Creative Artists Agency (CAA) was formed by five agents at the
William Morris Agency in 1975. CAA was
incorporated in Delaware and had a $35,000 line of credit and a $21,000 bank loan and rented a small Century City office. Within a week, they sold a
game show called
Rhyme and Reason, the
Rich Little Show, and
The Jackson 5ive. An early plan was to form a medium-sized full-service agency, share proceeds equally, and do without nameplates on doors or formal titles or individual client lists, with guidelines like "be a team player" and "return phone calls promptly." CAA used its writer clients to attract actors to the agency. Ovitz and CAA were the first to
package films like TV shows. Representing numerous A-list actors and having about $90 million in annual bookings in the late 1970s, Ovitz led the agency to expand into the film business. In the 1990s, CAA was owned mostly by several key agents, including Ovitz, Meyer, and Haber. Ovitz expanded the agency into advertising and telecommunications. In 1993, CAA hosted then-President
Bill Clinton, who gave a speech about the role of entertainment. In 1995, CAA was described as the industry's most powerful agency. In 1995, Ron Meyer was appointed as the head of
MCA, After Ovitz, the agency was taken over by Richard Lovett, who was made the president, along with Kevin Huvane, Rob Light,
Bryan Lourd,
Rick Nicita, and David O'Connor as managing partners. The partners founded the
CAA Foundation in 1996 to create positive social change by encouraging
volunteerism, partnerships, and donations. In 2012, it worked with
Insight Labs for education reform, and contributed to its
School Is Not School reform effort. CAA established CAA Marketing in 1998 to work with brands and clients for promotion purposes. CAA Marketing developed
Chipotle's Back to the Start video and created a marketing campaign for the Coca-Cola Company. From 2005 to 2015, CAA developed greater fiscal discipline, with more emphasis on profits, possibly as the result of the influence of private equity firms. During these years, CAA doubled in size, from 750 to 1,500 employees. There was pressure to diversify into television, publishing, concerts, and find other ways to grow. A report in
USA Today suggested that CAA's development of its sports-related clientele was significant in 2007. A report in
Nexus magazine in 2015 suggested that CAA was well-positioned to develop the E-Sports market. CAA puts together deals for sports stars such as writing their clients into fitness apps. CAA's agents scrambled to deal with a strike by the
Screen Actors Guild in 2008. In 2010, TPG Capital gained a 35% interest in the agency and pledged $500 million for investments. The transaction enabled acquisitions in areas such as sports and overseas operations. It later sold a controlling stake to TPG Capital in October 2014. In 2015, TPG Capital was reported to own 53% of CAA. The
WGA, which in 2019 held a dispute between the top four Hollywood talent agencies (
William Morris Endeavor, Creative Artists Agency,
United Talent Agency and
ICM Partners), on September 30, 2020, asked CAA to sell a majority stake in their Content company for reaching a deal, with CAA accepting their divestment on December 16, 2020 and selling the majority of it to a South Korean studio,
JTBC. In June 2022, nine months after it was announced that CAA would acquire
ICM Partners, a deal valued at $750 million was reached between the agencies. - following the acquisition, about 425 ICM staffers and agents were slated to join CAA. In September 2023, French billionaire
François-Henri Pinault agreed to buy a majority stake. On January 20, 2025, former President
Joe Biden moved back to
Wilmington, Delaware, after his term ended. He later signed with talent agency CAA to represent him in public engagements. CAA previously represented him from 2017 to 2020. In February 2025, former Vice President
Kamala Harris signed with CAA for representation on speaking engagements and publishing. The company has signed other high-profile Democratic politicians, including former President
Barack Obama, former Senator
Joe Manchin and former House representative
Beto O'Rourke.
Practice of blacklisting, Harvey Weinstein contends that she was blacklisted since 2005 by CAA for making a comment about now-disgraced producer
Harvey Weinstein. The agency has been accused of blacklisting people who did or said things that the agency did not want publicized. For example, In December 2017, there were reports that the agency was actively involved in coverups relating to abuse and harassment by now-disgraced Miramax executive
Harvey Weinstein.
Variety, citing a report in
The New York Times, reported that at least eight agents knew about the ongoing harassment yet continued to do business with Weinstein, and even sent actresses to meet with him in situations where they might have been vulnerable to his predations. Actress
Uma Thurman accused the agency of being connected to Weinstein's predatory behavior. Thurman left CAA on November 22, 2017, the day before making an Instagram post addressing accusations against Weinstein. In 2005,
Courtney Love advised young actresses in an interview, "If Harvey Weinstein invites you to a private party in the
Four Seasons, don't go." Love later said that she was "banned" by CAA for speaking out about Weinstein.
Competition CAA was formed in 1975 from defections from the William Morris Agency, and the entertainment world continues to support four or five major talent agencies. In 2009, William Morris Agency and Endeavor merged to form
Endeavor Holdings. In 2014, Endeavour bought
IMG Worldwide, a fashion and sports agency, for $2.4 billion. The agencies compete by "regularly poaching agents and clients from one another." ==Agents==