Entertainment Industry Mourns The End Of 'Hollywood' Howard Berman Being Their Personal Voice In Congress

from the time-to-get-with-the-times dept

We noted after the election that Hollywood’s absolute favorite elected official — “Hollywood” Howard Berman — lost his seat. He was often referred to as “the Representative from Disney” for his unwavering support of passing legislation that helped the big Hollywood studios and record labels over the public interest. For many of us interested in the public benefit, his loss seemed like a good deal — but, of course, for folks at the big movie studios and record labels, it was a disaster. Just witness this unintentionally hilarious Politico piece by former MPAA exec and current Universal Music ‘Executive VP of Public Policy,’ Matt Gerson, which read like a love letter to Berman, where he reveals what everyone knew already: that Berman and the MPAA were apparently in constant communication, with Berman regularly being called into MPAA meetings to help.

I first met Howard Berman when I was with the Motion Picture Association of America. I remember Jack Valenti uttering a phrase that I would hear repeatedly over 20 years: “What does Howard think?” When we have an idea for a compromise, someone runs it by Howard. When we develop a strategy, someone is tasked to get Howard’s reaction. When we speak with his congressional colleagues, the usual response from Democrats and Republicans alike is, “Let me grab Howard on the floor and see what he is thinking.”

The article is also a little wacky, in that it both highlights Berman’s supposed “attention to detail,” as well as his apparently frequent failures to know the names of the people he was talking about.

Either way, you can understand why the legacy entertainment industry companies are sad to be losing such a close “friend,” but aren’t we all a little better off with Representatives who actually pay attention to what’s best for the public, rather than just what’s best for a few companies?

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Companies: mpaa, universal music

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Comments on “Entertainment Industry Mourns The End Of 'Hollywood' Howard Berman Being Their Personal Voice In Congress”

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47 Comments
out_of_the_blue says:

It's YOUR fault, Mike! You won't give us the solution!

Some people are starting to question whether you have one. C’mon, just give us a peek at how you recover a $100M of “sunk (or fixed) costs” on a movie ten cents at a time.

And now a personal note for Modest Mike “Streisand Effect” Masnick:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Streisand_effect
To properly honor Mike, I propose “Masnick Defect” as term for out-of-bounds self-aggrandizement such as years of trying to turn a single quip into fame.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: It's YOUR fault, Mike! You won't give us the solution!

I only pass through here on occasion, but I think the magic formula you’re looking for is “cwf+rtb”.

If that doesn’t pump your ‘nads, how about the laws of supply and demand? You remember those?

If your studio isn’t confident that it can earn $100M from a film, maybe it shouldn’t make it.

PaulT (profile) says:

Re: Re: It's YOUR fault, Mike! You won't give us the solution!

He’s obviously desperate and completely deluded, but it’s worth addressing this:

“If your studio isn’t confident that it can earn $100M from a film, maybe it shouldn’t make it.”

Exactly. Few movies need to have such inflated budgets (which have far outpaced inflation for bigger blockbusters), and many films are highly profitable without any such stupid figure attached. Those that do need to be attractive to audiences that will pay the higher profit theatrical and purchase fee, or reduce the fixed cost so that you can make the costs back more easily with streaming and lower margin distribution. That’s what the market should be doing – better products that people are willing to pay a premium for, or more control over initial costs so that they’re profitable at cheaper prices to consumers.

Instead we have morons like ootb whining that they need government enforcement to support inflated costs and wasteful spending, and that it’s the people pointing out the mistakes that need to come up with the solutions on their behalf. Pathetic.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: It's YOUR fault, Mike! You won't give us the solution!

“To properly honor Mike, I propose “Masnick Defect” as term for out-of-bounds self-aggrandizement such as years of trying to turn a single quip into fame.”

How many weeks did it take you to come up with that one. Your parents and professors would be proud. How many times did you point to the post and said look what i came up with and posted all by myself!

FuzzyDuck says:

Re: It's YOUR fault, Mike! You won't give us the solution!

“how you recover a $100M of “sunk (or fixed) costs” on a movie ten cents at a time.”

This a math question right?

How many times do you have to sell something for 10 cents in order to earn 100.000.000 $

Lemme see, 1 billion times?

Do I win anything Blue for being the first to come up with the right answer?

Anonymous Coward says:

and it’s this constant ‘called into meetings to help’ attitude that politicians have been only too quick to respond to that has led the world into the copyright fuck up that we have now. had governments and law enforcement agencies concentrated on representing the people they are supposed to instead of taking the payments for favours route, perhaps we would have progressed a damn site further than we have, in more ways than one!!

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