Behind the Agency

Mission Statment

Studio 60 is a creative studio that helps artists, teams, and brands design and execute connected creative ecosystems, spanning music, visuals, live experiences, and technology.

Where many agencies specialize in either strategy or execution, Studio 60 operates across both—deliberately and selectively. We design how things get made, who makes them, and why the parts must work together.

Our work often begins where others stop: aligning creative intent with technical reality, assembling the right teams, and owning the critical paths that determine whether an idea succeeds or collapses under complexity.

Sometimes we lead. Sometimes we embed. Sometimes we build.

Always, we integrate.

Include in this section our founding story, our philosophy as a company, and what we provide for our clients.

BT leads Studio 60’s creative and technical direction.

He works at the intersection of music, visuals, live experiences, and technology—designing the systems behind the work and stepping in wherever clarity, structure, or problem-solving is needed most.

BT’s focus is making sure ambitious ideas actually hold up in the real world.

BT Odoy

Founder | Creative director

Kyle Konopka

Chief operations officer

Kyle runs operations at Studio 60.

He turns creative intent into executable plans—overseeing logistics, budgets, timelines, and partnerships across complex, fast-moving projects.

Kyle makes sure the work gets done cleanly, sustainably, and without unnecessary friction.

Young man with glasses and curly hair smiling, sitting in a gaming chair in a dimly lit room with colorful lights and framed posters on the wall.

Joel leads strategy, positioning, and audience-facing execution.

He connects creative work to the people it’s meant to reach—shaping releases, campaigns, and narratives that extend beyond the moment and build long-term value.

Joel Earhart

Chief marketing officer

Alessia Nicole

Chief of Imagery

Less leads visual direction at Studio 60.

SHe defines the look, tone, and visual systems across projects—ensuring imagery feels intentional, cohesive, and inseparable from the larger creative ecosystem.

Young man with glasses and a cap is sitting and smiling, illuminated by purple and blue lights, in a room with framed artwork on the wall.