Oh Look, The Number Of People Employed In The Movie And Music Recording Business Just Hit An All Time High
from the but-jobs-jobs-jobs! dept
The common refrain coming out of the MPAA and RIAA over the past few years has really focused on “jobs, jobs, jobs!” This is a message that often works with Congress. If you can convince Congress that “jobs” are at risk, they go scrambling to protect those jobs, even if the economy would be much better off with obsolete jobs going away, and better jobs taking their place. That said, the MPAA and RIAA have a long history of making up ridiculous claims about the number of people employed in their industries, as well as the number of supposed “lost jobs.” So it’s rather noteworthy to see that the good folks over at ZeroHedge have pointed out that, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS), jobs in the motion picture and sound recording industries hit an all time high in December.

Filed Under: bls, employment, jobs, motion pictures, movies, music, sound recordings
Comments on “Oh Look, The Number Of People Employed In The Movie And Music Recording Business Just Hit An All Time High”
So if the number of employees have hit an all time high then why are the MPAA etc. screaming of job losses that is caused by piracy.
Re: Re:
Just because we have lots of jobs now doesn’t mean there aren’t also massive losses caused by piracy!
Just think, if it weren’t for piracy, everyone would probably be employed in the music industry.
Re: Re: Re:
Reminds me of that study that drastically inflated the size of the media industries.
“Do you listen to music at work? Yes? Then you have a job in the music industry!”
Re: Re: Re: Re:
Complementary Linkage:
http://blog.ted.com/2012/03/20/the-numbers-behind-the-copyright-math/
Re: Re:
Isn’t it obvious? Sure, the number of people EMPLOYED is up, but the number of people with JOBS is rapidly disappearing. You see, just because someone is employed, it doesn’t necessarily mean that they have an actual job to do.
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True – what with part-time and zero-hour contracts abounding these days…
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The stats also match the timeline of increasing government and private sector efforts in regard to piracy enforcement.
I would have expected job increases, and that’s exactly what happened.
Is Mike Masnick complaining about these jobs because his theories have been proven incorrect?
Re: Re: Re:
Uhuh, and I’m sure that whole ‘global depression’ and the fact that it’s starting to ease up has nothing at all to do with the increase in employment… /s
Also, might wanna be a little careful with the ‘increase in jobs is due to increase in piracy crackdowns’, given that pretty much each peak in that chart is almost immediately followed by a massive drop, often ending up lower then when it started.
Much more likely, is that the peaks are when a big movie is being filmed, with a lot of jobs needed, increasing in needed manpower as things get closer to being done, and the following drop is when suddenly those people aren’t needed anymore, and are let go.
Re: Re: Piracy Enforcement
That comment would be less risible if piracy rates had actually dropped as a result of the “enforcement.” It hasn’t.
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Wait, so you are saying that piracy has created jobs? And that you expected piracy to create jobs?
So doesn’t that mean piracy is good then because it creates jobs just as you predicted?
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Because their efforts at combating the evil pirates is working. Attacking and theatening people with excessive fines, court costs and jail time for infringement has led to the creation of all these jobs.
/s
You don't get it
You don’t get it. This is obviously the result of the Six Strikes scheme, it doesn’t matter that it’s only just been implemented and not until after December 2012, we keep telling you that the more restrictive regulations regarding copyright there are, the more jobs there will be.
Kind regards,
Big Greedy Media LLC.
Re: You don't get it
I wonder when they will sponsor a report showing exactly that, so it is possible to give the pet politicians something to point their sceptics to!
According to OOTB
…It’s because they shut down that filthy evil pirate Kim Dotcom without a trial…
Re: According to OOTB -- you're close enough.
“…It’s because they shut down that filthy evil pirate Kim Dotcom without a trial…” — Heh, heh. So OBVIOUSLY TRUE that even you fanboy-trolls know it!
THANKS for the advance notice and for joining my clone army by putting up a post close enough to what I was going to. You fanboys WILL eventually share my views, even if you don’t wish to, because I’m aligned with common law, common sense, current legalities, and practical facts.
Re: Re: According to OOTB -- you're close enough.
OH wait. Dotcom has opened MEGA and guess what jobs have INCREASED. If Dotcom was operating a piracy site then there will be reports of job losses but the number of jobs are increasing.
Flawed logic by OOTB again!
Re: Re: Re: According to OOTB -- you're close enough.
@ AC: “OH wait. Dotcom has opened MEGA and guess what jobs have INCREASED. If Dotcom was operating a piracy site then there will be reports of job losses but the number of jobs are increasing.
Flawed logic by OOTB again!”
———-
How can that be when Mega strongly disavows piracy? :
http://www.theregister.co.uk/2013/01/20/mega_launch_fail//
‘Clause 19 makes it plain Mega is a no-dodgy-files zone, stating “You are strictly prohibited from using our services to infringe copyright. You may not upload, download, store, share, display, stream, distribute, e-mail, link to, transmit or otherwise make available any files, data, or content that infringes any copyright or other proprietary rights of any person or entity.”‘
Looks like piratey AC is mistaken about the new Mega.
Re: Re: Re:2 According to OOTB -- you're close enough.
Megaupload had similar terms of service.
Re: Re: According to OOTB -- you're close enough.
So, you’re Bizzaro and see the world stupidly?
Re: Re: According to OOTB -- you're close enough.
You fanboys WILL eventually share my views, even if you don’t wish to, because I’m aligned with common law, common sense, current legalities, and practical facts.
That has to be a record for the most amount of fail in a single sentence.
Re: Re: Re: According to OOTB -- you're close enough.
I figured it was meant as a joke, because really, what else could it be, and taken in that way it was a smashing success, as I couldn’t help but laugh reading it.
Re: Re: According to OOTB -- you're close enough.
I’m not sure if I want to have whatever OOTB is smoking, or if it should be treated like Agent Orange.
It may be nice to be so blissfully ignorant of reality, but whatever he is smoking also seems to have the side effect of bringing one to an arrogance that you know that everyone should believe in your logic no matter how flawed it may be.
As the entertainment industry and government collide and merge together the number of jobs will naturally increase.
Good thing we put an end to piracy in August 2009.
Where's an economist to analyze whether these are full-time?
Oh, if only there were someone here who didn’t just re-write according to his bias from a one-paragraph blog post, but who actually dug into the numbers.
For example, as a cost-saving measure, many of these are likely to be part-time jobs — not least because of Obamacare not covering part-time employees — so while raw NUMBER may be increased, payroll and amount of total work hours may not have.
Re: Where's an economist to analyze whether these are full-time?
WHOOOSH! BOOM!
Person 1: ‘What was that?!‘
Person 2: ‘That was the sound of the goalposts being moved quick enough to cause a sonic boom.’
Re: Re: Where's an economist to analyze whether these are full-time?
@ “That One Guy
WHOOOSH! BOOM!
Person 1: ‘What was that?!’
Person 2: ‘That was the sound of the goalposts being moved quick enough to cause a sonic boom.’
————–
You write so stoopidly that it’s unclear whether you agree with me or not, but at a hazard I’ll guess that you don’t. — Ever look beyond end of your nose? Are you such a dolt as can’t grasp that one number doesn’t tell the whole story? Have you noticed that the weight of product in potato chip bags has gone down while price per bag stays the same? So long as you get a bag, it’s all the same, right?
Re: Re: Re: Where's an economist to analyze whether these are full-time?
“”You write so stoopidly that it’s unclear whether you agree with me or not, but at a hazard I’ll guess that you don’t. — Ever look beyond end of your nose? Are you such a dolt as can’t grasp that one number doesn’t tell the whole story? Have you noticed that the weight of product in potato chip bags has gone down while price per bag stays the same? So long as you get a bag, it’s all the same, right?””
Said comment being written by someone who does exactly the same in what he writes, now that is priceless!
Re: Re: Re:2 Where's an economist to analyze whether these are full-time?
@ AC: “Said comment being written by someone who does exactly the same in what he writes, now that is priceless!”
Said CLICHE being written by an AC, now that is VALUELESS.
Re: Re: Re:3 Where's an economist to analyze whether these are full-time?
“”Said CLICHE being written by an AC, now that is VALUELESS.””
Which makes said comment by OOTB even VALUELSS.
Re: Re: Re: Where's an economist to analyze whether these are full-time?
You write so stoopidly…
And you spell stupidly.
Re: Where's an economist to analyze whether these are full-time?
Oh, if only there were someone here who didn’t just re-write according to his bias from a one-paragraph blog post, but who actually dug into the numbers.
For example, as a cost-saving measure, many of these are likely to be part-time jobs — not least because of Obamacare not covering part-time employees — so while raw NUMBER may be increased, payroll and amount of total work hours may not have.
Almost every job in the film industry is part-time. Workers move from project to project. Virtually none are employed by the same company year round.
Re: Where's an economist to analyze whether these are full-time?
“For example, as a cost-saving measure, many of these are likely to be part-time jobs — not least because of Obamacare not covering part-time employees”
Actually, no, boy.
Most jobs in the entertainment industry are short-term, running from a day to a week to a complete season of production.
Once an assignment is done, the workers move on.
That includes actors, writers, artists, construction workers, etc.
Only executives and senior studio personnel have full-time jobs.
It has nothing to do with Obamacare.
Re: Re: Where's an economist to analyze whether these are full-time?
“It has nothing to do with Obamacare.”
and it was like that since … forever
Re: Where's an economist to analyze whether these are full-time?
Glad to see you’re not blaming pirates for that and putting the blame where it’s truly due (the government and corporate decision making).
Re: Re: Where's an economist to analyze whether these are full-time?
Shhh. Don’t tell out_of_the_asscrack that. out_of_the_asscrack HATES it when you criticise corporate decision making, ESPECIALLY when said corporate decision making was made by Hollywood.
The bigger question, what’s causing all those gigantic jumps and drops in the chart?
A bunch of short term jobs as people go from one movie to the next, and some seasons are busier for movie and music making then others?
If the industry had half a brain it could be even higher.
Can we get the percentage of lawyers to clear things up?
Yet again OOTB accuses someone of being a pirate when they are not.
Flawed logic by OOTB yet again!
But all the new jobs are for lawyers and lobbyists.
That’s literally TRILLIONS of jobs lost in the movie industry, people! Literally trillions of people are now out of work thanks to Mike Masnick. We’ve got the statistics to prove it.
Speaking of the music business and highs...
Here’s an article about the goings-on at Universal Music.
http://radaronline.com/exclusives/2013/04/adam-levine-drugs-video/
I am trying to figure out what the above chart is based upon. The linked site does not provide any information about what BLS document contains the chart and where a copy of that document can be found.
Must include zero
Any graph that doesn’t include zero on it’s quantitive axis is misleading at best.
The rule is – if the graph doesn’t seem to show anything interesting when the axis includes zero, then the data is not that interesting to begin with.
Cropping the graph and therefore exaggerating it, just makes it seem like a lie.
Re: Must include zero
Wait, you think that the graph needs to be 99% white space? That 405 at the top left of the graph isn’t 405 people, it’s 405,000. Extending the graph from 345,000 to 0 would make the change look like nothing at all.
Or is that what you’re saying? Comparing it from 405,000 to 0 would make it seem like piracy has done diddly squat to harm jobs.
Re: Must include zero
I have a different rule that says people that make up incorrect rules can be safely ignored.
Why would you doubt that the job count has went up? After all they now have a copyright czar, ICE is working for them closing sites, the DOJ is activity working for them, Biden worked for them temporarily setting up 6 duds, Congress works for them passing bills, USTR is busy on their agenda with trade treaties, and the countless lobbyist and lawyers have made the entertainment field a gold mine for work. Even Prenda and Righthaven were having a go at it… only the last parties turned out to be highly temporary in job duration.
Geeze no wonder the job count is at a record high.
One is left to wonder how many of these positions are with the outfits sending out flawed DMCA notices and hunting piracy in every dark corner.
I think that when they say things they secretly add a ^-1 in the end of their sentences. So they are actually right when they say they lost billions of dollars because it actually means, mathematically, that they earned all that. Same with jobs. Now those clever bastards…
Ahem. No surprises, right?
More jobs in the Movie and Music recording business? Did they hire more caterers and security guards?
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And shelf-stackers loading up popcorn and soda…
What this chart tells me is the country is making a big whooptidoo by drafting legislation and criminalizing people over the fluctuations of a mere 50,000 entertainment jobs. We’ve got our priorities straight!
Misreading
This is something I learned in Junior High-school. Misreading the graph. Look at the numbers on the y axis (the line that is vertical), there is actually not a huge difference in numbers. Therefore, there was not a HUGE change as it appears to be.