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Are Stars Going Nova? Part III
"...stars are essentially worthless - and absolutely essential."
In the past, and on more than one occasion, I've discussed the changing nature of the entertainment business, and the potential collapse of the star system, or at least the complete upheaval of stars as we see them today. The end of stars as an idea is not terribly new, but the changing nature of film as a medium, society as a whole and our relationship with media in general give greater credence to (and new angles on) old arguments. Now that we're fully committed to a lack-luster summer at the B.O. the Hollywood PTB (Powers-That-Be) are genuinely open to exploring new business-models and market trends.
Back the f%@& up!
"Anything that can go wrong, will go wrong."
- Murphy's Law
In Hollywood, you're only as good as your last project. In order for anyone to know how good you are, they have to see what you can do. Nobody will hire based on the work you tell them about, you have to back it up with examples. But it's really hard to show people your work if it disappears into the ether.
Are Stars Going Nova? Part II
"We are all made of stars"
- Moby
A little while back I floated the idea that stars are beginning to lose their power to pull in a guaranteed audience. Apparently, I'm not the only person questioning the foundational principles of Hollywood business models. The concept of "content is king" is penetrating every aspect of the entertainment industry.
Are Stars Going Nova?
"A movie star is mythic, a movie star is like no one you've ever seen walking around in daily life... You don't see these people walking to the drug store, and the ones that you do aren't stars, they're actors."
- John Waters
Hollywood has gone through many changes in its just-over century long history. The introduction of sync-sound, color, television and home video, each changed the basic business model of feature films, but throughout the history of film the star has been a bankable commodity. Recent years, however, have shown a decrease in the reliability of a star's box-office draw.
Hollywood is Nucking Futs
"Nobody knows anything"
I had the pleasure of attending a Q&A with William Goldman and John Cleese last week, an entertaining couple of hours all around. The audience was full of working and aspiring screenwriters, and the common theme throughout most of the questions being asked was, "What should I be doing to best advance my career?"
Unfortunately, the common theme through most of the answers to these questions was, "I don't know."
Breaking in won't happen
"If I can make it there I'll make it anywhere"
- Frank Sinatra
"Breaking in" to the entertainment industry is even harder than you think - and even fewer people than you realize have begun a career by "breaking in". Hollywood is perceived by outsiders as a closed system, but really it's not much of a system at all. It's so hard to break in because there's nothing to break into.
Do the thing
"Fish gotta swim, birds gotta fly"
- Oscar Hammerstein
Actors act. Writers write. Producers produce. If you aren't doing what you claim to be, you are merely posing. Learn your craft, build a work ethic and develop your craft - these are the only roads to success in your career.
Your story has three acts - Part II
"Four shalt thou not count, neither count thou two, excepting that thou then proceed to three. Five is right out!"
- Michael Palin
I wanted to continue the topic I began in a previous column because the topic is terribly complex, and it happens to hit close to the root of my true passion: story.
Your story has three acts - Part I
"Thou shalt count to three, no more, no less. Three shalt be the number that thou count, and the number of the counting shall be three."
- Michael Palin
Your story has three acts. It doesn't matter if it's a two act play, a five act television show, a single feature film, or a three act play. Your story has three acts. Unless it sucks.
You have to do it
"It's so hard to find good help these days."
- cliché
Your mommy can't do it, your daddy can't do it and nobody else will. You have to build your career and define who you are as an individual.