It’s amazing to me that people actually get upset
when I mute the commercials as we watch television. Even
more amazing, some people are not upset about paying $13.00
to see a movie, then sitting through advertisements. People
seem to actively resist the idea of thinking about the
material that is being inserted into their brains via
their eyes and ears. People actually want to
be advertised at.
The latest manipulative content forced on movie-goers
before they earn the privilege of seeing the film they
paid to see is a campaign against movie piracy, featuring
bits created by Twentieth Century Fox, a subsidiary of
News Corp.. These bits feature people involved in the
industry of making movies, telling the camera why it is
so wrong to illegally copy movies. They are, at least
to me and everyone I know who has seen them, quite offensive.
The people shown benevolently informing us, the ignorant
movie-going masses, of the hitherto unconsidered evils
of cinema piracy are always (supposedly) working class
regular-Joe types, just like us. These individuals discuss
how many, many regular people put so many hours of hard,
hard work into these films, and how it just isn’t
"right" to see the final product without paying.
(I have no access to the latest salary figures, but a
stunt man doesn’t seem all that regular to me.)
I remain to be convinced that a financial crisis is hitting
Hollywood as a result of movie piracy.
These anti-piracy spots do not address foreign, Canadian,
or any non-mainstream film. (They don’t explicitly
single out Hollywood, but how many films have extremely
lavish sets and cars flying into the air before rolling
a dozen times?) They don’t address important underfunded
alternative artists who have been hit hard by grant cuts
resulting from the ever-increasing economic class gap,
the very gap caused by ever-wealthier executives who care
nothing for culture or people.
These spots do not address the decadence of Hollywood,
the Rodeo Drive boutiques who manage to stay in business
despite the “robbery” of piracy, the publicized
drug problems and vandalism of some Hollywood stars, or
the wastefulness of mainstream American cinema which is
so extreme as to virtually mock the blue-collar working
class.
Finally, these spots do not address the astronomical
amounts paid to the actors in the films. How can we the
public swallow the earnest egalitarian plea of working
stuntmen and set designers when they agree to work in
such farcically unequal circumstances? You want fairness?
Fire the actors! Sue the executives! Piracy is not driving
up movie prices. Prices are being driven up by actor salaries
and by people who consent to pay the higher prices.
In an interview, Motion Picture Association of America
President Jack Valenti said "This is a campaign of
education and persuasion. You're hurting someone, maybe
someone like your own family." Also, Peter Chernin,
president and chief operating officer of News Corp., said
"What we are endeavoring to do is both communicate
that it's wrong and also communicate that there are human
stakes and that those stakes are not just millionaires
making less millions."
Chernin thus acknowledges movie-made millionaires in
the same breath as blaming working class movie pirates
for any losses to film industry workers. If workers are
suffering, it is because big studios fight against union
contracts, because executives pass losses onto the end
consumer by raising prices, and because actors are over,
over, overpaid.
Piracy is illegal. I do not, in this column, advocate it. But
the biggest insult in this new campaign is that we average
cost-of-living types are expected to believe it.