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Qualified to Act.; The ShoWest Goes On
from KCRW's The Business Podcast March 31, 2008
In a town where actors are more likely to wait tables than wait in the wings, how do you define a working actor. That's the central question in our lively conversation with two actors. How SAG answers that question may determine if there's a strike. Plus, this year's ShoWest movie exhibitors' conference.
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Big Gulp to Blockbuster
from KCRW's The Business March 25, 2008
Jim Keyes was the former CEO of 7-11 stores. Now he's applying the lessons of the Big Gulp to the small screen at the troubled video-rental giant Blockbuster. Plus, Variety game reviewer Ben Fritz asks, "Why are hardcore video gamers so sensitive." And good agentry with writer and producer Rob Long.
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Gaming Goes Casual; Pilot(Less.) Season
from KCRW's The Business March 17, 2008
Video games are an $18 billion business in the US, and they just keep growing. Will Hollywood studios get in on some of that interactive action. Plus, will TV's increasingly pilotless way of making shows crash and burn.
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Variety up for Sale; Oscar Prognosticators
from KCRW's The Business March 03, 2008
The venerable Hollywood trade paper, Variety, is up for sale. What will a new owner mean to the business. We'll have a lively conversation with blogger extraordinaire Nikki Finke and PR veteran Howard Bragman. Plus, which Oscar prognosticators predicted with paramount precision.
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How Green Is My Oscar.
from KCRW's The Business February 26, 2008
The divide between movies that make money and movies that get awards has been growing in the last few years. Why. And what does that say about how Hollywood is changing. Plus, the 1967 Oscars signaled a coming cinematic revolution. Is this year's crop of best picture nominees the harbinger of another.
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Ding Dong the Strike Is Dead!
from KCRW's The Business February 19, 2008
The writers' strike has meant reruns, reality and rankor. So how will things change now that the strike is over. Plus, when will the digital pie that the writers want a piece of actually be out of the oven.
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Wilshire and Washington
from KCRW's The Business February 12, 2008
In the wake of Super Tuesday, The Business broadcasts from the corner of Hollywood Boulevard and Pennsylvania Avenue. We talk to Variety's political guru, Ted Johnson, and check back with MGM CEO Harry Sloan, an elephant in a sea of donkeys.
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Pixar's Big Bird
from KCRW's The Business February 04, 2008
Animation had lost its luster until Pixar came on the scene and shined it up. We talk to one of their chief polishers, writer and director Brad Bird, about retired superheroes, rats that cook and Oscar gold. Plus, do movies make money (redux).
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So Much Reality TV It's Unreal!
from KCRW's The Business January 29, 2008
TV was already getting more and more into unscripted fare before the strike. Now, there's so much reality programming it's unreal! We get the lay of the unscripted landscape with Joel McHale of E! Entertainment's show The Soup. Plus, while most of the industry suffers, video games rock on (redux).
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Will Striking Writers Take a Page from Directors' Deal.
from KCRW's The Business January 22, 2008
The directors seem to have made a deal with producers. Will the writers follow suit. Should they. We're live today with TV writer/producer David Milch and Oscar-winning filmmaker Paul Haggis to answer these questions and more. First, what exactly did the DGA agree to. Joe Adalian has been one of the team of reporters covering the strike for Variety. NOTE: Today's special LIVE edition of The Business is broadcast locally in the Los Angeles area only, but will be archived online.
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DRM; Awards; Swag
from KCRW's The Business January 14, 2008
The big four record labels are finally offering some music free of copyright protection. Is it too little too late. And, no Globes, no Oscars = no box office. Plus, swag--Hollywood's silent scourge.
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That Was the Hollywood Year That Was!
from KCRW's The Business January 07, 2008
From scandals to the strike to the surprise success of mega-sequels it's the Hollywood year that was! We get ready for the year ahead with our annual look at the stories of year just ended with Cynthia Littleton of Variety and Carl Diorio of the Hollywood Reporter.
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Best of The Business: On the Bubble
from KCRW's The Business December 31, 2007
This week, it's the Best of The Business. The strike will put a gaggle of TV shows "on the bubble," and we're not talking about being drunk on champagne. So today, between Dove products and the producers of a remake of the 1939 classic film The Women, we revisit our conversation with the producers of Scrubs and Jericho, shows that came back from the brink of extinction earlier this year.
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Iraq War Movies Tank at the Box Office
from KCRW's The Business December 17, 2007
There's been a surge in Iraq and a surge of Iraq movies here at home. It might be working in Baghdad but it's tanking at the local cineplex. We talk to the director of In the Valley of Elah, Paul Haggis. Plus, the strike promises a not-very-happy new year or winter or spring for Hollywood.
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Do Movies Make Money.
from KCRW's The Business December 17, 2007
A new report paints a bleak picture for Hollywood if it doesn't quit spending money like a drunken sailor on shore leave. We speak with Roger R. Smith, the author of Do Movies Make Money.
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Will the Strike Kill the Soaps.; Inside Strike Negotiations
from KCRW's The Business December 17, 2007
What's it like to negotiate during a strike. We talk with the man who led talks for employees during the acrimonious 1994 supermarket walkout. Plus, will the writers' strike be another nail in the coffin of once wildly profitable daytime soap operas.Note: This edition of The Business will not air live at its usual time slot on KCRW as it will be pre-empted by special holiday programming. It will air at 7pm.
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The Strike and American Screenwriting, II; Video Games Rock On
from KCRW's The Business December 17, 2007
To understand the current writers' strike, you need to understand the long and contentious relationship between screenwriters and the people who write their checks. This week, Part II of our conversation with Oscar-winning scribe Marc Norman about his new book, What Happens Next: A History of American Screenwriting. Plus, while the writers strike, video games rock on--literally.
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What Happens Next: A History of American Screenwriting, Part 1
from KCRW's The Business November 19, 2007
To understand the current writers' strike, you need to understand the long and contentious relationship between screenwriters and the people who write their checks. We put that relationship in the therapist's chair with Oscar-winning scribe Marc Norman, author of a fascinating new book called What Happens Next: A History of American Screenwriting.
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'Season Finale;' Tax-Incentive Derby
from KCRW's The Business October 23, 2007
The UPN and the WB lived but a short decade, but they changed television forever. Now, the former president of entertainment at the WB and a veteran TV journalist have written a compelling and cautionary tale for anyone thinking about starting a new network. Plus, get out your calculators---it's the tax-incentive derby.
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Tony Kaye and the Hollywood 'Lake of Fire'
from KCRW's The Business October 09, 2007
After a high-profile legal battle to take his name off American History X and replace it with a wacky pseudonym, Tony Kaye became persona non grata in Hollywood. Nearly a decade later, he's back with a new documentary in theaters and two features on the way.
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Tony Kaye and the Hollywood 'Lake of Fire'
from KCRW's The Business October 08, 2007
After a high-profile legal battle to take his name off American History X and replace it with a wacky pseudonym, Tony Kaye became persona non grata in Hollywood. Nearly a decade later, he's back with a new documentary in theaters and two features on the way.
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