The scene was utter pandemonium backstage at MTV Studios. It
                  was the height of the boy band era, and the Backstreet Boys
                  were performing on “Total Request Live.” One lowly production
                  assistant stood between a mob of teenage girls and America’s
                  teen heartthrobs. That assistant was Brent Montgomery, and it
                  was his first day on the job. At first, his assignment was to
                  manage which fans could access the studio based on a guest
                  list. The problem was, 14-year-old girls do not usually have a
                  government ID, and desperate mothers were trying to bribe
                  their way past him.
                
                
                  “Eventually, the crowd got settled in, and I thought,
                  ‘Alright, we did our job,’” Montgomery remembered. “But then
                  someone pointed at me and said, ‘Hey, why don’t you go buy a
                  bunch of water?’ Now, I didn’t have that much money, so I
                  never bought bottled water. They gave me $100, and I bought as
                  much as I could carry, about 60 one-liter bottles. Later, I
                  walked away from the set during a commercial break, and I
                  heard expletives over my walkie-talkie. ‘What idiot bought
                  carbonated water?!’ The girls had gone crazy during the
                  performance, and the set was soaked. I ran around the other
                  side of the building and hoped the person in charge wouldn’t
                  remember me.” Thus marked the beginning of Montgomery’s
                  illustrious production assistant career, during which his
                  lofty dreams of telling stories on screen took a backseat to
                  running errands and living at the bottom of the
                  proverbial totem pole. He knew New York was where he needed to
                  be, but he was itching to make something he could call his
                  own. In 2002, he and his business partner, fellow former
                  student Colby Gaines ’97, established Leftfield Pictures with
                  the initial goal of pitching and producing unscripted
                  television shows.
                
                
                  “We like to say we came out of the gate hot,” Montgomery said.
                  “We didn’t sell a show in our first seven years.” Instead, the
                  duo took the camera gear they had scrounged for and shot
                  weddings, bar mitzvahs and infomercials—whatever work they
                  could do to cover their overhead. “It was just hustle, hustle,
                  hustle.” In 2008, they finally produced their first greenlit
                  series, but it was promptly canceled after less than a year on
                  air.
                
                
                  Ever resilient, the Leftfield Pictures team went to work
                  developing the series that would dig them out of their hole
                  for good. They say what happens in Vegas stays in Vegas, but
                  Montgomery and Gaines found a phenomenon in Sin City that
                  would reach across the world and back.
                
               
            
Send Message to Dunae
Thank you for submitting a contact form!
Contact form was unable to submit.