40
AT 40: Matt King
Job Title: Project Manager
The people are what
sets Bandit Lites apart from the rest of the industry.
Once a week, for 40 weeks, Bandit will showcase an
employee that has made a substantial contribution
to the company, whether it be in an office, on the
road or somewhere in between. Bandit would not be
celebrating its 40th Anniversary without the hard
work and dedication of every one these employees.*
*Employee Spotlights
are released in no particular order.
Matt King started
learning about lights in his high school auditorium.
After graduating, King worked the bar band and state
fair circuit, and soon found himself touring as a
lighting technician for Reba McEntire. It was on that
tour that he met Larry Boster, and was recruited to
work for Bandit Lites. Here are a few questions we
asked to get to know him better.
Q. What is your title?
What job responsibilities come along with that position?
A. I’m a project manager. We take the plot and
equipment list given to us from the Bandit client
reps and transform that into all the technical data,
which is basically everything that the rig needs.
We also do something that most other companies don’t
do. We create artwork for each artist and then the
artwork is used for case labels, which are printed
out instead of hand written, making it easier to read.
We also use the artwork for motor controllers and
the book covers, which contains all the information
that we produce for the road guys.
Q. How did you get
involved with Bandit Lites?
A. Brooks & Dunn was touring with Reba, which
is who I was with at that time. Larry Boster [Brooks
& Dunn’s LD] kept pestering me to call Mike
Golden and so I kept pestering Mike Golden. By the
end of the year, I was working here. I came in as
a lighting tech.
Then, about the middle of that first year, they were
talking about adding a project manager. Mike Golden
approached me about it. I finished up the tour I was
on and that next year I became the project manager.
I’ve been at Bandit for ten years and in the
office for nine years now.
Q. Do you have any
advice for someone that is looking to get into this
industry?
A. Just be willing to do whatever people ask of you
and try to learn everything you can. It’s good
to learn all the technical stuff even if you’d
like to be an LD. You’ll eventually have to
deal with costs and budgets. You may not be working
on lights but you may have someone tell you that a
light can’t be fixed and because you’ve
learned how the light works, you can say, yes it can
and this is how you do it. Also- when I was first
starting out, I was given the advice that if you want
to get out on the road, you need to do something that
no one else likes. Working on motors was my ticket
to the road.
Q. What is the
best part about working at Bandit?
A. The best part about working for Bandit is probably
the folks I get to work with, both within Bandit as
well as our clients and outside vendors. You show
up at a gig and you will most likely see someone you’ve
worked with before. The industry really is just one
big family.