The Manager's Bookstore

Home | About MO | Contact MO | Tell-a-friend | Make start page | Add to favorites

Search for business and management books, authors, publishers & news
Search for business books, management authors, management book publishers & business books' news
Search for business and management books, authors, publishers & news
Advanced


Featuring
8986 books
7547 authors
222 subjects
1269 publishers

Recommended business and management reading, from top sources
- The Business Owner's Bookshelf
- Excellent reading from a terrible year
- Strategy+Business Best Business Books 2008
- BusinessWeek Best-Seller List - Hardcover, November 26. 2008
- The best business books of 2007 @ Miami Herald


News and reviews about business books, authors and publishers
- Charles Jacobs Goes Inside the Entrepreneur's Brain
- Jim Collins: How to Thrive in 2009
- The Peter Principle Lives On
- Brand Aid: Technology’s the Great Equalizer
- How News Corp. Nabbed MySpace
- The I-Word
- The Influence of the Net Generation
- New Business in the Network of Everything


Get our FREE newsletter on management books
Get our FREE newsletter on business books
Get our FREE newsletter on management books



 




Book details for The Big Picture: The New Logic of Money and Power in Hollywood Buy The Big Picture: The New Logic of Money and Power in Hollywood
The Big Picture: The New Logic of Money and Power in Hollywood
Book author(s) Book subject

Edward Jay Epstein

Media & Entertainment Industries

Sales rank 507,744 Customers rating (based on 16 reviews)
The Big Picture: The New Logic of Money and Power in Hollywood

Brief description of The Big Picture: The New Logic of Money and Power in Hollywood

During the heyday of the studio system spanning the 1930s, ‘40s, and ‘50s, virtually all the American motion picture industry’s money, power, and prestige came from a single activity: selling tickets at the box office. Today, the movie business is just a small, highly visible outpost in a media universe controlled by six corporations–Sony, Time Warner, NBC Universal, Viacom, Disney, and NewsCorporation. These conglomerates view films as part of an immense, synergistic, vertically integrated money-making industry. In The Big Picture, acclaimed writer Edward Jay Epstein gives an unprecedented, sweeping, and thoroughly entertaining account of the real magic behind moviemaking: how the studios make their money. Epstein shows how, in Hollywood, the only art that matters is the art of the deal: major films turn huge profits, not from the movies themselves but through myriad other enterprises, such as video-game spin-offs, fast-food tie-ins, soundtracks, and even theme-park rides. The studios may compete with one another for stars, publicity, box-office receipts, and Oscars; their corporate parents, however, make fortunes from cooperation (and collusion) with one another in less glamorous markets, such as cable, home video, and pay-TV. But money is only part of the Hollywood story; the social and political milieus–power, prestige, and status–tell the rest. Alongside remarkable financial revelations, The Big Picture is filled with eye-opening true Hollywood insider stories. We learn how the promise of free cowboy boots for a producer delayed a major movie’s shooting schedule; why stars never perform their own stunts, despite what the supermarket tabloids claim; how movies intentionally shape political sensibilities, both in America and abroad; and why fifteen-year-olds dictate the kind of low-grade fare that has flooded screens across the country. Epstein also offers incisive profiles of the pioneers, including Louis B. Mayer, who helped build Hollywood, and introduces us to the visionaries–Walt Disney, Akio Morita, Rupert Murdoch, Steve Ross, Sumner Redstone, David Sarnoff–power brokers who, by dint of innovation and deception, created and control the media that mold our lives. If you are interested in Hollywood today and the complex and fascinating way it has evolved in order to survive, you haven’t seen the big picture until you’ve read The Big Picture.

Book details
PublisherRandom House
Release date02/2005
Availability
EditionHardcover
List price$25.95
Our pricen/a
Used pricefrom $6.13
This book is recommended by...

The Best Of 2005's Bunch: BusinessWeek's Best Books of 2005

This book has been mentioned in...

Hollywood Confidential: The New Logic of Money and Power in Hollywood (@ Business Week)

Comments by amazon customers about The Big Picture: The New Logic of Money and Power in Hollywood

Very good
If you want to learn about Hollywood's past and how Hollywood works from A to Z in terms of business YOU WANT THIS BOOK. It really dwelves into the busines side, and since Hollywood isall about BUSINESS first - eveyrone should read this first before beginning starting off in this biz.


Hollywood and Economics
An informative read that will provide the reader with a good understanding and overview of the economics of the film industry. The author provides a brief history of the major studios (consolidated into the current Big Six: Disney, Time Warner, Fox, Viacom, NBC Universal, and Sony) at the beginning and the leading men that transformed the business from post WWII into the eighties and nineties. These men provided the initial vision for licensing, international distribution, integration with home electronics and the continuing digitization of the industry. The economics for the industry are that films at the US box office are money losers but once the revenue streams from International Box Office, DVD, Pay TV, Network TV, Foreign TV, product licensing and other forms of distribution are collected even box office failures can break even or even become profitable. The studios have developed a compensation system for the major players in the process to share in the revenue but not all of them through some unique accounting practices. Everyone knows about this but still willingly participate. The other very interesting note is that the true money makers are films that are fairly consistent in plot (action) and audience (young) and character (young hero/super hero) but all the studios continue to make the adult movies and art house independents to please the inner world of Hollywood.

Great info, a bit dry
I read a lot of non-fiction books about the film industry in general. This one was full of useful info but it didn't explore any new territory. It was written factually without much regard for easy reading. Useful to learn about some of the business practices in Hollywood if you haven't learned much already. A decent primer.

There is No Net
Epstein gives a fascinating account of the rise of Hollywood in the early part of the 20th century, focusing on the role intellectual property law played in the that development (the fact that patents in technology related to the making and showing of movies were controlled by the Edison Trust, located on the East coast, forced would-be movie moguls to relocate to the West coast away from courts sympathetic to the Edison Trust). He also explains how historical and legal developments (studio ownership of the means of production and the resulting anti-trust lawsuit brought by the federal government) led to the rise and fall of the studio system by the 1950s, and how federal legislation made it impossible for television networks to produce their own shows in the 1970s, a void the movie studios rushed to fill. Epstein details of the creative accounting methods and other legalisms that the six major movie studios use to maximize profit in the modern world of movie finance, where licensing revenue and home video sales far outweigh box office receipts. jeffbrownlegal@gmail.com

An authoritative, mesmerising read
If you want to understand how Hollywood became what it is today then this book ticks all the boxes: it tracks Hollywood from its beginnings in the early-20th century and the early part of the book focusses on the development of the big six media corporations in the world and who runs them and why TV and DVD are now far more important to the bottom line than straight theatrical release. Some of the real examples of Hollywood's incredible loss-making ability are startling: one studio's 'greatest success' actually lost over US$60m, and you learn that the drivers of money and power are not the strong but actually it all boils down to children: what they want and don't want fuels the whole industry. Fascinating stuff and very easy to read...five stars, no questions asked.



Buy The Big Picture: The New Logic of Money and Power in Hollywood
 
Home | About MO | Contact MO | Tell-a-friend | Make start page | Add to favorites
© Copyright 2005-2006 - by ManagementOnly.com
Read our Privacy Policy