logo
#

Latest news with #ParticipantMedia

Evan Shapiro to Keynote The Hollywood Reporter's Access Canada Summit
Evan Shapiro to Keynote The Hollywood Reporter's Access Canada Summit

Yahoo

time4 days ago

  • Entertainment
  • Yahoo

Evan Shapiro to Keynote The Hollywood Reporter's Access Canada Summit

Evan Shapiro, known as the cartographer of the media universe, will be a keynote speaker at The Hollywood Reporter's inaugural Access Canada Summit, set to run during the upcoming Toronto Film Festival. Shapiro, a former top executive at NBCUniversal and Participant Media is expected to bring his trademark provocative mix of graphics, charts and analysis to the Access Canada Summit to reflect on the current, and future, state of the media industry. More from The Hollywood Reporter 'Industry' Creators on How Their Storytelling and Characters Have Evolved (in Bleepable Ways) and HBO's "Fantastic Notes" Disney+ Inks New Deal to Bundle With Crave, TSN in Canada The Hollywood Reporter Sets Tonys Preshow Shapiro is also a veteran producer (Portlandia, Brick City) and a former president of IFC TV and Sundance Channel. The inaugural three-day Access Canada Summit event in Toronto, set to run Sept. 8-10 during TIFF's 2025 edition, will spotlight Canadian content producers navigating a global entertainment industry. Besides his keynote presentation, Shapiro will also host a small group of Access Canada Summit attendees at a private breakfast where winners of an upcoming draw can pose questions and discuss specific forecasts and opportunities in the unfolding global media space with the in-demand industry analyst and speaker. The Access Canada Summit event, to be held at the Omni King Edward Hotel, will include keynote speakers and panels and dealmaking between top creatives and decision-makers across the country, and have THR as its title media partner. The event will be produced by Access Canada, the producer of The Hollywood Reporter Women in Entertainment Canada event, which just concluded its second star-studded conference and awards show on May 29 in Toronto. More programming announcements the inaugural Summit, including keynote speakers, panels and workshops, curated meetings and networking opportunities, will be announced in the coming weeks. Best of The Hollywood Reporter 'The Studio': 30 Famous Faces Who Play (a Version of) Themselves in the Hollywood-Based Series 22 of the Most Shocking Character Deaths in Television History A 'Star Wars' Timeline: All the Movies and TV Shows in the Franchise

Four Hollywood Insiders Want To Transform Storytelling To Include Impact
Four Hollywood Insiders Want To Transform Storytelling To Include Impact

Forbes

time27-03-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Forbes

Four Hollywood Insiders Want To Transform Storytelling To Include Impact

Robert Rippberger, cofounder of SIE Society, addressing the audience during their Impact and Profit ... More Conference in December 2024 in Los Angeles, CA. The film industry is known for making entertainment. But can its stories also drive social and environmental change? Robert Rippberger, co-founder of Social Impact Entertainment Society and producer/director of recently released film Renner, says that in fact, the highest-grossing films of all time have a message embedded in them. He's referring to films such as Avatar, Titanic, and Star Wars, which may not seem as impact-oriented films but they touched on important themes: in Avatar, the environment and natural world; in Titanic, classism; and in Star Wars, ethics. 'I want to flip the script and argue that films can make money and have impact. It doesn't have to be either or," he says. That's what inspired four accomplished filmmakers and producers to come together during the pandemic to create a hub, the Social Impact Entertainment (SIE) Society, for those in the entertainment industry who want to create impactful content -- across film, television, social media, and radio/podcasts. Now, it has approximately 1500 members and last December, they held their annual gathering with former Participant Media CEO David Linde as the keynote speaker. Social Impact Entertainment Society was started by Robert Rippberger, William Nix, Rebecca Graham ... More Forde, and Tobias Deml, featured here. Rippberger and Tobias Deml, who had been friends since college and had been running Cinema for Chage, connected with Rebecca Graham Forde and William Nix through the Producers Guild of America, where they had been serving on the Social Impact Task Force. All four quickly realized that their goals were the same, but they were working in silos. So they started volunteer-led SIE to bring not just their knowledge and networks under one roof, but invite others to join. 'Our core ethos is let's create a community where all of us can come together -- film, TV, games, theater, other forms of media -- give them a megaphone so that the people who are doing the work, we can all rise up together," says Forde. Yet, the last few years have not been kind to Hollywood: a writer's strike, a shift to streaming platforms, and fewer people going into theaters. So the biggest question to date has been, does this kind of content make money and can it be a profitable venture for producers and investors? For example, in 2024, Participant Media, backed by businessman and former president of eBay Jeff Skoll, shut down. That was seen as the beacon of impact-driven content, producing films such as Al Gore's An Inconvenient Truth, Mark Ruffalo's Dark Waters, Oscar-winner Spotlight, and Matt Damon-starrer Promised Land. While so many of these films won accolades, and several were even financially successful, ultimately Participant did have to close its doors. Rippberger says he's not convinced that it was the content itself that led to the downfall. Participant was operating in a weaker market, heavy competition from streaming platforms, consolidation in the industry, and complicated economics that had hit Hollywood as a whole, he explains. At their gathering in December, in fact, David Linde notes that while Participant may have closed its doors, its efforts didn't go unnoticed. 'Every major studio has executives in their creative departments to think about authenticity in the portrayal and in how they tell a story. Every agency now has a social impact arm – for a reason. Because filmmakers and their clients are asking for it. The work lives on – in either people who have identified the opportunity and come at it with a commercial background or with those that come with a social advocacy background," he says. Thus, Rippberger, Deml, and Forde want to dismiss the naysayers. And their approach is to hit them with case studies. Thus SIE Society has catalogued the films and projects that have worked online. They've coupled it with research, links to funding bodies, and relevant industry news and links. 'You don't need to do the same research seven times over. You can do it once and then recycle it and share it with everybody. And so that's what we're doing. I would say, we're streamlining the space so that it becomes more financially effective for funders. The more that this field is built, the less expensive it's gonna be to operate,' says Deml. Making the economic case is just as important as the messaging of the film, he adds. If it can be proven through existing models that yes, this type of content can be profitable, and here are examples to prove it, then funders will be less hesitant. 'It's a long-held belief that this stuff doesn't work. I would call it a prejudice. And one of these things is you can't have impact and profit at the same time. But that's not true." This effort is also not just limited to films. SIE Society would like to work more closely with social media. With massive channels such as Mr. Beast touching in on philanthropy, giving back, and making a business with a purpose, Rippberger says he'd love to see SIE Society at VidCon in Anaheim. Meanwhile Forde shares that she's now helping launch a podcast on DNA discovery and how that can impact one's life. '23 million people have had a major DNA discovery, catastrophic to their families, uprooted relationships, et cetera. So it's actually a epidemic and there is really no training out there. So we are launching this with the pure intent to help and educate,' she explains. There is no one format that will fit everyone's needs and vision. So SIE Society wants to be a meeting place for talent to figure out what do they need to push their projects forward. 'We have experts all over the place that can serve as consultants. I don't think you have to feel like you're alone in it either, because we want to be that community. Be it the independent filmmaker who has no money and just wants to plow through all these free resources, because we don't charge membership," Forde adds. But it could also be a resource for scientists and academics who have interesting data and stories but need help reaching a broader audience. There SIE can come with the storytelling. Ultimately, there is power in numbers, Deml argues. 'If I can get more storytellers in this sector to actually care about this kind of stuff, this can multiply really quickly. And so I think there's just such deep conviction that when you have good solutions, but no distribution for the behavior change, you need to build that distribution, you need to build that fascination of storytelling. And there is just nothing like SIE Society out there. That's why everybody was an archipelago, that's why it was so inefficient, that's why there was like no connective tissue. And I feel like we feel validated in nearly every single thing that we do.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store