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Michael B. Jordan Production Company Head Alana Mayo on the Future of Hollywood


Alana Mayo, the 34-year-old head of production and development at Outlier Society, is happily riding shotgun with her AirPods firmly in place. She’s not listening to music or a podcast; no one is rolling calls on the other line. She just likes to be ready for anything. A 12-year veteran of the film industry—most recently a VP at Paramount Pictures, where she worked on The Big Short, Fences, and Selma—Mayo has spent the last nine months turning the start-up that Michael B. Jordan launched in 2016 (and named after the Malcolm Gladwell book) into a proper studio. And when you’re trying to go from celebrity LLC to Hollywood heavy-weight, being plugged in is simply part of the job.

At any given moment, Outlier, which has only three full-time employees including Mayo and 31-year-old Jordan, is developing an impressive slate of feature films, scripted and nonscripted TV shows, short-form Web series, and a panoply of other platform-agnostic content. “What is so great about this company is that you can be bold and quick and fail without losing hundreds of millions of dollars, and adapt from there,” Mayo says when we sit down in a high-gloss conference room Outlier shares with Skydance Media, the Santa Monica company behind blockbusters like World War Z, Jack Reacher, and several Mission: Impossibles. “I always describe us as a millennial company. I think, because Michael and I are actually in this demographic, we so clearly see the opportunity in reaching people outside of traditional means.”

And reaching people is the mission: Mayo considers “meeting the audience where they’re at” to be her primary concern. “I don’t think the world is fixed by content, but I’d say it is 100 percent informed by content and the images people see,” she says. “I often think back on what I remember from my childhood and how that shaped the image of myself. I think content has a really profound effect on kids.”

In March the studio became one of the first to publicly adopt inclusion riders, a contract amendment that guarantees cast and crew diversity on all productions. The decision was a no-brainer. “Being a person of color, we’re always fighting for inclusion,” Jordan says. “So when we’re able to be in a position of power to bring people in? I didn’t think twice about that. I was like, ‘Oh, that’s a thing? Oh, cool. Great.’” And in July, Outlier got its first vote of industry approval in the form of five Emmy nominations for a modern reimagining of Fahrenheit 451 for HBO.

Together the digitally savvy pair pulls inspiration from social media, obscure comic books, even an inkling that something is about to pop in the zeitgeist. “We don’t have a strict formula to how we find intellectual property, but there shouldn’t be any rock left unturned,” says Jordan, who is currently filming back-to-back Outlier projects in Atlanta. “I’ll send Alana a DM or a post on Instagram that inspired my mind. It’s more or less me throwing stuff her way to see if she thinks there’s something there. Then we go back and forth and see if there’s any existing intellectual property or articles that might support the story or if it’s something that we build from the ground up.”

PHOTO: JON KOPALOFF/FILMMAGIC

The Power Couple

“I met Lena as a writer before I met her as a romantic interest,” Mayo says of fiancée Waithe. “I hope one day we’ll figure out a way to work together.”

PHOTO: MICHAEL GIBSON/HBO

The Blockbuster

“The correlation between a diverse cast and box office numbers is incredibly strong,” Mayo says of Outlier’s remake of Fahrenheit 451, starring Jordan as Guy Montag. “The more diverse, the more box office—time and time again.”

PHOTO: COURTESY OF MICHAEL B. JORDAN

The Moguls

From left: Mayo, director Destin Daniel Cretton, and Jordan on the set of Outlier’s Just Mercy, a coproduction with Gil Netter and Warner Bros., the first major studio to follow Outlier’s lead and adopt inclusion riders.

Oftentimes an aching void in the marketplace is the perfect place to start. Raising Dion, a forthcoming Netflix series about a young boy with superpowers, is Outlier’s response to Black Panther. “There are so few science-fiction films or TV shows that have people of color as the star. And not in a way where it is the usual paradigm and you’re just casting it differently, but where you’re actually embracing other people and their culture,” Mayo says. “Whoopi Goldberg talked about how [growing up] she never saw black people in the future in film and television. As a child she was like, ‘What happens to us?'”

From an early age Mayo struggled to answer that question for herself. A child of the eighties, she never identified with era classics like Sixteen Candles. “I’m from Chicago, so I should be like, ‘Oh, John Hughes,’ but I did not relate to that movie at all,” she says. “I grew up identifying as an outsider. I had these weird, potentially contradictory parts of my identity.” Mayo’s mom, Maisha, is a Jehovah’s Witness who worked in entertainment law. Her dad, Barry, is a meditation enthusiast and retired radio executive who helped launch New York’s WRKS-FM. “To grow up with weird, idiosyncratic people who did not look at that as a deficit allowed me and my brothers to embrace doing things differently,” she says. “Like, ‘Yeah, we are black kids raised in Chicago in this devout Christian religion, but also we’re all of these other things. And all of these things can exist as a whole.’ I was lucky to grow up that way. I think it very directly led me to what I’m doing professionally now.”

“I grew up identifying as an outsider. I had these weird, potentially contradictory parts of my identity.”

Back at Skydance, Mayo and company stand out among the framed Tom Cruise posters and comically oversize movie props. Her assistant, Christina (employee number three), a recent Columbia University grad with bleached-out blue hair and a near-encyclopedic knowledge of film, keeps answering her cell phone, “Alana Mayo’s office!” At one point during our photo shoot, a female Skydance executive in slacks and a button-down hovers in a door frame. “I’m loving this. I’m texting Lena,” she teases, referring to Mayo’s fiancée, Lena Waithe, Emmy-winning writer and the creator of The Chi. Mayo lets out a laugh—“I’m never going to live this one down, am I?” she says—but continues to clack away on her laptop as a hairstylist sets the edges on her braids.

Later, while drinking her second coffee of the morning, she talks about her experience of being black in white spaces. “This is how we dress. This is how I wear my hair. And I think it is really, really cool for people like us to occupy these spaces because one feeds the other…. We’re finally at a place where I feel like ‘the system’ is excited by young people coming in with a different point of view,” she says. “To be able to work alongside a company like this”—she gestures around Skydance—“means a big-budget, all-audience movie is possible. It allows us to feel emboldened to change and experiment.”

“My office was always filled with people of color and gays and women.And for that, I was ostracized.” —Lee Daniels

In other words, it allows Outlier to change the industry from the inside out, something that hasn’t always been possible. “My office was always filled with people of color and gays and women. And for that, I was ostracized,” says Oscar-nominated director Lee Daniels, for whom Mayo interned while in college at Columbia University. “That Alana is being embraced for it makes my heart swell.” When I ask Mayo whether she identifies as a disruptor, her eyes light up. “I love that word,” she says. “I love disruptor. I love innovation. I’m a contrarian by nature, so anything that is about fucking with the status quo is very exciting to me. I would love to think of this company, and everybody who works at it, as a disruptor.”

But what if this all-stories-welcome wormhole closes? What if the next Black Panther doesn’t break records? Or audiences don’t clamor to see David Makes Man, Outlier’s upcoming OWN series from Moonlight cowriter Tarell Alvin McCraney about growing up in a South Florida housing project? What if disruption becomes passé? Hollywood is, after all, a fickle town. “There is a history in this industry of trending,” Mayo concedes. “I’m not optimistic enough to believe that the moment happening right now will not be a trend.”

But she hopes that by the time the tides shift, too many outliers will already have a seat at the conference room table. “People who are looked at as ‘other’ are kicking ass in the industry right now,” Mayo says. “They are setting themselves up for incredible longevity and creating paths for a ton of people to come in behind them, so it won’t really matter when the powers that be don’t feel this to be valuable anymore. At the risk of sounding obnoxious, we’re trying to build something that feels like a legacy and not like a moment.”

Justine Harman is the features director at Glamour.



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Here's What Is Next for Bachelor in Paradise's Newly Engaged Jenna Cooper and Jordan Kimball


Caution: Bachelor in Paradise finale spoilers ahead.

Jordan Kimball and Jenna Cooper may provide Bachelor in Paradise with lots of comedic relief (see: the time Jordan threw a giant stuffed animal into the ocean, but their love is the real deal. “I’ve just never seen anything like them before,” Kenny King told Glamour after the finale taping. “The minute Jenna walked into Paradise, it was just over for Jordan.” Even Grocery Store Joe Amabile sees them going the distance and getting married by next summer. Or, as he puts it, “Jordan’s a go-getter.”

While Paradise wasn’t always easy for Cooper, a 29-year-old fitness model/social media manager, and Kimball, a 26-year-old pensive gentleman, the two are happy their journey was documented. “It’s nice to watch it back and know we’re always going to have that,” Jordan tells Glamour. Adds Jenna, “We get to relive [falling in love]. And to see it working in real life, I just love it. It makes me so happy.”

So what is life going to be like now that the couple can go out in public together? And are they serious about getting married next summer in Paradise? After the finale, we caught up with the pair. Read on.

PHOTO: Jessica Radloff

Congratulations! How did you know you this was your person?

Jordan Kimball: Just meeting her was so powerful. As soon as I saw her, I knew that I was never going to be the same. [To Jenna] I’ll always care about you, I’ll always love you unconditionally. This just brought us so close, and I don’t picture it without you.

Jenna Cooper: I can’t imagine living without you now. His fearless, stubborn pursuit of me made me feel like, OK, if we can get through Paradise and what I put you through, then we can get through anything. And I want to.

But Jenna, he put you through stuff, too!

Jordan: True. I put the whole community through things.

Jenna: Yeah, you did! But I feel like we’re not just going to get through things in life, we’re going to thrive as a couple. Personally, I think you bring out the best in me, and I bring out the best in you.

On tonight’s finale, you said you want to get married June 9th next year, which is usually when Paradise is filming. So you want to get married on the show then, correct?

Jenna: Yes, in the environment where we fell in love. I can’t imagine it somewhere else.

Jordan: Yes. We owe it to them. They brought us together. To have everyone back is like another reunion, and they got to witness us fall in love. It’s such a beautiful place to bring all of our family there. I can’t think of a more fun environment.

At one point before you got engaged, Jenna, Jordan said he didn’t know if he was ready. Does seeing and hearing some of these moments for the first time affect you?

Jordan: Absolutely. You don’t know what to expect. You don’t really understand what’s going on until you watch it back. I remember we did our fantasy suite, and I woke up the next morning and thought, I don’t know what I’m going to do. I thought [Jenna] was wonderful and then on the ride back [to the resort], I immediately got into the Suburban and knew at that moment. It just synced up. I was like, “OK, I’m going to do this!”

Jenna: I didn’t expect it, but I knew I was going to say yes—whenever he asked me, whether it was then or a year from now.

Jordan: She had a lot to say to me in the time building up to me getting down on one knee. She [talked] a lot. I was impressed. Usually you don’t talk that much. Not about love.

Jenna: That’s because I’ve met my match when it comes to talking. I just let you take the reins sometimes. I thought you’d appreciate that.

Jordan: Thanks, thanks.

You two have talked a lot about being parents. Is that really in the near future?

Jordan: There’s a lot of talk about that. But I think we’re at least a year out.

Jenna: Yeah, agreed.

What’s next for you both?

Jordan: I’m still on the same career path that I’ve been in. I actually have a shoot in a few days with Wilhelmina in Miami. She’s doing the same thing she’s been doing. We’re trying to let each other grow separately so we can help support our wants and everything. But while we’re doing that, we’re fueling the growth for us together, and…

Jenna: I like it that way. I’m pretty independent.

Jordan: We’ve [talked about me] moving from Florida. I’ve been traveling a lot, so I find myself not in Florida very much recently. It’s a good time to start a new chapter. Fall is coming up. Strike some romance there and keep falling for you. And yeah, we’re talking places and location. It’s not something you just sit down and decide. We’re going to figure it out and when we do, it’s going to be rock solid.

This interview has been edited and condensed for clarity.





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Jordan Kimball's Quotes Are the Best Part of The Bachelorette Premiere—So We Asked Him for More


If you caught tonight’s season premiere of The Bachelorette, then you know it’s all about male model Jordan Kimball and his epic one liners. They’re so good, they’ll no doubt put him on the fast track to Bachelor in Paradise. (What, you think he’ll actually wind up as Becca’s final choice?)

With quotes like “the power is in the brows” and “my brand is the pensive gentleman,” the 26-year-old from Crystal River, Florida is clearly in a league of his own. Even Becca admitted as such when I asked her about him: “He’s like no one I’ve ever met before. He marches to his own drum.” (That’s an understatement.)

Not only did it take Jordan six hours—yes, hours—to pick out a suit that “looks like a shark” for the first night, but he also brought a pair of luxury European dress shoes so Becca and her suitors know “a gentleman is approaching.” Of course.

Still, aside from showing off his perfectly curated wardrobe, why did Jordan sign up for The Bachelorette? The day before filming began, we sat down with him to learn that—and a hell of a lot more.

How were you cast on The Bachelorette?

Jordan Kimball: I was in Venice, California at a Whole Foods and a producer approached me. Then I had a friend who nominated me a year before, and I had another producer a week later say, “Hey, I have your nomination in front of me.” I already had my application submitted from being recruited, and we went from there. She had the whole hand in submitting me.

Have you seen the show before?

JK: Yes, I’ve seen the show before. I enjoyed it. The season I enjoyed the most was JoJo’s season. I think I enjoy The Bachelorette more than The Bachelor, to be honest.

Have you given yourself any rules prior to going on the show?

JK: Not really. I live every day like a gentleman. I only drink two glasses of wine at most unless it’s a really big celebration, and then Pinot Grigio is my go to. Sauvignon Blanc. I like the white wines. Other than that, you have to stay polished. I don’t intend to have any drama with any of the guys. I just want to be myself and focus on Becca.

Why do you think your last relationship didn’t work?

JK: Because I honestly feel it was the wrong time in our lives. It was a typical tragic first love and it ended very mutually.

What makes you think Becca is the right girl for you?

JK: The fact that she has a tattoo of a cross on her wrist is very big to me. I talk to God every day. I believe that believing in something bigger than yourself has a lot to do with who you are as a person. I understand she has a dog and likes cuddling on the couch with her dog, and that’s something you can definitely catch me doing in the afternoon, maybe with a little rain on the roof. In my free time I like to read. I like to be comfortable. I’m so uncomfortable sometimes with traveling and working with different brands that it would be nice to have someone down to earth enough to just chill on the couch with me.

What’s something you’re scared or nervous about telling Becca?

JK: That I do travel, so I’m not there so much. Maybe three days a week I could be gone. Maybe four days a week, depending on how busy it is. So there’s that potential to have half a week. Obviously I communicate and I would let her know that I’m there, but I’m not always physically there.

What’s your biggest fear in a relationship?

JK: My biggest fear in a relationship is that you give your all to that person in a relationship and fall hard, and maybe they weren’t in it to win it like you were.



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Bella Hadid Responds to Rumors She's Dating NBA Player Jordan Clarkson


Bella Hadid may or may not have a new guy in her life. According to Us Weekly, she’s been spending time with Los Angeles Lakers player Jordan Clarkson. A source—so, grain of salt—told the magazine that the pair hung out in New York City on December 12 after the Lakers lost to the New York Knicks. Bella and Jordan’s squad that night included his teammate, Brandon Ingram, models Hailey Baldwin and Camila Morrone, and singer Justine Skye, among other pals. According to one onlooker, “It was a big crew, and they were in a private room.” Since then, according to this source, Bella and Jordan have reportedly been casually dating. Or, as he or she put it, “They’ve been hanging out the past few weeks.”

Bella, however, has spoken out on Twitter to set things straight. After Perez Hilton tweeted out an article about the possible romance, Bella responded with, “I am? ?.” It seems the rumor was as much news to her as to anyone else.

Jordan was previously linked to Kendall Jenner, but it looks like the two are on good terms considering that they were spotted hanging out with mutual friends last year after they had ended things.

You might also be wondering if there’s anything still happening between Bella and her ex The Weeknd. After the “Starboy” singer broke up with Selena Gomez, there were reports that he and Bella were hanging out again. But it sounds like the two were simply catching up and mending their friendship.

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'Dancing With the Stars' Finale Night Two Recap: Jordan Fisher and Lindsay Arnold Take Home the Mirrorball Trophy


If it wasn’t obvious from night one of Dancing With the Stars, then it is now: Jordan Fisher and Lindsay Arnold are your new DWTS champions. The Hamilton star succeeds reigning season 24 champ Rashad Jennings as the latest celebrity to get a new door stop Mirrorball. Len Goodman said Jordan is “the most complete male celebrity ever on Dancing With the Stars,” while Bruno Tonioli praised him as being “right up there with the best we’ve ever seen on this show.” The win also marks Lindsay’s first Mirrorball trophy in six seasons. She previously came in fourth with Wanya Morris, third with Calvin Johnson, Jr., and second with David Ross.

Following their victory, Jordan and Lindsay didn’t get to say anything, because, well, the show ran out of time. It was perhaps the biggest misstep of the entire season, especially for fans who propelled Jordan to victory and would have loved to have heard his reaction instead of just seeing it. Apparently, that’s what Good Morning America is for. Still, not cool you guys.

As expected, Lindsey Stirling and Mark Ballas came in second place, with Frankie Muniz and Witney Carson taking third. All three couples will now head to New York to appear on GMA and act as if they’re thrilled to to have to dance again on an hour of sleep.

In other news, both Jordan and Frankie were announced as the celebrity guests joining Dancing With the Stars Live!: Light Up the Night this winter. It’s the first time since the tour began that two contestants will go on the road.

In case you only turned in for the last five minutes, or want to relive the last dances, here’s what happened during the final episode…

Favorites Dance:

Lindsey Stirling and Mark Ballas: Dancing to Wham! has never looked so good. Mark and Lindsey scored a perfect 30 to “Wake Me Up Before You Go-Go,” but perhaps most impressive was the rehearsal package that aired right before that detailed Lindsey’s journey. Not only did she detail her struggle with anorexia, but she opened up about how the criticism from the judges on America’s Got Talent propelled her to a career she never could have dreamed of. If there’s a Mirrorball for that, this girl deserves it. Score: 30/30

Frankie Muniz and Witney Carson: Len Goodman called Frankie and Witney’s Argentine Tango fantastic, and Carrie Ann said it was a “bigger and better performance” than when they performed it the first time. I’m glad he’s on the DWTS tour this winter. America needs this. Score: 30/30

Jordan Fisher and Lindsay Arnold: In Jordan’s rehearsal package, he and his parents talked about how Jordan came in second place so many times in his career before he got his first big break with the Secret Life of the American Teenager. That’s code for: Don’t let second place happen on DWTS, voters. Even Lin-Manuel Miranda makes a cameo telling him to “go get ’em!” Jordan, of course, did just that, performing a flawless Samba that Carrie Ann Inaba called “much, much, much improved.” (Side note to Carrie Ann: This is Jordan we are talking about. One “much improved” is one too many. The guy has always been stellar.) Score: 30/30

Fusion Dances:

Lindsey Stirling and Mark Ballas: I’ve never been a huge fan of the 24-hour fusion dances, but apparently they’re popular enough to keep doing for added “suspense” each finale. Lindsey and Mark killed it, and Len Goodman told Lindsey she’s a fantastic dancer. No kidding. Score: 30/30

Frankie Muniz and Witney Carson: Frankie started off by saying, “If I don’t win, this is still the most amazing experience of my life.” Seriously, someone cast him on This Is Us next…the guy knows how to bring the waterworks. He also knows how to bring the dance moves, courtesy of the Foxtrot/Tango fusion, which Bruno goes crazy for until he says Frankie lost a little bit of a control. Carrie Ann told Frankie he’s what this show is about, and she’s right. Perhaps he deserves the Mirrorball more than anyone (even Len said he’s the people’s champion). Score: 28/30

Jordan Fisher and Lindsay Arnold: Surprise, surprise, only Jordan could make a Salsa and Paso Doble fusion look like a walk in the park. Carrie Ann summed it up: “There’s not much else to say. Your skills are out of this world.” Yep. The End. Score: 30/30



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'Dancing With the Stars' Season 25 Finale Night 1 Recap: Jordan Fisher and Lindsey Stirling Dominate Their Freestyle


This season of Dancing with the Stars might go down as one of the most predictable in the show’s history, unless the last woman standing has something to say about it. Violinist Lindsey Stirling—the only female still in the competition—pulled out all the stops in her stunning freestyle (complete with a violin performance while doing jumps and twirls!) and tied for first with Broadway star Jordan Fisher. While Jordan has been the front-runner since day one, it isn’t lost on the audience that he’s a trained dancer. The Hamilton star will probably win the Mirrorball on Tuesday night, but it’s Lindsey who deserves it.

Meanwhile, Frankie Muniz continued to impress; as a result, he rounded out the third and final spot in the finale. That meant that Drew Scott and Emma Slater were sent home, which came as a shock to almost no one. “There’s no way I could have done anything I did out here without [Emma],” he said following his elimination. “I can’t even believe I’m here…you’ve made this a once in a lifetime opportunity.”

Until tomorrow’s grand finale, it’s time to break down the redemption and freestyle dances! Let’s get to it.

The Redemption Dances

Drew Scott and Emma Slater: Drew said he couldn’t believe he’s in the finals, but maybe Drew doesn’t know what he’s talking about. After all, only a few weeks ago he said he had a good chance to win the Mirrorball. So which is it, Drew? Perhaps I’m being too hard on him, but I’m still shocked he’s lasted this long. Fan voting will do that for you. The judges gushed over his Paso Doble, but he’s still going home. Score: 36/40

Frankie Muniz and Witney Carson: The former child star performed his week one Foxtrot and completely slayed it. Guest judge Julianne Hough said there was something different about tonight, starting with the pivots and how he made Witney move. I didn’t know pivots were anything other than something Ross Gellar screams on Friends, but that’s why I’m not a judge. Score: 38/40

Jordan Fisher and Lindsay Arnold: The last time Jordan and Lindsay performed the Charleston, Lindsay hadn’t hurt her knee, Jordan’s cornea wasn’t scratched, and Len had some harsh criticism about their lack of Charleston in the Charleston. This time around, Team FishUponAStar were not 100% physically, but they sure were there technically—and the judges rewarded them with a perfect score. Rightfully so, as the dance was brilliant. Score: 40/40

Lindsey Stirling and Mark Ballas: Carrie Ann Inaba said Lindsey is the most improved contestant, which shocked the hell out of me considering she’s been pretty great since day one. She also poses the biggest threat to Jordan, who seems to have had this competition locked up since the premiere. Halfway through tonight’s show, she and Jordan were the only ones with perfect scores. Score: 40/40

The Freestyle Dances

Drew Scott and Emma Slater: Carrie Ann said Drew and Emma’s freestyle wasn’t entirely in sync, but the audience wasn’t having it. For the first time, I agreed with them. While Drew and Emma won’t win the Mirrorball, their freestyle was everything you could have hoped for from “a couple of quirky weirdos.” It was energetic, joyous, and the best note to go out on. Score: 39/40

Frankie Muniz and Witney Carson: In an emotional rehearsal package, Frankie broke down while talking about how thankful he is for Witney and what the experience has meant to him. Their freestyle was dark and intense, or as Bruno praised, a bit of “Janet Jackson and Rhythm Nation.” It’s a departure from previous, more light-hearted freestyles, but the audience loved it. Score: 38/40

Jordan Fisher and Lindsay Arnold: “The freestyle is everything when winning the Mirrorball,” Lindsay said in her rehearsal package. Considering every dance of theirs has freestyle elements mixed in, they were probably under the most pressure of the remaining couples to knock it out of the park. And spoiler alert: They absolutely did. Give ’em the Mirrorball now? Score: 40/40

Lindsey Stirling and Mark Ballas: Want to know how good Lindsey and Mark’s freestyle was? So good that it made me forget about Jordan and Lindsay’s freestyle. Between the violin playing and the acrobatics, the whole thing was off the charts. While I still think Jordan will win the Mirrorball, I will go on the record saying that Lindsey deserves it. Score: 40/40

See you tomorrow night for the season 25 finale!



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