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W. David McBrayer

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W. David McBrayer
McBrayer in 2004 while filming Beat the Drum in South Africa
Born
US
NationalityAmerican
OccupationFilm Producer

William David McBrayer is an American film, television producer, writer and entrepreneur.

Education

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McBrayer attended the University of Tennessee. He was president of the Student Art League and, while an under graduate, was published in Perceptual and Motor Skills, for his research in perception entitled "Effects of Social Influence in a Recognition Task of Auditory Intensity".[1]" His primary interest was the nexus of art/the creative process/psychology. He graduated from UTC in 1973 with a B.S. in psychology. He received a MA in advertising/mass communications from Michigan State University in 1976 and was recipient of the Graduate Award for advertising. While in graduate school at MSU, McBrayer co-founded PACE Marketing Group, a market research company that conducted consumer research on the UPC for a Senate sub-committee.

Career

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New York (1976–1985)

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McBrayer began his advertising career on Madison Avenue in 1976, with Grey Advertising on the Procter & Gamble account, before joining Young & Rubicam/Worldwide, the world's largest advertising agency at the time. McBrayer went client side, at age 27, to become Senior Vice President, Advertising & Brand Management with Culbro's General Cigar Division, the youngest senior executive in the company's 75-year history. McBrayer later founded Ad Associates, Inc., an advertising and communications company and co- founded National Market Measures, a Cleveland, Ohio-based market research. company whose clients included The World Bank.[2] He sold National Market Measures in 1987.

During his ten years in the New York ad industry, McBrayer won numerous national and international advertising awards, including the prestigious Clio Award, the International Award for Advertising Excellence, the International Television Association Gold Medal Award for Multi-Media, and various print industry readership awards.

Next steps (1985–1999)

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McBrayer co-founded Digital Solutions, Inc., an Atlanta-based technology company specializing in digital non-linear editing systems for the film and television industry. DSI was recognized as one of the most successful and innovative companies of its kind in the digital broadcasting industry. While president of DSI, he won the Outstanding AVID reseller award and McBrayer was selected by UPS for Excellence in Business for his Golden Rule approach to business-to-business marketing. Under his leadership Digital Solutions created the DSI-AVID Educational Center to train professional editors in the latest film and television techniques.

In the mid-1990s, McBrayer also co-founded Z Post, LLC, a television production and post-production company with facilities in Atlanta and Los Angeles. Z Post's clients included Turner Broadcasting, the Cartoon Network, Vanity Fair, Avid Technology, Fox Broadcasting, Channel 36, Warner Bros. Records, the Billy Graham Association and Walk Thru the Bible. Z Post produced "Creating Hollywood Style Special Effects on the Avid Media Composer," the first authorized training CD ROM for Avid Technology, the industry leader in television and film editing and special effects technology.

In 1998, McBrayer sold Digital Solutions for an undisclosed amount.

In 1999, McBrayer created, wrote (along with Touched by an Angel writer Bob Colleary) and executive produced a television pilot entitled Postcards From Heaven, starring Marion Ross and John Haymes Newton[3] Postcards From Heaven won the Global Association of Independent Television Award for Outstanding Drama Programing in 2000. McBrayer was awarded the top prize by famed writer/producer Stephen Cannell.

In 2000, Z Post produced "Hope For Africa", a hard-hitting, six-part television series highlighting the AIDS epidemic in Africa, which aired on the South African Broadcasting Corporation (SABC).[4] The series was shot on location in South Africa and Kenya. It was during this trip that McBrayer got the inspiration for his 2003 film, Beat The Drum. In 2000, SABC aired "Hope for Africa", in Swaziland and more newspapers were sold that day in the paper's entire history because of the special brochure that was produced to accompany the series.[5]

While filming "Hope for Africa" in Kenya, McBrayer and the production team met with Kenya's then-president Daniel arap Moi at Moi's private estate to discuss "Hope For Africa". The event was featured on Kenya television and radio. President Moi asked the team to continue its efforts to bring awareness about the AIDS crisis in Africa.

Beat The Drum

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In 2002 McBrayer formed Z Productions LLC in Los Angeles, California and moved the post production company, Z Post LLC, to Hollywood.

McBrayer began writing the script for the feature film, Beat the Drum following his initial trip to Africa. The film tells the story of a young Zulu boy, Musa, who is orphaned after a mysterious "curse" strikes his village. To help his grandmother, Musa sets out for Johannesburg with his father's last gift, a handmade tribal drum, in search of work and his uncle. The journey confronts him with the stark realities of urban life, but his spirit never wavers. He later returns to his village with a truth and understanding his elders have failed to grasp: that the "curse" that is killing their people is in fact AIDS, a disease that can be prevented.[6]

McBrayer assembled an all South African production team and shot the film in just 26 days during the summer of 2002 on-location in Johannesburg and KwaZulu-Natal. The film is dedicated "to Beatrice," his mother, who died in October 2002, during post production.

Starring Clive Scott and Owen Sejake, Beat the Drum premiered at the 2003 Mill Valley Film Festival.[7] The feature film has won numerous international awards including the prestigious Montreal Zenith D'Or, which was televised live on Montreal television, and the Monaco International Film Festival Angel Award, the festival's top honor, presented to Mr. McBrayer by Miss France.

McBrayer has said that he wrote Beat The Drum to "help give a voice to the voiceless. I simply wanted to be an honest witness to the plight of these kids. When there is a tear in the human fabric we should all feel it."[4]

Variety heralded the film as "Spectacular," calling it a "handsome well-crafted family drama...naturalistic performances...affecting human drama...first-rate!"[8] Leonard Maltin of Entertainment Tonight called it, "a film with a big heart and a vital message." The Hollywood Reporter said, "Audiences were enthralled by this movie." In its on-air interview with director David Hickson and young star Junior Singo (Musa) CNN called the movie, "Profoundly moving and spiritually uplifting."

The movie is represented by Sidney Kimmel International. In 2008 MGM secured the international rights to "Beat the Drum"; Genius/Harvey Weinstein Company acquired the domestic U.S. DVD rights and the DVD was first released in 2008. Showtime/The Movie Channel has contracted for the exclusive North American television rights.

Beat the Drum has won over thirty international film festival awards, including Best Picture, Best Director (David Hickson), Best Supporting Actor, (Owen Sejake), Best Actor (Junior Singo), Best Music (Klaus Badelt and Ramin Djawadi) and several Audience Awards[9] W. David McBrayer wrote and produced the movie. Beatthedrum.com.

In cooperation with Sky Films, proceeds from airline sales of the movie, which was aired in-flight on all major international airlines, provided the financial resources to establish The Beat the Drum Village in Kenyan for AIDS orphans.[10] This non-profit project is on-going and provides family style housing, financial support, education, and medical care for orphans with HIV/AIDS.

Philosophical interests

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In college, McBrayer developed a keen interest in the work of Swiss psychologist Carl Gustav Jung, and in particular, Jung's concept of synchronicity. McBrayer also subscribes to certain tenets of Eastern philosophy. His first screenplay, entitled Synchronicity, delves into this metaphysical phenomenon. McBrayer's feature film, Beat the Drum, explores the interconnectedness of life, chance encounters, and faith. He has written and co-authored several non-fiction books on New Testament Greek and theology including Seven Dynamic Word Studies in the Greek New Testament, The Original Word – Introduction to New Testament Greek, and Granville Sharp's Remarks on the Use of the Definitive Article in the Greek Text of the New Testament. McBrayer was Executive Editor of the Byzantine Majority Textform, often cited as the definitive work on the Majority text of the Greek New Testament.

Hobbies

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In 1994, McBrayer won the Birmingham Open in fencing, a regional fencing tournament. He is a cross-country cyclist and has biked BRAG [Bike Riding Across Georgia] from Atlanta to Savannah. In 2005 he completed the Natchez Trace Trail—from Natchez, MS to Nashville, TN., an approximately 590-mile trek, with his daughter Lauren Miller. McBrayer is a long-time scuba diver, past skydiver, and avid skier. He enjoys yoga, painting, sculpting, and exotic wood bowl turning.

McBrayer is an active member of the Writers Guild of America, East.

References

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  1. ^ Perceptual and Motor Skills, 1976, 42, 75–85, "Effects of Social Influence in a Recognition Task of Auditory Intensity: A Temporary Shift in Criterion.
  2. ^ "National Market Measures". Archived from the original on December 28, 2008. Retrieved December 21, 2008.
  3. ^ "Postcards from Heaven". IMDb.
  4. ^ a b "Page Title". Archived from the original on October 22, 2007. Retrieved August 8, 2009.
  5. ^ "Archived copy" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on January 6, 2009. Retrieved December 20, 2008.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  6. ^ "Beat the Drum (2003) - IMDb". IMDb.
  7. ^ The New York Times Movies
  8. ^ https://www.variety.com/review/VE1117922198.html?categoryid=31&cs=1&query=beat+the+drum [dead link]
  9. ^ "Awards". Archived from the original on January 4, 2009. Retrieved December 20, 2008.
  10. ^ "Beat the Drum Village". www.beatthedrumvillage.com. Archived from the original on January 25, 2010.
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