May 7, 2024

Theater Owners Call for Fewer R-Rated Movies

The movie business has never been healthier, except that attendance in North America is down 12 percent so far this year compared to last. There was a plea for fewer R-rated movies, followed by chest-thumping from Universal Pictures about its crude comedy “Ted.”

And sitting in a darkened theater, attendees were told, has never been more enjoyable, unless you are attending CinemaCon, where you will be harshly advised to refrain from using your phone to illegally record movies. (Theater chain executives need to be reminded of this?)

Studios approach this convention, attended by about 5,000 people, as a crucial opportunity to get out their pom-poms and promote coming releases; if theater owners like what they see, it can help secure additional auditoriums during the gridlocked summer and holiday seasons. Studios enlist stars to help woo the theatrical troops — who fly in from spots like Kansas City and Knoxville — as Brad Pitt did on Monday night on behalf of his June release, “World War Z.”

For the National Association of Theater Owners, CinemaCon is an opportunity to discuss new audio technology, brainstorm about how to fight camcorder pirates and sample the latest and greatest in popped corn. This year, John Fithian, president and chief executive of that trade organization, also used the spotlight to complain about a glut of R-rated films.

He said attendance had suffered this year because of “the weight of too many R-rated movies.”

“Make more family-friendly films and fewer R-rated titles,” Mr. Fithian said. “Americans have stated their choice.”

Appearing with Christopher J. Dodd, chairman of the Motion Picture Association of America, Mr. Fithian also unveiled minor tweaks to the way ratings for individual films are advertised. The labels will include more thorough descriptions of why a movie received a certain rating. Theaters will also begin running a ratings-related public service announcement.

Mr. Fithian’s criticism of R-rated movies comes after the school shootings last year in Newtown, Conn., and shootings last summer at a movie theater in Aurora, Colo.

After Mr. Fithian was Adam Fogelson, chairman of Universal Pictures. He began his presentation with an off-color scene from the R-rated “Ted” and then unveiled clips from two coming films that will be rated R. “2 Guns” is about undercover agents set up by the mob; “Kick-Ass 2” stars the young Chloë Grace Moritz as an (extremely) foul-mouthed crime fighter.

Mr. Fogelson also discussed lighter films planned for the summer, like a sequel to “Despicable Me” and the crime comedy “R.I.P.D.,” about undead police officers working for the Rest in Peace Department.

Article source: http://www.nytimes.com/2013/04/17/business/media/theater-owners-call-for-fewer-r-rated-movies.html?partner=rss&emc=rss

Bits Blog: Protests Against Antipiracy Bills Take to the Streets

Protesters at a rally organized by the New York Tech Meetup in Manhattan.Jenna Wortham/The New York TimesProtesters at a rally organized by the New York Tech Meetup in Manhattan.

1:26 p.m. | Updated Adding details from the rally.

1:49 p.m. | Updated Adding remarks from protesters, mention of Flickr protest.

2:07 p.m. | Updated Adding reporting from Seattle.

2:16 p.m. | Updated Adding comment from Mark Zuckerberg of Facebook.

On Wednesday, as many sites around the Web participated in virtual protests against two Congressional antipiracy bills, some opponents to the legislation took their demonstrations offline and into the real world.

The New York Tech Meetup, an eight-year-old trade organization that has nearly 20,000 members, called for those who oppose the proposed bills to rally in Midtown Manhattan outside the offices of Senators Charles E. Schumer and Kirsten E. Gillibrand, who co-sponsored some of the proposed legislation.

A few hundred protesters gathered in metal pens that the police had set up on the sidewalk.

“A lot of people in Washington are scratching their heads today because conventional wisdom is that SOPA would have passed by now,” said one speaker, Timothy Karr, strategy director for an organization called Free Press, referring to one of the bills. “But conventional wisdom is wrong, and it is no longer business as usual in Washington.”

Several local start-ups, including CrowdTap and LocalResponse, said earlier that they were planning to shut down their offices and bring all their employees to the event.

Sebastian Delmont, 38, who works at StreetEasy, a real estate site, said that about half of his co-workers had come to the protest. He said the risk to his company from the legislation was low, “but our worry is that they are building something like a Great Firewall, like in China and the Middle East.”

Sarah Hromack, who manages the Web site of the Whitney Museum, said she was at the protest as someone who cared about visual content online. Ms. Hromack said she was worried about the long-term implications of the legislation. She said she had participated in some online shows of support for the movement, “but getting out of our offices is also important.”

The Web sites on Wednesday of, clockwise from top left, Google, Mozilla, Wired and Wikipedia.

Similar rallies are planned for San Francisco and Seattle.

The offline events mirror online efforts, which include the darkening of several major Web sites, including English-language Wikipedia (although it is still possible to access the encyclopedia’s content through several clever workarounds), Reddit, Boing Boing and the comedy video site My Damn Channel . Tumblr, a blogging platform, is also giving its users a tool to let them black out what information they see when they log into their accounts in protest.

Several sites have not gone dark, but have blanketed their pages with information about one of the bills, the Stop Online Piracy Act, known as SOPA; these include Google, Craigslist and I Can Haz Cheezburger, a hub for humorous pictures of cats. The mobile restaurant finder UrbanSpoon is restricting access for its users, and some news organizations, including Wired.com are protesting the legislation by blacking out content on their Web sites.

Flickr, the photo site owned by Yahoo, gave users a tool that let them black out their photos “to deprive the Web of the rich content that makes it thrive.”

Such an outpouring of support around a political cause is atypical in the tech world, which tends to limit its gatherings to technology demonstrations, social events and launch parties around new products and services.

But Jessica Lawrence, the managing director of the New York Tech Meetup, said this legislation — which its most vocal opponents say could lead to censorship and thwart the innovation of technology start-ups — is sparking an unusually vigorous response.

“The tech community has not typically been engaged in political issues but that is changing, especially for smaller start-ups and companies that aren’t as big as Facebook and Google that have someone on staff for legislative issues,” she said. “These small companies would be left in the dark without anyone to represent their ideas.”

Mark Zuckerberg, chief executive of Facebook, weighed in against the legislation on his own Facebook page Wednesday afternoon, saying: “The world today needs political leaders who are pro-Internet. We have been working with many of these folks for months on better alternatives to these current proposals.” Within an hour, more than 200,000 Facebook users had clicked the “Like” button on his post. Facebook did not make any site-wide changes to support the protests.

While there were blackouts on the Web, a whiteout prevented critics of the proposed legislation from congregating in Seattle. An overnight snowstorm dumped several inches of snow on the city, scuttling plans for a protest. “If our goal is to educate people, it will be pretty hard to find people to educate today,” the organizers of the rally said in an update announcing the postponement of the rally.

The Seattle area is home to technology companies like Amazon and Microsoft that have voiced opposition to SOPA. Amazon did not black out its Web site, instead providing a link from its home page to Net Coalition, a group opposing the legislation.

Nick Wingfield contributed reporting.

Article source: http://feeds.nytimes.com/click.phdo?i=b2f8775055ccf3a7374425513e5b5e9a

DealBook: Europe’s Debt Crisis Stymies Financial Overhaul

Minh Uong

LONDON — As the Continent grapples with the sovereign debt crisis, financial regulatory revision in Europe has been put on the back burner, with some rules delayed until at least 2013.

The changing priorities have left investment banks, hedge funds and even nonfinancial companies in a holding pattern about compliance and costs, a situation that is weighing on earnings prospects.

“It’s the uncertainty that’s killing everybody,” said Anthony Belchambers, chief executive of the Futures and Options Association, a trade organization based in London for companies involved in the derivatives markets. “No one can measure the scale or cost of the regulation until it’s finalized.”

In the aftermath of the financial crisis in 2009, European regulators outlined the broad aims of a financial overhaul. But policy makers dragged their feet in the months that followed, unable to come to a consensus on critical areas like derivatives trading. Now, rule-making has been all but forgotten as they deal with teetering economies like Greece and Spain.

Most European rules won’t be in place before 2013, more than a year behind the original deadline, according to the Financial Stability Board, an international body tasked with strengthening the financial markets through improved regulation. Policy makers in the United States, which has faced its own delays, are on track to complete the bulk of their regulations by next year, with some already approved.

The biggest problems on the Continent center on how to wrangle the $600 trillion global derivatives markets. Negotiations have largely pitted Britain, which favors looser regulation, against France and Germany, which want stricter limits placed on markets.

France and Germany, two euro zone heavyweights, argue that only over-the-counter trades should be reported to central repositories that collect the data and be cleared through central counterparties. Britain, which handles 75 percent of such trading in Europe, says that would put London at a disadvantage to rivals in Paris and Frankfurt. Britain’s chancellor of the Exchequer, George Osborne, has fought to extend regulation to all derivatives, including those traded on electronic platforms.

The debate comes as Germany’s Deutsche Börse stands poised to become the world’s largest platform for derivatives trading if its planned merger with NYSE Euronext receives regulatory approval. Under the European Union’s current proposal, Deutsche Börse and Europe’s other electronic platforms would face less regulatory oversight than Britain’s over-the-counter financial dealers. British officials fear that would hurt London’s dominance as Europe’s financial capital if businesses leave in search of trading centers with fewer regulatory costs.

On Oct. 4, both sides reached a basic compromise. Initially, the European Union will regulate only over-the-counter derivatives starting in 2013. The rules will eventually expand to include electronic-traded derivatives, although no time frame was given.

“The whole process has been very disjointed,” said Sean Sprackling, a director at the consulting firm PricewaterhouseCoopers in London.

For European companies, the protracted legislative process has made it difficult to know what compliance and risk management structures they will need to develop — and at what cost.

Under the European proposal, Siemens, Philips, the British supermarket giant Tesco and other nonfinancial businesses will be exempt from reporting their derivatives transactions to trade repositories and clearing them through central counterparties. But the plan has added a caveat. When the rules take hold, those so-called end users whose derivatives trading operations reach a certain threshold will have to comply with regulations governing trade repositories and clearinghouses. Details on the threshold, however, have yet to be agreed on.

End users that rely on investment banks to develop and execute their derivatives — rather than in-house teams — may still have to expand their compliance teams despite working through a financial intermediary. That would be an extra cost that would hit earnings just as Europe’s nonfinancial companies are struggling to respond to a renewed slowdown in the global economy.

“A number of end users will be captured by the full regulation even if they’re dealing through a licensed firm,” Mr. Belchambers of the Futures and Options Association said.

Banks and other financial institutions have threatened to move their operations elsewhere if the changes in the United States and Europe become too onerous. But those fears are overblown, according to Barnabas W. B. Reynolds, head of the financial institutions advisory practice at the law firm Shearman Sterling in London.

For one, the derivatives rules in the United States and Europe are expected to have broadly similar objectives. So even though there will be a gap when the two regions have different regimes, it is unlikely to be long enough for companies to benefit from any regulatory arbitrage.

And analysts also say they believe it is unlikely that companies will seek out regulatory-friendly markets in Asia like Hong Kong and Singapore. Mr. Reynolds said New York and London simply provided greater stability during periods of turmoil.

“The pecking order of financial centers will remain the same,” he said. “In a time of uncertainty, there’s always a flight to quality.”

Article source: http://feeds.nytimes.com/click.phdo?i=a9c11c34e5124b216882eb09fc94611e