WHAT DOES AN
ASSOCIATE PRODUCER DO?
Film producers fill a variety of roles depending upon the
type of producer. Either employed by a production company or independent,
producers plan and coordinate various aspects of film production, such as
selecting script, coordinating writing, directing and editing, and arranging
financing. During the "discovery stage", the producer has to find and
acknowledge promising material. Then, unless the film is supposed to be based
on an original script, the producer has to find an appropriate screenwriter.
For various reasons, producers cannot always supervise all
of the production. In this case, the main producer may appoint executive
producers, line producers, or unit production managers who represent the main
producer's interests. The producer has the last word on whether sounds or music
have to be changed, including deciding if scenes have to be cut. They are in
charge of selling the film or arranging distribution rights as well. The
producer's role can vary significantly from project to project, based on the
circumstances and funding. They generally are in charge of things like hiring
staff, creating filming schedules, checking and approving locations, and much
more.
Most positions in the film world follow a strict hierarchy
and set of tasks, usually because that is how most people understand a film set
to work and what the union and legal regulations will allow. An assistant
director will work on scheduling and run the set, but will never tell the
director of photography what to do. The director will make all the creative
choices about the film, but will not do the budgeting because this would
interfere with the work of the line producer. Some film jobs, however, are less
determined ahead of time and are more up to the interpretation of the specific
project. The question "what does an associate producer do?" comes up
quite a bit, and the answer is that their specific tasks, payment, and even
employer will depend on each project they are working on.
An Associate Producer position can often be an entry level
one. Often referred to as the 'AP', an Associate Producer generally assists the
producer in putting the TV program or film together. Duties may include
writing, editing, organizing scripts, running the teleprompter in news casts,
or helping the editor by making beat calls.
An Associate Producer needs good writing and editing skills,
and may often be called upon to make simple editorial decisions when editing
video by choosing the shots that match the copy. The Associate Producer will
generally be required to rewrite wire copy, and may also be responsible for
cueing up tapes, and making sure scripts are in order.
An Associate Producer may also pitch story ideas, help guide
the editorial content of the program, assist with promotions, handle some
bookings as well as manage the growing tape needs on the program. The role may
also have the responsibility for assisting with the show's or film's webpage.
An Associate Producers job duties and responsibilities will
vary from project to project. Duties may include organizing production personnel,
coordinating set construction, operating a teleprompter, supervising lighting
or sound plans, editing scripts, or writing news items.
GENERAL THINGS AN
ASSOCIATE PRODUCER DOES
The associate producer is still one of the film jobs in the
producers department, so it usually works on the overall completion of the film
rather than one specific technical element.
The producer oversees the production of the film itself,
approving budgets, organizing production, and everything else in this area in a
high level fashion. An associate producer is not going to have this kind of
power generally, and will often instead work at one level of this organ making
sure certain things get done.
An associate producer may only work in the office of the
production company overseeing the production and may end up doing several
producer functions on several different projects at once. They may also just
work on a certain part of the project, such as when shooting on one location
during a narrative production or on a certain segment of a documentary film.
Perhaps they oversaw the script development, post-production, distribution deals,
or some other subset where the producer's department had to be there but the
lead producer could not be there. They may even just serve the function of an
assistant producer, providing support to the main producers in their jobs.
Whatever the determined role is, the associate producer will
not be a full producer and will likely not be a participant in the production,
meaning that they will not receive above the line profit sharing. If it is a
union governed shoot they may or may not have to be part of the Producer's
Guild, but usually an associate producer will not, and will be hired to only do
tasks that other union positions do not have to do. Oftentimes, a co-producer
will do the same functions of an associate producer, but they are still above
an assistant producer on most sets.
An associate producer position is usually separated from an
executive producer position, though what an associate producer does may often
be similar to what an executive producer does. An executive producer often
provides funding, acts as an intermediary for a distribution outlet, or simply
did one great thing for the producer. An associate producer will likely do
regular tasks, though the title is negotiable. For example, if one individual
provides a large sum of funding they may request that they are credited as an
associate producer credit so that they add this to their filmography. It is
these kind of allowances that make it hard to say what an associate producer
will do in a production because it is strictly determined by each situation.
Sources: Google, Wikipedia, Pinterest, IMDB, Shane Burley, Rhonda
Callow, Bright Bulb, Media Match, Study, Producers Guild of America, Chegg,
PayScale, Creative Skill Set
Did not realize the title was so broad in definition. Thanks for sharing.
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