1/17/2008

Doug Liman Forms New Company to Create New Media Content

As we keep talking about here, the future of the industry (for forward-consuming audience, the present of the industry) could be a brave new world of creator-owned content. As horrific as the strike is, it may be providing the perfect storm for the people who create content to start going straight to the audience, via the distribution of the Internet, and cut out all the studio and network middlemen.

This press release just went out from the Guild, concerning Liman's company and the deal it made with the WGA:

Director Doug Liman Forms New Production Company “Jackson Bites” to Create Television Programming for New Media

Announces Immediate Agreement with Writers Guild of America

New York and Los Angeles – Director and producer Doug Liman announced today the formation of a new media company, “Jackson Bites,” which will create television-style programming for alternative distribution. He will serve as co-owner of the venture with the support of a wide range of new media and business investors. Liman also announced that the new company has entered into an agreement with the Writers Guild of America (WGA), effective immediately.

As a result of the agreement, WGA members will be able to write, develop, and create programming for Jackson Bites for distribution on a wide range of new media outlets, including the Internet, set-top boxes, cell phones, and other wireless devices, and via direct deals with satellite networks and cable companies.

"If the last strike is best remembered for the studios attempting to show they could create programming without writers, this could be the strike where the writers show they can do it without the studios,” said Liman. “We are at a moment of opportunity in television where we have gone from three networks to six, and from a handful of channels to a thousand and YouTube. In that environment, what matters is compelling programming – and compelling programming starts with the writer. Jackson Bites will afford writers the opportunity to create content that will be seen and enjoyed by audiences with or without the involvement of the television networks.”


“This agreement reflects precisely what we have held from the start: for writers, the Internet and new media are the future. Doug Liman’s company makes that vision reality, with high-end, TV-quality programming created for alternative distribution,” said Michael Winship, president of the Writers Guild of America, East.

“We are happy to reach an agreement with Doug Liman that is perfectly suited to the needs of a new generation of content providers,” said Patric M. Verrone, president of the Writers Guild of America, West.

The deal between Jackson Bites and WGA, which was negotiated by Liman and his lawyer Alan Grodin with the WGA and is similar to the deals the WGA recently announced with United Artists, Worldwide Pants, the Weinstein Company, MRC, and Spyglass Entertainment, and addresses an important issue to writers – new media.

Liman, whose career was launched with the independent film Swingers, continued on to executive produce the television series The O.C., as well as to direct The Bourne Identity, Mr. & Mrs. Smith, and the upcoming film Jumper, sees this as the moment for new media.

Jackson Bites is financed completely outside the studio system. Liman will not direct or produce any of the content in the new company. Jackson is Liman's eleven-year-old sheep dog.

3 comments:

4merBTLer said...

!
Excellent!

Another step to relegate the congloms to managing rental space (the lots) and whatever distribution real producers are willing to throw their way.

The ground is shifting....

hollarback said...

Wow, sounds like the old days of Hollywood when the studios were just getting started - the field is wide open.

Very smart.

The Pop View said...

I quoted this over on my blog today:

About 35 percent of Americans have changed their media consumption habits as a result of the Hollywood writers strike, according to a report by the consultancy firm Interpret, and 27 percent are watching less network TV.

The survey also notes that 94 percent of Americans are aware of the Writers Guild of America strike, and 55 percent are cognizant of the issues involved. Of that 55 percent, 56 percent support the writers, 7 percent support the producers and 37 percent don’t support either.

Heavy-TV viewers (watching 21 hours or more a week) have been most impacted by the strike with 32 percent viewing less network TV. DVDs have been the biggest beneficiaries, with 43 percent of respondents noting they are watching more movies because of the strike; 26 percent are reading more and 23 percent are watching more TV shows on DVD.

Interpret also found that if the networks replace first-run series with reality shows and repeats, nearly half of Americans (46 percent) say their TV viewing behavior would change.