Wednesday, November 17, 2010

Q&A with the founder of ATB Talent - Guy Kochlani

Guy Kochlani is the founder of Across the Board Talent Agency. The LA native and Law School graduate discusses ATB and a little something about himself.

Guy on why he founded ATB:

I have 15, going on 16 years of entertainment background. I saw a flaw in the way the other agencies operate. There will be an agency with ten to twenty agents. Each of those agents has a hundred to two-hundred clients. Most of those clients just get lost in the process. Who knows where they are. The developmental clients don’t get much of the attention. You may have a big agency name, but you won’t get the one-on-one attention. So I decided to address the problem and formed my own agency.

Guy on what is different about ATB:

I created a business model where each agent would max-out at fifty clients, so each client could get one-on-one attention that they deserve.

Guy on where the name ATB came from:

The way Across The Board came a long is kind of a funny story. It started off as the Kochlani Talent Agency. I’d call the casting directors and say, “This is Guy from the Kochlani Talent Agency.” They’d say, “Where?” Turns out, they could not pronounce Kochlani. I then realized I kept saying the phrase, “Across the Board.” Clients would ask me, “How do you rep me?” I would always respond, “Across the Board.” Then I thought, “ATB. Across The Board.” And that’s the way the name Across The Board came along.

Guy on being a child actor:

I came into the business as a child actor. I was one of those kids who ran around the streets saying, “I want to be an actor.” So, my neighbor’s brother was a producer and an actor. I walked up to him at a family barbeque and said, “Benny, please you gotta put me in your next movie.” One month passes. Two months pass. Eight months pass. Nothing. I keep following up with him. Finally, after eight months of persistence, I get the call. He gave me a small part in his movie and told me that I had to take two weeks off of school. I thought to myself, how cool is that? I got to take off school to be on location. My first movie was Broken Bars. I spent four years as a working actor.

Guy on life post-the big screen:

At nineteen, I realized I have better use behind the camera than in front of the camera. I felt out the entertainment industry in every capacity. I worked at Universal Records, KIIS-FM, an entertainment law firm in Beverly Hills, and even opened up a special events company that produced fashion shows. Eventually, I landed at a talent agency. That was my calling.

Guy on relating to his clients:

Being an actor, I know the type of issues that the clients have to go through and the game they have to play. I try to reduce that. My clients know that they don’t have to play games with me. I definitely think my background as an actor has helped because I can manage my clients with knowledge of what they go through.

Guy on being accessible 24/7:

The reason I am keeping this a boutique agency is that my clients can call me, text me, email me, Facebook me, Twitter me at any hour. If you have a question at 3 a.m. and I’m up, I’ll call you back. Yes, some have abused it. But all in all, it’s going well.

Guy on life outside of ATB:

I see a lot of movies in my spare time. Mafia movies and spy movies are my favorite. My favorite movie of all time is Casino. I love dance music. I try to live a social life. I spend a lot of time networking and trying to move my clients’ careers forward. And of course, every day at 10 a.m. I need my Caffeine Free Diet Coke.

Guy on The Big Apple ATB:

My love is New York. I lived there for a bit right before law school. I’m in the process of expanding ATB by opening a second office in New York. The city has an amazing energy. You get off the subway, and you feel a rush. That rush is what I love about New York. ATB New York is looking very promising in 2011.

Friday, June 4, 2010

Zarko Goal

Only one word can describe Adam's performance . . .

Saturday, September 5, 2009

BIG UPS to Sandra Bullock

Big ups to the great producer and leading actress Sandra Bullock. Her last movie, "The Proposal," was a smash hit at the box office, thanks to the help of Ryan Reynolds. "The Proposal" was the highest grossing Sandra Bullock film. Big moments await for Ms. Bullock with more great hits in the works like "The Blind Side" coming out later on this year, and five more features in development. Can she surpass the glory days of "The Proposal" with her new feature, "All About Steve," which just came out this weekend. Bullock and her co-star, Bradley Cooper, have an amazing onscreen chemistry. Both come off very funny, especially with the BIG help of Thomas Haden Church and Ken Jeong. The cast was nothing short than great. I was highly surprised by the performance of Thomas Haden Church. He was the third lead in the movie, following Bullock and Cooper. His comments and facial expressions are priceless. In addition, Ken Jeong, another of my favorites, has sky rocketed in the past year. It seems like Ken Jeong is included in every comedy movie, "All About Steve," "Hangover," "The Goods," "Role Models," "Step Brothers," etc... Talk about having a good agent. Jeong is a formula that gets plugged into EVERY comedy movie.

In short, I highly recommend you guys to go see "All About Steve."

Until next time,

Tuesday, August 25, 2009

When it rains, it pours

The phrase "whenever it rains, it pours," has definitely been proving itself to me lately. I am not one who complains about the daily sour turns that parallels our life's. Instead, I just always try to find the positive "lesson" from the event and move on. Today, for example, I received a parking ticket in Beverly Hills because my meter expired two minutes over. By the time I noticed that the time has expired, I had already received the generous additional debt of $50. Expensive 2 minutes. "Like I really need another debt right now." What's funny is that I didn't get mad or anything, I quietly peeled the ticket off my dashboard and placed it in my pocket. The woman that I was with, felt so bad about me receiving the ticket that she offered to pay for it. She felt like it was her fault because I was helping her out with certain stuff. Obviously, I declined her offer and moved on with my day. There was no need to get upset, since there was nothing that could have been done about the matter.
As I was driving home, all that was on my mind, was my inner voice hoping for a better day tomorrow. I really need the shiner days to kick in. It has been a little of a slump lately.
Let's hope tomorrow will bring a shiner day.

Sunday, August 23, 2009

Julia & Julia

For a person who sees just about every single movie that is released, I must recommend you all to see Julia & Julia. I was a little puzzled when the movie started out by mentioning "based on two true stories." I said to myself, "I wonder how the hell, they are going to pull this one off." And pulled it off, they sure did. The entire movie was spilt into two stories, the life of Julia Child in 1949, and the life of Julia Powell's in modern day 2002. I don't want to give away anything about the film, especially to those who haven't seen it. But I will say that this is by far one of the best feel good and uplifting movies I have seen this year. Meryl Streep and Stanley Tucci make an amazing duo. The entire time I had weird flashbacks from seeing them two in "The Devil Wears Prada," which was another great film. However, the role of Amy Adams, even though, I see played great, came off to me as a little masculine, maybe it was just her haircut in the movie. Regardless, go see Julia & Julia. In fact, take your mother, sister, grandma or girlfriend to see it. Anyone who appreciates good food wrapped around a great success story will definitely enjoy it.

Until next time, have a great day