Shut Up And Write!

I’m no fan of Richard Rushfield’s, and I suspect if he even gave a rat’s ass about any opinion other than his own he’d feel even less positively about moi.  Having been an executive, in his book that doubly qualifies me as a schmuck.

Rushfield is a co-founder and effective editor emeritus of THE ANKLER, an upstart competitor to Penske-dominated trade media that he and other aggrieved and stifled ex-HOLLYWOOD REPORTER contributors founded several years ago.  They have come together with the help of some significant VC money to produce a publication that heavily caters to creatives, and not merely in its coverage of their projects and releases.  Since the publication came of age during the dual strikes of 2023 they have dealt virtually non-stop with the changing economic tides of Hollywood–none of it particularly positive to be sure.  But while his younger colleagues spend more of their time championing the accomplishments of the creator generation and giving voice to those who can’t seem to find a way to pivot into that from the entry-level gigs many had been gifted by personal connection and/or diveristy initiatives, Rushfield occupies the role of resident curmedgeon, forever pining for a golden era of Hollywood where awards ceremonies mattered and those involved in them actually took the chance to talk about their works rather than their ideologies.  He’s basically Carl from UP, but he’s yet to have had the revelations from his younger colleagues that led to his own personal cleansing.

And yesterday we learned that as a byproduct of the sort of coverage he’s personally authored about L’Affaire Warnermount he’s now costing those colleagues access to information and revenue that actually can allow them not to join the ranks of those they are profiling that are now being reduced to menial jobs.  Naturally, one of THE ANKLER’s equally pugnacious fellow Penske-loathers, THE WRAP, took particular glee in reporting it.  Here’s  Corbin Bolies’ log on this pyre:

Paramount has pulled its advertising from The Ankler after its editorial director and chief columnist, Richard Rushfield, was seen at CinemaCon on Monday with a bag of “Block the Merger” buttons.  Rushfield had a picture of the buttons on his Instagram as he landed in Las Vegas for the convention. He told TheWrap that he was delivering the buttons to fellow members of the organization Future Film Coalition once he arrived at CinemaCon.

The sighting led to a conference call between Paramount representatives, Rushfield and CEO Janice Min. On the call, Rushfield said he wasn’t handing the buttons out, but was bringing them to someone else. …During the call, Rushfield maintained that he’s a columnist, though Paramount pushed back, given he also holds the title of editorial director, while Min emphasized that The Ankler is not against Paramount’s merger with Warner Bros. Discovery.   Nevertheless, Paramount decided to pull advertising from The Ankler. Its employees have also been directed not to cooperate with the entertainment industry outlet until further notice.

Earlier yesterday Boiles’ colleague Adam Chitwood amplified the output of quite a few more creatives which were the apparent intended recipients of Rushfield’s trinkets:

Prominent Hollywood entertainers including Pedro Pascal, Florence Pugh and Edward Norton signed Monday’s open letter denouncing the Paramount-Warner Bros. Discovery merger on Tuesday, ballooning support for the Democracy Defenders Fund effort to over 2,000 signatures in just 24 hours…”We are deeply concerned by indications of support for this merger that prioritize the interests of a small group of powerful stakeholders over the broader public good,” the letter reads. “The integrity, independence, and diversity of our industry would be grievously compromised. Competition is essential for a healthy economy and a healthy democracy. So is thoughtful regulation and enforcement.”

They are, of course, not wrong.  There have been plenty such business deals and internal decisions in the past few years that have contributed to this hellscape we seem to be attempting to exist in.  There will undoubtedly be more.  But you don’t need to have the creative chops of these fine folks–not to mention the likes of J.J. Abrams, David Fincher, Jason Bateman, Kristen Stewart, Emma Thompson, Ben Stiller and Lin-Manuel Miranda that an earlier iteration of Chitwood’s reporting rattled off–to connect the dots as to why this particular pending transaction is in their minds a bridge too far.

Certainly, the Paramount reaction conjures up imagery of how the White House seems to deal with anyone who dare criticize anything and everything they choose to do.  Rushfield all but confessed that to Boiles when he was directly asked about why he was taking a side hustle as a courier while flying on his company dime to attend a business conference:

Rushfield told TheWrap, “If it isn’t censorship, what is it? You tell me a better word. This is an issue of intense public debate. People have strong feelings. My views I have aired very publicly. What does it mean when we have town halls on this issue? Where’s the line? I’m not doing anything that is at odds with what I’ve written publicly. I’m not organizing people, I’m not directing people. I’m on the board of the Future Film Coalition.”

I haven’t read as unconvincing a defense for someone’s actions since someone recently claimed he was merely imagining himself as a doctor as opposed to Jesus Christ.
And no, I’m not defending that moronic meme .  But I will push back when someone gets on their own version of a political soapbox to curry favor with its public.  And yes that includes all of these A listers who felt it was their civic duty to publicly express their vocal support for these efforts.  The Oscars–which Rushfield famously spent an inordinate amount of time taking candid pictures of attendees the way his once-beloved REPORTER used to when it was actually a well-read print daily–was thankfully devoid of such grandstanding.  I guess that sort of adult behavior has a short shelf life?
Using Rushfield’s version of logic, I’d fully expect one of his TV-centric colleagues to show up at next week’s NAB confab in Las Vegas with anti-Nexstar swag.  The merger they are using the same access tactics to the White House to bully through in the same manner that the Ellisons are doing with Warner Brothers are gonna result in a helluva lot more jobs being lost than anything Warnermount will produce, and in many cities even more dystopian than LA.  But there’s probably not a lot of ANKLER subscribers in those zip codes.
And I suspect they truly couldn’t care as much as Rushfield’s comrade-in-arms Peter Kiefer did in bringing to light the consternation about the rising costs and increasingly political hoops so many of his current readers whined about when trying to place their kids in private schools.  The kinds that have historically led to degrees that have qualified them for so many of those increasingly extinct PA and writers’ assistants gigs–because even before the Ellisons hit the scene studios were paying salaries that few, if any, recent graduates without significant parental help could afford to live on in this city.
Curiously, Richard et al, how many of those signatories have been involved in determining those salary structures and hiring choices?  Hand out any buttons or devote a series of stories to that lately?
My expectations for THE ANKLER aren’t great to begin with, as many of our far fewer readers here might recall.  I do kinda resent when people who largely never sat in an actual C-suite try and lecture why their insights and opinions are superior–and the few that did willingly ignore the sorts of details they once supposedly paid attention to.
But I do sort of hope that Rushfield might just want to try and do a slightly better job at separating how HE feels about what he’s choosing to report on and perhaps consider the consequences of his actions.  Fighting windmills might be ok for Don Quixote, but it’s not gonna do much good in this case.  Do your campaigning on your own time, and hire a freaking courier to deliver your buttons.  I’ve heard plenty of them used to be writer’s assistants.
Until next time…

 

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