• Wednesday, Jun. 28, 2023
Kim Slowik joins WTP Pictures as director of partnerships/EP
Kim Slowik
LOS ANGELES -- 

WTP Pictures, with bases of operation in L.A. and Detroit, has brought Kim Slowik aboard as its director of partnerships/executive producer. The addition of Slowik to the leadership team at WTP Pictures comes at a pivotal time as WTP continues to gain momentum with a recent rebrand from its We The People moniker. As director of partnerships, Slowik will play a crucial role in amplifying and supporting WTP Pictures’ roster of creatives and aiding the company’s propulsion into original content and documentary work. 

Throughout her career, Slowik has paired her knack for agile problem solving and expertise of production with a commitment to developing talent and promoting diversity and inclusion in the industry. For the past two decades she has touched almost every aspect of production with previous roles including sales and marketing executive, music producer at Howling Music and post producer at Milagro Post. Starting as an agency producer at Doner, Leo Burnett, McCann, and Goodby, Silverstein, & Partners, she quickly rose up the ranks to executive producer at The Martin Agency. She has led award-winning brand campaigns and activations for the likes of Ford, Old Navy, DoorDash, Chevy, and more. 

Susan Rued Anderson, WTP co-founder/executive producer, said, “Kim is that person in a room full of people that makes it a point to know everyone. She is curious, smart as hell, and incredibly strategic. Having worked at top agencies, she brings an insight to the creative and inherently understands what will be needed for the project. She recognizes talent and understands the necessity of uplifting and supporting underrepresented talent. As director of partnerships/EP at WTP, she is essential in helping us curate the WTP Pictures roster and working in liaison to agency producers and creatives.”

Slowik added, “Working alongside this team has already been so refreshing. It’s people who genuinely care about each other, united by their passion for creating something new and fresh. I’m proud to be a part of it.” 

  • Tuesday, Jun. 27, 2023
Matt Wade joins 11 Dollar Bill as sr. editor & creative lead
Matt Wade
CHICAGO, BOULDER & RALEIGH -- 

Postproduction studio 11 Dollar Bill, Raleigh, has added Matt Wade to its staff as sr. editor and creative lead. Formerly with Futuristic Films, Denver, Wade brings experience spanning commercials, digital content, music videos and other media, including recent work for Colorado Lottery, Spotify and American Airlines.

“We’re thrilled to welcome Matt to North Carolina and 11 Dollar Bill,” said managing director Josh Eggleston. “His skills as a content creator and storyteller will be a great asset to our clients in Raleigh, and through 11 Dollar Bill’s studios in Chicago and Boulder. He is a wonderful collaborator and problem-solver. His positive attitude and fun-loving nature make him someone you are grateful to have in the room.”

Wade was sr. editor at Futuristic Films for four years and previously held a post as editor at Denver agency Crispin Porter+Bogusky. A graduate of Colorado State University, he got his start as a director and editor of music videos. More recently, he has focused on advertising and branded projects. He collaborated with Denver agency Cactus on several award-winning campaigns for the Colorado Lottery. He also edited several episodes of the short film series The Shadow Campaign for DPS Skis.

“I take great joy in telling stories, especially when I can make them shine in a way that’s unexpected,” he said. “In addition to serving the director or agency, I think it’s my responsibility to bring something extra to the project.”

Wade views his new role at 11 Dollar Bill as an opportunity to work on a diversity of creatively challenging projects and help the studio to grow. “It’s a great fit,” he insisted. “It’s a fresh start, a chance to work with clients in a personal way and to build something new.”

  • Tuesday, Jun. 27, 2023
Identity hires EP Molly Mitchell to run its flagship NYC Office 
Molly Mitchell
NEW YORK -- 

Production company Identity has appointed Molly Mitchell as its newest executive producer. With an extensive sales background and a track record of cultivating talent, Mitchell is poised to bring fresh creative energy and strategic leadership to the company, now in its 25th year of business.

After many years managing talent for the likes of Big Sky Edit, Assembly Films and MacGuffin Films, to name a few, Mitchell transitioned to working as a producer from production through post, as well as on the agency side. In 2020, Mitchell founded Houseboat, a “floating” production house built to shape itself specifically for every campaign, with a mission to represent diverse voices and perspectives across the industry.

Now at Identity, Mitchell joins a team that complements her skillset and goals. “It’s invigorating to join a well-established brand that takes risks,” she stated. “We share the same enthusiasm for the future of our industry. Identity embraces a different way of thinking, and that was really important for me. I’m really drawn to creative that pushes boundaries, from quirky comedy to provocative tabletop--I like being a part of work that keeps us all on our toes! There’s also a great amount of trust, and that’s paramount to any successful relationship.”

In her new role, Mitchell will oversee all aspects of production and development, working with Identity’s directorial roster to deliver groundbreaking work across various mediums. 

Identity founder Joe Masi said, “Molly brings great knowledge of what is happening now--the trends, the changes and the opportunities. Having run her own company, she knows what it takes to be successful, and she’s built an amazing reputation for herself. Identity is involved in many things, and I was looking for someone who could grow not just Identity, but the company as a whole. Once Molly started meeting our directors, it was obvious to all that she is the person to take us to the next level. As things change in our business, so have we, and we have done it successfully. I’m excited to know that adding Molly to the team will bring great new ideas.”

  • Monday, Jun. 26, 2023
Jacki Kelley returns to Interpublic as chief client officer and chief business officer
Jacki Kelley
NEW YORK -- 

Jacki Kelley has been appointed EVP, chief client officer and chief business officer for Interpublic Group (NYSE: IPG). In this newly created role, Kelley will leverage her extensive expertise across the agency and media space, as well as her dedication to client success, to drive innovation, collaboration, and value for IPG’s global portfolio of clients. Working closely with the company’s agencies and leadership teams and reporting to IPG’s CEO, she will focus on delivering exceptional client results, fostering strategic partnerships, and enhancing IPG’s position as an industry leader.

Kelley re-joins IPG from dentsu, where she most recently served as its CEO, Americas, and chief client officer. Prior to joining dentsu in 2019, Kelley held prominent executive and operational positions at Bloomberg LP, Yahoo!, USA Today and IPG Mediabrands, where she was CEO, North America, and president of global clients, prior to which she was the global CEO for UM. During her tenure at Mediabrands, Kelley played a key role in driving innovation across the agency--successfully integrating cutting-edge tools, technologies, and services for clients in North America and across the broader global network.

IPG CEO Philippe Krakowsky said of Kelley, “She is a force in our industry, who leads with great heart and a keen understanding of what marketers need in order to succeed in today’s complex media and consumer landscape. Over the course of her career, Jacki has consistently built lasting relationships with clients that drive value and growth for their businesses.”

Kelley said, “IPG is where I learned the importance of ‘work you love, with people you love’--a beautiful statement coined by The Martin Agency’s late and amazing Mike Hughes. Our industry is the ultimate team sport, and I am excited to return to the field with IPG’s dynamic leaders and strong agency brands. I look forward to partnering again with Philippe, who remains one of the most strategic and thoughtful leaders--someone who consistently pushes the boundaries of innovation and progress to drive growth for IPG’s clients and people.”

  • Tuesday, Jun. 20, 2023
Editor Blake Bogosian joins Cut+Run
Blake Bogosian
SAN FRANCISCO -- 

Cut+Run has added editor Blake Bogosian to its roster. Bogosian, a mainstay in the San Francisco creative community, has contributed to campaigns for BMW, Intel, Google, Samsung, PayPal and more. 

”Blake and I met 10 years ago and I have closely followed his career since,” said Cut+Run executive producer Brian Stanley. “He brings an infectious blend of authenticity and passion for filmmaking to every project.”

Bogosian is a natural storyteller and versatile editor, working across multiple genres and occasionally stepping behind the camera to direct a handful of successful short films. Prior to joining Cut+Run, he was at Beast.

“Working at my dad’s corner store in Los Angeles, I learned at a young age how to engage with people from all walks of life. I am often reminded of that experience in my day-to-day collaborations with clients and directors,” Bogosian explained. “I am lucky to be surrounded by creative people and do what I love.”

“Blake is an editor who is beloved by so many, and I instantly connected with him and his love of the craft,” said Michelle Eskin, managing partner, Cut+Run. “We are excited to add his talent to our roster and also launch him nationally in this new chapter of his career and our San Francisco office.”

  • Friday, Jun. 16, 2023
A Union reunion for editor Jono Griffith
Jono Griffith
LOS ANGELES -- 

Editor Jono Griffith has returned to bicoastal Union, and will be available to take on new projects as of July 1. His notable work includes Canal+’s “The Bear” (director: Matthijs van Heijningen, agency: BETC Euro RSCG) and Rolo’s “Elephant” (director: Rogier van der Ploeg), both of which won the Grand Prix at Cannes, as well as Super Bowl Ad Meter winners “100 Year Game” for the NFL (director: Peter Berg, agency: 72andSunny) and “Hero’s ‘Journey” for Kia starring Melissa McCarthy (director: van Heijningen, agency: David&Goliath). Griffith’s frequent collaborations with van Heijningen have also yielded the director’s Cannes Lion, One Show, Clio and LIA winner, “The Ostrich” (Leo Burnett/Chicago), for Samsung. 

Other recent work for Griffith includes Diablo IV’s “Saviours Wanted” (directors: Chloé Zhao/Kiku Ohe, agency: 72andSunny), Nike’s “Qiang Diao” (director: Finn Keenan, agency: Wieden + Kennedy), and Audi’s “Escape” (director: van Heijningen, agency: BBH). Griffith was at Work Editorial before rejoining Union. Other prior affiliations include Final Cut and his own company, Circus.

Michael Raimondi, Union partner/managing director, said, “Jono is a unique talent who effortlessly crafts stories that bridge the gap between comedy and drama. They are bold and always ring true.” 

Griffith said, “My family business is films and stories--and I love it. Union is as dedicated to these passions as I am. Being part of this family and sharing these passions as an editor, and as a mentor, really is as good as it gets. I can’t wait to show the world what we can do.”

Griffith’s work is as likely to make you cry as laugh, sometimes within the same spot. The aforementioned Samsung spot elicits smiles as an ostrich inadvertently dons a pair of AR goggles and sweetly takes flight, winning the admiration of his fellow landlocked birds. “Music Academy,” for Principal Financial Group (director: Michael Spiccia, agency: TBWA\Chiat\Day LA), is moving and grounded in a mom’s love for her daughter. Going broad, “Cool Ranch” for Doritos (director: Lance Acord, agency: Goodby, Silverstein & Partners) features a dance duel between Sam Elliott and Lil Nas X, including the only time Elliott’s iconic mustache has done “The Wave.” 

Griffith has filmmaking in his blood. “My dad was the British character actor and documentary filmmaker Kenneth Griffith, and my mother was a talented actress,” he said. “She was also the great granddaughter of pioneer filmmaker, William Haggar,” whose various credits include cutting in the first close up, the first camera pan, the first police chase, and more. “So the family started in film editing in 1902,” he added.

Griffith studied photography but most of his teens were spent living the lifestyle of a wannabe anarchist, when he met his wife Julie--“a punky nurse who lived in Hackney,” he said, adding that “we quickly married and soon had twin baby girls.” He started his career working on one of his father’s documentaries (prior to her assassination, Indira Gandhi had asked him to make a film about her father Nehru); Jono was supposed to do the still photography, but ended up doing and learning so much more, observing the editor Reena Mohan (“her shed was a calm and creative oasis...something I still try to provide,” he said). As a runner at VTR, he became further enamored of movie magic (as he put it, “rushes went in there dead and living films came out”). Next was his tenure at commercial editorial company DGW, where he rose to editor under the tutelage of Kevin Whelan, who had opened DGW Amsterdam (c.1994), with Wieden+Kennedy as a client; Griffith and his family relocated so he could take on work, including many collaborations with Czar Films owner/director van de Ploeg (including Rolo's “Elephant”) and his burgeoning relationship with van Heijningen. Griffith also began working with Tomato in London, including cutting the feature length Underground concert film of Everything Everything. He cut Destiny’s “Become Legend” (director: Joseph Kosinski, agency: 72andSunny), and worked with The Chemical Brothers, and continues the relationship, having recently edited “Don’t Think,” chronicling their live performance at Fuji Rock. 

During a one-year stint at Final Cut, Griffith worked with Chris Cunningham and Traktor, Romain Gavras (notably cutting Adidas “All In” via Sid Lee), before starting his own company, Circus. Joining Union Editorial opened the door to the U.S., and Griffith’s work on The Thing, a feature film for Universal directed by van Heijningen, led to more longform assignments spanning documentaries, feature films and TV shows, the most recent being Brassic 4, which won Best Comedy Drama at the Royal Television Society Awards. He cut the feature doc, The Other Final, which took home the Banff Mountain Fest Best Documentary Grand Prize and Cannes Film Festival Special Mention Documentary Prize.

Griffith has also worked with filmmakers James Mangold, Peter Thwaites, Wayne McClammy, Ruben Fleischer, Madonna, Hamish Rothwell, Albert Kodagolian, and many more. Additional awards and honors include Eurobeat Grand Prix, EPICA Epica d’Or, numerous Cannes Lions Gold, ADC Gold, ANDY Gold, Addy Gold, Clio Editing Gold, D&AD Yellow Pencil, and Int’l ANDY Gold Editing.

Griffith moved to L.A. earlier this year.

  • Friday, Jun. 16, 2023
Mitch Gardiner joins Uppercut as sr. Flame artist
Mitch Gardiner
LOS ANGELES -- 

Postproduction house Uppercut has added sr. Flame artist Mitch Gardiner to its VFX department. 

The Bay Area native has been active in the L.A. area postproduction community since 1997. He has worked at such postproduction studios as The Finish Line, Swietlik Editorial, Cut+Run, STITCH Editing, and most recently Bacon Visual Effects. 

Gardiner’s 2D solves and his eye for animation have been showcased in spots for Dr. Pepper’s campaign in partnership with the film Ironman, State Farm’s “Birds,” which he completed without CGI, and Round Table Pizza’s “Round Table Delivery Guy” where Gardiner developed the look and design of the spot’s game-play element. Additionally, he has worked on projects for Apple, Honda, Hershey’s, Facebook, and Infiniti, among others. 

Gardiner said, “Uppercut approaches finishing with a focus that I find inspiring. They’re really committed to growing their VFX division, and everyone I’ve worked with here so far has been enthusiastic and highly collaborative, which makes the work fun. You can tackle the high demands of postproduction if the company and team you work with are all aligned, and I’m thankful to be working with Uppercut.”

Uppercut’s founder Micah Scarpelli said, “What I like most about Mitch is that his career has been led by his genuine fascination and curiosity for VFX, and that started before he was working within that specialty. He’s an absolute genius with Flame, but you can’t teach or learn his level of applied diligence and artistry.”

  • Thursday, Jun. 15, 2023
Grey London appoints Liam Thomas as head of design
David Wigglesworth (l) and Liam Thomas
LONDON -- 

Grey London has appointed Liam Thomas as head of design to lead its team of designers, animators and artworkers.

Thomas, who joins from DEPT® where he was head of design, recently won a Webby for his work on “The Truth, Undressed” for Canesten, which also picked up a Bronze Clio at the 2023 Clio Awards, and a Gold Clio at the Clio Health Awards 2023. 

In his new role, Thomas will work across all Grey London clients reporting to executive creative director David Wigglesworth. Thomas will oversee the 15-strong design team, including artworkers in London, working periodically with Grey’s sister agency in Croatia. 

In previous roles, Thomas has worked on major accounts including Nike, Tinder, Under Armour and Twitch, and worked as sr. designer at Manifesto Studios and Made Thought & AnalogFolk before joining DEPT® in May 2022.

Thomas is also a co-founder of SOMEDAY--a creative experiment rooted in Welsh culture which he set up with Dave Griffiths, to explore Welsh stories through design, events, apparel and conversation.

He is deeply passionate about addressing the attainment and accessibility gap within the advertising industry and has worked directly with schools and colleges in Wales, his hometown, to mentor students and support them as they explore what creative career opportunities are out there.

  • Wednesday, Jun. 14, 2023
David Day joins Special Group London as CCO and partner
Special London's (l-r) Emily Harlock, David Day and Jennifer Black
LONDON -- 

Independent creative agency Special has appointed David Day as chief creative officer and partner. Day joins CEO Jennifer Black and chief strategy officer Emily Harlock to form the partner team for the London agency.

Currently executive creative director at CPB London, Day will take the new role when he joins in the autumn. His appointment comes as Special adds the pan-European account Mutti to its roster of clients, including Virgin, Speedo, Time Out and Asos.

In his time at CPB London, Day has grown the creative agency winning multiple accounts including Tinder, Asics and most recently Marie Curie. He also worked on the “Imagine” campaign for International Women’s Day, with his work for The Glenlivet, “Breaking Walls,” picking up numerous awards. A former creative director at Mother and executive creative director at Pablo London, Day also produced award-winning work for the BBC at Fallon London and won multiple awards during his time as creative director at Wieden + Kennedy.

Special, which originally launched in New Zealand, now has offices in Australia, U.K. and the U.S.. Clients across the group include Uber, PepsiCo and Virgin.

Day will lead the London office of Special alongside Black and Harlock, bringing his start-up experience, creative leadership and pitch-winning talent to grow the agency and drive its creative and design output.

Black said, “I loved working with Dave in my past life. He’s a hugely talented and experienced creative leader, and an absolutely lovely human to boot. We are incredibly excited for everything we’re going to do together.”

Day said, “Our role is to create interactions. Moments where we connect brands with people. And it’s in those interactions, no matter how fleeting, where we exist and they have to be special. It’s the reason I’ve come to join."

 

  • Tuesday, Jun. 6, 2023
TMA names Rick Utzinger an ECD; Erin Wasson upped to EVP, managing director
Rick Utzinger
DALLAS -- 

TMA (The Marketing Arm) has made a couple of talent moves on the executive leadership front, bringing Rick Utzinger aboard as an executive creative director and appointing Erin Wasson, currently EVP of growth and development, to serve as EVP, managing director.

Utzinger arrives at TMA following his work at BBDO LA, where he contributed to the AT&T business.  Prior to that, he was an ECD with Fallon in Minneapolis handling Arby’s, Silk, Samsung and Cooper Tires, among other clients and brands.  He also served as a creative director at both David&Goliath and TBWA\Chiat\Day in Los Angeles.  Utzinger has been recognized by Cannes, D&AD, The One Show and Clios for his work on Arby’s, Toyota, New Directions for Homeless Veterans, Miller Lite and The Grammy Awards.

Wasson has been with TMA for more than 12 years across two stints, first as an account director in the Chicago office, and later in growth and development, based in Dallas.  Throughout her career she led accounts at agencies including DDB Chicago and Ogilvy.

TMA is part of Omnicom Group Inc.

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