[scifinoir2] Conventions: Another day at the office for celebs

2010-09-06 Thread brent wodehouse
http://www.cnn.com/2010/SHOWBIZ/09/06/dragoncon.celebrities/

Conventions: Another day at the office for celebs

by Suzanne Kelly, CNN

September 6, 2010


Atlanta, Georgia (CNN) -- Much of the world got to know her as Col. Wilma
Deering on the "Buck Rogers in the 25th Century" television series. Though
she later played Kate on "Silver Spoons," there was something about that
Spandex that was hard to forget. 

But today, actress Erin Gray has found a way to combine her celebrity with
the very real business of fan-based conventions. At events like [
http://dragoncon.org/ ]Dragon*Con in Atlanta, the woman known for playing
strong female characters now uses her brains to wrangle issues for her
celebrity clients as they prepare for close encounters with fans.

Gray runs a company called [ http://www.heroesforhire.info/default.htm
]Heroes for Hire, which represents about 35 celebrity clients at
conventions around the world. CNN caught up with her at Dragon*Con in
Atlanta (unofficially referred to as "PartyCon"). Dragon*Con is known for
being the most "fan-friendly" convention, which, in itself, can pose both
unique opportunities and unique challenges.

Heading into the weekend, there were 35,000 people expected to attend,
primarily to see some of the 400 celebrity guests who sign autographs and
mingle with the crowds. Gray knew this meant that there were a lot of
things to plan for.

"We create 30-page spreadsheets so that we can keep track of where we are
in the process," Gray said. "Are the contracts signed? Have the photos and
bios been sent? Are the travel details done?"

Today, the former space colonel walks a fine line between getting her
clients closer to their fans at conventions and keeping them away. "We've
had death threats before," she said.

"I've had my own personal stalker. I would get nude drawings of my body
with a knife and a message saying 'I'm watching you' and 'I'm going to get
you.' When you have a baby, you just feel so vulnerable. We couldn't
figure it out because it was happening at the studio," Gray said.
Incidentally, it turned out to be a security guard. 

"The other one, I would get these 10-page tiny handwritten letters front
and back and perfect penmanship, and he would say things like 'don't tell
your husband about our relationship.' And you know how I found out who it
was? He said, 'when you waved at me.' I waved to my postman. This is
before we had stalking laws. And when something like that happens, you
think, 'is being an actress worth it?' "

Luckily, Gray doesn't have those terrifying experiences anymore, but now
she has clients who do. 

"I have a couple of clients who give me the names of their stalkers, and I
have to let the promoter know who they are and to keep an eye out for
them. I have one who is obsessed with a female celebrity, and this guy
e-mails me, texts me, and he'll come to a show and stand about 20 feet
away and stare at her. We'll hire security, and they will be with security
all day long," Gray said. "Every actor has their stalker."

But the reality is that conventions like Dragon*Con can help make or break
an actor's career. We are no longer living in the age of Hollywood
executives determining who the stars will be, Gray said. We are living in
an age of social media, where the fans have a louder voice than ever
before. 

For example, Gray has one client whom Hollywood paid no attention to. So
she went out on her own and started a webcast, and today has more than 1.7
million followers on Twitter. Ouch! That's gotta hurt all of those people
who told Felicia Day, "don't call us; we'll call you."

"I think there's been a major shift in grass roots media because of the
internet and because the geeks and nerds rule the world. They are in
control in so many ways. The comic is today's Western, so many movies, and
I think that if actors want to optimize their longevity, it's important
for them to meet the fans because those fans are so loyal and will show up
at any movie or tune in to any television show they're on," Gray said.

The shift in Gray's own career from onscreen heartthrob to celebrity
manager was completely unscripted.

"As an actress reaching her mid- to late 40s and the number of roles not
being there and still having kids in private schools, there came a point
when I hit bottom, and I was desperate to get a job and understand that
being a model and actress my entire life since the age of 15, I didn't
have the qualifications to get a normal job, nor did I want to. I couldn't
see myself in a corporate environment under the thumb of some boss," she
said. 

So she started talking to other female actresses in her position, and
before long, they were telling her how she could make money at conventions
like these.

"I went online and started booking myself, and one day Gil Gerard called
me up and said, 'what are you doing?' and I told him I was going to a show
in Ohio, and he said, "Oh, I want to go, book me, and I'll pay you 10
percent." Then Gil went an

Re: [scifinoir2] Conventions: Another day at the office for celebs

2010-09-07 Thread Martin Baxter
Brent, that was a really interesting post. More things to fandom that I
never thought about. Except, unfortunately, for the stalker angle. I know
the fear she felt all too well, having a few cyber-stalkers now and a
real-life one in my past.

On Mon, Sep 6, 2010 at 10:00 PM, brent wodehouse <
brent_wodeho...@thefence.us> wrote:

>
>
> http://www.cnn.com/2010/SHOWBIZ/09/06/dragoncon.celebrities/
>
> Conventions: Another day at the office for celebs
>
> by Suzanne Kelly, CNN
>
> September 6, 2010
>
> Atlanta, Georgia (CNN) -- Much of the world got to know her as Col. Wilma
> Deering on the "Buck Rogers in the 25th Century" television series. Though
> she later played Kate on "Silver Spoons," there was something about that
> Spandex that was hard to forget.
>
> But today, actress Erin Gray has found a way to combine her celebrity with
> the very real business of fan-based conventions. At events like [
> http://dragoncon.org/ ]Dragon*Con in Atlanta, the woman known for playing
> strong female characters now uses her brains to wrangle issues for her
> celebrity clients as they prepare for close encounters with fans.
>
> Gray runs a company called [ http://www.heroesforhire.info/default.htm
> ]Heroes for Hire, which represents about 35 celebrity clients at
> conventions around the world. CNN caught up with her at Dragon*Con in
> Atlanta (unofficially referred to as "PartyCon"). Dragon*Con is known for
> being the most "fan-friendly" convention, which, in itself, can pose both
> unique opportunities and unique challenges.
>
> Heading into the weekend, there were 35,000 people expected to attend,
> primarily to see some of the 400 celebrity guests who sign autographs and
> mingle with the crowds. Gray knew this meant that there were a lot of
> things to plan for.
>
> "We create 30-page spreadsheets so that we can keep track of where we are
> in the process," Gray said. "Are the contracts signed? Have the photos and
> bios been sent? Are the travel details done?"
>
> Today, the former space colonel walks a fine line between getting her
> clients closer to their fans at conventions and keeping them away. "We've
> had death threats before," she said.
>
> "I've had my own personal stalker. I would get nude drawings of my body
> with a knife and a message saying 'I'm watching you' and 'I'm going to get
> you.' When you have a baby, you just feel so vulnerable. We couldn't
> figure it out because it was happening at the studio," Gray said.
> Incidentally, it turned out to be a security guard.
>
> "The other one, I would get these 10-page tiny handwritten letters front
> and back and perfect penmanship, and he would say things like 'don't tell
> your husband about our relationship.' And you know how I found out who it
> was? He said, 'when you waved at me.' I waved to my postman. This is
> before we had stalking laws. And when something like that happens, you
> think, 'is being an actress worth it?' "
>
> Luckily, Gray doesn't have those terrifying experiences anymore, but now
> she has clients who do.
>
> "I have a couple of clients who give me the names of their stalkers, and I
> have to let the promoter know who they are and to keep an eye out for
> them. I have one who is obsessed with a female celebrity, and this guy
> e-mails me, texts me, and he'll come to a show and stand about 20 feet
> away and stare at her. We'll hire security, and they will be with security
> all day long," Gray said. "Every actor has their stalker."
>
> But the reality is that conventions like Dragon*Con can help make or break
> an actor's career. We are no longer living in the age of Hollywood
> executives determining who the stars will be, Gray said. We are living in
> an age of social media, where the fans have a louder voice than ever
> before.
>
> For example, Gray has one client whom Hollywood paid no attention to. So
> she went out on her own and started a webcast, and today has more than 1.7
> million followers on Twitter. Ouch! That's gotta hurt all of those people
> who told Felicia Day, "don't call us; we'll call you."
>
> "I think there's been a major shift in grass roots media because of the
> internet and because the geeks and nerds rule the world. They are in
> control in so many ways. The comic is today's Western, so many movies, and
> I think that if actors want to optimize their longevity, it's important
> for them to meet the fans because those fans are so loyal and will show up
> at any movie or tune in to any television show they're on," Gray said.
>
> The shift in Gray's own career from onscreen heartthrob to celebrity
> manager was completely unscripted.
>
> "As an actress reaching her mid- to late 40s and the number of roles not
> being there and still having kids in private schools, there came a point
> when I hit bottom, and I was desperate to get a job and understand that
> being a model and actress my entire life since the age of 15, I didn't
> have the qualifications to get a normal job, nor did I want to. I coul