| Hi, I'm the guy who wrote this article. Good comments. Some thoughts: * It takes a lot of people to write software, too. Those SoMoLo SaaS world-changers don't design and code themselves. * But, the tech industry has found ways to bootstrap ideas that do not involve eight- or nine-figure up-front bets. The only difference between "high end" movies and "indie film" is that indies merely require six- or seven-figure up-front bets. * Every industry that is disrupted goes through two revolutions: (1) it is digitized, i.e. it joins the "World Of Bits" (VGR) or the "IT Era" (Stratechery's phrasing); and (2) it is networked, i.e. the Internet enables new business models and production modes. * That first revolution usually benefits incumbents. It lets them do the same exact things, more efficiently. * Further, that first revolution is commonly confused with "disruption". But if it's not unseating incumbents -- it ain't. * Filmed entertainment is still at the tail end of this first revolution. (I had the first two RED cameras, so I've had a front row seat to this.) But many pieces of the supply chain are still mired in Paper Belt mentality. I mainly wrote this to stimulate discussion and thought among my film industry peers. Ironically, there's been far more engagement from y'all hackers instead. Probably because hackers, like rappers, tend to think of themselves as entrepreneurs by default. Filmmakers: you need to catch up. |