Ridiculous: Short-Sighted, Anonymous Hollywood Exec Flips Out Over Using BitTorrent For Promotions

from the what-year-is-this? dept

I had thought that we’d gotten past the point at which Hollywood execs would freak out over the use of a modern, better, more efficient technology to help promote a movie, but apparently in the minds of some of the folks who run the big movie studios, we’re perpetually stuck in 2004 or so. That’s the only explanation I can figure out for this wacky article from TheWrap, which highlights what appears to be a single (completely anonymous, of course) Hollywood studio big shot absolutely losing his mind over the fact that a major movie is promoting itself by distributing the first 7 minutes for free via BitTorrent, in a marketing deal done with BitTorrent Inc. Indie studio Cinedgim made the deal with BitTorrent to promote their new film Arthur Newman, starring Colin Firth and Emily Blunt, and it seems like a perfectly normal way to promote stuff, but not to one studio exec who can’t even bother to stand behind his words by identifying himself.

“It’s a deal with the devil,” one studio executive told TheWrap. “Cinedigm is being used as their pawn.”

A deal with the devil? Funny, I remember most of the major studios doing deals with BitTorrent Inc. six years ago. That was for a poorly planned out and poorly executed video download store, but still. Most people now recognize that there are all sorts of opportunities in going where your customers and fans are. That a Hollywood exec doesn’t see that is a bit scary for whichever studio they happen to work for.

“It’s great for BitTorrent and disingenuous of Cinedigm,” said the executive. “The fact of the matter is BitTorrent is in it for themselves, they’re not in it for the health of the industry.”

Now that’s just funny. As if the studio execs are not in it for themselves? The studios have focused on a business model that sucks the life out of the “health of the industry” for ages, by trying to squeeze out as much money as possible from just a few ideas — doing remakes and sequels and adaptations, rather than doing anything that is new or unique. And then they use Hollywood accounting to make sure the actual creators almost never get paid any additional money, while they make many times over the amount invested. A statement like that pretends that the exec has the “health of the industry” in mind, rather than his own bottom line.

And, of course, there’s a strong argument that this statement is totally wrong as well. Cinedigm really does appear to have a much bigger focus on the health of the industry than this nameless studio exec, because Cinedigm is trying to adapt with the times and to embrace new opportunities.

“I really missed them being at the forefront of the piracy issue,” the studio executive said. “I don’t remember them going, ‘Naughty, naughty, don’t use our technology for that.’ They don’t give a shit.”

Huh? Actually, from rather early on, BitTorrent made clear that you shouldn’t use their technology to infringe, because BitTorrent does nothing to hide your IP address. When it first came out, in fact, most people talked about how it wasn’t a great technology for infringement, given the lack of secrecy involved in using it. Furthermore, from as far back as I can remember, BitTorrent the company (which this exec seems to confuse entirely with BitTorrent the protocol) has worked hard to promote legitimate and non-infringing uses. We already talked about the (failed) partnerships with Hollywood in the past, but the company has long been focused on helping to try to find ways to drag Hollywood execs into the 21st century with a better, more efficient platform for distribution.

Really, this exec just seems to be acting in a knee jerk way against BitTorrent the company without understanding very much at all. Hell, even the idea of releasing the first seven minutes of a movie online for free to drive more views — that’s been done for years. There’s almost nothing new here at all. In fact, we wrote about a movie studio doing the exact same thing thirteen years ago when Dreamworks did that with Chicken Run. How could it possibly be a bad thing to release the first 7 minutes of a movie for free, in an effort to convince people that it will be worth their while to go see the full thing? Well, I can think of one way: if you make crap movies where the first seven minutes will convince you not to pay to see the rest. Perhaps that’s this exec’s problem.

Thankfully, the forward-looking folks at Cinedigm don’t seem put off by one anonymous exec at a competing studio:

“Blaming BitTorrent for piracy is like blaming a freeway for drunk drivers, ” Jill Calcaterra, Cinedigm’s chief marketing officer said. “How people use it can be positive for the industry or it can hurt the industry. We want it help us make this indie film successful.”

Furthermore, it appears that they’re planning to use BitTorrent to promote a number of other films this way as well.

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Companies: bittorrent

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Comments on “Ridiculous: Short-Sighted, Anonymous Hollywood Exec Flips Out Over Using BitTorrent For Promotions”

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51 Comments
Rikuo (profile) says:

So a portion of a movie, not the whole thing, ended up on Bittorent that can act as an advertisement for the full movie.

So…what are the movie studios going to say when another workprint is leaked, one missing all the special effects? Ya know, like what happened with that Wolverine Origins movie? It’s pretty much the same thing. The fact that it’s done with or without their permission doesn’t matter – in the end, a portion of an unreleased movie ends up accessible for free viewing, acting as an advertisement.

DannyB (profile) says:

Re: "appears to be a single (completely anonymous, of course)"

If Cinedigm is so unknown as you say, then why should you or a clueless Hollywood Exec care about how Cinedigm distributes its own films?

In fact why should a clueless dinosaur Hollywood Exec care about how any other modern firm distributes its own films in this millennium?

ratskywatsky (profile) says:

Re: Re: "appears to be a single (completely anonymous, of course)"

I have no idea why an unnamed exec would comment but Cinedigm has released exactly 4 films under its current name and per my above quote the “Major film ” in question ( Arthur Neman) had the worst opening I can recall for a film opening on over 100 screens ( nearly 250 in this case) it grossed an average of $455 per which means about 60 people per theater went to see for the entire weekend. I can assure you no actual exec at a major studio would give a rats ass if they released the entire film on BitTorrent. I just get annoyed when people who know nothing about film distribution make absurd statements such as claiming Cindedigm is “Major Studio” ( on a side note they are NOT A STUDIO at all, they are a distributor as are most companies outside of Hollywood). They do NOT make movies they acquire them after someone else has paid to have them made or that is a major film release but don’t let facts get in the way of a good story. This is about the last film I would use as an example of BitTorrrent being good for a films sales.

PaulT (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re: "appears to be a single (completely anonymous, of course)"

“This is about the last film I would use as an example of BitTorrrent being good for a films sales.”

Your comments seem to be missing the point of the article. This isn’t about showing that torrents are a great way to promote or Cinedigm’s exact place in the food chain (the article doesn’t claim that they’re a major studio, by the way. The link to the source article refers to Arthur Newman as a “major movie”, but nothing in the article states that Cinedigm is a “major studio”).

It’s about the typical reaction among incumbants to this kind of move. Realistically, they’re not doing anything massively new. Movies have been promoted (or even distributed) through torrents before. Movies have been promoted by showing people the first reel before. Nothing here is truly new.

But, even so, we have a studio executive (who apparently does work for a major studio) attacking Cinedigm as though marketing in this way is somehow wrong. That’s the point of the article, and is incorrect. Torrents are a neutral technology, BitTorrent are not involved with pirated material, and the setup allows people to distribute and promote legal material if they wish. To pretend otherwise is either to misunderstand the technology or just be afraid of different ways to promote content that don’t require multi-million dollar advertising budgets.

It’s the same old story – Hollywood incumbents lashing out at new technology that they feel threatens their place. The only newsworthy part of this is that it’s taking place in 2013, whereas most of the questions raised and challenges issued were answered in 2003.

ratskywatsky (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:2 "appears to be a single (completely anonymous, of course)"

Sorry but facts do matter. Cinedigm is NOT a ” studio” big or small. The standard definition of a studio is company that MAKES films and thus invests significant money in them. Cinedigm is a distributor that has virtually no track record either now or in its previous incarnation as New Video in theatrical film distribution. Arthur Newman is NOT a major film. It is a piece of crap that was almost surely sold to Cinedigm for next to nothing as they were willing do distribute it. Some unnamed studio exec allegedly criticizes them for this and this is a story? No serious exec would care what Cinedigm does with the film. The eagerness here to use even a story built around an anonymous quote and false details to attack studios shows how often there is little interest here in facts when studios are involved. I am not a big fan of studios on many issues but this is a non story. Sorry that I am “missing” the real story when there is no story.

ratskywatsky (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:2 "appears to be a single (completely anonymous, of course)"

Sorry but facts do matter. Cinedigm is NOT a ” studio” big or small. The standard definition of a studio is company that MAKES films and thus invests significant money in them. Cinedigm is a distributor that has virtually no track record either now or in its previous incarnation as New Video in theatrical film distribution. Arthur Newman is NOT a major film. It is a piece of crap that was almost surely sold to Cinedigm for next to nothing as they were willing do distribute it. Some unnamed studio exec allegedly criticizes them for this and this is a story? No serious exec would care what Cinedigm does with the film. The eagerness here to use even a story built around an anonymous quote and false details to attack studios shows how often there is little interest here in facts when studios are involved. I am not a big fan of studios on many issues but this is a non story. Sorry that I am “missing” the real story when there is no story.

ratskywatsky (profile) says:

I don’t want to get into the piracy issue as I disagree with nearly everyone here ( worked in indie film for 20 years)but it is absurd to call Cinedigm a major studio and even less so this film a major movie. They have dealt mostly specialized in documentaries ( they were New Video for many years) and have VERY little experience with theatrical release. The film in question opened this weekend to one of the worst box offices for a film on over 100 screens in recent memory (average $435) I am not blaming the box office on BitTorrent , the film had bad reviews but it is hardly any kind of proof that BitTorrent helps sales. Obviously the DVD & streaming sales remain to be seen but I would not hold my breath.

John Fenderson (profile) says:

Re: Re:

This isn’t a piracy issue at all. This is an issue of a movie executive who simply doesn’t know what he’s talking about.

Bittorrent is a file transfer technology. That’s all. To say that using it is in some way a “deal with the devil” is the same as saying that using FTP or email attachments are a “deal with the devil.”

RD says:

Re: Re: Re:

“Bittorrent is a file transfer technology. That’s all. To say that using it is in some way a “deal with the devil” is the same as saying that using FTP or email attachments are a “deal with the devil.”

But…that’s because they are. If it’s on the internet, or uses the internet, its de facto evil, illegal, immoral. It just is. Also theft, has to be.

/s

Anonymous Coward says:

The studios have focused on a business model that sucks the life out of the “health of the industry” for ages, by trying to squeeze out as much money as possible from just a few ideas — doing remakes and sequels and adaptations, rather than doing anything that is new or unique.

So just the other day you noted that the industry is enjoying record employment. Today the life is being sucked out of the “health of the industry”.

So which is it?

btr1701 (profile) says:

Industry

> “It’s great for BitTorrent and disingenuous
> of Cinedigm,” said the executive. “The fact of
> the matter is BitTorrent is in it for themselves,
> they’re not in it for the health of the industry.”

Why should BitTorrent be obligated to do anything for the health of the industry? It’s not *their* industry.

Does the movie industry go out of its way to prop up the health of the car industry or the steel industry or the fabric industry? No? Well, why not? They expect others to help out *them* out of the goodness of their hearts. Shouldn’t they reciprocate?

DannyB (profile) says:

Re: Industry

“It’s great for BitTorrent and disingenuous
of Cinedigm,” said the executive. “The fact of
the matter is BitTorrent is in it for themselves,
they’re not in it for the health of the industry.”

. . . said clueless dinosaur. “The fact of
the matter is Hollywood is in it for themselves,
they’re not in it for the health of Google .”

anonymouse says:

Re: Industry

Sadly the execs are the ones wanting to block any change as they would lose the money they steal every day, and we are talking about billions being stolen over the years.

I am surprised that the fraud has not been investigated more as there is a lot of money on the table, or under it i should say.

And one thing this article actually showed is that bittorent inc is in it for themselves, i was wondering about how they have not come up with an anonymous client.
Now it makes more sense If they make it anonymous it will end up that the anonymity will be used against them to show they are trying to protect their users from any abuse of the system by the copyright cartel.

Anonymous Coward says:

The purpose of IP law and the purpose of govt established monopolies on broadcasting and cableco infrastructure and the purpose of having laws that prevent restaurants and other venues from hosting independent content creators is not to promote the progress or to serve any public good. It’s not for the good of creators either. The purpose is to allow middlemen to scam both the public and the artists by limiting the ways that content creators can distribute their content and ensuring that content creators must go through a parasitic middlemen to get their content distributed and hence pay them monopoly rents (in the form of giving up their IP privileges to the middlemen) so that both the public and the artists pay parasite middlemen monopoly rents to contribute nothing.

Abolish IP. Abolish govt established broadcasting and cableco monopolies for private or commercial use. These things are theft.

Chosen Reject (profile) says:

Right now if you go to the trouble of trying to hide your bittorrent activities you are seen as a copyright infringer and nothing else. As more and more movie studios (and labels, game studios, publishers, etc) start using bittorrent to distribute promotional material like this, hiding your bittorrent activity will be seen the same as blocking tracking cookies. It’ll be interesting to see how long privacy advocates are lumped in with piracy advocates.

PaulT (profile) says:

“”I don’t remember them going, ‘Naughty, naughty, don’t use our technology for that.’ “

I don’t recall Ford saying that you shouldn’t run people over with their cars either. Does that mean that we can ignore investigating every hit and run driver and just sue Ford now? Or does that mean that non-criminal uses of Ford’s vehicles are now suspect because they didn’t attack the illegal ones in press releases?

“How could it possibly be a bad thing to release the first 7 minutes of a movie for free, in an effort to convince people that it will be worth their while to go see the full thing?”

I’m going to guess that somewhere in this guy’s mind he can’t accept that the technology is used for legal purposes and so somehow views this as being some kind of advertisement for piracy. You know, despite it already being used in the mainstream for just that and this being a great example of how torrents are not de facto illegal.

So, a clueless moron anonymously making uneducated statements showing how he neither understand the marketplace nor consumers, while attacking logical moves that have been proven successful in the past as though they’re evil? I wonder if he’s one of our regulars…

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