Curt Marvis

Curt Marvis is CEO and Co-Founder of video curation company The QYOU.[1]

Marvis founded The QYOU a media and production business that provides curated internet video content for television, mobile, and video-on-demand viewing, in 2013 along with Scott Ehrlich (producer), Les Garland and G. Scott Paterson.[2]

Curt sits on the executive board at The QYOU and helps drives the company’s global expansion.

Executive experience

Prior to his role at The QYOU, Marvis was President of Digital Media at Lionsgate,[3] where he oversaw its digital business portfolio, which included the following:[4]

• Digital delivery agreements for filmed entertainment content

• Equity investment in Break.com

• FEARnet On Demand and FEARnet.com

• EPIX premium entertainment channel

• TV Guide Network and TV Guide.com

Before joining Lionsgate, Marvis was co-founder and CEO of CinemaNow, for which Lionsgate was a lead investor since CinemaNow's founding in 1999[5]

CinemaNow was acquired by Sonic Solutions in November 2008 for $3 million after having raised more than $40 million in venture capital over its lifetime[6]

He served as President of publicly held game developer 7th Level, where he led a restructuring into delivery of web-based technology applications. While at 7th Level, he created and implemented business partnerships with Microsoft, RealNetworks, GeoCities, broadcast.com, IBM, and MTV, and helped orchestrate the merger between 7th Level and privately held Street Technologies to form Learn2.com, a site providing training on Microsoft Office and Windows software as well as skills for business, sales, and communications.[7]

Prior to this, Marvis was co-founder and Executive Vice President of multimedia startup Powerhouse Entertainment, where he was a major contributor to the creation of 'Moviegames', a form of interactive entertainment that integrated original film footage with voice recognition technology. Moviegames debuted in two live-action CD-ROM games based on Disney's The Jungle Book and New Line Cinema's The Adventures of Pinocchio.[8]

Other work experience

Marvis served one year on the IBM Multimedia Task Force creating strategic plans for IBM in their development of interactive software.[9]

He served as a Non-Executive Director of JumpTV Inc. from September 30, 2005 to October 20, 2008.[10]

Music video production

From 1984 to 1994 he co-founded and served as CEO of The Company, a privately held LA-based production company that produced and developed more than 200 music videos, concerts, home videos, and commercials. During the ten years he headed The Company, Marvis launched productions for artists including Pink Floyd, The Rolling Stones, Janet Jackson, and Bon Jovi. His productions numbered amongst MTV's most popular rock videos, for which he was honored during the Grammy Awards, American Video Awards, Billboard Awards, MTV Video Music Awards, and international competitions.[11]

In 1991, he and directing partner Wayne Isham were awarded the MTV Video Vanguard Award honoring lifetime achievement for their work.[12]

Early career

Marvis spent three years with documentary and family programming production house Bill Burrud Productions and five years producing for a number of projects including the comedy program Channel Zero as well as a diverse mix of reality and dramatic productions for United Artists, New World and Sunn Classics. At the age of 17, he filmed and produced a television documentary on California that was sold during Marche International Des Producteurs (MIP) in Cannes, where he was the youngest producer to participate in the selling of his own program. [13]

Education

Marvis graduated summa cum laude from UCLA with a BFA in Motion Picture and Television Production in 1980. [14]

gollark: For Android.
gollark: Oh, no, it's 250GB apparently.
gollark: I'd like postmarketOS, but sadly it's not quite production-ready.
gollark: And building a system image takes ages and about 40GB of storage.
gollark: Because it's a monolithic system image thing, you can't use it while it updates and it takes ages.

References

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