Press

Prime One Productions to Air Three Spots on the
Premiere Telecast of The Ultimate Fighter Season 11

WESTMINSTER, CA--(Marketwire - 03/31/10) - Prime One Productions, a full service production company specializing in HD/SD commercials, corporate videos and documentaries announced Tuesday that it will be releasing three originally produced spots for MMA clothing brands Punishment Athletics, Razor Clothing and Huntington Beach based South Coast Fight Club. The three spots will air on Wednesday, March 31st during the telecast of The Ultimate Fighter on Spike TV (7 e/10 p).

The spots will see distribution through the Verizon Fios, Time Warner, Cox Cable and Comcast cable systems and will be aired in the Southern California, Las Vegas, Albuquerque, Pittsburgh, and Texas markets as well as other targeted cities throughout the United States. "We have really been doing a great job of catering to emerging Mixed Martial Arts (MMA) brands as well as our other clients and giving them professionally produced spots without the huge studio price tag," says Rick Lee, Prime One Productions Founder.

Punishment Athletics is owned by former UFC light-heavyweight champion Tito Ortiz, while Razor clothing is owned by former WEC Lightweight champion Razor Rob McCullough. "Rick Lee and his crew are not only professional but also creative and knowledgeable. They went the extra mile to produce a superior commercial that will leave a lasting impact with our customers," says Tito Ortiz.

Nicholas Rians, owner of South Coast Fight Club, comments on Prime One Productions, "The people at Prime One Productions were professional, on time and worked around my schedule. They went above and beyond to get my project done."

For more information on Prime One Productions please log onto our website, www.primeone.tv. For production rates please email us at prime1productions@gmail.com.

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Ultimate Fighting for the troops, now on film

All it took was Craigslist, a viral video and an invitation to the first mixed martial arts (or MMA) fight ever held in a war zone.

"I'm so lucky," says Rick Lee, 26, of Westminster, who still DJs at local nightclubs to pay the bills.

His 3-minute trailer for "A Fight for the Troops," has attracted 10,000 views in just a few weeks.

The buzz is even louder.

The Pentagon requested a private screening of the film. Sports-apparel giant "Tapout" posted the trailer on its Web site. And the Ultimate Fighting community – which is huge – appears hungry to watch active duty soldiers fighting in the ring before marching off to fight for real in Mosul.

"I get e-mails every day, asking, 'When's it coming out,' " says Lee, who was working for free in 2007 to hone his craft.

Now he's part of a three-man production team at the center of one of the world's fastest-growing sports.

And to think he almost turned down the job.

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