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WHY HOLLYWOOD AS WE KNOW IT IS ALREADY OVER
NICK BILTON

Posted on 01/30/2017 6:14:38 PM PST by BBell

vanityfair.com material not allowed on FR per publisher.


TOPICS: Arts/Photography; Business/Economy; TV/Movies
KEYWORDS: buttcrack; hollywood
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To: dfwgator

I never heard of those but I did look them up.


21 posted on 01/30/2017 7:11:23 PM PST by BBell (calm down and eat your sandwiches)
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To: odawg
The males all look metrosexual, with their little sissy beards

And those oh so "cool" man buns.

22 posted on 01/30/2017 7:13:07 PM PST by BBell (calm down and eat your sandwiches)
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To: Sasparilla

I have found myself watching foreign films and shows more and more. Netflix is full of them. And I watch TCM a lot.


23 posted on 01/30/2017 7:17:21 PM PST by BBell (calm down and eat your sandwiches)
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To: BBell

Hollyweird keeps spouting leftist garbage and looking down their noses at us, and people wonder why movie theatre attendance is at an all time low???

Patronizing liberals may not be the entire cause, but they certainly are a factor.


24 posted on 01/30/2017 7:19:23 PM PST by Tolerance Sucks Rocks (Life was so much better before Hart-Cellar.)
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To: Sasparilla
Well Sasparilla I do like Coen brother's movies.


25 posted on 01/30/2017 7:22:25 PM PST by BBell (calm down and eat your sandwiches)
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To: BBell

There are very few shows I watch coming from TV and Hollyweird these days.

There is really only one I make sure to watch every week and that is ABC’s “The Middle”. It’s a humorous take on life in the middle of America and stars Patricia Heaton, a staunch conservative herself in real life.

With the left coast’s disdain for fly-over country, I’m surprised “The Middle” has stayed around this long. I could care less about anything else Hollyweird puts out these days.

CGato


26 posted on 01/30/2017 7:23:42 PM PST by Conservative Gato
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To: BBell

You can’t deny his facts.

But ironically, at the same time, we are swamped by media and entertainment. its everywhere, and dominates everything from sports to politics.


27 posted on 01/30/2017 7:26:35 PM PST by PGR88
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To: BBell
I’m ignorant about a lot of this. I have a netflix account but beyond that I don’t know much. I don’t even have a smart phone or tablet.

Oh. Sorry, I shouldn't have been supercilious.

My summary did capture the main points as I saw them, but my tone was wrong.

A lot of people — particularly on the right — have been expecting/hoping Hollywood would go under for a long time (like, since the '90s if not before).

Their repetitive, derivative content, the constant left-wing agenda, the mind-numbing, wall-to-wall virtue signaling that audiences see through and are bored by, are so annoying that many of us are wondering "how long can they keep this up?"

Yet year after year, they do exactly that.

But recently, with the emergence of decent-quality junk on alternative delivery channels like Netflix and (I guess) Amazon, people have started to think the unthinkable, that Hollywood may be losing its primacy as the preeminent source of movie/video entertainment.

The author buys into this, and cited some examples of what comprises the dynamic that is grinding down Hollywood's granite perch.

I don't really buy it, at least not yet.

I won't buy it until some entertainment appears that smashes the walls of political correctness. A feature-length movie — with high production values and good actors — that honestly depicts the Islamic invasion of the Western democracies, and the feckless sell-outs who are letting it happen.

The plight of an African-American teenager who aspires to academic and career excellence, who has a dream of something bigger than rapping and twerking, and what that teen has to put up with from neighbors, schoolmates, and parent(s). The drugs, the bullying, the negativism. How to meet it, how to defeat it, how to leave it behind.

An honest look at college, poking fun at political correctness, the way my son does about his experiences.

When subject matter like that is covered, I'll believe Hollywood has lost its supremacy.

28 posted on 01/30/2017 7:27:46 PM PST by Steely Tom (Liberals think in propaganda)
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To: BBell
For me, Hollywood died with Frank Capra
29 posted on 01/30/2017 7:36:55 PM PST by Spruce
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To: BBell

I am not a consumer of Hollywood products. If they all went on strike now, I wouldn’t miss them.


30 posted on 01/30/2017 7:41:56 PM PST by Some Fat Guy in L.A. (Still bitterly clinging to rational thought despite it's unfashionability)
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To: BBell

The writer doesn’t mention two other factors which are hurting traditional Hollywood. First, you don’t insult and belittle that half of the country which disagrees with you politically and expect its patronage. Second, stop with the ceaseless preaching by means of your product. It’s old, wearisome, and annoying. People are tuning out.


31 posted on 01/30/2017 7:44:54 PM PST by Robwin
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To: BBell

George Lucas did an interview with Wired about twenty years ago. He nailed it about what was going to happen to Hollywood because of the Internet and things like cheap HD cameras and desktop packages such as AfterEffects. The future of filmmaking was going to be two guys in a garage producing a movie that would blow us all away. That is pretty much where we are now.


32 posted on 01/30/2017 7:46:40 PM PST by Ciaphas Cain (The choice to be stupid is not a conviction I am obligated to respect.)
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To: Steely Tom
There are other, more dystopian theories, which predict that film and video games will merge, and we will become actors in a movie, reading lines or being told to “look out!” as an exploding car comes hurtling in our direction, not too dissimilar from Mildred Montag’s evening rituals in Fahrenheit 451.

When I read this part I immediately thought of Fahrenheit 451 and then the author brought up Fahrenheit 451. I was impressed.

33 posted on 01/30/2017 7:47:51 PM PST by BBell (calm down and eat your sandwiches)
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To: BBell
Well Sasparilla I do like Coen brother's movies.

I believe the Coens are conservatives. They aren't real out-front with it, and they make fun of it plenty, but when they do make fun of conservatism, it's gentle.

Their movies are very good, I agree. There isn't one I didn't like. I've watched The Big Lebowski several times, so much so that I'm a little tired of it.

Fargo and Miller's Crossing are re-watchable.

Raising Arizona is only good on the first viewing, IMO, FWIW.

34 posted on 01/30/2017 7:50:34 PM PST by Steely Tom (Liberals think in propaganda)
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To: Spruce

I liked John Huston and Sergio Leone. But Sergio Leone was not “Hollywood”.


35 posted on 01/30/2017 7:50:57 PM PST by BBell (calm down and eat your sandwiches)
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To: Steely Tom

I still like to watch “Raising Arizona” every few years. It’s probably the best movie Nicolas Cage ever made. Have you ever watched “The Man Who Wasn’t There”? Another good Coen brother’s movie.


36 posted on 01/30/2017 7:59:22 PM PST by BBell (calm down and eat your sandwiches)
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To: BBell
There are other, more dystopian theories, which predict that film and video games will merge...

Yes, but that's obvious, at least to people in the biz.

I read somewhere that more composers are writing music for video games than are working on movies. That was seven or eight years ago.

There was a movie entered at Sundance a few years ago that was made entirely using an iPhone with an "anamorphic" lens attachment (the movie was Tangerine, and the lens is made by Moondog Labs of Rochester, NY).

These factors are part of larger trends that will over time erode Hollywood's position.

Did you know that a complete sound studio mix board can now be held in the palm of your hand? In fact, there are sound mix apps for the iPhone, as well as various types of synthesizers, some of which take input from one instrument and convert it to the sound of another instrument. Of course, software for creating and editing video and sound is readily available and very inexpensive.

37 posted on 01/30/2017 8:06:00 PM PST by Steely Tom (Liberals think in propaganda)
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To: BBell

Death throes of a dying party....


38 posted on 01/30/2017 8:06:55 PM PST by ChinaGotTheGoodsOnClinton (Go Egypt on 0bama)
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To: Ciaphas Cain
The future of filmmaking was going to be two guys in a garage producing a movie that would blow us all away. That is pretty much where we are now.

Yes! I watch a lot of "B" movies on netflix with actors of whom I have never heard of and these are mostly really good movies. A lot of big name actors make cameo appearances in these "B" movies.

Another thing, a lot of them are shot down here in the New Orleans area. New Orleans Has become "Hollywood" south. A lot cheaper to shot a movie down here.

Jug Face, which was shot in Tennessee, is a very creepy movie but would be considered a "B" movie by the Hollywood crowd.

39 posted on 01/30/2017 8:10:47 PM PST by BBell (calm down and eat your sandwiches)
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To: Steely Tom
Did you know that a complete sound studio mix board can now be held in the palm of your hand? In fact, there are sound mix apps for the iPhone, as well as various types of synthesizers, some of which take input from one instrument and convert it to the sound of another instrument. Of course, software for creating and editing video and sound is readily available and very inexpensive.

See post 32 and 39. The independent movie makers are going to be the rue of Hollywood.

40 posted on 01/30/2017 8:17:39 PM PST by BBell (calm down and eat your sandwiches)
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