









|
Hanson and Co. Go Hollywood On
April 20 a gala crowd flocked to the world premiere of Harvard Goes Hollywood, a
30-minute tongue-in-cheek montage of movie clips and interviews about Harvard and HLS. The
film was produced by Class Action, Inc., a corporation formed by Professor Jon
Hansons Corporations students. Im a little bit nervous, Hanson
admitted to the audience. Im new to this movie mogul thing.
Here follows the first and last annual report from Class
Action CEO Heather Thompson 00, the hardest-working and lowest-paid CEO in the
country, according to Hanson:
In order to better learn corporate law and corporate structures, Professor
Hanson challenged our class of 130 students to form a real corporation. We created a
By-laws Committee to structure the corporation and to incorporate us in Delaware, and an
Entrepreneurial Committee to develop product ideas. Of the projects presented by the
Entrepreneurial Committee, the class chose this movie because they believed it would help
foster community here at HLS.
Within six short weeks we formed our corporation,
picked our product, produced Harvard Goes Hollywood, and organized and marketed its
premiere. Our legal counsel was Fried, Frank, Harris, Shriver, and Jacobson; our
accountants were Deloitte and Touche; and Goldman Sachs & Co. valued our corporation
and ran the IPO (Initial Private Offering). All three graciously donated their
services.
While none of the project counted towards their
final grade, the members of the class still sacrificed enormous amounts of their time
serving as CEO, CFO, COO, VPs, and directors; others on committees in charge of producing,
directing, editing, and marketing the movie, and, after our IPO, many as shareholders. The
hard work of all involved was reflected in the overwhelming success of the project. Both
of the two premiere-night shows were to standing-room-only audiences, and to date nearly
300 videos have been sold. The premiere met rave reviews by the Law Record and the Boston
Business Journal; and the Harvard University Gazette commented that the
film was obviously a tremendous hit. Unlike most successful corporations, however,
this one has a semester-long life span and will be donating all of its net profits to the
HLS Public Interest Summer Fellowships. |