William Mapother

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The JOBS Act

Posted on: March 22nd, 2012 by wmapother No Comments

No, it’s not an experimental one-act play about the founder of Apple.  

It’s a set of bills intended to make raising money easier for entrepreneurs and small private businesses.  The Senate just passed it today.  The House will now vote and then President Obama is expected to pass it into law.

One purpose is to ease SEC regulations on private business, some of which have been in place since the 1930s.  One effect is to benefit the trend of crowdfunding, in which a network of people fund a project or business.  Successful crowdfunding sites include Indiegogo, Kickstarter, and AngelList.

As a co-founder of Slated, the premiere crowdfunding site for film investment, I welcome these changes, not only because they’ll increase the capital available to filmmakers, but also because they make investing in film accessible to those who are interested.

Slated Closes Series B

Posted on: March 20th, 2012 by wmapother No Comments

We at Slated are happy to announce that we’ve completed our Series B round of fundraisingfor the site. Thank you to TechCrunch, who did a great piece on our reaching our Series B goal.

Slated is the next-generation online platform for investing in film, connecting investors and filmmakers on a socially-vetted marketplace.  The plaform currently offers 45 films, several with Oscar winners attached.  Overview FAQs are on my site, and here’s a more professionally-geared description:

“Launched in 2012, Slated is the next-generation online marketplace for investing in film.

For investors & industry professionals, Slated provides exclusive access to a socially-vetted marketplace of high-quality films and filmmakers. Slated makes it easier to track a film’s progress, to follow trusted people and their portfolios, and to receive targeted updates that will help them find their next great film.

For filmmakers, Slated provides a level of validation for their projects and a platform to promote their films to an active audience including investors, distributors, and sales agents.”

Shoulders of Giants

Posted on: March 15th, 2012 by wmapother 3 Comments

Being dragged along for the shopping trip:  Not priceless.  Finding a way to survive it:  is.

This guy shows the way.  Here’s a link to it, too.

 

Crowdfunding Film – Press

Posted on: March 8th, 2012 by wmapother 1 Comment

Rikaroo gives Slated a good overview post, and at the Berlin Festival, a panel spoke about 
the benefits to filmmakers of seeking crowdfunding.

Get Thee to a Class

Posted on: March 7th, 2012 by wmapother 1 Comment

(Another in a series of posts to actors.  For more check out the ‘Info to Actors’ category at left.)

Actors young and young-ish, it’s dangerously easy to stop growing in your craft. Other performers — dancers, singers, etc. — wouldn’t imagine stopping their training. Why should an actor?  I once read that only a week before he died, Laurence Olivier was still in an acting class. QED. And RIP. And…moving on.

Last evening I was reminded of an entirely separate benefit to being in class:  the connections you make. On your own, you’re likely to let this asset slide. For a craft so dependent on interacting with others, actors tend to spend a lot of time alone. How many people are you going to meet on your three trails between the fridge, the TV, and the toilet?

So yesterday I went to a party for the premiere of Samantha Gutstadt‘s web series – kileshay.com. While there I ran into Tava Smiley, an acting classmate from several years ago.  She introduced me to Gabe Sachs, a writer on – genuflection, please – the cult series Freaks and Geeks. (Yes, it’s on Netflix.) This show launched the careers of people like James Franco, Seth Rogen, and Jason Siegel.  Yeah, I know.

Anyway, to wrap this up, after I stopped fanboying all over Gabe, I was reminded of an acting class’s ancillary benefit:  friends for now and connections for the future. No actor is an island, as it were. So make the connections and then – especially when you feel you’re falling off the face of the earth – stay in touch with them.

And just so I can squeeze one more lesson from this, I’ll add that it’s also a reminder of the importance of being in not just any class, but a good one, alongside actors who are studying and serious.  The ones who will be around for a while and find a way to work. The committed and idiosyncratic. The freaks and geeks.

[This is another in a continuing series of potentially helpful, hopefully practical posts to actors on practicing their craft or surviving the trying.  I bear no responsibility for how this or any of my posts might ruin your life, lead you to law school, or make your parents sick with worry.  For more of the same, click the ‘Info to Actors’ category at left.]