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Posts Tagged ‘law’

Common Legal Issues in Business with Attorney Kevin Houchin

Tuesday, February 24th, 2009

In This Podcast Episode

Rob McNealy interviews attorney, author and artist Kevin Houchin about naming, branding and common legal issues faced by business owners.

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Kevin Houchin’s Bio

Kevin HouchinKevin E. Houchin lawyers from a wholly different perspective. Kevin knew from a very young age that his purpose in life was to help people reach their potential. Entering law school at 33 enabled him to mindfully integrate his experience as a graphic designer and his dozen or so years as a small business and brand development consultant. His artistic eye, his marketing skills, and his legal knowledge combine to make him a highly effective counselor.

Kevin advises creative people on how to maximize creativity, build businesses, and protect intellectual property. He enjoys discussions that turn toward relationships and creative collaboration which enable him to play the role of business and life coach in addition to attorney and marketing consultant.

Kevin writes about how to get the most out of law school in his book Fuel the Spark: 5 Guiding Values for Success in Law School & Beyond. He is also the author of the forthcoming The Secrets of Creative Business. Both books are published by Morgan James Publishing. He also contributes a chapter on the legal issues of social media in Twitter Power: How to Dominate Your Market One Tweet at a Time, by Joel Comm (Wiley Publishing).

Kevin writes a regular column for the leading business journal in Northern Colorado, blogs compulsively, and has a large following on Twitter.com. He speaks regularly for creative entrepreneurial business, continuing legal education, and law school audiences.

Kevin’s diverse background helps him provide expert counsel to people seeking to reach their creative potential. To fuel his own spark of creativity, Kevin enjoys creating fine art and cooking without a recipe. His favorite art medium is batik, because it combines his design and planning skills with an element of chance. His favorite cooking medium is the grill because it is a perfect catalyst for a really rockin’ party.

A native Iowan, Kevin is an active father and husband. He lives with his wife and their three children in the mountains outside Fort Collins, Colorado where on a clear day you really can see forever.[ad#horizontal]

Viral Video & Digital Media with Harvey Harrison of Burning Shorts

Wednesday, May 21st, 2008

In This Podcast Episode

Rob McNealy interviews entertainment entrepreneur and lawyer, Harvey Harrison of Burning Shorts, on interactive digital entertainment media and viral video.

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Harvey Harrison’s Bio

Harvey Harrison, a native of Los Angeles, grew up with dual citizenship in Venice Beach and Silverlake/Rampart, two “colorful” areas of the city. After graduation from Yale with a degree in philosophy and a JD degree from Stanford Law School, Harvey practiced entertainment law under the masterful training of Dixon Q. Dern at Dern, Mason, and Floum. Among clients with whom Harvey worked was Chuck Jones.

He began his work as a literary and packaging agent at the Sy Fischer Company/Agency which represented companies like Hanna Barbera as well as individual writer-producer-director talent like Garry Marshall.

During this time and by 1982, Harvey experienced the “digital epiphany”, and represented game designers and companies. He has been a pioneer in the effort to advance the digital arts since that early start until the present. Profiled in Newsweek, MSNBC/Wall Street Journal Online, San Francisco Chronicle, and the Los Angeles Times for this effort, Harvey was praised by Newsweek for his “boyish enthusiasm” and “his strategy to win the hearts and minds” of prospective clients.

In the mid 80s, Harvey served as President of the world acclaimed Japanese based animation company TMS Entertainment, with the mission to produce for the US market. When he started, TMS had not yet directly supplied programming to any US outlet. When he concluded at TMS approximately two years later, TMS had produced or was committed to produce 194 half hour animated episodes either directly or subcontract for US clients such as CBS, Disney, and Universal.

After nearly a thousand television series episodes and several movies at Sy Fischer Co and TMS, Harvey joined the “studio side” as Vice President, Business Affairs, for Tri-Star Television and, then, following the merger, in that capacity at Columbia Pictures Television.

Harvey returned to agenting for a number of joyful and productive years with the elite Jim Preminger Agency. While all Harvey’s agency work has been in live action motion pictures and television as well as animated and digital media, his increasing involvement with the latter inspired him to found Catalyst Agency, Inc., in 1996, which he runs currently.

During this period, Harvey continued the earlier practice of representing companies as well as individual talents. Company clients include/included Rhythm & Hues (interactive and art divisions), Cyan (Myst, Riven), and Dangerously Adorable Productions (Fear of Girls online comedy series). Individual client include Everett Peck creator/producer of Duckman, the enduring television series favorite, and creator/executive producer of Squirrel Boy the series recently launched by Cartoon Network as well as Alexandra Dreyfus, star of online hit series Lonelygirl-15.

Harvey’s work as a pioneer in digital media extends beyond entertainment. In response to their need, Harvey advised the department of psychiatry and the related Neuropsychiatric Institute (now the Jane & Terry SEMEL INSTITUTE for Neuroscience & Human Behavior) at UCLA regarding distribution of its educational content in digital media. As a result of this consultancy, the department invited Harvey to join the faculty; he serves as lecturer in the department of psychiatry and biobehavioral sciences at UCLA (appointed 2000-2008).

Beyond the media and while Harvey does not practice entertainment law, he donated pro bono services as a volunteer attorney in the juvenile division of the Office of the Public Defender, Ventura County, focusing on school placement issues, or, as he describes his efforts, “from Juvenile to School Hall”. This service has led to his teaching at the Juvenile Facility in Oxnard, California.

Harvey is married to Jeanne Harrison, a businessperson, and they have two children: David, a graduate of USC who currently works for MTV Networks, and Rebecca, a student at Agoura High School.