He may not be the biggest Hollywood name behind The Social Network , but without his relationship with author Ben Mezrich Hollywood may not have made this movie. Producer Dana Brunetti , recounts how he and now-partner Kevin Spacey wooed Facebook co-founder Eduardo Severin into telling them the story. He also explains his his own fascination with Facebook.
Jan 31, 2011•30 min
John Sloss , one of the Sundance Film Festival's most seasoned players, gives a window into selling movies as the independent film world struggles to recover. He talks about diversifying his business last year by distributing the documentary Exit through the Giftshop , and how that was both a solid business decision and a wild ride because Banksy, the famously secretive street artist behind the film, was in charge of all the marketing yet refused to talk with him. Then we meet Loyd Catlett , Jef...
Jan 24, 2011•30 min
During their two-month ordeal the 33 Chilean miners made a pact that they would stick together and sell the rights to their story as a group when and if they emerged. Now attorney Guillermo Carey , part of a team that's formed a corporation to sell their story, talks about setting up a fund to take care of miners' needs and strategy for selling the rights to the story for books, movies, video games and more. Plus, Mindset Media's Jim Meyer discusses how what you watch could reflect your personal...
Jan 17, 2011•30 min
We air a conversation from comedian Marc Maron 's WTF podcast. Maron and comedian-writer-producer Louis C.K. discuss C.K.'s career in the TV business, as well as their their relationship as fellow comics and struggles as friends.
Jan 10, 2011•30 min
John Horn of the Los Angeles Times and Michael Schneider of Variety join Kim Masters to drag in the new year and muse about what 2010 trends could affect 2011...
Jan 03, 2011•30 min
The LA Times' John Horn , Variety's Michael Schneider and Kim Masters discuss the big show business stories for 2010. The three industry veterans break down the top stories and tell us what it all means.
Dec 27, 2010•30 min
The King's Speech director Tom Hooper talks about the anxiety of funding this historical buddy drama and the anxiety of learning Hollywood etiquette. He also gives a convincing argument for changing the MPAA ratings system. Plus, Franklin Leonard 's 2010 Black List, the annual compilation of the most loved scripts that made the rounds in Hollywood this past year.
Dec 20, 2010•30 min
The Fighter is a natural awards-bait movie but producer David Hoberman says that in today's Hollywood, studios didn't want to make it. It started as a $70 million film produced by Paramount and ended up as an $18 million film made with outside money from Relativity Media. Along the way Matt Damon and Brad Pitt showed interest, as did director Darren Aronofsky, but all dropped out leaving the producers to scramble. Also, Christian Bale, whose performance in The Fighter is generating Oscar buzz, g...
Dec 13, 2010•30 min
Director Andrew Jarecki on the making of his first narrative feature, All Good Things . The film, starring Ryan Gosling, Kirsten Dunst and Frank Langella is inspired by the bizarre, real life story of Robert Durst — the wealthy son of a New York real estate magnate — whose wife went missing in 1982 and whose good friend is murdered years later. Not tried for either case, Durst was later was arrested in Texas after his neighbor’s dismembered body was found floating in Galveston Bay. Durst, who ha...
Dec 06, 2010•30 min
We revisit our conversation with filmmaking brothers Jay and Mark Duplass , whose movie, Cyrus , marked a turning point in their careers. They'd made feature films but never before with studio backing, never with known actors and never with significant budgets. As darlings of the indie world and trailblazers in the mumblecore filmmaking style they gained acclaim at festivals and on blogs, but now they're rising stars in Hollywood and are currently in post production on their next film, Jeff Who ...
Nov 29, 2010•30 min
Valerie Plame and Joe Wilson on seeing their story in the new Doug Liman movie, Fair Game. Plus, an audio diary of a veteran line producer, David Streit , looking to finance his first feature. A senior lecturer at AFI, after years of dreaming of shepherding his own movie from script to screen, this year at the American Film Market he bravely went for it and brought a microphone along to record his experiences.
Nov 22, 2010•30 min
The special-effects gurus known as the Brothers Strause made Skyline for a thrifty $10 million. They wanted to prove themselves as directors to the studios but found out they'd rather make their own films. Plus, we go behind closed doors to where deals are made at the American Film Market. We spend a day shadowing the head of the international sales and distribution company IM Global and track their landmark deal on Walking with Dinosaurs .
Nov 15, 2010•30 min
The Hobbit movies have suffered a cursed road to the screen marked by studio financing problems, the loss of director Guillermo del Toro and a fire at a New Zealand studio. But nothing generated so much public anger and government attention as when the actors tried to unionize and Warner Bros threatened to move the $500 million production out of New Zealand. Jonathan Handel , contributing editor to the Hollywood Reporter, breaks down the high drama and big dollars involved. Plus, young filmmaker...
Nov 08, 2010•29 min
We hear from Paranormal Activity producer Jason Blum on the challenge of making a sequel to the 2009 break-out hit. This time with studio backing from Paramount, the producers had to find a way to make the follow-up true to the ethos of its micro-budget original. Plus, producer of Toy Story 3 , Darla K. Anderson -- the lone woman in Pixar's famed brain trust. She weighs in on gender dynamics at this successful studio and in the movie business as a whole while addressing the controversy over Pixa...
Nov 01, 2010•30 min
Gary Calamar , music supervisor of hit TV shows (True Blood, Dexter, House and Six Feet Unde r) on choosing the right songs to convey a mood and brand a show. Gareth Edwards on working guerrilla-style and doing his own effects to make his sci-fi thriller Monsters on the cheap.
Oct 25, 2010•30 min
Since 2005, Franklin Leonard , creator and keeper of The Black List, has kept Hollywood on pins and needles every December awaiting this compilation of the most loved unproduced screenplays making the rounds in town. Plus, Darlene Hunt -- creator and executive producer of Showtime's The Big C , starring Laura Linney -- started out as an actress but hit it big as a writer.
Oct 18, 2010•30 min
Celebrated director Stephen Frears ( The Grifters, High Fidelity, The Queen ) talks about his new movie Tamara Drewe and his comfort level working in the independent film world. After two failed attempts at Hollywood studio movies, the indie director says he retreated to a more sensible place, away from the large budgets that had a paralyzing effect on him. Then we meet Dan Bern and Mike Viola , the Lennon-McCartney of mock rock movie songs, including those sung by the fictitious rock stars in W...
Oct 11, 2010•30 min
Kyle Killen created the Fox drama, Lone Star , which was recently canceled after just two airings. While that television dream didn't exactly work out as planned, his film career is hanging in limbo. He wrote the much lauded screenplay for the movie The Beaver , which was due out this year. Killen talks about how this screenplay turned his life around and how the casting of Gibson may have affected the possibility of it's release.
Oct 04, 2010•30 min
"Jumped the Shark" may be the most famous thing Fred Fox, Jr. has ever written and in a way he didn't even write it-- not that phrase exactly. Fox is the Happy Days writer behind the now infamous episode that inspired the iconic catchphrase 'jumped the shark.' Fox discusses writing the episode and its aftermath, and answers the question, "Why water skiis?" Then we go to the West Coast Documentary and Reality Conference, where eager producers and willing television executives engage in speed pitc...
Sep 27, 2010•30 min
Premieres, parties and press junkets at the Toronto International Film Festival. Kim Masters goes insides a junket to interview Conviction director Tony Goldwyn about working a festival. Then its off to an industry party where Nigel Cole, director of Made in Dagenham , compares this year's TIFF to two years ago when he was promoting a film that was jeopardized by financial troubles. Plus, the original title for Cole's latest film and why it changed.
Sep 20, 2010•30 min
Director Ken Kwapis's latest TV project is the new NBC series Outsourced , which premieres September 23. The show follows an American running a call center in Mumbai, and has been accused of stereotyping the Indian characters. Kwapis discusses these accusations and the nature of provocative comedies. He also talks about directing the pilot episodes of The Bernie Mac Show, The Larry Sanders Show and American version of The Office , and on working with show-runners and talent to create the tone an...
Sep 13, 2010•30 min
Battlefield Earth recently won the Razzie for being the "worst picture of the decade." The two credited screenwriters on that film -- J.D. Shapiro and Corey Mandell — say, "Don't blame us!" We find out how their careers survived writing one of the most notorious movies ever. (This program was originally broadcast on April 19, 2010. Today's show features an all new Hollywood banter.)
Sep 06, 2010•30 min
The documentary The Tillman Story was given a controversial R rating for language by the Motion Picture Association of America. We talk with filmmaker Amir Bar Lev about his failed effort to challenge that rating in an appeal. Then we hear from Joan Graves , head of the MPAA's rating's board, about their reasoning on this and other questionable ratings.
Aug 30, 2010•30 min
Veteran television producer Winnie Holzman and Savannah Dooley go from being mother and daughter to writing partners. They run the ABC Family dramedy Huge , which is set in a weight-loss camp for teens. While Holzman is an old hand at TV this is the first project by 25-year-old Dooley. Because of her inexperience the network paired her with her mom. Matt Holzman, Executive Producer of The Business , talks with the mother-daughter team about making Huge a family affair, their particular writing-p...
Aug 23, 2010•30 min
Behind every filmmaker stands an assistant. The former assistant to Phillip Noyce, director of Patriot Games and Clear and Present Danger , read scripts for four years until finally finding his latest project, Salt . Bea Sequeira talks about being a script reader and working in the shadows as an assistant. Then Warner Bros' Michael Tritter gives us the back story on the stealth marketing campaign for Inception ....
Aug 16, 2010•30 min
In 1976 Star Wars was the first movie presented at Comic-Con. Now the four-day event, with about 125,000 attendees, is a huge marketing bonanza -- not just for comic-book movies, sci-fi, fantasy, horror and animation but practically any movie or TV show loosely connected to this fan base. We hear what the people at this year's Comic-Con think about Hollywood and speak with long-time studio "genre consultant" Jeff Walker , who's lived the geek dream, working for and with the studios on movies' pu...
Aug 09, 2010•30 min
Producer Dean Zanuck , goes out on his own, independent of his Oscar-winning producer father and of studio financing to make his new indie movie, Get Low . He talks about being the third-generation in the family business of show business and of living up to his grandfather and father's legacy. Then filmmaker Robert Bella 's efforts to bring his movie , Colin Fitz Lives , back from oblivion...
Aug 02, 2010•30 min
This week on The Business , it's Reality-palooza! Three producers of big unscripted hits -- Intervention , Top Chef and The Hills -- talk about the reality of reality television. They reveal the keys to casting, the dilemma of who really "writes" these shows, what soft-scripted mean and how important authenticity really is in reality TV.
Jul 26, 2010•30 min
Rona Barrett , who brought Hollywood gossip and entertainment industry news to TV, discusses show business -- then and now. Then, with all this bad star behavior out there -- from Mel Gibson to Roman Polanski to Charlie Sheen -- we ask Dean Valentine , former head of UPN and Walt Disney Television, where Hollywood draws the line in a business that's all about the bottom line.
Jul 19, 2010•30 min
We look at the decision in the Celador versus Disney case. What was at issue? How will the decision awarding Celador a $270 million payout affect business in Hollywood? Then, Lance Daly directed a couple of 11-year-olds with no acting experience in his new movie Kisses . The Irish filmmaker wanted kids who were gritty and tough, but the very reason they're so affecting in the film made them a challenge to direct.
Jul 12, 2010•30 min