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The Post-Spielberg Olympics

Karina Longworth
By Karina Longworth posted 1 year ago
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TIME has a story about Steven Spielberg’s departure from his post as creative consultant to the Beijing Summer Olympics, and most interestingly, how China will need to scramble to save face in the wake of it.

Landing Spielberg in the first place was a coup, considering that China’s main goal with the games is to sell the idea “that China has returned to its rightful place as a world player whose opinion matters.” That’s not necessarily a fiction––Spielberg, after all, dropped out of his commitment in frustration over China’s “opinion” on their trading partner Sudan and Darfur––but the idea that China is ready to play on the world stage without facing the blowback of various human rights issues and international political, trade and manufacturing controversies certainly seems like a fantasy worthy of Hollywood. Can they pull off this globalist fairy tale without the guiding vision of the man who brought us Hook?

It’s a situtation that’s going to require serious damage control. As a spokesman for Human Rights Watch puts it in the article, “They are trying to have a perfect Games and present a picture of unmitigated success to the world. And here is something that is not a success.” Part of the problem is that protest groups, emboldended by the Speilberg exit, have started lobbying other Hollywood types associated with the Games (Ang Lee is another creative advisor), as well as the event’s corporate sponsors. China can probably survive the loss of their hired Hollywood cred, but if Coca-Cola drops out, their dreams of joining the big boys on the global-pop cultural stage will be dashed for good.

Trade Roughage 2/13/08

Karina Longworth
By Karina Longworth posted 1 year ago
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  • Around 7pm PST last night, WGA West president Patrick Varrone made the announement: “The strike is over. Our membership has voted. Writers can go back to work.” Only 283 of 3,775 voting guild members cast a ballot in favor of prolonging the strike.
  • But the Hollywood Labor Wars are hardly over. The Screen Actors Guild will start negotiating a new contract soon, and a number of super-famous people (including Ben Affleck, Charlie Sheen and Sally Field) are lobbying the guild to make sure only super-famous people are able to vote on the contract that will cover the entire acting caste system.
  • Steven Spielberg has backed out of its commitment as an “Artistic Advisor” to the Beijing Summer Olympics, on the grounds that China has failed to use its influence to intervene in the genocide in Darfur. “At this point, my time and energy must be spent not on Olympic ceremonies but doing all I can to help bring an end to the unspeakable crimes against humanity that continue to be committed in Darfur.” Oh Steve––this is totally the “my dog ate my homework” of socially conscious mogul excuses. You can do better than that.

Strike Hysteria, Chapter 2: Trade Roughage, 08/08/07

Karina Longworth
By Karina Longworth posted 2 years ago
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  • george_clooney.jpgThe Hollywood Reporter has two full stories this morning on the apparent hysteria leading up to an expected November writers strike, and a possible actors and directors strike next June. Borys Kit says agents are scrambling to get A-listers booked solid for the next ten months; Carl DiOrio warns that the studios’ effort to ramp up pre-strike production is almost sure to lead to a decline in overall quality.
  • One of those A-listers apparently has no intention of working for the sake of working. While his compatriots suffer through strike fever, George Clooney has signed on to produce and narrate a documentary on Darfur for HBO.
  • Lured by the state’s tax incentives, Pacifica Ventures is planning to build a $75 million film studio in Pennsylvania.
  • General Motors has teamed up with Women in Film to offer a grant to five emerging female filmmakers. According to Variety, the grant recipients will be “chosen by a WIF committee of professional filmmakers and entertainment industry executives,” and in addition to a cash award, they’ll also have access to “a six-day, full-immersion mentoring program.” The application deadline is August 31, and more information can be found here.