Tuesday, January 04, 2005

G-Rated Movies Rule!

MOVIE ECONOMICS
The Dysfunctional Family-Film Business
By far the best return on investment comes from G-rated films. So why aren’t more made?
By Grainger David

Note: I was discussing this very topic with friends a week or so before Christmas. With an R-rated Movie, you might sell 1-2 tickets per household; with a G-rated (or even a PG-rated movie) you would sell 3-4, or more, tickets per household. Thus (even though this article doesn't discuss it in these terms), it appears that Hollywood has an agenda that is anti-American, anti-religion, anti-family, anti-traditional values, etc., and that it is using the movies to foist that agenda on the American public.
Happy New Year. Patriot Mark

If Hollywood were run like a real business—instead of, say, like a clubby, insecure, award-crazy, star-groveling high school—where things like return on investment mattered, there would be one unchallenged, sacred principle that studio chieftains would never violate: Make lots of G-rated movies. . . .

See the article at Movie Economics: The Dysfunctional Family-Film Business
http://www.fortune.com/fortune/articles/0,15114,1011899,00.html

0 Comments:

Post a Comment

<< Home