Unsolicited Submission Policy

Exposure Labs and its subsidiaries, parent, affiliates and/or related entities (collectively, “Exposure Labs”), wish to inform you of our policy regarding the submission, review and/or consideration of materials including, without limitation, concepts, suggestions, notes, literary material, scripts, story lines, screenplays, articles, formats, creative decks, treatments, proposals, videos, marketing or promotional plans, program formats, audiovisual works, musical compositions, characters, drawings, artwork and/or any other unsolicited information and materials whatsoever. Exposure Labs policy is that we do not accept, review or consider any material(s) that we have not specifically requested or otherwise agreed to in writing to accept for consideration (“Unsolicited Submission(s)”). 

PLEASE DO NOT SEND US ANY UNSOLICITED SUBMISSION(S), AS ANY AND ALL SUCH MATERIALS WILL BE DELETED OR DESTROYED IMMEDIATELY UPON RECEIPT, WITHOUT REVIEW, REGARDLESS OF WHETHER MATERIALS ARE SENT BY MAIL, ELECTRONIC TRANSMISSION, PERSONAL DELIVERY OR OTHERWISE.

At all times, Exposure Labs has many products, materials and projects in various stages of development. Exposure Labs seeks to avoid any possible misunderstandings or disputes when products and materials independently developed by or on behalf of Exposure Labs may be perceived to be similar to creative works of third parties, including Unsolicited Submission(s). Any similarity between any Unsolicited Submission(s) and any elements in any Exposure Labs’ creative work including without limitation any film, television series, commercial, podcast, branded content, story, character, title or concept, is purely coincidental.

Our policy is that no Unsolicited Submission(s) will be forwarded to, or reviewed by, any Exposure Labs staff. Accordingly, any similarity between any Unsolicited Submission(s) and any elements in any Exposure Labs’ creative work including without limitation any film, television series, commercial, podcast, branded content, story, character, title or concept, is purely coincidental.