In the latest episode of the “Daily Variety” podcast, entrepreneurs Tina Knowles and Ashley Graham discuss their pioneering journeys in establishing influential media and retail brands. Their insights are drawn from a series of discussions that took place at Variety‘s annual Entertainment Marketing Summit.
This full-day event in Beverly Hills included sessions with leading industry figures such as marketers, brand managers, creators, talent representatives, ad sales executives, and media buyers. Videos of all the sessions are available for viewing here.
Listen to todayâs âDaily Varietyâ podcast here:
In a discussion with Variety‘s senior entertainment writer Angelique Jackson, Tina Knowles shared memories of her early role in styling Destinyâs Child, the iconic group that propelled her daughter BeyoncĂ© to international fame.
âI was doing everything out of necessity. It wasnât because and I didnât know I was producing, I didnât know I was creative director, and that term wasnât even a thing then. I was just doing what needed to be done, and a lot of times never given credit for it. And I was OK with that. I actually liked hiding and being in the background,â Knowles said. âAnd I realized when I look back on it that I was literally this country woman with this big hair from Texas with this thick accent. And I would go into a TV show like âThe Tonight Showâ and have to fight with the lighting director. And theyâd be like, âWho? This is somebodyâs mama, get her out of here! And they didnât take me seriously. But I would be a pest. And I would say, Iâm sorry, but you got four Black girls, you need more light on them. And theyâd be like, âWho are you to tell me about lighting?â But I was doing all these things and I didnât feel enough. I guess I didnât feel like I was professionally trained, so I would just be OK with somebody kind of pushing me to the side.â
Ashley Graham, a trailblazing supermodel for plus-size women, together with her UTA agent Natasha Bolouki, spoke with Jennifer Maas, Variety‘s senior business writer, about her venture into designing apparel lines for JC Penney. Additionally, Graham recounted how she managed to perform as Roxie Hart in the Broadway production of Chicago for six weeks, despite having no prior experience in singing or dancing.
Variety via Getty Images
âNow, friends â I donât sing, I donât act, and I definitely donât dance. But for some reason, I had it in my head that this was a goal of mine. And Iâm a big manifester. I have the yellow pad every year. Iâm writing my three or four pages and weâre getting it done. Weâre putting it on the mirror and the walls. And when I first met Natasha and the whole team, they asked me what was the biggest dream I had that maybe hadnât come true yet? And that was one of them. I kid you not,â Graham said.
âTwo months later, âChicagoâ calls and theyâre like, âWe want you to come in for an audition.â I was not ready. I had no idea what I was doing. I spent my own money and I went and got the best music teacher, dance teacher, acting teacher. I nailed the audition. I was Roxie Hart in âChicagoâ for six weeks on Broadway, and UTA really helped me and made that happen,â she said. âAnd what that did for me is it made me say, I need to dream bigger. Because if something like that, where Iâm not born with the skill set and I have to go and get trained for it, that means thereâs a lot of training that could be happening for anything that I really want.â
(Pictured top: Tina Knowles)
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