Amy Baer

Amy Baer currently serves as President of Landline Pictures, a label within MRC Film that makes feature films about and for the 50+ audience. Launched in 2020, their  first movie, JERRY & MARGE GO LARGE, directed by David Frankel, who did MARLEY & ME, is streaming now on Paramount+. 

Starring Bryan Cranston and Annette Bening, the film is based on the true story of a married couple who used a loophole in the Massachusetts State Lottery to win $27 million. I watched it with my dad a few weeks ago and it’s incredibly fun and heartwarming.

While Amy grew up in a showbiz family, she still had to carve her own path. One thing was certain: she did not want to be an actor.

During her stint at CAA in 1988 as an assistant to the late Jay Moloney, she discovered the studio executive route.

She eventually became President & CEO of CBS Films. She also spent 17 years at Sony Pictures Entertainment, where she oversaw impressive films such as:

MY BEST FRIEND’S WEDDING (1997)

ADAPTATION (2001)

S.W.A.T. (2002)

SOMETHING’S GOTTA GIVE (2003)

THE HOLIDAY (2006)

MONEYBALL (2011)

Amy’s entrepreneurial spirit led her to raise seven figure development fund and launch Gidden Media, one of the industry’s only female-led, independently financed content incubation companies. 

Her first film as a producer was the 2013 hit LAST VEGAS, starring Michael Douglas, Robert DeNiro, Morgan Freeman and Kevin Kline, which grossed $136MM worldwide. 

A devoted wife and mother of two, Amy has also found time to be Board President of Women in Film since June 2018.

A few takeaways from our chat include:

  • Soaking up as much as you can when you are in a job you dislike

  • How leaving the studio system forced her to develop an entrepreneurial muscle

  • And how to not take things personally

Michelle LeClerc

Michelle strives to add context and meaning to the exponentially growing world of design. Recently served as the Creative Director at Beutler Ink, a strategic creative agency specializing in research, writing, and design. Michelle has developed design and data visualization for social justice organizations like Campaign Zero, Be a Hero, and Yale’s The Justice Collaboratory and Freedom Reads. In 2017, she created the data visualization for Elizabeth Warren’s book, This Fight is Our Fight, a #1 New York Times bestseller. In 2019, on behalf of Campaign Zero, she led the data visualization for the first police scorecard in the US, which sought to identify urgent issues surrounding police accountability and propose best-practice solutions. Michelle’s commitment to quality design extends from the office to the classroom—she teaches Infographic Design at Temple’s Tyler School of Art.

www.michelleleclerc.com
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