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HOW HOLLYWOOD

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DVD/video sales, rentals: $23.8 b (5-6 months after release) Cable, ... DVD burners and recorders (no need to rent) Digital television (may intensify piracy) ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: HOW HOLLYWOOD


1
HOW HOLLYWOOD
  • WORKS

2
  • Dominant companies have been around since 1930s
  • 1990s saw major consolidations (Time and Warner,
    Disney Capital Cities/ABC, Viacom/Paramount)

3
Oligopoly
  • Market is dominated by small number of sellers
  • Markets are characterized by interactivity
  • Decisions of one firm influences - and are
    influenced by - the others

4
The Big Six
  • Warner Bros (AOL Time Warner)
  • Disney
  • Twentieth Century Fox (News Corp)
  • Colombia (Sony)
  • Paramount (Viacom)
  • Universal Studio (GE)

5
Release windows
  • Theaters
  • Video DVD
  • Pay-per-view
  • Pay cable
  • Broadcast basic cable

6
Box office back end sales
  • Box Office 10 billion
  • DVD/video sales, rentals 23.8 b
  • (5-6 months after release)
  • Cable, pay-per-view 2.2 b
  • (7-8 months after release)
  • Premium cable 10.4 billion
  • (a year after release)

7
Causes of Hollywood Oligopoly
  • New contenders rarely survive, as they lack the
    advantages of the giants
  • Cross-subsidization opportunities
  • Privileged dealing with other units of the
    conglomerate
  • Horizontal and, esp. vertical integration

8
Horizontal Integration
  • Wide spectrum, including theme parks, music,
    print, etc.

9
Vertical Integration
  • Controlling markets downstream
  • Theater chains
  • Cable TV
  • TV stations
  • TV networks
  • Home video outlets

10
  • Theater release provides instantaneous
    national/international marketing outlets boosted
    by huge TV advertising
  • Price discrimination (one pays less down the line
    of outlets)
  • Importance of box office revenue falling (now
    down to 20) due to home video, pay cable and
    other revenue sources.

11
Global Hollywood
  • Strong international trade, protected by MPAA
  • 18th most powerful Washington lobby
  • Hollywood product dominates many foreign film
    markets
  • Regular production of films encourages foreign
    buyers to deal with the majors
  • International box office revenue increasing

12
In bed with the competition
  • Market control is critical
  • Studios often collude
  • Keeps market closed
  • Concern not with losing money, but with
    maximizing profits

13
Feature film production
  • Average movie costs 60 million to produce
  • 20 million to market

14
Feature film cycle
  • Production
  • Locations often subsidized
  • Distribution
  • Basis of Hollywoods power
  • Presentation
  • Key is strong opening
  • But most money made in aftermarket

15
Hollywood Business Model
  • USA an Ideal Market
  • Highly-populated
  • melting-pot
  • wealthy
  • strong media systems
  • many cinema screens (now 37,000)
  • easily cover costs on national market
  • sell aggressively overseas

16
Distribution/Exhibition Strategies
  • First weekend fast, blanket release
  • Selective openness to small-budget and
    international films
  • Openness to independent producers and
    distributors (often have close ties to studios).
  • International sales increasingly important
    (nearly 50 of rev)
  • enhanced by co-productions, and increasing
    television outlets

17
Threats to Hollywoods income
  • Personal video recorders (skip commercials,
    subvert prime time, copy DVDs)
  • DVD burners and recorders (no need to rent)
  • Digital television (may intensify piracy)
  • File-sharing services (undermine value of
    syndicated programs, sales of prerecorded shows
    and movies)
  • Camcorders

18
Studio/Network Response
  • Sue to prevent automatic ad-skipping and online
    sharing
  • Recording devices that delete shows after a
    period of time
  • Limit hard drives of recording devices
  • Set-top boxes that make only one copy of
    cable/sat shows, and prevent copies of
    pay-per-view programs
  • Suing customers of file-sharing networks

19
  • Provision of studio online subscription movie
    services
  • Watermarking master copies so camcorders cant
    work
  • Pressure on wi-fi companies to go for streaming
    rather than downloading and transfer
  • Offering movie products to the consumer much
    sooner
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