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Easy Background Check
Millennium Model Management (Millenium Model Management) (Milenium Model Management) (Milennium Model Management)"Legitimate agents work on a commission. They don't get any money until you get paid for doing the work they have obtained for you .... An agent's time should be spent finding work for his or her client, not selling products and services." -- BBBFormer MMM Employee Speaks Out"When I worked there, the comp card room was full. Meaning that no comp cards had been sent out."I used to work for Millenium Model Mangement ... I signed a non-exclusive contract (thank God) with them in 2003, and since then I have not received one phone call. I worked with them last year. I left because they didn't need me anymore, and they needed someone who could commit fully to the job of [...]. I am now trying to withdraw from their agency; I am going to send a withdrawal letter ASAP. I have written it, but I am not sure if I withdraw if I will be able to get my money back. As a client I received no work. They charged me $1,500 for my portfolio. I have since been approached by better and more reliable representation and they remarked that even though my photos were good, I couldn't possibly get work because it didn't concentrate on my face. I am disgusted. I wanted to sign as an actor, but they assured me that I would need a portfolio. I haven't been called to a single audition. So I have found auditions on my own and I am doing beyond well, and in July I am meeting with agents from LA. But I think everyone should get their money back. When I worked there, the comp card room was full. Meaning that no comp cards had been sent out. I and other potential talent and models were not even being looked at. Plus my agent (or what I thought was an agent) was very rude and flustered from a work overload. These people were friendly to your face so they could get money out of you, and then the next moment when you worked with them they were very different. I saw some things that I thought were strange, but I never ever asked, because these people did not like me. Their open calls were supposed to be selective. In other words not everyone who is invited is signed. I noticed that everyone who was invited to these calls were in fact signed. And not to be mean, but the majority of them did not have the potential to be a model, either for height, weight or level of attractiveness. So that obviously shows that they are just out to get vulnerable people's money. I am disgusted by all of this. The agents I am meeting with in July told me about Millenium Model Management and Model Search America and said that they were scams. They could not believe that I didn't receive any work, especially as an actor. Today I am a well-sought-after non-union actress and I am doing great. But I am mad at Millenium because they were supposed to get me auditions especially if I paid $1,500 for a stupid portfolio that was never even sent out! I want everyone involved to get their money back! Sincerely, Actress --- NOTICE: Former leaders of MMM have started similar model companies called Artist Management Group and Model Talent Group (modeltalentgroup.com)MODELING CLASSESConcerned Parent: My daughter signed a contract with Millennium Model Management and they don't seem to do a whole lot for the $1,800 we are paying. Do you have any information on them? Admin: You are not supposed to pay a modeling agency for classes or photos. Reputable agencies train their models free and photography payments are made directly to the photographer after you interview and select the photographer. If you don't hire the photographer, you can end up getting photography at a quality far below what is professional. If you don't pay the photographer directly, you run the risk of the agency jacking up the price behind your back. A photographer in NY said the model management firm for whom he took pictures charged models 5 times what he was paid. He was paid $300 per model; the agency charged the models $1,500 each. Training and photography are two conflicts of interest which, unchecked, have plagued the modeling industry for many years. A few years ago, the Federal Trade Commission, which is based in Washington, sued Model 1, which was based in Virginia. It was a modeling agency/school which collected about $1,500 from consumers for classes and photography. Model 1 and its partner company, Creative Talent Management (CTM), were sued together by the FTC. Prior to the legal action by the federal government against the modeling agency/school which engaged in deceptive and unfair trade, misleading people into believing they would get work as models if only they paid for classes and photos, the Washington Post published a long report about CTM. It included a statement by Monique Pillard, President of Elite Model Management, based in New York City, and one of the top modeling agencies in the world:
Millennium Model Management and Model Search AmericaMillennium Model Management has a known business relationship with Model Search America, another advance-fee modeling company. They evidently share mailing lists. MMM refers consumers to MSA; and MSA refers consumers to MMM. The BBB report on MMM explained the connection:
Consumer: I have a contract with Millennium out of Cleveland. Two years ago, I got a call back from Model Search America from Millenium. I paid $1,000 for a portfolio. Consumer: My sister's daughter, age 13, went to a modeling search in Cincinnati put on by Model Search America. She was one of the ones chosen to pay $500 to attend a modeling show in Columbus with a chance to go to New York. She was not chosen to go to New York. But about a week later, she got a call from Millenium Model Management. Their website address is: www.millennium-models.com. She went to their Cincinnati office and signed a contract with an agent who told her that she won't believe how her life is going to change now that they are her agent. Millenium Model Management encouraged her to go to training classes in Cleveland, and said that they are going to have a photographer fly in from New York to assemble a portfolio for her. There is no charge for the classes; however, the photos will cost $1,000. Admin: Find your own photographer. The price is too high.
Next Model Management president Joel Wilkenfeld said $250 is reasonable
starting out. Anthony Caprio, president of PTG Models and Talent, said: "No
entry-level model SHOULD EVER pay more than $800 for a comp card." The
FTC says, Model: I saw a letter about Millenium Model Management, and I thought I would add my experience. I met with this agency at Model Search America. I'm from Pennsylvania, but Millennium insisted that I drive four hours to Washington, D.C., to meet with them, so I did. When I got to Washington, I had to read a short script and walk a runway in front of a room full of other potential models, parents, etc. There were 12 people at the audition, and they kept only two of us. They interviewed me separately after everyone had left, and said that I was a "B" model. They said everyone that they made leave were "C" models, and had no potential, but that to sign with them exclusively, I had to be an "A" model. I found this funny. He went on to say that to be an "A" model, I would need to take their classes and pay for their photos. The total cost came to $1,400. He insisted that after I learned more about runway (which I had already had experience doing), and acting (which I told him I had absolutely no interest in doing), I would get tons of work. So here I am, a new potential model, begging my mother to pay this money... And so she pays... I drive up to D.C. for the first class. Then the Cleveland branch of Millennium opens up, and it's only a two-hour drive from me, so they allow me to switch places. At Cleveland, I meet their agent there, and she sets up my photo shoot. She never says anything about the classes, and I never took the rest of them. I didn't want to take them, I had already taken a lot of modeling classes. (Nevertheless, funny how they didn't think I needed classes so badly after they had their paycheck.) Continuing, the photographer -- a very rude, angry, unprofessional man -- comes to Cleveland. Do we get our own shoot? No! There's about 20 of us that he takes out in a group. We have to do our own hair and makeup, and pick out our own clothes. The photographer takes no more than 10 photos in each outfit, making us choose our own poses. Let's see now, new models doing their own hair and makeup, choosing their own poses, and picking out their own outfits, with a photographer who apparently hates his job, and has to shoot 19 other people in that same hour... I bet you can guess how great those photos turned out. Anyways, they picked out five photos for my composite cards. When they came, I drove all the way back to Cleveland to pick up my cards... and they are all bent. They say there's nothing they can do about it. Then they urged me to put my photos online. An "agency" which is supposed to be "representing" me, and making money off me getting work, actually charged me almost $200 to be on their website. I'm actually on it now. Do you know how much work I've gotten from my comp cards and their website? None. Zero. I know about a dozen other girls from that agency whom I've met. Guess how much work they've got? None. I did one runway show that they sponsored, but you had to volunteer to do it. It was a weekend long, and it was the most unorganized event ever, and nobody got paid for it. However, every model in it was with Millennium, and it was the only job any of us had gotten from them. My advice: save your money. Today I model for a local agency which has provided me with a lot of work. I've done print work, promotional work, calendar work, runway work, web ads, and more. Send your photos out to legit agencies... as in, those who charge you NOTHING! Also, don't pay for photography... you can go to a reputable model-photographer network website and find a photographer who will do TFP (Time for Print). You work together, nobody gets paid. S/he gets to use your photos in his portfolio; and you use them in yours. I've done a dozen of them at least, and the photos have been just as good if not better than the ones I paid for. Consumer: I recently interviewed with Millennium Model Management in Vienna, Virginia. They said they liked me and wanted to sign me. However, they also wanted a nice sum of money for classes, photos, and registration. Admin: It is illegal in many states to charge registration fees. Call your Attorney General's Office to find out if it's illegal in Virginia. Sarah Doukas, Managing Director, Storm Model Management, once said: "Never, ever pay money upfront for anything." It seems Millennium Model Management is charging for everything upfront. Besides classes, photos, registration, and website advertising, what else could they charge you for up front?!! Why does MMM refer consumers to MSA? If MMM is competent, why don't they do what Exposure, Inc. does? Every "model management" company should also be a placement agent. "It is a placement agent’s job to promote a model and get her placed nationally. If a model has the potential to work in a national or international market, his or her local mother agency should be able to do the placement, or get them seen by the best agencies worldwide." Exposure, Inc.'s president will fly to NY at her expense to get her models signed. MMM, on the other hand, will stay at home, and send models to the MSA conventions at their expense. If test shoots at a world-renowned agency like Elite Model Management cost $250, why would you want to pay $1,000 at an insignificant company like Millenium Model Management? And if Elite fronts the money, why would you want to pay Millennium upfront? With the EMM arrangement you can't get burned. With the MMM arrangement you can. You could pay 1k in pictures but never get a modeling job. CONSUMER COMMENTS (2004) I am writing this letter to let every new talent know On that day, there are about 10 people who came They interviewed all contestants separately. During the She asked me to put at least $150 for the deposit on that She told me that she only gave this to me because I had talent When I left that room, I met other contestants
Consumer Complaint We signed in October, and so far all we have seen is the bill! I wish I had come across this website sooner. My daughter got a call from MMM... she interviewed in front of a group of other hopefuls, and got the second individual interview. This went just like it was scripted from all the other complaints I have read. Her "classes" were weak, but her photos and comp cards were good. I talked to a former model and photographer who knows the owner(s) of MMM, she said she did not think very highly of MMM. Angry Parent Consumer Comments Dear Easy Background Check, Well, I decided to check them up online and what I Thanks for posting so much relevant information in a clear way! Anon Insider Information I worked for this agency and saw how they treated people. As a model I was hired to work a 'big shoot' which consisted of about 50 girls that My conscience bothered me... I resigned from MMM after my cousin got a 'postcard' invite to MMM. Anonymous --- Modeling“You actually get to dress up and be someone else and that's what I think is fun.” Cassie is a full time college student who works after class to help finance her dream. “Everything I've ever worked for goes toward this because this is something I really want.” Cassie paid a bundle to sign on with Millennium Model Management. “The initial fee is $1,500 and they lead you to believe that the $1,500 pays for a lifetime of photo shoots.” But then, Cassie was charged nearly $400 dollars more for publicity photos. A short time later, she was shocked to find the business closed. “I got out of the elevator and their office was dark.” All Cassie got for her nearly $2,000 dollar investment was a few photographs." "Christina has advice for people thinking about a modeling career. “They should call agencies in their own market and find out when their open call is and submit photos to be reviewed by that agency.” And instead of paying for fancy photographs, Christina says don't waste your money. “Matter of fact, I prefer that they just be snapshots taken from a normal camera by a friend.” Christina also has this warning… “if they really are pressuring them to go under contract, they want them to sign something, if they're really pressuring them to do that, red flag.” “I just want people to not fall for it, not waste their money and to go for something that's real and not a scam.” The phone number for Millennium Model Management has been disconnected. We were able to track down someone who used to be affiliated with the company, who told us the company is no longer in business. Cassie plans to file a complaint with the Missouri Attorney General's office." "Modeling," Contact 2, Fox 2 St. Louis, June 18, 2004. http://www.fox2ktvi.com/dynamic/story.asp?category=62 Online Complaint
Re: Millennium Model Management[ Follow Ups ] [ Post Followup ] [ Blackwood-Steele ] [ FAQ ] Posted by Barbara on September 09, 2003 at 12:31:26: In Reply to: Millennium Model Management posted by Mike on April 21, 2003 at 12:34:03:
--- Notice:> I know you may not be able to do this, but I was wondering if there
was any Small Claims Court is the venue of choice for most people who are scammed out of about $1,500. http://www.courts.state.va.us/pamphlets/small_claims.html (VA) How do I file a claim with the Small Claims Court? (ST. LOUIS, MO) http://www.co.st-louis.mo.us/circuitcourt/circlerkfaqs.html#q3 ---
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