- Hannah Satzke is joining 3 Arts Entertainment as a Manager in their New York office, tasked with building out the firm's fashion and beauty representation vertical.
- Satzke founded Make Management in 2021 after five years at WME and a stint as Associate Director of Brand Partnerships at Columbia Records.
- Three of her clients are making the move with her: beauty creator and runway model Meredith Duxbury, viral food interviewer Matt Peterson, and London-based lifestyle entrepreneur Matilda Bea.
- The hire is backed by 3 Arts Partners Luke Dillon and Dunia McNeily, who are spearheading the firm's expansion into the creator and digital lifestyle space.
3 Arts Entertainment has hired Hannah Satzke, founder of digital-first management shop Make Management, as a Manager in its New York office. The move is the firm’s clearest signal yet that it is getting serious about fashion and beauty representation.
Satzke launched Make Management in 2021, growing a creator-focused roster after five years at WME and a role as Associate Director of Brand Partnerships at Columbia Records.
This kind of cross-industry move mirrors what we saw when Kendall Ostrow joined CAA Creators earlier in June 2026, bringing digital media expertise into a major management infrastructure.
Three clients are crossing over with Satzke: Forbes 30 Under 30 beauty creator and runway model Meredith Duxbury, whose TikTok presence has eclipsed 420 million likes; viral street-interview host Matt Peterson, known for his “asking strangers what to eat” format; and London-based creator and entrepreneur Matilda Bea, celebrated for her distinctive entertaining and interiors content.
The hire arrives as 3 Arts is actively reshaping its talent mix, a dynamic also visible with Lital Spitzer departure to Underscore Talent, which opened space for exactly these kinds of new-lane hires.
Partners Luke Dillon and Dunia McNeily said Satzke’s understanding of how creators build “scalable, enduring brands” was key to bringing her aboard.
Takeaways
This isn’t just a manager switching offices, it’s 3 Arts Entertainment planting a flag in a space that traditional management has historically left on the table.
Fashion and beauty talent, the kind that moves product, sells out collabs, and walks runways and commands TikTok, has been massively underserved by legacy management firms.
Hannah Satzke spent years at WME, then built Make Management from scratch in exactly this lane. She’s not learning on the job, she is the job.
And bringing Meredith Duxbury, Matt Peterson, and Matilda Bea along means 3 Arts hits the ground running with an already-proven client book. The real question is how far they’ll push it.
Can 3 Arts’ existing film and TV infrastructure give beauty and fashion creators like Meredith Duxbury a genuine edge into scripted or broadcast opportunities? Does WME losing Satzke’s networks and client relationships signal a gap in how the big agencies are serving digital-first, creator-led talent?