Patricia Vance
Patricia E. Vance | |
---|---|
Residence | NYC, NY, USA |
Nationality | American |
Alma mater | Washington University in St. Louis (B.A. International Relations and Russian) |
Title | President, and CEO Entertainment Software Rating Board |
Website | |
ESRB.org |
Patricia (Pat) Vance was appointed president and CEO of the Entertainment Software Rating Board (ESRB) in November 2002. Vance is responsible for overseeing and enforcing the computer and video game industry's self-regulatory practices. This includes ensuring that video game consumers and parents have effective tools with which to make educated purchase decisions.
Upon taking the helm of the ESRB, Vance oversaw a re-tooling of the organization which kept it from remaining in the crosshairs of anti-games legislators. She is best known due to the Grand Theft Auto: San Andreas "Hot Coffee" incident in 2005 where the publisher of the game failed to submit all of the content programmed into the product. Following an investigation by ESRB the game was re-rated from "M" to "AO," causing retailers to effectively impose a recall of the game as they generally choose to not sell AO-rated games.[1] The incident became a flashpoint around which critics of the industry and the ratings board rallied and legislators across the country began introducing anti-games legislation.
Before joining the ESRB, Vance spent 18 years at Disney/ABC, with responsibility for leveraging ABC properties in the development and management of a broad range of new media and market initiatives. These initiatives included the Internet (ABC.com, ABCNEWS.com, Oscar.com, Oprah.com), interactive entertainment and educational software publishing (Creative Wonders, ABC Interactive, OT Sports, ABC News Interactive), direct response videocassette marketing, in-flight entertainment, home video and cable television.
Prior to ABC, Vance was responsible for planning movie acquisitions for The Movie Channel. She has also held senior management positions with The Princeton Review as Executive Vice President & General Manager of Admissions Services, and before that as President and CEO of HalfthePlanet.com, an online resource network for people with disabilities.[2]
See also
- The Entertainment Software Association
- E3Expo
- IEMA
- ESRB
References
- Hidden sex scenes hit GTA rating-BBC News, 2005-07-21. Retrieved on 2006-12-18
- The Ratings Game: The Controversy Over The ESRB - Game Informer magazine, August 2006
- Unlevel Playing Field for Video Games? - CNET, August 22, 2005