A Screener Issue That Threatens To Engulf The Industry

The Motion Picture Association of America’s new policy of not providing screeners to those voting on various awards is pissing off many in the industry. “The question producers might consider now: How bad a taste will the screener issue leave in the mouths of the Writers Guild and Screen Actors Guild? Why? Because both these unions are currently in the process of organizing the positions and recommendations they’ll carry into next year’s negotiations with the Alliance of Motion Picture and Television Producers on their feature-film and TV contracts.”

Is Disney Headed For A Fall?

“Charges that the Disney company has lost its way under current company head Michael Eisner are not new. But the departure of the final Disney family member from the fabled company has thrown the charges into a new relief… Disney’s core animation and theme-park businesses have been battered by the competition. [Roy] Disney and his fellow departing board members charge that the company is pushing profits over innovation and quality.” Worse yet, the public seems to agree, and the Disney name no longer carries the automatic consumer respect that it once did.

Crackdown? What Crackdown?

“Hollywood’s all-out war against movie piracy is turning into a big-budget bomb, with illegal copies of virtually every new release — and even some films that have yet to debut in theaters — turning up on the Internet… The abundance of bootlegs arrives just as the movie studios have launched their most aggressive campaign yet to protect their business from the rampant downloading that has plagued the record industry… The steps may have made some thievery more difficult, but overall, piracy appears to be up from previous years… In fact, the new security measures seem only to have emboldened some pirates.”

More Lawsuits, Just In Time For The Holidays!

The recording industry has filed another 41 lawsuits against online file-swappers accused of trading at least 1000 songs illegally, and warned an additional 90 individuals that legal action is imminent if they do not stop their file-trading activity. Since this past summer, the industry has sued more than 300 users, settled with 220, and received pledges from over 1,000 that they will delete their illegally-downloaded songs and never download again.

Here’s Betting The Industry Doesn’t Like This, Either

In Europe, final touches are being put on a next-generation portable MP3 application known as tunA, which will not only function as a playback machine, but has the potential to turn every user into a walking radio station. The application “employs Wi-Fi to locate nearby users, peek at their music playlist and wirelessly jack into their audio stream… tunA is being designed for wireless PDAs, cell phones and even its own hardware device.”

Crowe Warns Aussie Movie Industry

As Australia considers cutting off funding to its film industry, actor Russell Crowe warns that to do so would damage the industry.”I don’t think the structure that we have in place should become a social welfare system for people who can’t compete,” he said. “But he said the industry should concentrate on making improvements and becoming internationally competitive rather than consider withdrawing funding.”

Sundance Lineup Star-Heavy, Racially Diverse

“The competitive categories of the 2004 Sundance Film Festival will be characterized by big-name actors appearing in films by relatively unknown directors, projects influenced by Sept. 11 and a record-breaking number of projects from black filmmakers. Festival director Geoff Gilmore and director of programming John Cooper made those assessments on Monday as they unveiled three sections of the fest — the Dramatic and Documentary competitions and the American Spectrum program.”

Maryland Public Television Faces Scrutiny

A state audit has uncovered multiple examples of what the auditor says are questionable financial practices at Maryland Public Television. Conflicts of interest, contracts awarded without proper bidding process, and deliberate attempts to subvert the state’s rules on project review are among the charges being leveled at MPT, which insists that the report is overblown. MPT is best known nationally for producing the program “Wall $treet Week.”

How Women Look On TV (And Why)

A new study of the television, analyzing the 2002-3 prime-time season, “found that women made up 22 percent of all creators, executive producers, producers, directors, writers, editors and directors of photography, a percentage that has remained virtually unchanged for the last four seasons. Meanwhile, on screen, male characters outnumbered females by almost 2 to 1 (62 percent males, 38 percent females). The women were also younger than the men: 70 percent of all characters in their 40’s and 80 percent of those in their 50’s were men. Among major characters, only men held political office or were military or religious leaders. A total of 93 percent of business owners were men.”

Getting Sick: Hollywood’s Last Taboo

When Hollywood composer Michael Kamen died this month, after a years-long battle with multiple sclerosis, few of the news bulletins reporting his demise were able to give the cause. In fact, the afflictions of Hollywood stars are almost never accurately reported, and the very idea of sickness seems to be almost unacceptable in polite Hollywood society. It’s a bizarre taboo, but an undeniable one, and Kamen is only the latest example of a star-studded culture obsessed with health, and unwilling to discuss even the idea of sickness.