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Where Your Favorite Actress Could End up Next: Youtube

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Hollywood talent agency William Morris is in talks for a deal that would funnel the talent agency's clients into videos created for the Internet giant.

Hollywood talent agencies pride themselves on placing their star clients into the biggest movies and TV shows.

Now, add YouTube to the list.

William Morris Agency, one of the largest talent firms, is in talks for a deal that would funnel its clients -- both actors and consumer brands -- into videos created for the Internet giant. It's the latest example of how old-line agencies are actively cultivating new homes for talent, as traditional film and television jobs for their clients grow more scarce and less lucrative.

The pending deal would also give William Morris clients something only the biggest stars to date have been able to command in film and television: an ownership stake in the videos they create for the online video website, according to people familiar with the discussions. Under the scenario, William Morris would also lure some of the talent agency's major consumer brands to YouTube's programs as sponsors -- a milestone for the site, which has a massive online audience but has struggled to attract advertising.

William Morris' willingness to place its celebrities alongside such YouTube glitterati as lonelygirl15 and Gary Brolsma, of “Numa Numa Dance" fame, is both a bet on a digital future and an acknowledgment of the increasingly bleak outlook for Hollywood actors.

“There are fewer movies, fewer TV shows and it's going to get worse," said Dennis Miller, general partner at media investment firm Spark Capital in Boston. He said although the income offered by the Internet wasn't yet close to matching what actors earn in movies or television, the deal nonetheless signaled “you're on the cutting edge of developing [a] new platform for existing clientele."

All the major talent agencies have been placing bets in various online ventures long before the recession took hold, backing digital studios that create Web-only video, signing up- and-coming talent and brokering sponsorship deals to underwrite the modest production budgets. The agencies consider these investments a toehold in a lucrative future -- and an opportunity to figure out the digital business models while the stakes are still relatively small.



YouTube's partnership with William Morris represents another step toward introducing professionally produced content to a website best known for the quirky amateur videos created and uploaded by its users. Although the site remains the most popular place online for people to watch video (in December alone, it attracted some 99 million users in the U.S., according to comScore), YouTube still faces difficulty attracting advertisers.

“The disconnect between massive viewership and relatively little ad dollars against user- generated content has been a constant source of frustration for YouTube," Miller said.

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