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Athleisure Mag #57 Sep 2020 | Living in the Moment with Gianni Paolo

Since 2014, Sunday night's meant watching the latest episode of STARZ Power which is co-created by Courtney A. Kemp and Curtis "50 Cent" Jackson. As season 6 came to a close for its series finale, we were already anticipating the promise of a series of spinoff shows that would continue to follow an array of characters as well as a prequel to show us how it all started. Power Book II: Ghost launched its first episode on Sept 6th and has already been greenlit for a sec- ond season. STARZ has also greenlit Power Book III: Kanan and Power Book IV: Force.

This month, we caught up with Gianni Paolo who joined Power in seasons 5 and 6 and is one of the leads of Power Book II: Ghost. In addition to shooting him in fall style for our virtual shoot, we talk about being a hockey player professionally, pick- up hockey games, his experience being in Ma, reading for Power, joining the cast and how his character continues in Ghost. We also talk about how he's looking at his ca- reer and how he is engaging with various projects.

ATHLEISURE MAG: Before we delve into your acting career and being on Power, you were a hockey player for a lot of your life! What drew you to this sport?

GIANNI PAOLO: Honestly, I don’t even remember starting playing hockey. From what I can remember of just being alive, hockey was apart of my life. My dad was a big hockey fan so he wanted us to play. So all 3 of us, my 2 brothers as well, were hockey players. I literally started skating when I was 2 or 3 maybe and it’s all that I can remember, just my dad being the one that put us in.

AM: Then you got drafted and continued to play! What was that moment when you realized that just as much as you loved hockey, you actually wanted to do acting?

GP: I was kind of juggling with both of them and kind of struggling with the idea of both of them probably my whole high school career. So I got drafted to the Que- bec Junior Hockey League when I was 16. It was so funny because everything would keep drawing me towards acting and not hockey. Just small things would happen every single month, week – where I would fully immerse myself in hockey and then things would just get sidetracked. It just kept pushing me to- wards acting and when I got drafted, I was like, “ok this is what I’ve gotta do and my parents have put so much mon- ey into this,” but then there were so many things that just kept pushing me towards acting. So it just became some- thing that I just had to do. It wasn’t like I was like, “I like this” – it was something that I just had to do.

AM: Do you still play? I know that you don’t play it professionally, but are you still involved in the sport?

GP: Yeah, I’m in NY right now because we’re still shooting. When I’m in LA, there is a Monday night league with CAA which is a talent agency which also rep- resents a bunch of NHL players. I pretty much have a friend on every NHL team. I play with probably 50-60 guys that are the top NHL players right now. So I get tickets to any game I want and it’s great. So they come out and skate too because CAA represents a lot of them as well. There’s also Jerry Bruckheimer (Bad Boys, Top Gun, The Amazing Race) who skates and other actors like Mi- chael Rosenbaum (Guardians of the Gal- axy, The Neighbor, Smallville) – people who are actors but there is this whole entertainment industry hockey league which I love! So I play every Monday night and also I play a lot. I play 3 times a week if all of the leagues are going at the same time. My manager who is also a hockey player, he has a team on Thurs- day nights that we play and then there’s another director that I know and he has a team on Tuesday nights and he was like, “whenever you can play, just come by and play.” So, I play a lot and I’m still pretty involved in the sport.

AM: That’s crazy. Yes, people all over the country play it, but you never think about people doing it in LA and at 3 times a week!

GP: I know! No one thinks of hockey like a pickup game – basketball yes, but not hockey and there is a HUGE hockey com- munity in Los Angeles as well as in the en- tertainment industry.

AM: You’ve been in a number of shows and movies. I know that Ma came out last summer. What was it like to be in that pro- duction?

GP: Honestly, when we were filming that movie, it was the best month and a half in my entire life! Then we were told that we had reshoots because we had to shoot a couple of more things. So I was like, “yeah we have to go back.” Basically, we lived at the director’s Tate Taylor’s (The Help, Filthy Rich, The Girl on the Train) house and every night, we’d wrap and we’d sit around the fire and he’d make food and the whole cast Octavia Spencer (The Help, Hidden Figures, Self Made) and Juliette Lewis (The Act, August: Osage County, Nat- ural Born Killers) – it was the most incred- ible experience of my life. And then actu- ally, I wound up being able to stay as we did the reshoots in Nov and I stayed an- other week with Octavia and everyone so we had Thanksgiving there. You can see it if you look him up in Architectural Digest on YouTube – you can see his house and it’s just this massive house with ATV’s and woods and hunting. It was just like one of the best experiences in my entire life. Filming it was really the joy that I had in it. It’s hard to not look at the final project and say, did this do everything for me that I wanted it to do – so I just take the bigger experience from filming it as part of it!

AM: In prepping for your shoot, we talk- ed with our friends in the industry letting them know that we were working with you. Of course people were excited as they couldn’t say enough things about how much they loved Power as well as Power Book II: Ghost." What was it that drew you to Power the show and then ultimately,

GP: It’s actually really funny because I almost wasn’t going to audition for the show because I had already booked Ma and it was only a co-star and it was only 1 scene in season 5. That was all it was. I wound up calling my mom saying that I had this self tape to send to NY because they cast in NY and I was in LA. I told her that it shoots around Christmas time and I knew that Ma was coming out and I wanted to be prepared for when we were going to film that. It actually worked out because the episode was shooting at Christmas time and I’m from Rhode Island so it made sense to just do it because I was going to be home anyways. My mom also loves the show so she said, “please just do it. I love Power.” I had not seen the show at that point. But for some reason, it was a show that was on my list. So I said, “ok fine, I’ll read for it.” I sent them a self tape and heard literally the next day that I got it. Since it was a local hire, I had to fly myself out there and put myself up. I had to do all that and we wound up shooting the scene and the director said, “how’d that go?” Hernan Otano was the director of Power as well as Ghost. I said that it was good – the character was this cocky lacrosse player. I was like, “sure, I get this stuff all the time.” He wound up saying that the next 2 takes were mine and that I could do whatever I want. I ended up improving a ton and being funny and just really went for it because I knew that the next 2 were mine and I was going to do it. So he let me have fun and when I watched the episode, all the improv made it and the stuff that was written, didn’t. I knew that they really liked what I did and then they ended up calling me back for season 6 and gave me a storyline. And then, as season 6 happened, 50 ended up giving me a hit and said, “you guys are going to takeover." I didn't know what he meant because when Power finished, I had only done 4 episodes in season 6. I was like, “50 lied to me – he said we’d take over and the show is ending.” I wound up getting the call and hearing, “no, you’re one of the leads in the spin-off.” I was like oh my God – yes! It was literally a co-star that turned into a recurring role that turned into a lead of a whole spin-off. It’s a crazy story!

AM: That is a crazy story! For those that may need to catch up, tell us about your character Brayden Weston and what do we get to know more about him as we’re watching "Ghost?"

GP: Brayden comes from a wealthy family and he winds up meeting Tariq at Choate, a boarding school that Tariq is sent to because his sister wound up getting killed. He winds up being Tariq’s roommate and they get close because they find out that they both like money. We start selling drugs together at Choate and then Tariq gets kicked out – so you don’t see Brayden anymore. In Ghost, Brayden winds up reconnecting with Tariq. We’re at the point right now where they’re getting back into business because Brayden, even though he is privileged and grew up with money, he loves the streets and the thrill of selling drugs, money and that’s just what Brayden loves. That’s kind of the character – this kid who loves the thrill of selling drugs, money and power and that’s just kind of where he’s leaning right now. What I have been thinking in my head and have been telling people is he’s a lot like Walter White in a sense. He’s this green guy that gets involved in the drug world and he loves it. As much as Walter in Breaking Bad would say that he is doing it for his family, you wind up seeing him say, “I liked it – I was good at it.” That’s kind of how I see Brayden in a sense. He is truly good at it and loves to do it.

AM: The show launched in Sept earlier this month and you guys are still in production. What has filming this show been like in terms of it being this spinoff show. What’s it like being on this set?

GP: I honestly love it so much! Michael Rainey Jr. who plays Tariq, the show is about him after his dad dies. He is my best friend in the world. We hang out every night and I get to go to work with my best friend every day. I really love the entire cast and there is not one per- son that I don’t hang out with – we all hang out together. With Power, it was already a family that I was coming into and everyone had already met as they worked with one another for 5 years. I came in new and didn’t really know any- one. Michael and I connected kind of in season 6, but really when I came back to film Ghost that’s when Michael and I got close and now I go to work with my best friend every day. It’s good with everyone coming in, besides me and Michael, there are 2 other people that were in Power as well – everyone else was kind of new or newer to the show. So we were all coming in new together except for a couple of people. But with Power, it was already a family for 5 or 6 years when I came in.

AM: I know that you’re a fan of 50 Cent and it must be amazing to work with him. What advice has he given you that you have really embraced in being able to work so closely with him?

GP: I can’t believe that I get to work with 50 Cent everyday! I had hip hop posters all over my room and it’s all I listen to! It’s just crazy. When I see him, I’m like, “nah this isn’t real! That’s not 50 Cent.” Something that I really take from him is truly that he doesn’t care at all what people think about him. You see the things that get picked up in the media it’s 50 Cent this and 50 Cent that. He says whatever he wants and does it in a smart way where obviously he’s promoting. Contrary to what people think, he’s not just starting beef for no reason. He’s starting beef because every time his show is coming out, he’s in the news all the time. It’s genius if you think about it! What I got from him is that he will say what’s on his mind and what he thinks. Obviously with me, I don’t have as much leeway – I didn’t get shot 9 times! I’ve gotta be careful. He truly does and says what he wants. He doesn't cater to the industry. That’s also something that I don’t do. I’m not going to post or say something because that’s what people want me to do. That’s not who I am and not who I will ever be, do you know what I mean? That’s how a lot of people are in this industry because they want to work and I get that, but that’s not who I am. 50 is truly that person where I’m like, this is how I want to shape myself so that I can live my life and not be scared to say what is on my mind or how I feel.

AM: In looking at your Instagram, clearly being in the gym is a big part of your rou- tine. Why is health and fitness so import- ant to you?

GP: I don’t know. I think it’s because I was in the gym every day playing hockey. This is kind of what I equate it to. When I moved out to LA and I stopped playing hockey, it was very sudden. I stopped playing hockey with a rigorous schedule and a week later, I was in LA and I wasn’t playing competitive hockey ever again. The next week, I’d eat so much because we’d be burning 3,000 calories a day just skating on the ice and then we’d go up- stairs to the gym and we’d be burning so many calories that I’d just eat all day long. So when I got to LA, I was eating the same but I wasn’t skating like I was and I was like, “oh My God, this is a problem. I have to take things seriously.” I didn’t get overweight, I mean maybe a little be- cause I worked at a restaurant so that’s pretty easy to do. But I knew I had to take my fitness more seriously. That’s when I truly fell in love with it. I didn’t know how much I loved fitness when I played hock- ey because it was like a job. You go to the job. When I started working out, I started boxing and doing Jiu jitsu. I started weight training. When I did it for hockey it was specific. We would do squats and things like that and I hated that. Now, when I’m in the gym, I get to work out on things like my arms and my abs which makes me look good. I truly don’t go to work to film until I have gone to the gym. I have to workout before I go to work. I’m crazy about it. It’s literally my number one thing before I go to work to film, production, a TV show etc I make sure that I know the local gym, where I will be working out, how I will get from the gym to set – that’s literally the number thing that I worry about. It’s the one thing that makes me truly happy. If I workout and get a good lift in, I know I will feel great and have a great day on set. If I don’t get a good lift in and don’t eat right, I’m gonna have a rough day. So, I’m tuned in with my body and self so that I know it’s the most im- portant thing in my life.

AM: What’s a typical workout with you like?

GP: I have one of my best friends who is also a trainer who sends me a lift every morning so that I wake up to it. We do this consistent/inconsistent thing where we do the same thing for a couple of weeks and then totally change it up. It’s kind of a lot of chest, shoulders, biceps, triceps when I’m going to be on camera with my shirt off. Honestly, my legs are so big now that I can’t fit into any jeans now because of skating for 18 years. My thighs are so muscular and massive that I could never do legs and they would still be great. So I never have to do legs any- more. I do a lot of cardio - we’ll do bike sprints, a minute on 11 on the treadmill, a minute at 5 for a light jog. We kind of do the high intensity workouts as well. A lot of heavy weight lifting, cardio and abs. Not so much anymore with legs.

AM: What do you eat in terms of staying in shape and what are the splurge foods you enjoy?

GP: I have a protein shake every morning with collagen and I put some creatine in there for some size and a nice little egg white protein – that’s my morning/post lift drink. Then I will have 4 eggs and a little bit of turkey bacon to put some meat in. I’m a huge fruit eater. I eat it all day throughout the day and maybe it’s not good for me because it has a ton of sugar in it, but I eat a ton of fruit. I just love it and I didn’t realize how much I love it until I realized that I would rather have that over candy at this point. For dinner, I’m a big protein and meat eater so a pound of turkey or a pound of beef I’ll eat. Then obviously, I try to go low carb. I tried keto for a little bit, but I thought I was going to die so I stopped doing that. I feel like I need a little bit of carbs for my workouts to be up to par. I try to go low carb/high protein as best I can. My splurge food – I love Chinese food – I love fried chicken, it’s my favorite. Last night, it was Michael Rainey’s birthday and we went to Philippe’s and I went to town. I had Lo Mein, we had chicken satay, spring rolls. Last night was kind of my night, it was his birthday and I splurged. Today, I was back in the gym in the morning and sweating it all out and I’m back to normal!

AM: We love podcasts and are a huge fan of True Crime. I know that you love stand up comedy and you were a talent broker and co-producer for Theo Von’s (Road Rules, Last Comic Standing, Reality Bites Back) podcast This Past Weekend as well as the talent booker for Andrew Santino’s (I’m Dying Up Here, This is Us, Friendsgiving) Whisky Ginger. What drew you to be- ing involved in podcasts in general?

GP: When I moved to LA, The Comedy Store it’s one of the greatest places in the world. You go to The Comedy Store and the best comedians go back-to-back like 10 of them! Like one of their tickets when they’re on the road is $200! I would go and Chris Rock would drop in and he’d do his Oscars monologue and then I’d see Kevin Hart drop in out of nowhere. I saw Daniel Tosh – all these guys that don’t ever tour – they come in and do 15-20 mins. Dave Cha- pelle – it was crazy! So when I first started going to The Comedy Store, I have always been into standup comedy, but not until I went there did I think it was insane. One day, I came and I saw this comedian, Theo Vonn, and I thought, “oh man, he’s so fun- ny, this guy is going to blow up.” I started listening to his podcast which he was do- ing in his kitchen. I went to go film Ma and I was listening to his podcast in my trailer and one of the PA’s came in and I knocked on my trailer to tell me that they were going to bring me to set. He heard me listening to Theo and it was funny because Theo didn’t real- ly have that big of a following at this point and it was a cult thing. The PA asked if I listened to him and I told him that I thought he was great. He said that Theo grew up on his dad’s farm and that he would connect the two of us if I went back to LA. I went back to LA and it was kind of slow for a few months after filming so I hit up the PA and said that I wanted to help Theo with his podcast to help him with social media as well as to book some guests. The next day, I met with Theo and cut to a year later after booking guests, working on his social media and all that stuff – he went on Joe Ro- gan and blew up – he has a million and a half followers. The podcast – we get millions of listens a month. I saw him at The Comedy Store and I knew that he was funny and knew he was one of the funniest people I had seen in my whole life.

Obviously with filming, it’s tough for me to be able to juggle both and that’s why I stepped away for a minute. I did a lot of work with Andrew too to help him with his social media and with guests during quarantine and the COVID-19 stuff that was really tricky too. I helped him because I met all these guys through Theo and they know who I am and how I work and how I am able to figure out social media in a way because I’m younger and these guys are 36-40 year old. They don't know as much so I kind of figured out a way to maneuver through it. I have been helping out a lot of these guys do a lot of the social stuff. I don’t know what drew me to podcasting. I listen to a lot of Inside the Actor’s Studio, Off Camera with Sam Jones, Hollywood Reporter stuff. I like podcasting personally because it’s not Jimmy Fallon – there’s nothing wrong with that. You go on Jimmy Fallon and you’re asked to tell a story about this shark that bit you. It’s like, ok cool I can tell this pop corny story. But when you’re on a podcast, you’re going indepth with a person and you’re really getting to hear what they want to say as opposed to a pre-interview that’s like 5 minutes and then they’re like, “ok let’s just say this.” I think that the podcast is more of what I love and the crime stuff is good and I listen to a ton of podcasts. I think it’s just the realness and the uncensoredness. I like raw comedy.

AM: You should keep an eye out for Show- time’s The Comedy Store!

GP: YESS! I did see that. That’s a docu- mentary and they actually did a scripted show I’m Dying Up Here and Santino was on that too and was one of the lead char- acters as well as Erik Griffin. That was a cool shot to watch!

AM: Do you have charities or organizations that you’re apart of that you give your time to that you like to bring awareness to?

GP: I post a decent amount to my Stories. The way I work, it’s not that I don’t like it. I just feel like when people go on their social media and say go to this place and donate to this cause. Some people do it in a gross way in my opinion. They’re saying do this or do that and in a sense, it makes people not want to do that. I know for me, I’m like no – I’m not doing that. It’s like your guilting people. The way I am, I say, “this is something that I love. You don’t have to like it, I love it and if it is something that you would like, here is the info.” So I go live on Tik Tok sometimes and people can send you money through Tik Tok live. All the money that I get, I send to the Toucan Rescue Ranch. I love this organization, they're in Costa Rica and I like the Dian Fossey Gorilla Fund. I love animals to be honest! There’s nothing that animals can do about their situation. I love wildlife. They’re so interesting to me. That’s why I’m geared towards that. I am a person who is involved in it but silently. I know I have a platform where I can make more money but I don’t like when people throw things in your face to say look at what I am doing. It’s not how I am. Sure I’d love to help the cause but if you don’t like toucans, that’s fine on you. I was supposed to do stuff with the Cal- ifornia Wildlife Center when I got back from filming but we stopped filming for COVID-19 and they had all these restric- tions. I think that doing more towards my career actually in turn helped my ca- reer. I was taking 10 classes a week writ- ing all of these scripts so that when I did more stuff that I loved – playing hockey again and getting more into stuff like that – it gave me room to actually grow instead of choking so much. It’s some- thing that I have learned over the past couple of years. I also love cars so people post them all the time. I’ll post a Porsche or some- thing as I’m a huge car enthusiasts and then the next post will be about toucans or the ocean and people will be like you can’t love cars and the ocean! I’m like why? I can like the ocean and cars. They don’t think it makes sense. People want you to be one way or the other, but I post what I like.

AM: Are there other projects that you want to take on? You have had so many things that you’ve been involved in that you have been able to do – what’s next for your portfolio?

GP: I want to do a franchise so bad! I went to Comic Con for a panel last year for Ma. It was the coolest experience in my life. I had never been into comic books and that world. When I went there, it was incredible to see the fans screaming for these shows and movies. I was like, “these people love these movies and shows that much?” They have a massive fan base. I truly want to be apart of a Twilight or something cool that has a big fandom. It’s something that I want to be apart of. Obviously, I want to be able to do the A24 movies and the indie movies like a Safdie Brothers movie would be incredible. I want to do a franchise. The good part is that you make your money from the franchise and you get that fanbase and you can do whatever you want to do for you. That’s when you can do the A24 movies, the indie movies. The Spectacular Now is one of my favorites. Doing those movies that are not for a big audience, but when you have a name and they see that you can man a franchise, then they say, ok we’ll give him this project and see how he does and he can bring his base over there. You can prove yourself on how good you are on acting. That’s the things that get me excited about the future.

AM: We can see you in a Fast & Furious movie.

GP: Oh I would love that! I’m racing cars and I’m saving toucans!

AM: Who are three people that have influ- enced you to be where you are in your ca- reer?

GP: It’s so funny because when I go back and look on who I said a year ago – it always changes. Someone who I consistently look up to is 100% Mark Wahlberg. He’s every- thing that I aspire to be. He gets up – he has that gym and I want that gym that he posts in his house on his Stories everyday. It’s incredible and I want this massive gym in the house that I can go with boys and lift in the morning. Business wise, the guy is a genius. He has all of these businesses that he has been a part of. Career wise, I probably wouldn’t pick the same kind of movies that he has – some yes definitely. Others probably not but him in general and the way that he has maneuvered his career is someone that I look up to. Also, obviously Leonardo DiCaprio who everyone looks up to. I would do every sin- gle movie he has ever done as they’re in- credible. Obviously when you get to a cer- tain point, you get to pick and he knows exactly what he wants to do and what he likes as well as to try. So that’s someone I really look up to. Someone that I really liked when I moved out to LA and I was watching Sons of Anar- chy, right when I finished hockey and I had started acting, Charlie Hunnam (The Gen- tleman, King Arthur: Legend of the Sword, Pacific Rim) is just a badass. He in a sense wanted to play that role and moved out to LA. He was a big part of my influence to move out to California. I’d say those 3. Other actors that I’m loving right now would obviously be Robert Pattinson (Twi- light franchise, Tenet, Harry Potter fran- chise) who is doing so well and is blowing up. Bill Skarsgård (It, Deadpool, The Diver- gent series) from It – those are the guys that I try to look for right now when they have things coming out.

@GianniVPaolo

PHOTOGRAPHY CREDITS Athleisure Mag's virtual shoot was shot by Co-Founder + Celebrity Photographer Paul Farkas. Throughout this shoot, Paul used an iPhone, iPad, Facetime, Clos, Canon Mark IV; and selected Canon lenses: EF 50 f/1.2 L, EF 24-70 f/2.8 L II, and EF 70-200 f/2.8 L II.

@PVFarkas STYLE & GROOMING CREDITS Athleisure Mag's Celeb Fashion Stylist, Co-Founder/Creatuve + Style Director Kim- mie Smith and Groomer Bruce Dean share what they used to create this fall mens- wear style editorial. LOOK I | OUT & ABOUT STYLE PG 37 - 41 | ALO YOGA Traverse Pull Over + Polar Moto Joggers | REVO X JEEP Avi- ators | ATHLETIC PROPULSION LABS Techloom Wave | LOOK II | FITNESS STYLE

PG 42 + 45 | ALO YOGA Polar Moto Joggers

| ATHLETIC PROPULSION LABS Techloom Wave | LOOK III | AFTER WORK STYLE PG 46 | PROUD Be Creative Zipper Polo | MAVI JEANS James Ink Williamsburg | ATHLETIC PROPULSION LABS Techloom Chelsea | LOOK IIV | LOUNGE STYLE PG 50 + 52 | AVIATOR NATION 5 Stripe Hoodie + Sweatpant Charcoal Set | ATH- LETIC PROPULSION LABS Lusso |

GROOMING | M.A.C. Cosmetics | Aquage Hair Care |

@Shes.Kimmie @BruceDeanBeauty Hear STARZ Power Book II: Ghost, Gi- anni Paolo on our show, #TRIBEGOALS - which is a part of Athleisure Studio, our multi-media podcast network! Make sure to subscribe to find out when the episode drops. You can hear it on iHeart Radio, Spotify, Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts and wherever you enjoy lis- tening to your favorite podcast.