April 26, 2024

Media Decoder Blog: The Breakfast Meeting: Senators Criticize ‘Zero Dark Thirty,’ and Filming Assange

The Breakfast Meeting

What’s making news in media.

Three prominent United States senators on Wednesday joined critics of the film “Zero Dark Thirty” over its depiction of C.I.A. interrogations in the ultimately successful hunt for Osama bin Laden, Scott Shane writes. In a letter to Michael Lynton, chairman and chief executive of Sony Pictures Entertainment, which is releasing the film, the senators called the film “grossly inaccurate and misleading in its suggestion that torture resulted in information that led to the location” of Bin Laden. The three — Dianne Feinstein, Democrat of California; Carl Levin, Democrat of Michigan; and John McCain, Republican of Arizona — called on Sony to “consider correcting the impression that the C.I.A.’s use of coercive interrogation techniques led to the operation” against Bin Laden, but they do not explain exactly how that could be done.

  • The documentary “We Steal Secrets,” about Julian Assange and the whistle-blower site Wikileaks, will debut at the Sundance Film Festival in January and represents the beginning of a boomlet in Wikileaks related filmwork, Michael Cieply writes. The documentary is a collaboration between the producer Marc Shmuger, the former chairman of Universal Pictures, and the Oscar-winning director, Alex Gibney.
  • Also in January, DreamWorks Studios and Participant Media plan to begin shooting a dramatic feature film to be directed by Bill Condon. HBO also has had plans for an Assange movie, and Mark Boal, the writer and a producer of “Zero Dark Thirty,” continues to work on a possible Assange drama based on a New York Times Magazine article, “The Boy Who Kicked the Hornet’s Nest” by Bill Keller.

An investigation of the sexual abuse crisis within the British Broadcasting Corporation concluded on Wednesday that leadership hampered by “rigid management chains” left the organization “completely incapable” of dealing with the crisis, John F. Burns and Stephen Castle write. The report, written by Nick Pollard, a veteran British broadcast executive, criticized the decision to drop a segment that would have exposed decades of sexual abuse by Jimmy Savile, a BBC fixture; but it said that confusion and mismanagement, not a cover-up, lay at the heart of the decision. Also, the report also did not challenge the assertions of Mark Thompson, then head of the BBC and current president and chief executive of The New York Times Company, that he had no role in killing the Savile investigation.

Jenni Rivera, the Mexican-American singer and television star who died in a plane crash in Mexico on Dec. 9, experienced a surge in sales, both in CDs and digital downloads, Ben Sisario writes. Taylor Swift remained atop the Billboard album for a fifth week with her album “Red” (Big Machine) recording 208,000 sales, according to Nielsen SoundScan. The 64,000 albums reported on Wednesday represented a 10-fold increase; a compilation album released just two days after Ms. Rivera died, “La Misma Gran Señora” (Fonovisa), reached No. 38 on the overall Billboard album chart.


Article source: http://mediadecoder.blogs.nytimes.com/2012/12/20/the-breakfast-meeting-hollywood-adapts-to-gun-violence-and-senators-criticize-zero-dark-thirty/?partner=rss&emc=rss

The Downfall of M T Carney, Disney’s Marketing Manager

Except for M T Carney, Walt Disney Studios’ new president of movie marketing. She wore white pants and white Chanel flats.

A rookie mistake; no big deal: Ms. Carney, 42, had been hired six months earlier and had zero movie experience, coming from a New York marketing agency specializing in packaged goods. But the anecdote ricocheted around the catty movie business, giving visual reinforcement to a judgment that most power players had already made: she’s not one of us.

Despite successful ad campaigns since then for films like “The Muppets” and “The Help,” Ms. Carney has still not found her footing, and Disney appears to have concluded that she never will. The studio has sought to replace her in recent months, making a formal offer to at least one marketing executive at a rival studio who declined, according to people with knowledge of the matter who spoke on the condition of anonymity because the recruitment was private.

For her part, Ms. Carney has made it clear to Disney that she would like to return the focus of her career to New York, where her two young children attend school under the care of her ex-husband. Disney and Ms. Carney declined to comment on her status, but Disney insiders expect her to leave or shift to a lesser role sooner rather than later.

Ms. Carney isn’t a household name, but she holds what is perhaps Hollywood’s most influential marketing position because it includes selling films worldwide from, in addition to Disney, Pixar, Marvel and Mr. Spielberg’s DreamWorks Studios. Should she depart, it may say more about the insularity of the movie industry and its resistance to innovation than her marketing talents, which by many accounts are considerable.

“Film is the single most difficult industry for an outside marketer to crack,” said Peter Sealey, a former Columbia Pictures marketing chief who co-wrote the book “Not on My Watch: Hollywood vs. the Future.” He would know: He was a star marketer at Coca-Cola, which sent him to Hollywood after it bought Columbia in 1982. It was a rocky transition, but he lasted six years with support from Coke — better results than marketers brought in by studios over the years from Burger King and McDonald’s.

“It’s a clubby, inbred culture that still operates on instinct over research and an almost religious adherence to this-is-how-we-do-it tenets,” Mr. Sealey added.

Studios like Disney have an authentic desire to rein in runaway advertising costs and innovate with new types of marketing. They have no choice. Global advertising now costs at least $150 million for a major event film, but DVD sales continue to decline and attendance at North American theaters is at a 16-year low. Simultaneously the traditional way of turning out a broad audience — TV commercials — has been undercut by the splintering of television viewing.

But producers, directors, actors and agents often balk at unusual approaches. They just want their film to be No. 1 at the box office on opening weekend, and prefer that marketing experiments be carried out with somebody else’s career.

“You need a psychiatrist if you think Steven Spielberg is going to trust M T to tell him how to sell his films,” said one Disney executive who spoke on the condition of anonymity to avoid angering his employer. (Ms. Carney goes by punctuation-free initials that stand for Marie Therese.)

Part of the challenge for outsiders involves a radical difference in timing. Studios have one opening weekend to persuade people to see a film. When marketing a new hamburger, however, months can be devoted to hooking people. Movie marketing involves dealing with emotional artists instead of more pragmatic business people. And it requires a distinctive type of vision: What is the movie and who is it for? The answer may be two radically different things.

Article source: http://www.nytimes.com/2012/01/09/business/media/the-downfall-of-m-t-carney-disneys-marketing-manager.html?partner=rss&emc=rss