Sony Pictures options Stone’s comic novel The Prison Minyan for TV

THE PRISON MINYAN/Jonathan Stone

June 9, 2022 | by Lauren Brown

Sony Pictures has optioned US writer Jonathan Stone’s novel The Prison Minyan (Lightning Books) for adaptation as a series of one-hour “dramedy” episodes.

Andrew Plotkin, senior vice-president of drama development at Sony Pictures Television Studios, acquired film rights from John Beach and Kevin Cleary of Gravity Squared Entertainment in Los Angeles and Andrea Cavallaro of the Sandra Dijkstra Literary Agency in Del Mar, California.

Plotkin has developed series including “The Boys”, “Them”, “I Know What You Did Last Summer”, “One Tree Hill”, “Nip/Tuck”, “Cold Case” and “Veronica Mars”.

The Prison Minyan was published simultaneously in the UK and the US by Lightning Books in January 2022, after publisher Dan Hiscocks acquired rights from Vanessa Kerr at Abner Stein in London.

It tells the story of a group of fraudsters, tax evaders, trigamists and forgers at Otisville Prison, the real-life jail in upstate New York which is the prison of choice for Jewish offenders. When the regime toughens to punish a newly arrived celebrity convict who has upset the 45th president, the inmates find devious ways to fight back.

Stone, who got the idea for the novel from the incarceration at Otisville of Donald Trump’s fixer Michael Cohen, said of the option deal: “I am so pleased with this development. I’ve always thought The Prison Minyan’s setting and characters would be a great basis for a series. Now it looks like savvier folks than me feel the same way.”

Hiscocks said: “We fell in love with The Prison Minyan as soon as we saw the manuscript. We were overjoyed when it got a review in the New York Times – no mean achievement for a tiny UK indie publisher –and equally delighted when the Jewish Chronicle called it ‘this most cherishably Jewish of books’.

“We’re over the moon to see it taken up by the industry’s biggest independent content producer. With smart comedy, wisdom and some serious jeopardy in its action scenes, it’s perfect for the small screen.” 

John W. Beach Of Gravity Squared Entertainment Talks Authors & Screenwriters

Los Angeles, CA, John W. Beach is the owner of Los Angeles based Gravity Squared Entertainment, a company that manages writers and directors, as well as producing for film and television. He also has about one hundred and fifty books under management. Beach’s main role at his company involves packaging these books and attaching talent to them. He also represents a limited number of screenwriters.

Beach works with a number of book agents to ensure he has a steady stream of books to consider. “My job is to expose the book or screenplay to the industry.” It’s up to the industry to determine if they are worthy of production into film and TV shows. Despite the breadth of book types Beach represents, he does have a propensity for historical non-fiction.

Due to time constraints, John Beach is more selective with the screenwriters he chooses to work with. “I respond to a great voice, great characters in most genres.” He doesn’t respond well to westerns or sci-fi “because they’re not my world,” he confessed.

Selecting Books

Beach is privilege to read many books either at manuscript stage or before they hit the shelves. “While most of our books are published, we do get most of our books before they hit the shelves and this gives us a little more time to present them to the industry, before they hit the shelves.

Although Beach will consider representing self-published authors, he conceded that they are sometimes at a disadvantage to writers with deals at major publishing houses because of their larger marketing and advertising capabilities. “Marketing and advertising gets eyes on books which equate to reviews and ratings, which in turn translate into cinema goers. This is why books published by larger companies often receive more attention from Hollywood producers.

Ratings and reviews equate to an audience.

It is no co-incidence that many screenwriters also write books. They may have an unpublished book they adapt into a screenplay in the hopes of an easier sell, or vice versa. Beach believes that, broadly speaking, books are easier (but not easy) to sell. “Selling books comes with a lot of caveats.”Creative Screenwriting Magazine

The manager/ producer points out that books and screenplays are entirely different writing formats requiring vastly different skills sets. Most authors are not good screenwriters and vice versa. “An author doesn’t easily become a screenwriter and a screenwriter doesn’t easily become an author,” he said.

Books are more descriptive. Screenplays are more beat-centric.

Beach laments that many writers are unaware that authors and screenwriters are different writing professions. A dentist is not an optometrist although both are medical professionals. “I’ve seen examples of authors writing screenplays that aren’t formatted correctly, the plot points were missing or in the wrong places, and the protagonists and antagonists were poorly defined. You have to achieve the same thing in screenplays as in a novel with fewer pages.” This undoubtedly sours the relationship and makes a writer appear unprofessional. Therefore, he often refers books to screenwriters so they can adapt them into screenplays.

Given the stark variations in format, there are close similarities between pitching books and film ideas. “You’ll have a one or two sentence logline and a synopsis in both.

Despite dealing with underlying material to potentially be adapted into films and television shows, Beach still sees the potential of original stories. “Big studios have a preference for big IP, but original stories are still selling.” It’s worth noting that big IP was once an original story.

Although he defines his role as largely presenting his book roster to film and television producers, there are instances where a writer might have a distinct tone and voice, but the story in the book is lacking. In the case of screenwriters, it’s easier to ask them if they have another script to read if one didn’t resonate with him or was lacking in some aspect. This is more difficult with book writers, because they may not have written another book he can read.

There is no shortage of tasks that fill John’s typical work day. He reads books and screenplays, responds to queries, reads contracts, and attends to running his company. “It’s roughly sixty percent reading and forty percent office work,” he stated.

Dealing With Writers

Having a manager isn’t the same as hiring one as an employee in the writing world. “The relationship starts with communication. It’s a partnership. One person can’t lead the way while the other does less. Both people need to be in tune with each other for it to succeed.”

A writer’s job extends beyond writing. They need to network and not leave their careers solely to their managers. They need to have a vision of where they want their careers to be in five years. “My job is to guide them. I might advise that one idea is more commercial than another in service to that vision, but I can’t do the work for them,” he added.

We asked John what most attracts him to a story either in a book or screenplay. “A character that is full of need and struggle. Characters really resonate with me. Characters that are real world that we see through a lens.”

The life of working writer is filled with uncertainty. “Many inexperienced writers think it’s easy to take a book out and get it seen, let alone read. It’s even more difficult to find a buyer given that they lean more towards produced writers, especially in TV.” Breaking a new writer into the business poses a unique set of obstacles and difficulties.

The manager/ producer currently spends most of his time on studio and network projects and less than ten percent on independent projects. “That’s not because I’m not interested in them. I feel the studios and networks provide more stability.”

John Beach is upbeat about the trends in the film and television industry. “I’m seeing increases in inclusion and diversity; films about characters with disabilities and authentic actors playing those characters. Studios are looking for authentic stories with authentic characters.” The sea change starts at the top down. “We need more executives who are BIPOC, female, bi-racial, and have disabilities in powerful positions.

Despite the challenges of discovering new writing talent, Beach cherishes his role as a manager/ producer. “love having my fingertips on such amazing stories. I represent the first American woman to walk in space [Dr. Kathy Sullivan] and an international disability rights activist. It’s amazing hearing those stories. It humbles you.

Gravity Squared client, Kathy Sullivan, named to President Biden’s Council of Advisors on Science and Technology

Thirty Distinguished Leaders Represent Most Diverse PCAST in U.S. History, Will Develop Science and Technology Recommendations to Address Nation’s Most Pressing Challenges

WASHINGTON – Today, President Biden announced 30 of America’s most distinguished leaders in science and technology as members of his President’s Council of Advisors on Science and Technology (PCAST). A direct descendant of the scientific advisory committee established by President Eisenhower in 1957 in the weeks after the launch of Sputnik, PCAST is the sole body of external advisors charged with making science, technology, and innovation policy recommendations to the President and the White House.

Drawing from the nation’s most talented and accomplished individuals, President Biden’s PCAST includes 20 elected members of the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering and Medicine, five MacArthur “Genius” Fellows, two former Cabinet secretaries, and two Nobel laureates. Its members include experts in astrophysics and agriculture, biochemistry and computer engineering, ecology and entrepreneurship, immunology and nanotechnology, neuroscience and national security, social science and cybersecurity, and more.

The members represent the most diverse PCAST in U.S. history. PCAST is traditionally co-chaired by the President’s Science Advisor and 1-2 external co-chairs; since its inception in 1957, no women have ever served as co-chairs. President Biden’s PCAST has two women co-chairs. And, this PCAST reflects the President’s commitment to build an Administration that truly looks like America: for the first time ever, women make up half of PCAST, and people of color and immigrants make up more than one-third of PCAST. Its diversity will help the council bring to bear a wide range of perspectives to address the nation’s most pressing opportunities and challenges, so that science, technology, and engineering benefits all Americans.

“The future of America depends on science and technology like never before,” said PCAST Co-Chair and Director of the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy Dr. Eric Lander. “President Biden understands that addressing the opportunities and challenges we face – to our health, our planet, our economic prosperity, and our national security – will require harnessing the full power of science and technology. Scientific progress depends on people seeing things in new ways, because they bring different lenses, different experiences, different passions, different questions. This PCAST is uniquely prepared because of its extraordinary scientific breadth, wide range of work experiences, and unprecedented diversity.”

“We are thrilled that some of our most accomplished Americans are willing to step up and serve the nation by being members of PCAST,” saidPCAST Co-Chair Dr. Frances Arnold. “Their vast expertise will help the nation build back better through science and technology.”

“Science and technology permeate so many elements of government decision making,” said PCAST Co-Chair Dr. Maria Zuber. “I am excited to bring this historic and brilliant group’s knowledge, experience, and innovative thinking to bear on the nation’s toughest challenges in science and technology and navigate an equitable and inclusive path forward for the nation.”

As directed in the President’s executive order establishing PCAST, the council includes advisors from outside the federal government who are responsible for advising the President “on matters involving policy affecting science, technology, and innovation, as well as on matters involving scientific and technological information that is needed to inform public policy relating to the economy, worker empowerment, education, energy, the environment, public health, national and homeland security, racial equity, and other topics.”

Read more about the PCAST members below. Additional information about PCAST and the PCAST members can be found at http://www.whitehouse.gov/PCAST.

PCAST CO-CHAIRS

Frances Arnold, Ph.D., is a biochemical engineer who pioneered how to harness evolution to create proteins, for which she received the Nobel Prize in Chemistry and became the first American woman to do so. She holds more than 60 U.S. patents and co-founded three companies in sustainable fuels, chemistry, and agriculture. She is the Linus Pauling Professor of Chemical Engineering, Bioengineering, and Biochemistry at the California Institute of Technology.

Eric Lander, Ph.D., is a geneticist, molecular biologist, and mathematician who serves as the President’s Science Advisor and Director of the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy, and is a member of the President’s Cabinet. One of the nation’s leading life scientists, he was a principal leader of the Human Genome Project and was president and founding director of the Broad Institute of Harvard and MIT, which propels work on genomic medicine. He was PCAST’s external co-chair during all eight years of the Obama-Biden administration.

Maria T. Zuber, Ph.D., is a geophysicist and planetary scientist who has produced several topography and gravity maps of planetary bodies that exceed the quality and resolution of those for Earth. She has led a dozen experiments on ten NASA missions and was the first woman to lead a NASA planetary mission. She is the Vice President for Research and E. A. Griswold Professor of Geophysics at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), where she was the first woman to lead one of the university’s science departments.

PCAST MEMBERS

Marvin Adams, Ph.D., P.E., is a nuclear engineer and computational physicist who develops and applies complex computational algorithms to problems related to nuclear energy and national security. He has experience in nuclear reactor physics and design, nuclear weapons analysis and modernization, counterproliferation, and arms control. He chairs the Mission Committee at Los Alamos National Laboratory, which oversees the laboratory’s weapons and global security programs, serves on the Nuclear Effects Advisory Panel for the U.S. Department of Defense, and has served for several years on the Stockpile Assessment Team for U.S. Strategic Command. He is the HTRI Professor of Nuclear Engineering, Regents Fellow, and Director of National Laboratories Mission Support in the Texas A&M University System.

Dan E. Arvizu, Ph.D., is a mechanical engineer and an expert in energy materials, process sciences, and technology commercialization with over 30 years of experience in various roles at Department of Energy (DOE) National Laboratories. He served as Director and Chief Executive of the National Renewable Energy Laboratory during the Obama-Biden administration, in which role he was the first Hispanic to lead a DOE national laboratory. Currently he is a leader in higher education as the Chancellor of the New Mexico State University System, a Land Grant, Space Grant, Hispanic-Serving Institution, bringing a focus on harnessing education, research, and outreach initiatives to foster economic development and social mobility.

John Banovetz, Ph.D., is a chemist, materials scientist, and business leader with over 25 years’ experience in corporate research and technology development, manufacturing, strategy, innovation, and environmental stewardship. He holds multiple patents in polymer science and adhesives, and oversees more than 8,000 researchers worldwide in his role as the Executive Vice President, Chief Technology Officer and Environmental Responsibility at 3M Company, a leading industrial, worker safety, health care, and consumer goods manufacturing company.

Ashton Carter, D.Phil., is a physicist and technologist who served as the 25th U.S. Secretary of Defense. While serving in the Obama-Biden administration’s Cabinet, he built and restored bridges between the Pentagon and America’s private-sector technology and innovation ecosystem, designed and executed the Defense Department’s strategic pivot to the Asia-Pacific region, opened all the military’s combat positions to women, and lifted the ban on transgender service members. He is Director of the Harvard Kennedy School’s Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs and Belfer Professor of Technology and Global Affairs at Harvard University.

Frances Colón, Ph.D., is a neuroscientist and science diplomat who served as Deputy Science and Technology Adviser to the U.S. Secretary of State during the Obama-Biden administration. Her diverse experience in science diplomacy has included coordinating climate change policy for the Energy and Climate Partnership of the Americas, helping American immigrant scientists build networks of scientists to solve problems in their countries of origin, working to advance the careers of women and girls in science, technology, engineering, and math (STEM), and leading scientific re-engagement with Cuba. Born and raised in Puerto Rico, Colón is currently the Senior Director for International Climate at the Center for American Progress.

Lisa A. Cooper, M.D., M.P.H., is an internal medicine physician, social epidemiologist, and health services researcher who was among the first to document how doctor-patient relationships can help overcome racial and ethnic disparities in healthcare. Born in Liberia, she is one of the United States’ leading researchers and practitioners in the field of health equity, having designed innovative approaches to improve physicians’ communication skills, patients’ self-management skills, and the ability of healthcare organizations to address the needs of populations experiencing health disparities. She serves as the Bloomberg Distinguished Professor of Equity in Health and Healthcare at Johns Hopkins University, and is Director of the Johns Hopkins Center for Health Equity.

John O. Dabiri, Ph.D., is an aeronautical engineer who designs next-generation wind turbines with the potential to reduce cost, size, and environmental impacts while maximizing the amount of electricity generated. His discoveries on the ideal placement of wind turbines were shaped by his cross-disciplinary research into how jellyfish and schools of fish move throughout the ocean efficiently. A recipient of the MacArthur Foundation “Genius” Fellowship, he is the Centennial Professor of Aeronautics and Mechanical Engineering at the California Institute of Technology.

William Dally, Ph.D., is a computer scientist who invented hardware architectures that power parallel computing, modern supercomputers, and artificial intelligence as we know it today; he holds 120 patents and has authored more than 250 papers and 4 textbooks in these fields. The former chair of Stanford University’s computer science department and a frequent consultant to many government defense and intelligence agencies on high-performance computing and artificial intelligence, he is the Chief Scientist and Senior Vice President for Research at NVIDIA, a leading computer chip and technology company.

Sue Desmond-Hellmann, M.D., M.P.H., is a physician-scientist who led the development of the first gene-targeted drug for treating breast cancer. Her medical, scientific, and philanthropic career spans 40 years: from academic medicine and clinical practice studying cancer and HIV/AIDS, to running research and product development at some of America’s top biotechnology companies, to leading higher education at one of California’s marquis graduate institutions, to running the world’s largest private foundation. She is the former CEO of the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, and previously served as Chancellor of the University of California, San Francisco (UCSF), where she was the first woman to hold that role.

Inez Fung, Sc.D., is an atmospheric scientist and one of the world’s leading experts on climate and the carbon cycle – how carbon dioxide moves throughout the land, oceans, and the atmosphere – and how its movement both depends on and alters our planet’s climate. An immigrant to the United States from Hong Kong and a contributor to the United Nations’ Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, she is a Professor of Atmospheric Science at the University of California, Berkeley, and was the second woman to graduate from MIT with a doctorate in meteorology.

Andrea Goldsmith, Ph.D., is a pioneer in the field of wireless communications whose discoveries have influenced cellular and WiFi networks all over the world: from powering the latest generations of high-speed wireless, to enabling smart home appliances, to preventing cell phone calls from dropping when we walk or drive down the street. She is the Dean of the School of Engineering and Applied Science and the Arthur LeGrand Doty Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering at Princeton University, and was the first woman to win the Marconi Prize, the highest honor in telecommunications research.

Laura H. Greene, Ph.D., is a physicist and expert in quantum mechanics known for her discoveries and research in unconventional superconducting materials and high magnetic fields. She is also a leading advocate for diversity in science and a champion for women in scientific and engineering fields, having promoted the impact of women and young scientists around the world, particularly in developing countries. She is the Chief Scientist of the National High Magnetic Field Laboratory (at Florida State University, the University of Florida, and Los Alamos National Laboratory) and the Marie Krafft Professor of Physics at Florida State University.

Paula Hammond, Ph.D., is a chemical engineer who designs nanoscale materials that can deliver drugs to specific parts of the body. Her work includes designing tiny particles that target chemotherapy drugs directly to tumor cells, and nanostructured dressings that rapidly stop bleeding to save the lives of soldiers wounded on the battlefield. She is a leading researcher in how to use polymers, nanotechnology, and biomaterials to improve human health. In her past work, she has designed polymers to improve batteries, solar cells, and alternative fuel cells. She is Head of MIT’s Department of Chemical Engineering – where she was the first woman and person of color to hold that position – and an Institute Professor and member of the Koch Institute for Integrative Cancer Research at MIT.

Eric Horvitz, Ph.D., M.D., is a computer scientist and a leading researcher in artificial intelligence (AI) and issues at the intersection of technology, people, and society – including the technical and societal challenges and opportunities presented by AI’s uses. He has made influential contributions with developing and fielding frontier technologies in biomedicine, transportation, aerospace, and computing systems and services, and he has been awarded the Feigenbaum Prize and the Allen Newell Award for advances in AI. He is Chief Scientific Officer at Microsoft, where he previously led Microsoft Research.

Joe Kiani,M.S.E.E., is an engineer and entrepreneur who invented breakthrough technologies – now used in hospitals, homes, and even on our wrists – that use light to measure how much oxygen is in a person’s blood. He is listed on more than 500 patents or patent applications on advanced signal processing, optical sensors, and wearable technologies. An immigrant to the United States from Iran at age nine, he is the founder, chairman, and CEO of Masimo Corporation, a global medical technology company known for its pulse oximetry devices and other noninvasive patient monitoring technologies.

Jonathan Levin, Ph.D., is an economist and academic leader widely recognized for his research in industrial organization, technological change, health insurance, allocation of radio spectrum, and the economics of internet markets. In 2011, he was awarded the prestigious John Bates Clark Medal – awarded each year to the American economist under age 40 who is judged to have made the most significant contribution to economic thought and knowledge – which is considered to be among the most noteworthy prizes in the field of economics, second only to the Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences. He is currently the Philip H. Knight Professor and Dean of the Graduate School of Business at Stanford University.

Steve Pacala, Ph.D., is an ecologist and environmental biologist who designs and tests mathematical models to investigate interactions between greenhouse gases, climate, and the biosphere, and to predict their effects on local and global ecosystems. He is the co-author of the climate stabilization “wedge” approach, which argued over 15 years ago that climate change could be solved using science, technologies and industries already within humanity’s grasp. He is the Frederick D. Petrie Professor in the Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology at Princeton University.

Saul Perlmutter, Ph.D., is an astrophysicist and cosmologist who received the Nobel Prize in Physics for discovering that the expansion of our universe is accelerating. He leads one of NASA’s science teams for the Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope, and also develops and teaches courses on scientific-style critical thinking for scientists and nonscientists alike. Further honors for his groundbreaking research include the Shaw Prize in Astronomy, the Breakthrough Prize in Fundamental Physics, and the Albert Einstein Medal. He is the Franklin W. and Karen Weber Dabby Professor of Physics and Director of the Berkeley Institute for Data Science at University of California, Berkeley and Senior Scientist at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory.

William Press, Ph.D., is a computer scientist, computational biologist, and astrophysicist who co-discovered the mathematical model for predicting the distribution of masses of galaxies throughout the universe. He previously served as deputy director of Los Alamos National Laboratory and as the Vice-Chair of PCAST during the Obama-Biden administration. He has wide-ranging experience as a researcher and manager across the physical and life sciences in universities and national laboratories, including applications to national security issues. He is the Leslie Surginer Professor of Computer Science and Integrative Biology at The University of Texas at Austin.

Penny Pritzker, J.D., M.B.A., is an entrepreneur, businesswoman, and civic leader who served as the 38th U.S. Secretary of Commerce. As a Cabinet member during the Obama-Biden administration, Pritzker launched and managed the Manufacturing USA network of 16 regional innovation hubs, oversaw the nation’s commercial and atmospheric science and technology agencies, led broadband deployment for underserved communities, administered programs for enhancing cybersecurity, privacy, and intellectual property, and launched the Commerce Department’s first-ever skilled workforce training initiative. She is Chairman and Founder of PSP Partners, Chairman of the Board of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, and founded and built several leading businesses over the course of her career.

Jennifer Richeson, Ph.D., is a social psychologist whose research has illuminated how identities – particularly racial identities – are formed and shaped through interactions with others. She is one of America’s leading scholars of interracial interactions, racial identity, bias and prejudice, cultural diversity, social inequality, and injustice. She has received multiple prestigious awards for her work, including the MacArthur Foundation “Genius” Fellowship. Richeson is the Philip R. Allen Professor of Psychology and Director of the Social Perception and Communication Lab at Yale University.

Vicki Sato, Ph.D., is a biologist, immunologist, and biotechnology executive with decades of experience leading teams in drug research and development. Molecules and therapeutics developed under her leadership have become critical treatments for HIV, cystic fibrosis, inflammation, multiple sclerosis, and Hepatitis C. She was Chief Science Officer and ultimately President of Vertex Pharmaceuticals, one of the first biotechnology companies to use structure-based and computational chemistries in the design of new drugs. Sato spent several years as Professor of the Practice in the department of Molecular and Cell Biology at Harvard University and Professor of Management Practice at Harvard Business School, where her work focused on productivity and innovation in biotechnology and pharmaceutical research and development.

Lisa T. Su, Ph.D., is an electrical engineer who is an expert in semiconductor devices and high-performance processors. She pioneered new ways to connect computer chips using copper instead of aluminum, resulting in 20% faster chip speeds. An American immigrant from Taiwan, she is President and CEO of Advanced Micro Devices (AMD), a leading semiconductor and microprocessor company. She is a recipient of the IEEE Robert N. Noyce Medal (the first woman to receive the award), and has been named Fortune Magazine’s #2 “Business Person of the Year” for 2020 and one of Barron’s “World’s Best CEOs” of 2019.

Kathryn Sullivan, Ph.D., is a geologist, former NASA astronaut, and oceanographer who served as Under Secretary of Commerce for Oceans and Atmosphere and Administrator of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) during the Obama-Biden administration. Sullivan flew on three Space Shuttle missions, including the mission that deployed the Hubble Space Telescope. She was the first American woman to walk in space, the first woman to dive to the Challenger Deep in the Mariana Trench (the deepest part of the Earth’s oceans), and is the first and only person to do both. She has previously served in leadership positions in Ohio’s Center of Science and Industry, higher education, the private sector, and the federal government, including as NOAA’s chief scientist.

Terence Tao, Ph.D., is a mathematician known for his breadth of achievement in research covering both pure and applied mathematics, including important contributions to compressive sensing (used in signal processing and cryptography) and number theory. He is a recipient of the Fields Medal, which is often described as the Nobel Prize of mathematics, and a MacArthur Foundation “Genius” Fellowship. An American immigrant from Australia, he is Professor of Mathematics and the James and Carol Collins Chair in the College of Letters and Sciences at the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA).

Phil Venables, M.Sc., is a computer scientist, software engineer, and expert in technology, security, and enterprise risk who has co-founded and led multiple corporate and industry-wide cybersecurity initiatives focused on safeguarding critical infrastructure in the financial sector. This includes Sheltered Harbor, FS-ARC, and FS-ISAC, which collectively provide a sector-wide capability to prevent, detect, respond, and recover from cyberattacks against the global financial system. He is Chief Information Security Officer at Google Cloud, a member of the NIST Information Security and Privacy Advisory Board, a Distinguished Expert for the National Security Agency’s Science of Security program, co-founder of the Center for Internet Security, and previously was a Partner, Chief Information Security Officer, and Chief Operational Risk Officer at Goldman Sachs.

Catherine Woteki, Ph.D., is an agriculture and food scientist and nutritionist who served in the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) as Chief Scientist and Under Secretary for Research, Education, and Economics during the Obama-Biden administration, where she oversaw USDA’S Agricultural Research Service, Economic Research Service, the National Institute of Food and Agriculture, and the National Agricultural Statistics Service. One of the nation’s leading researchers in the fields of human nutrition, food safety, agriculture, and health policy, she previously served as USDA’s first Under Secretary of Food Safety. She is Visiting Distinguished Institute Professor in the Biocomplexity Institute at the University of Virginia and Professor of Food Science and Human Nutrition at Iowa State University.

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‘Coda’ Director Sian Heder Set to Helm Biopic on Disability Activist Judith Heumann


Kristen Lopez – Jul 23, 2021 3:40 pm

  • Director Sian Heder is setting up her next project, and it could be a game-changer. 

After filming the charming and heartfelt “Coda,” set to release on Apple TV+ August 13, director Sian Heder is setting up her next project, and it could be a game-changer.

Initially reported by Deadline, Heder will direct a biopic on noted disability rights activist Judith Heumann, based on Heumann’s memoir. The deal is part of a package through Apple Original Films with Heder already signed to the company in a multi-year agreement. Actress Ali Stroker, who became the first disabled person to win a Tony for her 2019 performance in “Oklahoma” on Broadway, is reportedly being considered for the leading role.

Heumann’s memoir, entitled “Being Heumann,” documents her life and her journey as a disabled rights advocate. She contracted polio in 1949 and became a wheelchair user. From there she became a leading advocate, including organizing the 504 Sit-In in San Francisco, which was a landmark moment for disability rights. You can see the sit-in, as well as Heumann as a young woman, in the Oscar-nominated Netflix documentary “Crip Camp.”

Heder will also produce the film with David Permut through his Permut Presentations, as well as Heumann’s managers John W. Beach and Kevin Cleary of Gravity Squared Entertainment. Heumann and her co-author Kristen Joiner will be executive producers. Alex Astrachan is co-producer.

Heder’s feature “CODA” tells the story of a young girl who is the only hearing member in a predominately deaf family. Her dream is to attend music school but it comes at the risk of leaving her family behind. The movie was a smash out of Sundance, winning four major prizes including the Grand Jury and Audience awards, and started a bidding war before being purchased by Apple.

Too often, biopics on people with disabilities have fallen toward the overtly inspirational or tragic, but Heder’s film could continue the trend of upending disabled stereotypes in film. Not only is Heumann one of the leading voices in disability activism, to be played by a disabled Tony winner shows there are disabled figures and talent to work in unison.

There’s no set release date for the biopic nor an indication of when filming will start. This should give people plenty of time to learn up on Heumann’s remarkable accomplishments.

Apple Taps ‘CODA’s Siân Heder To Helm & Write Judy Heumann’s Memoir ‘Being Heumann’; ‘Oklahoma’ Tony Winner Ali Stroker Eyed To Star

Mike Fleming Jr. @ Deadline

JULY 22, 2021 – EXCLUSIVEApple Original Films has landed rights to a package based on Judy Heumann’s bestselling memoir Being Heumann. Siân Heder, whom Apple signed to a multi-year overall deal in the wake of winning an auction for her Sundance sensation CODA, is adapting the film to direct. Ali Stroker, the first actress who uses a wheelchair for mobility to appear on Broadway and the first to win a Tony for her work in Oklahoma, is being eyed to star.

Ali Stroker

Heder will produce the film with David Permut through his Permut Presentations, and Heumann’s managers John W. Beach and Kevin Cleary of Gravity Squared Entertainment. Heumann and her co-author Kristen Joiner will be executive producers. Alex Astrachan is co-producer.

From the time she contracted polio in 1949 in Brooklyn which confined her to a wheelchair, and was deemed a fire hazard at age 5 and told to stay home, Heumann has been a crusader for the rights of the disabled. The book was published last year by Beacon Press, and expands the activism of Heumann that was part of the Barack & Michelle Obama-produced documentary Crip Camp, for which Heumann won a Critics’ Choice Award for Most Compelling Living Subject of a Documentary. The movie will explore her efforts to plan the 504 Sit In in San Francisco, an important protest that led to standardizing rights for the disabled. She went on to a distinguished career, including serving in the Clinton Administration as the Assistant Secretary for the Office of Special Education and Rehabilitative Services in the Department of Education.

CODA (which stands for Children Of Deaf Adults) will be released by Apple globally on August 13 in theaters and on Apple TV+. The film swept the awards at Sundance, including the Grand Jury Prize, and Heder’s deal with Apple includes a first-look on features, as well as an exclusive deal for series written and developed by her. Heder’s partnership with Apple includes recent collaborations on the critically acclaimed, NAACP- and Spirit Award-nominated series Little America as well as CODA.

Heder is repped by ICM Partners, Mosaic Media Group and attorney Mitch Smelkinson; Stoker is with KMR Talent, Schachter Entertainment and Schreck Rose Dapello.

GAME OF THRONES’ Nikolaj Coster-Waldau’s Ill Kippers Productions Options Just Published Gothic Novel ‘It Will Just Be Us’

By Dominic Patten

September 11, 3:51PM – Less than a year after putting up his own shingle, Nikolaj Coster-Waldau has picked up another novel for adaptation.

The Game of Thrones star’s Ill Kippers Productions has optioned the just published It Will Be Just Us by Jo Kaplan. The deal was finalized just before Labor Day after negotiations by Coster-Waldau’s Sloane, Offer, Weber & Dern attorneys David Weber and Lon Sorensen and Kaplan’s team of John W. Beach and Kevin Cleary at Gravity Squared Entertainment and The Sandra Dijkstra Literary Agency, I’ve learned.

“We were extremely excited when we discovered this book,” said Coster-Waldau to Deadline today of the September 8 released Gothic novel. “It is one of the most original haunted house stories that we’ve read or seen,” the Ill Kippers co-founder added.

“Jo Kaplan’s voice is grounded but compelling, and just down-right scary!’ the WME-repped actor stated. “And the adjacent historically-based story lines about slaves escaping to a land thought otherwise uninhabitable, along with the message that the past can come back to haunt you, seemed incredibly timely and we were inspired.”

Set in a decaying mansion surrounded by swamps, Kaplan’s Crooked Lane Books published novel finds two sisters battling a house bathed in death and legacy as new life is about to come into the world. Ill Kippers VP and Head of Development Jeffrey Chassen and Abby Ex will co-produce the project that the company plans to make of the book. Whether that ends up being a movie or a TV series is TBD.

Formed several months after GoT came to its blockbuster conclusion on HBO, the Jo Derrick co-founded Ill Kippers snagged the rights to Helene Dunbar’s 1980s set coming of age novel We Are Lost and Found right out of the gate, as Deadline exclusively reported at the time.

With Saban Films picking up the Coster-Waldau starring The Silencing earlier this year, the Emmy nominated actor is heading into production next on an Untitled Greenland expedition film that he and Derrick co-wrote. The flick will shoot in Iceland later this year or early 2021 with Coster-Waldau starring.

DC Comics – Wonder Women of History, Gravity Squared Client Judith Heumann to be Included

September 3, 2020 – DC revealed new details for Wonder Women of History, the publisher’s highly anticipated young adult graphic novel anthology curated by New York Times bestselling author Laurie Halse Anderson. 

The anthology will present tales of real-world heroes who take up Wonder Woman’s iconic mantle and work in the fields of science, social justice activism, politics, and more.  Today, DC announced the public figures that will be profiled as well as the talented writers and artists that will contribute to the project.

The graphic novel will hit stores everywhere books are sold on December 1, 2020 and is now available to pre-order. See below for the official details!

Wonder Women of History
Edited by Laurie Halse Anderson
On sale December 1, 2020
MSRP: $16.99
Available to Pre-Order Now

Women change the world—they’ve been doing it for centuries. Now, New York Times bestselling author Laurie Halse Anderson has gathered women and non-binary writers and artists to reveal the women making our world better day by day. Real-world heroes from the fields of politics, business, activism, science, and pop culture are making tough decisions every day and we celebrate them here!

Wonder Women of History spotlights these notable public figures, written and drawn by some of the most talented writers and artists in publishing:

  • Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez – written by Lilliam Rivera and drawn by Anastasia Longoria
  • Ruth Bader Ginsburg – written by Lilah Sturges and drawn by Devaki Neogi
  • Elizabeth Warren – written and drawn by Renae De Liz 
  • Rashida Tlaib – written and drawn by Marguerite Dabaie 
  • Teara Fraser – written by Traci Sorell and drawn by Natasha Donovan
  • Beyoncé – written by Mikki Kendall and drawn by A. D’Amico
  • Edith Windsor – written by Amanda Deibert and drawn by Cat Staggs
  • Marsha P. Johnson – written by Jadzia Axelrod and drawn by Michaela Washington
  • Emma Gonzalez – written by Kami Garcia and drawn by Igzell
  • Judith Heumann – written by Marieke Nijkamp and drawn by Ashanti Fortson
  • Ellen Ochoa – written by Cecil Castellucci and drawn by Carina Guevara
  • Shi Zhengli – written by Emily X.R. Pan and drawn by Wendy Xu
  • Serena Williams – written by Danielle Paige and drawn by Brittney Williams
  • Tig Notaro – written by Sara Farizan and drawn by Nicole Goux
  • Keiko Agena – written by Sarah Kuhn and drawn by Lynn Yoshii
  • Dominique Dawes – written by Danny Lore and drawn by Robyn Smith
  • Janelle Monae – written by Vita Ayala and drawn by O’Neill Jones

Wonder Women of History also includes portraits by Weshoyot Alvitre, Colleen Doran, Agnes Garbowska, Bex Glendining, Ashley A. Woods, and Safiya Zerrougui.

Gravity Squared client, former NASA Astronaut Kathy Sullivan, is now the first woman to dive to Challenger Deep

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Gravity Squared client, former NASA Astronaut Kathy Sullivan, is now the first woman to dive to Challenger Deep

June 8, 2020 — A former NASA astronaut who was the first American woman to walk in space has become the world’s first woman to reach the deepest point on Earth.

Kathy Sullivan on Saturday (June 6) dove to Challenger Deep, the lowest-known location on the planet. She is now the first woman and eighth person to descend the 7 miles (11 kilometers) to the bottom of the crescent-shaped Mariana Trench, located near Guam in the Western Pacific Ocean.

“Challenger Deep — and back!” wrote Sullivan on Facebook after completing the history-making dive. “10,915 m[eters] on our gauges (35,810 ft).”

Sullivan’s participation in Caladan Oceanic’s “Ring of Fire” expedition comes 36 years after she launched on and performed a spacewalk outside of the space shuttle Challenger in 1984. Both the orbiter and seafloor depression were named after the HMS Challenger, the British Royal Navy survey ship that in 1875 was the first to record the depth of what would later be known as Challenger Deep.

Sullivan’s craft on Saturday (Sunday, June 7 in Guam) was the “Limiting Factor,” the first commercially-certified full-ocean-depth DSV (deep submergence vehicle). Investor and explorer Victor Vescovo, who underwrote the design and build of the multi-million dollar submersible, served as Sullivan’s pilot. The dive marked Vescovo’s third visit to Challenger Deep after two record-setting descents in 2019.

“Just back up from Challenger Deep! My co-pilot was Dr. Kathy Sullivan — now the first woman to the bottom of the ocean and a former astronaut,” Vescovo wrote on Twitter 12 hours after setting off for the dive. “Big congratulations to her!”

Deployed from the support vessel “Pressure Drop,” a former U.S. Navy ship that was specially retrofitted for this expedition, Vescovo and Sullivan explored the eastern pool of Challenger Deep as part of a planned series of scientific dives that will survey the three pools that comprise the slot-shaped depression.

Over the course of as many as eight dives, the Caladan Oceanic team hopes to observe volcanic vents, identify new species of deep sea marine life and map the U.S. Exclusive Economic Zone at the request of the National Oceanographic and Atmospheric Agency (NOAA). Among the other team members scheduled to dive is Kelly Walsh, whose father, Don Walsh, was first to reach Challenger Deep with Jacques Piccard on board the Trieste research bathyscaphe 60 years ago.

Sullivan, a retired naval oceanographer, geologist and the former administrator of NOAA, received robotics training before departing for the dive to assist in collecting samples off the ocean floor. The Limiting Factor is outfitted with a Kraft Telerobotics “Raptor” hydraulic manipulator, a claw with a 5-foot (1.5-m) reach.

Prior to joining NASA in 1978 as a member of the first group of U.S. astronauts to include women, Sullivan was on one of the first cruises to utilize a submersible to study the volcanic processes that make the ocean crust.

“My specific aspiration through all of graduate school was to … be able to actually go down and see the deep-sea floor myself, do the volcanology part of marine geology and geophysics, and get to dive. That’s what I was heading toward and aiming everything towards until NASA came along,” Sullivan said in a 2007 NASA oral history interview.

In space, orbiting between 220 and 380 miles (350 and 615 km) above Earth, Sullivan helped demonstrate satellite refueling during her historic 3-hour and 29-minute extravehicular activity (EVA, or spacewalk), assisted in the deploy of the Hubble Space Telescope and conducted atmospheric research. In total, she logged 22 days off the planet over the course of her three space shuttle missions between 1984 and 1992.

Following her dive, Sullivan had the opportunity to call the astronauts aboard the International Space Station to share her experience.

“An incredible opportunity and huge step for science!” Caladan Oceanic wrote on Twitter of the sea to space connection.

With Sullivan’s dive to Challenger Deep, astronauts have now been to the lowest and highest points on Earth. On May 19, 2009, Scott Parazynski summited Mount Everest, two years after his fifth and final space shuttle mission.

“If you put Everest into the Challenger Deep, its summit would be more than a mile below sea level,” Sullivan wrote on her website documenting her expedition.

“What makes … summiting Everest and reaching the bottom of the Challenger Deep such wildly different challenges is air pressure,” she wrote. “From sea level to Everest? About 70 percent less air pressure at the summit than at sea level (1013 millibars to 253). Pressure at the bottom of the Challenger Deep? Over 1,000 times that at sea level (15,750 pounds per square inch, versus 14.7 at sea level).”

Before her record-setting dive, the deepest Sullivan had been was to 8,500 feet (2.5 km) to explore the hydrothermal vents of the East Pacific Rise on the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution’s Alvin submersible in 1996.

Gravity Squared Client, Kathy Sullivan, To Dive The Mariana Trench

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Gravity Squared Client, Kathy Sullivan, To Dive The Mariana Trench

Through collaboration between investor and explorer Victor Vescovo, Triton Submarines and EYOS Expeditions, the 2020 Caladan Oceanic expeditions will yet again visit never before seen ocean depths and famed historic sites. A first of its kind two-person research submersible, designed and manufactured by Triton specifically for extreme deep-sea exploration endeavours, will bring its stories of the voyage to the world in near-real-time between February and July of 2020.

The vessel, the Deep Submergence Vehicle (DSV) Limiting Factor, is the first commercially certified full-ocean-depth submersible. It will be transported and deployed into the ocean depths by the Deep Submergence Support Vessel (DSSV) Pressure Drop, a former US Navy ship specially retrofitted for the expedition. Vescovo will pilot the submersible on almost all of its dives.

”Following up on the success of our mission last year to dive to the bottom of all five of the world’s oceans, we look forward to diving two seas and two oceans in the recently- enhanced Limiting Factor on a new series of ‘first’ manned dives,” Vescovo said from Toulon, France, where he had just completed the first phase of the voyage.

Five Phases of the Mission

  • The mission will include five phases:
  • Phase I: “La Minerve” (West Mediterranean)
  •  Phase II: The Calypso Deep (East Mediterranean)
  • Phase III: The Red Sea
  • Phase IV: Indian Ocean/Nekton Expedition
  • Phase V: The “Ring of Fire” Expedition

Phase I: “La Minerve”

After completing sea trials off the coast of Spain on January 31st, the Caladan Oceanic team sailed to the southern coast of France where on February 1-2 they twice dove on the tragic wreck of the French submarine, Minerve. Caladan worked closely with French authorities and the family of its crew to organize the expedition. On the first dive, Vescovo was accompanied by retired French Rear Admiral Jean-Louis Barbier, a submarine expert who conducted a detailed investigation of the wreck to gather new evidence on what might have caused the vessel’s unexpected sinking in 1968.

Herve Fauve, the son of the submarine’s Captain, accompanied Vescovo on the second dive when a memorial plaque was placed on the remains of the sunken vessel at over 2,250 meters depth. This was the first manned visit to the site since the Minerve’s sinking in 1968, which was only discovered last summer. Vescovo later said: “It was very moving to be with the son of the Minerve’s Captain, at the actual wreck, and pay our respects to the brave sailors who gave their lives in the defense of France. As a former naval officer myself, I was very honoured to partner with our French allies to do this.”

Phase II: The Calypso Deep

From France, the expedition will sail to Kalamata, Greece and attempt to dive to the deepest point in the Mediterranean Sea, the Calypso Deep. To the surprise of the Caladan team, a thorough review of historical records indicate that no submarine has ever visited the actual bottom of the Mediterranean Sea at approximately 5,627 meters (17,280 feet), so this could be the “first descent” of this particular deep. Caladan will be conducting the dive in conjunction with the government of Greece and the scientific organization, Explorations de Monaco.

Phase III: The Red Sea

After its dives in the Mediterranean, the ship and crew will head through the Suez Canal and into the Red Sea. In cooperation with the Saudi Arabian scientific community at the King Abdullah University of Science and Technology (KAUST), Caladan hopes to make multiple dives in the little-explored Red Sea and make a manned dive – for the first time – to its deepest point: the Suakin Trough. The expedition expects to conduct its operations during mid-February in and around Thuwal, Saudi Arabia.

Phase IV: Indian Ocean and the Nekton Expedition

In the Indian Ocean, Caladan will partner with the Nekton Organization for a series of extensive scientific dives in the Seychelles and Maldives as part of their “First Descent” program. For more details on this month-long expedition, see: http://www.nektonmission.org Following these dives, the Caladan team will proceed to Singapore for refuelling and provisioning.

Phase V: The “Ring of Fire” Expedition

The “Ring of Fire” is a common name given to the geologically active area that borders the roughly circular Pacific tectonic plate. It is, overall, the most active plate in the world and causes many volcanoes, earthquakes, and tsunamis. The Caladan team will conduct several dive series around the western portion of the Ring of Fire in the Pacific Ocean, starting with attempts to dive multiple World War II-era wreck sites including the suspected USS Johnston, wrecks from the 1944 Typhoon Cobra off the Philippine islands, and the USS Indianapolis. These would be the first manned dives to all these wrecks and would help commemorate the 75th anniversary of the end of the War in the Pacific in World War II.

If confirmed, the dive on the suspected wreck of the USS Johnston off Samar island could be the deepest manned wreck dive in history if completed. The Johnston and Indianapolis were located in 2017 and 2019, respectively, by Paul Allen’s Research Vessel Petrel and a team led by Robert Kraft of Vulcan Inc..
The team will then proceed to the Yap and Palau trenches for almost two weeks to conduct extensive scientific investigations with multiple deep-sea lander deployments.

First Dive by a Woman to the Bottom of the Ocean

The Limiting Factor will then return to the deepest point in the ocean, the Challenger Deep in the Mariana Trench, for up to eight scientific and survey dives to all three “pools” that constitute the Deep. The team hopes they will be able to execute the first dive by a woman to the bottom of the ocean, with US astronaut and former NOAA Director Dr. Kathy Sullivan. Later in this dive series, Vescovo plans to descend to the same location that the Trieste visited in 1960 during the first descent into the Challenger Deep. In commemoration of the 60th anniversary of that dive, Vescovo intends to make the journey with Kelly Walsh, the son of the Trieste’s captain, Dr. Don Walsh.

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Sullivan, 1984 – © NASA

The expedition will conclude with a further two weeks of dives along the north-south “spine” of the Mariana Trench, with a goal to execute first descents of numerous deeps and canyons that have never before had manned visitation. The team hopes to observe volcanic vents, identify new species, and conduct extensive mapping of the US Exclusive Economic Zone at the request of the National Oceanographic and Atmospheric Agency (NOAA). All mapping done by the expedition will also be contributed to the Nippon Foundation-GEBCO Seabed 2030 Project. The expedition is expected to conclude on or about July 20th in Guam.
www.caladanoceanic.com

About Caladan Oceanic

Caladan Oceanic is a not-for-profit private company dedicated to the advancement of undersea technology and supporting expeditions to increase the understanding of, and support, the productive sustainment of the oceans. Founder Victor Vescovo has long had a passion for exploration and has summited the highest peak on all seven of the world’s continents including Mt. Everest, and skied at least 100 kilometres to both the North and South Poles. With the completion of the Five Deeps Expedition in August 2019, Vescovo became the first person in history to have been to the top of all the world’s continents, both poles, and the bottom of all its oceans. He will be awarded the Explorer’s Club Medal in March 2020.

About Triton Submarines

Triton Submarines of Sebastian, Florida, is the most experienced civil submarine producer in the world today – and the only contemporary manufacturer of acrylic- pressure-hull-equipped personal submarines to deliver multiple classed and certified vessels capable of diving to 3,300 feet (1,000 meters). Triton Submarines senior staff have over 350 years of combined experience with more than 80 different submersibles, and their operations team have together logged over 25,000 dives. Triton clients also enjoy superlative after-sales service and technical support from a company dedicated to their total satisfaction.

About EYOS Expeditions

EYOS Expeditions has been designing complex and challenging expeditions for private vessels since 2008. Drawing on the decades of experience of the company’s co-founders, the EYOS team have delivered over 1,200 safe and successful expeditions to some of the most remote destinations on Earth. EYOS Expeditions holds several “world firsts” and routinely take clients to destinations rarely or never before visited. EYOS Expeditions and sister company Expedition Voyager Consultants have worked behind the scenes on many of the industry’s groundbreaking itineraries and have a long history of delivering once-in-a-lifetime experiences for clients while maintaining the highest standards of safety, professionalism and environmental stewardship. EYOS Expeditions is today regarded as the industry leader for planning and operating remote expeditions using submersibles.

Apiary Entertainment partners with Gravity Squared Entertainment for the spy vs spy drama, LISBON by Neill Lochery

May 20, 2019 (Los Angeles, CA) – Apiary Entertainment has optioned the spy vs spy drama by Neill Lochery to develop for television with Gravity Squared Entertainment and Jon Schwartz.

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Lochery’s book tells the story of Lisbon’s role in the history of World War II, though not a gun was fired there. The only European city in which both the Allies and the Axis power operated openly, it was temporary home to much of Europe’s exiled royalty, over one million refugees seeking passage to the U.S., and a host of spies, secret police, captains of industry, bankers, prominent Jews, writers and artists, escaped POWs, and black marketeers. An operations officer writing in 1944 described the daily scene at Lisbon’s airport as being like the movie “Casablanca,” times twenty.

John W. Beach and Kevin Cleary of Gravity Squared Entertainment will serve as Co-executive producers on the project.  Jon Schwartz and Andrew Marcus of Apiary Entertainment will serve as Executive Producers.

Apiary Entertainment launched in 2018 by Andrew Marcus, former President and COO of Critical Content.

Richie Keen To Direct Will Ferrell In eSports Comedy At Legendary

By Amanda N’Duka 

EXCLUSIVE: Richie Keen, the director behind the Ice Cube-Charlie Day comedy Fist Fight, has been tapped to direct an eSports comedy at Legendary Pictures that has Will Ferrell attached to star.

Fist Fight marked Keen’s feature directorial debut. He has directed multiple episodes for shows like It’s Always Sunny in Philadelphia, The Goldbergs and the Kathy Bates-starring Netflix series Disjointed.

Jordan Dunn and Michael Kvamme penned the film, in which Ferrell will star as a member of a professional eSports team, and an anomaly in a sport where players usually retire in their 20s due to slowing hand-eye coordination.

Keen will also produce the pic alongside Gary Sanchez Productions and Mosaic.

Repped by CAA and Hansen, Jacobson, Teller, Keen is also attached to direct Michael Keaton in the Boom! Studios comic film adaptation Imagine Agents.

Vice President Pence Announces Gravity Squared client, Homer Hickam to National Space Council Users Advisory Group

Vice President Pence Announces National Space Council Users Advisory Group

Vice President Mike Pence, Chairman of the National Space Council, today announced the candidates selected to serve on the National Space Council’s Users Advisory Group. Pending official appointment by the Administrator of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration, the selected members of the Users Advisory Group will serve to fulfill President Trump’s mandate to “foster close coordination, cooperation, and technology and information exchange” across our nation’s space enterprise. The announcement was made on the eve of the second meeting of the National Space Council. “Moon, Mars, and Worlds Beyond: Winning the Next Frontier” includes testimonials from leaders in the civil, commercial, and national security sectors about the importance of the United States’ space enterprise.

Selection to the National Space Council’s Users Advisory Group:

Buzz Aldrin, Apollo 11 Astronaut

Tory Bruno, President and CEO of United Launch Alliance

Wes Bush, CEO of Northrop Grumman

Dean Cheng, Scholar at the Heritage Foundation

Eileen Collins, 4-time Shuttle astronaut, first female shuttle commander

Steve Crisafulli, Former Speaker of the Florida House of Representatives

Mary Lynne Dittmar, President and CEO of The Coalition for Deep Space Exploration

Adm. Jim Ellis, Retired 4-star Admiral, former head of STRATCOM, and member of the Space Foundation Board of Directors

Tim Ellis, CEO of Relativity Space

Newt Gingrich, Author, former Speaker of the House

Marillyn Hewson, CEO of Lockheed Martin Corporation

Homer Hickam, Author of the book “Rocket Boys” and former NASA Marshall Spaceflight Center engineer

Governor Kay Ivey, Governor of Alabama

Fred Klipsch, Founder and Chairman of Hoosiers for Quality Education

Les Lyles, Retired 4-star Air Force General and member of the NASA Advisory Council

Pam Melroy, 3-time Shuttle astronaut and former Deputy Director of the Tactical Technology Office at the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency

Dennis Muilenburg, CEO of the Boeing Company

Fatih Ozmen, CEO of the Sierra Nevada Corporation

G.P. Bud Peterson, President of the Georgia Institute of Technology

Jack Schmitt, Apollo 17 Astronaut and former Senator

Gwynne Shotwell, President and COO of SpaceX

Bob Smith, CEO of Blue Origin

Eric Stallmer, President of the Commercial Spaceflight Federation

David Thompson, Founder and CEO of Orbital ATK

Pamela Vaughan, Board Certified Science Teacher

Mandy Vaughn, President of VOX Launch Company

Stu Witt, Founder of Mojave Air and Spaceport, former Navy pilot, former Chairman of the Commercial Spaceflight Federation

David Wolf, 4-time Shuttle astronaut and physician

Pete Worden, Former Air Force General and NASA Ames Center Director

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