Thursday, January 26, 2012

SPORTS AND ENTERTAINMENT PROMOTION

For access to the most sophisticated video and audio post-production facilities, clients turn to S&EPG’s facilities for a complete production solution. Conveniently located the facility at your event recently upgraded to accommodate High Definition Television (HDTV) formats.
S&EPG mediahouse services:
Production - digital broadcast studios with advanced recording facilities
Post production – linear and non-linear edit suites, audio dubbing suites including an eighteen seat film-style dubbing theatre, graphics design, and DVD production and replication
Live operations – main control room, VTR and ingest, and production galleries
New media delivery platforms - S&EPG offers streaming servers and the Interactive Content Factory (ICF) that enable video to be delivered to web and mobile formats
Along with accommodating video, audio and graphics requirements, the mediahouse facility has extensive connectivity with satellite and fiber optic gateways to meet complex live production and distribution requirements and seamlessly deliver content around the world.



The S&EPG mediahouse advantage:
Single source for all your editing, audio and graphics requirements
Extensive connectivity to satellite and fibre optic gateways
Close integration with S&EPG Media's web and mobile platforms for seamless global delivery of content

email: sportsandentainmentpromotion@gmail.com
Att: Aaron Snowell

Tuesday, January 17, 2012

Freddie Green Franklin County JAZZ STAR

                                 FREDDIE   GREEN
The name Freddie Green in jazz is as great as the music sound.
Freddie  Green was an American swing jazz guitarist. He was especially noted for his sophisticated rhythm guitar in big band settings, particularly for the Count Basie orchestra, where he was part of the "All-American Rhythm Section" with Basie on piano, Jo Jones on drums, and Walter Page on bass.

Freddie Green of Franklin County NC is a flute and saxphone star on the rise in the jazz world.


Freddie Green Jazz style is a musical style that originated at the beginning of the 20th century in African American communities in the Southern United States. It was born out of a mix of African  music traditions from its early development until the present, jazz has incorporated music from 19th and 20th century American popular music.  He music has developed and spread around the world it has drawn on many different national, regional and local musical cultures giving rise,  to many distinctive styles: New Orleans jazz dating from the early 1910s, big band swing, Kansas City jazz Gypsy jazz from the 1930s and 1940s, bebop from the mid-1940s and on down through West Coast jazz, cool jazz, avant-garde jazz, modal jazz, free jazz, Latin jazz in various forms, soul jazz, jazz fusion and jazz rock, smooth jazz, jazz-funk, punk jazz acid jazz, ethno jazz, jazz rap, cyber jazz, Indo jazz, M-Base, nu jazz, urban jazz and other ways of playing the sax music.

                                                  Freddie Green at the MLK EVENT



                                        
                                                                                            

Friday, May 27, 2011

FREE YOUTH SUMMER CAMP FUNDRAISER Franklinton North Carolina

Cooking Sponor Clifton Bond Bailing

Helping Hands Pal, Inc.
Free Summer Camp Fundraiser
AT
Franklinton Lion's Club
May 27, 2011
Eat-In or Take Out
10:30 a.m. till 7:00p.m.

Menu

Fried Fish
Fried Chicken
Grilled BBQ Chicken
Chopped Chicken BBQ
Boiled Potatoes
Macaroni &Cheese
Green Beans
Cole Slaw
Hushpuppies or Rolls
Assorted Desserts

$8:00 Meal
2 pieces of Fish or 1/4 Chicken or Chopped Chicken BBQ
W/2 sides and 1 Dessert and Roll or Hushpuppies

10.00 Combo Meal
1 piece of Fish and 1/4 Chicken or Chopped Chicken BBQ
W/2 sides and 1 Dessert and Roll or Hushpuppies

DONATIONS
Call (919)495-5940

Wednesday, May 18, 2011

SPORTS AND ENTERTAINMENT PROMOTION

 Sports and Entertainment promoter i.e. music, wrestling, boxing etc. is a person or company in the business of marketing and promoting e.g. concerts/gigs, boxing matches, baseball, basketball, golf, wrestling events, festivals, nightclubs or other live events.

Business model
Promoters are typically hired on contract by entertainment venues, earning an agreed-to fee or a royalty (colloquially known as a "cut"). The royalty structure is often a simple percentage of admission fees (called "the door") and/or food and drink sales, but like other royalty arrangements many variations are possible such as minimums or maximums, allowances for various expenses, or limitations (e.g. only drink sales after midnight). Other promoters operate independently, renting venues for a fixed fee or under a revenue arrangement with the building owner or tenant, and keeping all of the additional profits from a successful event. One common arrangement for small venues is for the promoter to earn all of the admissions fees, while the venue earns all of the food and drink revenue.
Some venues have exclusive arrangements with a single promotion company; others work with multiple promoters on a rotating schedule (one night per week, for example) or on an event-by-event basis. Promoters often work together, either as equal partners or as subcontractors to each other's events. Several promoters may work together for a large special event, e.g. a New Year's Eve party in a hotel ballroom. They may also deputize "hosts", who are essentially socially influential or desirable non-promoters who will market the events to their circle of friends in exchange for special treatment or free admission to the event.

At a minimum the event promoter manages publicity and advertising. Depending on the arrangement they may also handle security, ticket sales, door policies, decorations, and booking of entertainers. Many promoters are DJs or musicians themselves, and perform at their own event. Conversely, many musicians act as promoters for their own concerts, either directly or through their manager or booking company. Historically, promotion has been a cottage industry, with companies operated by one or several well-connected charismatic individuals, often working part-time. However, with the rise of corporate ownership of live entertainment assets several large companies have emerged in the field, most notably Live Nation via its acquisition (indirectly, via Clear Channel). The larger companies tend to promote more traditional mainstream music in exclusive contracts with concert halls. Alternative music and events and nightclubs remain in the hands of independent promoters.

 Contracts and Disputes
There are often disputes over money in the promotions industry because it is largely cash business with a history of corruption and uneven recordkeeping. In addition there are many accounting complexities to manage, particularly for large events: revenue, expenses, and oversight of parking, coat checks, concession vendor sales (e.g. CDs and t-shirts), box office so-called "convenience fees", in kind trades, promotional give-away items used to lure guests (e.g. free drinks), costs for insurance, cleaning staff, and so on. One area of frequent contention are cross-promotions, where the promoter or some other party connected with the venue will obtain a favor (for example, a price discount) in exchange for giving a future favor to the vendor. If the existence of the scheme, or the relationship between the parties, is undisclosed this may become a form of bribery. Another opportunity for misunderstanding are the various "lists" of guests who will be admitted for free or with VIP treatment, and the "door policy" used by bouncers to decide who will be admitted and at what price. To deal with these complexities event contracts can become quite long and detailed. Whether written or not, these arrangements tend to favor the party with the greater sophistication or the more control over the production of the event. Even the most detailed, professionally written and negotiated contracts can become the subject of lawsuits over interpretation.

Because nightclubs are often associated with drug and alcohol consumption, rowdiness, and other late-night behavior, promoters may become entangled in various criminal disputes as well.

Promotions methods
Promoters bring crowds through a variety of methods. The most direct are guerrilla marketing techniques such as plastering posters on outdoor walls, flyposting, and distributing handbills on windows of cars parked in entertainment districts. Promoters also keep mailing lists, usually email lists, of their preferred guests and their wider list of potential customers. Recently, many promoters have taken advantage of online technology such as online social networks and event listing sites to handle publicity, invitations, mailing lists, and so on. Clubs and promoters are among leaders in SMS text message advertising to their own lists as well as sponsored snippets on 3rd party lists for daily content to subscribers. Many fans promote events,products through their Facebook/Twitter/Myspace on their own free will.

Promoters often build a brand out of their own personalities and the parties they host, marketing the events under a consistent name, style, type of program, and social experience that downplays the branding of the venue or artist. They may develop a loyal clientele that will follow them from one location to another.