earned him the nickname "El Negro" back in Mexico City, they'd received calls about a suspicious character in the area, that he needed to show them exactly where he lived.
Today, Iñárritu is listening to audio mixes of The Revenant for theaters outfitted with Dolby Atmos surround-sound. "Every time they invent a new fucking system, we have to do a new test," Iñárritu says with a sigh. "Pretty soon we'll have sounds coming out of our asses." The day before, he'd been to a similar test for the IMAX version of the picture. "Sitting too close to the screen, it's almost disturbing," he says. "They'll need to give the audience bags to vomit."
Iñárritu, we should note, utters all of these lines quite cheerily. He still curses in English with the mirth of a non-native speaker testing unfamiliar idioms, all of his "fuckings" pronounced with more care than other words and delivered with an unjaded relish. When Iñárritu smiles – perhaps because his smiles always seem tinged with irony – his face, thin, with pronounced cheekbones, a mustache and a slightly tufted goatee, assumes a sly, devilish cast. With minimal wardrobe and makeup adjustments, he could play the heavy in an after-school special about the dangers of Satanism.
In a medium-size theater, two sound engineers sit in front of a mixing board that spans the length of the screen. Martín Hernández, one of Iñárritu's oldest friends and collaborators, works at a laptop. We're about to watch Reel 4 of The Revenant.
Loosely based on the real-life adventure of a 19th-century American fur trapper named Hugh Glass, the film stars a prodigiously bearded Leonardo DiCaprio, who is mauled by a bear and then betrayed and left for dead by other members of his hunting party. The rest of the movie, on one level, is an immensely satisfying genre exercise, a proto-Western revenge fantasia in the tradition of Death Wish or Kill Bill, in which the audience endures the cruel sufferings of the protagonist as a pleasure-enhancing prelude to feats of impossible endurance, survival and bloody restitution.
Visually, the film is a spectacular throwback, the sort of epic rarely seen since the era of Lawrence of Arabia. It's also a sustained spiritual meditation, as well as an implicit critique of American capitalism, as told through its earliest incursions into the relatively untouched wilderness of the New World. If Iñárritu wins Best Director for The Revenant, which people who make odds on this sort of thing have been saying is entirely plausible, it will follow his win last year for Birdman, making him only the third director in Academy of Motion Pictures Arts and Sciences history to snag consecutive Oscars.

Kimberly French
It's funny, though: For all of his accomplishments in Hollywood, Iñárritu still describes himself as a frustrated musician. He and Hernández began working together in college as disc jockeys at a pioneering radio station in Mexico City. Iñárritu also played in a band and promoted shows, and he admits to paying special, almost obsessive attention to the sound of his films. "For Alejandro, sound can be more important than visual," says Hernández. "He has an amazing sound memory. If I change something, he will hear it." Iñárritu thought of Birdman, filmed to appear as if it unfolded in a single, frenetic tracking shot, as jazz: He went into a studio with the Mexican jazz drummer Antonio Sánchez and began recording the soundtrack (almost exclusively percussion) before he'd shot a frame of film, matching the beats with specific lines of dialogue in order to pre-dictate, in Iñárritu's words, "the pulse of the film."
For The Revenant, he commissioned a spare electronic score from Ryuichi Sakamoto and Alva Noto, avant-garde composers who have collaborated with Carsten Nicolai on a series of gorgeous, minimalist piano albums, and Bryce Dessner of the Brooklyn band the National. "If Birdman has to do more with jazz and theater," Iñárritu tells me, "I think this film is more about painting and dreams, when you don't have to think or talk, but just feel. So the silences and the sounds of nature are very, very important to the narrative."
Reel 4 begins with DiCaprio's character lying on a wintry forest bed, staring up at the old-growth trees towering above him like the ceiling of a cathedral, and ends with a thrilling chase scene in which he dives into a river to escape a band of Arikara Indians. As the scene progresses, we watch DiCaprio grunt, gasp, crawl through snow and suck the marrow from the bone of a picked-over buffalo carcass.
Iñárritu sits with his arms crossed and a serious expression on his face. When the lights come up, everyone looks at him anxiously. Eventually, he emits a long "Ummmm . . ." Then he says he's not hearing the ambient sounds coming out of the ceiling speakers, not nearly enough. "It's like one cojone, and we need two cojones!" he cries, mock-dramatically. "I want to hear more crackling trees. Make the birds louder! If it's at 30 percent, go to 60 percent. Then maybe I say, 'Oh, fuck, too loud!' And we can take it down. Show me the money, as the producer would say."
While the engineers tweak the settings on their boards, Iñárritu asks for a second Coke and picks at a plastic tub of peanuts, methodically removing one nut at a time with a thumb-finger pincer gesture. He has to wrap up soon. The next day he's planning to fly to Austin with his son, Eliseo, a senior in high school, for a college tour arranged by Richard Linklater, the Boyhood director and renowned Austinite who also happened to be Iñárritu's prime rival at the 2015 Oscars. (Birdman wound up beating Boyhood for both Best Director and Picture.) I ask Iñárritu if it's typical for directors to be this involved with the sound mix of a rarefied distribution format. He frowns and gives a shrug. "Ask them," he says, nodding at the sound guys. "I don't think so. I'm a little cuckoo. Neurotic." He pronounces the last word with special gusto, just like he does "fuck."
On set of "Birdman" with Michael Keaton (left), director Alejandro G. Iñárritu, cinematographer Emmanuel Lubezki in 2014. Everett Collection
A week after the sound tests at Universal, Iñárritu flew to New York for a private screening of The Revenant near Lincoln Center. Afterward, Martin Scorsese moderated a Q&A and called the film a masterpiece. Scorsese had just completed his own historical epic, Silence, filmed in the Taiwanese countryside, and later, over drinks, he complained to Iñárritu, "I'm from New York. I have an aversion to trees. I don't go camping. I don't like horses." Iñárritu could sympathize. "I'm the same," he tells me the following afternoon. "We are not, like, guys from the woods."
Iñárritu is dressed entirely in black again, sipping a black coffee in a hotel near Central Park. His son is staying in the room across the hall. A last-minute scheduling conflict had forced the postponement of the Austin visit, but they are planning to check out New York University. Since the ISIS terror attacks in Paris, Iñárritu has also been in regular phone contact with his daughter, María, who is going to school there. "I'm concerned about her," he says. "You know, we went out of Mexico because of the violence. And now I'm more worried in Paris than in Mexico. I said, 'Fuck, the world is becoming very scary for young people.' They are feeling what we felt in Mexico."
Around the time of the release of Amores Perros, Iñárritu's mother had her jaw broken by muggers, and his father, in a separate incident, was thrown into the trunk of a car by kidnappers and held for 12 hours for a $500 ransom. Iñárritu had his own car broken into and all of his family's luggage stolen while on vacation in San Miguel de Allende; afterward, he had to fly directly to New York to accept an award, and he borrowed "an old suit of stripes" from a friend, "the worst, cheapest suit ever – it's from 1948. I was the worst-dressed director in the history of New York fancy people." That trip was the first time Iñárritu met Scorsese, as it turns out – Scorsese liked Amores Perros and had invited Iñárritu to stop by his office – and Iñárritu showed up in the suit, feeling "like a fucking Mafia guy from a Scorsese film."
The rising violence in his home country, coming at a time when his own public profile was increasing, factored heavily into Iñárritu's decision to move his family to L.A. He says it also informed his approach to violence in his films. "The violence became such a painful social situation in my country, with so much suffering, that I didn't find it funny in films," he says.
Check out the rest on rollingstone.com.
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NBCUniversal to Present 2nd Annual TV Hosting Workshop 2016
Posted by NALIP on February 19, 2016

Sharpen your Hosting Skills and Techniques! Learn about the Social Digital Interaction of Media/TV!
Submission Deadline: Feb. 26th
NBCUniversal Cable Entertainment in partnership with the American Black Film Festival will produce the 2nd Annual TV Hosting Workshop to cultivate & discover exceptional on-camera host talent. Taught by a premiere host instructor, this three day workshop is targeted for intermediate and advanced level hosts who want to sharpen their hosting skills and techniques. The workshop will also focus on the Social Digital Interaction of Media/TV!
WORKSHOP FOCUS:
- Re-invent your brand!
- Enhance your on-camera performance, and reading and writing copy
- Strengthen co-hosting, teleprompter and auditioning skills
- Learn invaluable tips for your career
- Learn from keynote speakers!
TOP SELECT PARTICIPANT(S):
- Meet with NBCU Talent & Casting Executives from E!
- Receive the opportunity to host a red carpet event during the ABFF in Miami, June 15-19.
- Top performers will receive one (1) festival credential and airfare to ABFF in Miami.
- Top performers will be announced at the ABFF Awards Ceremony.
HOW TO APPLY
- Select TWO host scripts to perform and videotape: click to download
- Click on and complete the TV Hosting Workshop Application Form to upload your host reel and self-taped video entry according to the provided instructions.
- Applicants MUST also submit a reel of their previous host work (previous host experience may include, but not limited to: digital, TV and live events).
WORKSHOP DATES:
- DAY 1 - Friday, April 8th (9:00 am - 4:00 pm)
- DAY 2 - Saturday, April 9th (9:00 am - 4:00 pm)
- DAY 3 - Sunday, April 10th (9:00 am - 1:00 pm)
APPLICATION REQUIREMENTS
- Applicants must be a minimum of 21 years of age, and permanent, legal United States residents.
- Applicants must be available to participate in the workshop for all three scheduled days in New York City.
- Applicants must be able to provide their own housing and transportation to New York for the duration of the workshop. (NOTE: You do not need to be based in New York City to be considered)
SUBMISSION DATES
- Submissions Open: December 1, 2015
- Submissions Deadline: February 26, 2016
- Notify Participants By: March 4, 2016
* Please note: This workshop is not for beginners, but for participants with some host experience already under their belt. We are looking for candidates drawing upon diverse backgrounds.
Check this out on ABFF.com,
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Adam Rodriguez To Co-Star In ABC Comedy Pilot ‘Chunk & Bean’
Posted by NALIP · February 18, 2016

Getty Images
CSI: Miami alum Adam Rodriguez is set for a co-starring role in ABC’s single-camera comedy pilot Chunk & Bean. Written by Ed Herro and Brian Donovan and exec produced by Dave Hemingson, Chunk & Bean is a dual-family comedy centered on the unlikely friendship of two misfits, Chunk and Bean, who benefit from having two very different sets of parents living next door to each other. Rodriguez plays Jim Rogerson.
First-time developers Herro and Donovan, who penned the script inspired by their childhood, executive produce alongside Hemingson for ABC Studios.
The casting extends Rodriguez’s stint in comedy — he currently recurs on the CW’s hourlong comedy Jane The Virgin and previously also recurred on ABC’s Ugly Betty. On the drama side, the Magic Mike actor recently recurred on Fox’s Empire and NBC’s The Night Shift. He is repped by A Management and UTA.
Check this out on deadline.com
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Channing Dungey Named ABC Entertainment President, Replacing Paul Lee
Posted by NALIP · February 17, 2016
Channing Dungey, executive VP of drama at ABC, has been named entertainment president of ABC, replacing Paul Lee, who was ousted in a power struggle with Ben Sherwood, president of Disney/ABC Television. She’s the first African-American person to head programming at a major broadcast network. Dungey will now report directly to Sherwood.
“Channing is a gifted leader and a proven magnet for top creative talent, with an impressive record of developing compelling, breakthrough programming that resonates with viewers,” said Sherwood. “We thank Paul for his many accomplishments at ABC and his devotion to the ABC brand, and we wish him continued success in the future.”
Dungey, who’s been with the network since 2009 (and its affiliated studio since 2004), is credited with developing many of the Alphabet’s successful dramas, including “Scandal,” “Quantico,” “Marvel’s Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D.,” “How to Get Away with Murder,” and “American Crime.”
Said Dungey, “I’m thrilled and humbled that Ben has entrusted me with this tremendous opportunity. And I am truly grateful to Paul for being a valued mentor and friend. I’ve had the great honor of working alongside the talented team at ABC for many years and look forward to starting this exciting new chapter with them.”
Lee has held the position of entertainment president since 2010, having moved over from ABC Family. “Leading ABC has been a fantastic experience,” he said. “I’m especially proud of the incredible team I built and the strategic, creative vision we established and successfully executed for both the network and studio.”
As part of the transition, Patrick Moran, executive VP of ABC Studios, will now oversee day-to-day operations. The well-liked exec is poised for a career boost as well. His contract is up at the end of this season, so a title bump is likely. He’ll now report directly to Sherwood, so a layer has been removed.
Dungey began her career as a development assistant for Davis Entertainment at 20th Century Fox. She then became story editor at Steamroller Productions, where she worked on the development and production of such films as “Under Siege” and “On Deadly Ground.” Following that, she joined Warner Bros. as a production executive, where she helped develop films including “Bridges of Madison County,” “Heat,” “The Matrix” and “Practical Magic.”
Check this out at Variety.com
