Tuesday, October 13, 2020
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Could word that
Q Prime no longer reps
Red Hot Chili Peppers scuttle a potential deal between the management company and billionaire supermarket magnate
Ron Burkle?
Rumors ricocheting around the biz had the financier preparing to buy all or part of the management company. We also reported that Q Prime was said to be valued at around $80m.
The Peppers—having reunited with longtime guitarist
John Frusciante—are due to embark on what should be a gigantic tour as soon as circumstances permit; several European and other dates are slated for the summer of 2021.
In 2012, Burkle purchased
Dennis Arfa’s
Artist Group International, which books marquee Q Prime client
Metallica, among other superstars. Via
Paradigm, he partnered with
CODA and
Steve Strange’s
X-ray in 2017; his other media investments include boutique agency
APA, branded-entertainment firm
Three Lions Entertainment and (most recently) festival producer
Danny Wimmer Presents. He was also said to be angling for the deal with
Tom Gores-funded Paradigm before
Casey Wasserman secured it. (We’re told that deal will close by month’s end, with several key agents remaining under short-term deals.)
In other news circulating around the agency world, a press release from
WME noting the exit of
Brent Smith has raised eyebrows with what many observers feel was a vindictive tone. “Following an investigation based on complaints of bullying behavior by Brent Smith,” the brief announcement reads, “WME and Brent have mutually decided to part ways.” Speculation was that Smith, who is well liked by many important artists and managers, had already been planning to leave WME, but insiders wonder if that alone was reason to go there as the agency did.