The Reviewer Who Wasn't 164
An anonymous submitter sent in a pretty timely link as we enter the summer hype, er, summer movie season. Let the ticket-buyer beware...
You scratch my tape, and I'll scratch yours.
It's OK (Score:1)
All these bribed reviewers... (Score:1)
Re:Fake reviewer (Score:2)
I always get the same feeling... (Score:5)
Re:Typical review. (Score:2)
Some things never change.
- Robin
Re:The fake review isn't the worst part (Score:1)
Re:Tiger's Crouch was Emperors Clothing (Score:1)
Re:Capitalism is... (Score:2)
Capitalism is... (Score:2)
One could argue, if one were a supporter of capitalism, that at least that system offers you the choice not to see Sony's films as a punishment. Under socialism the government owns virtually everything, making a boycott impossible no matter how outrageous the behaviour. As I said, one could argue...
Re:"On the Media" did a similar story (Score:2)
"On the Media" did a similar story (Score:3)
I've never quite trusted film marketers-- but these are outright lies, and might interest the FTC.
On an interesting sidenote: it seems that the film revenues for "R rated" films have gone down ever since the movie industry started "enforcing" their ratings. It used to be, of course, that "Rated R" was a draw for certain types of violent films, but now the MPAA has "learned" that such restrictive ratings tend to reduce profits. I'm not sure who to support. (I believed that a trademarked "NC-17" rating might free the artistic impulses of directors--but I guess marketing considerations will probably doom us all to kiddie safe films. sniff)
Re:Wooo. *twirls finger* (Score:2)
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Re:Capitalism is... (Score:1)
Of course, one could also argue that, as corporations become bigger and more powerful snd start branching into more economic sectors (how many entertainment companies does Sony own already? Columbia, Sony Pictures Classics, (the former) CBS...), it becomes more and more difficult to avoid their products...
Re:Capitalism is... (Score:1)
And while we're on it, don't listen to any music at all. Don't watch any TV. Don't buy petrol from any company. Don't buy any food. Hell, don't breathe at all.
(And BTW, the point of boycotting a certain studio wasn't about whether their products are good or not, but about their unethical practices).
nothing new (Score:2)
Same thing in the computer industry (Score:3)
Much of the time a magazine big enough to have several columnists cover an issue will let one or two say bad things about a major advertiser's products as long as there are sycophants on staff who can be counted on to "balance" that bad press.
There are also apparently professional interviewees who give whatever comments are required to fit the slant of a particular story. Eventually you notice these guys cropping up more and more as word gets around that they can be counted on to deliver.
There was also the more benign case of Jerry Pournelle, who never called a tech support line that didn't like him when he wrote for BYTE. Everybody knew who he was so they treated him like a demigod, and it skewed his view of customer service in the industry.
Fun net.lore: How Jerry Pournelle got kicked off the ARPAnet [catalog.com]
I guess that answers my question (Score:1)
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Re:Duh (Score:3)
Oh yes there are. In fact, I'm sure there are people who still think it was the best movie of the year when it comes out in January.
The interesting thing is, though, that none of those people (generally) read slashdot. . . .
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Re:Summer movie reviews (Score:1)
2 minutes into it, I leaned over and said "this could get better any time now"...25 minutes later we walked out.
Bad costuming, oddball fight scenes (the lists were good, however), and terrible acting...OY!
Re:Fake reviewer (Score:3)
The movie poster quoted him "It's Time for this Message!"
I'm not making this up.
thad
Re:This absolutely shocked me... (Score:1)
In some industries, retailers figured this out a few decades ago and started charging manufacturers for shelf space.
If a manufacturer can't persuade us to buy brand A of product X, they can sometimes pretty much force us to by paying the retailers to (only) carry brand A of product X.
Re:Sony, say hello to the FTC (Score:3)
"This year's hottest new star!" (for Heath Ledger of "A Knight's Tale") and "another winner!" (for The Animal") don't say anything at all. They don't say anything bad about any other movie. They don't promise you'll enjoy the film. They don't even say that either of the films were good.
I don't see how anything they did violated any laws. Possibly the trust of the people, but give me a break, who trusts commercials? Or movie reviews? The MSNBC (oooh! reliable trustworthy news in itself!) article says it all:
"The real question is why Sony had to conceive the counterfeit critic to begin with..."
The article [msnbc.com] goes on to say that film reviewers are bought and fed appropriate quotes as a standard practice.
Now that I think about it, the invention of a fake reviewer wasn't such a bad idea. Maybe it was political commentary by some jaded ad creative. Or possibly just desperation. The end result is a nothing. Just a bunch of embarrassed LA film execs. Nothing the FTC would worry about.
(oh yeah. I have a degree [rock-chalk.com] in Advertising.)
Re:omg (Score:2)
Well, most of 'em are true, the movie studios have just always found a way to take them out of context and add a few exclamation points. The taken out of context thing is pretty much assumed, but there was a case a few years ago when one of the major studios got in trouble for cutting random words from a poor review and pasting them back together into a sentence which lauded the film. They ended up retracting the quotes from the ads when people got on their ass about it. Given how many living and breathing junket whores are out there willing to exchange a good review for some nice trinkets and a sushi dinner, these movies must be pretty hideous that they actually had to make up reviewers.
Cheers,
Re:Fake reviewer (Score:2)
Well, Joel's creepy mustache and hairdo do tend to leave some doubts, but some friends of mine at ABC have assured me that he really is an actual person.
Cheers,
So let me see... (Score:1)
The big shock to me is that there are fools out there big enough to believe that there was even a vague possibility the advertising was honest!
Re:Sony, say hello to the FTC (Score:1)
Re:laugh tracks. (Score:2)
Pope
Re:Newsweek.MSNBC?!?!? (Score:1)
I'd be very interested to read your references, if you have them handy.
Re:This absolutely shocked me... (Score:1)
Re:"On the Media" did a similar story (Score:1)
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Re:Typical review. (Score:1)
Rick
Re:Typical review. (Score:1)
Re:Really bad examples there, dude. (Score:2)
A couple of quick examples before I get back to work:
"No preservatives added" doesn't count the fact that they pump the packaging full of preservatives.
The FDA rules allow for 30% error in things like fat content. Now I would bet big money that food companies will pay labs to create tests that are, say, accurate within 5% and fudge the other 25% deliberately.
I think the FDA is well-intentioned and generally does a good job, but also I think their food labelling rules leave a lot to be desired.
p.s. I think it would be incredibly cool to meet and talk to a food chemist!
In yer dreams... (Score:3)
"100% Natural"?
"No Artificial Colors or Flavors"?
"Lite"?
"New and Improved"?
Any of the hundreds of movies that are 88.5 minutes of filler wrapped around a good-looking trailer?
This is Madison Avenue/Hollywood S.O.P. Nobody (who can change things) cares and nobody (who has any influence) is going to do anything about it.
I bet two tickets to the next Adam Sandler movie that this is the last time you hear about it in the media.
Typical review. (Score:5)
Story Is Poorly Phrased (Score:2)
Confusion is understandable, as the /. story is in the headline. The /. summary sounds as if the link is pointing at a summary of summer movies.
DCMA Violation (Score:2)
Re:as always... (Score:2)
Re:Summer movie reviews (Score:1)
Re:Look at the source, not the quote! (Score:2)
http://www.suntimes.com/ebert/ebert.html [suntimes.com]
Re:Decades from now ... (Score:1)
- Edmonton Self-Examiner'
The real review
"I would rather be caught engaging in questionable sexual practices than be caught reading this book. I couldn't put it down the garbage chute fast enough!'
Like anyone listens to reviewers anyhow... (Score:2)
A blurb from some non-major paper like the Ridgefield Press is generally a sign that they are desperate for any positive blurb at all.
Re:I always get the same feeling... (Score:2)
Getting back to the topic, this is why until recently, I've been a huge fan of Ain't It Cool News [aint-it-cool-news.com]. But even Harry seems to be slipping into the machine. He recently wrote an entire series of articles [aintitcool.com] based on his trip to the set of Lord of the Rings. It really smacked of the "we'll fly you to New Zealand and show you a good time, you just write whatever you want," sort of approach to tainting idealistic reviewers.
But AICN is still the best place to get movie news that's anywhere near honest and biased only by artistic concerns (which often include number of zombies
--
Aaron Sherman (ajs@ajs.com)
No surprise. (Score:2)
Personally i'm far more outraged by the results of tonight's iron chef bout. It was fixed, i tell ya, fixed!
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Re:"On the Media" did a similar story (Score:2)
Re:This absolutely shocked me... (Score:1)
Does advertising work? The older I get the more I think it doesn't.
Wait, this wasn't a lie! (Score:1)
Really bad examples there, dude. (Score:5)
While I agree with your conlusion -- no one cares -- you picked some really crummy examples.
The FDA has very, very strict rules on what can go on the labels and packages of food, right down to minimum point sizes of fonts. To use your example, if the package says, "no artificial colors," then you can bet your career that it contains no artificial colors. (You can bet yours, because the entire upper and middle management of the food company has bet theirs by saying so.)
Another example: ever see a dessert marked as "no sugar added" and wonder why they don't save some ink and use "sugar free" instead? They don't have a choice. Many dairy products (yogurt, ice cream, ice milk (and there are rules on what must be called ice cream vs ice milk)) have the no sugar added mark because milk contains lactose, another natural form of sugar, which means that "sugar free" yogurt would be deceptive.
(I could go on for hours. You can learn an amazingly cool amount of stuff when your dad has a master's in food chemistry.)
Unfortunately, the watchdog organization for movie reviewers is a little more open to money-greasing than the FDA is.
Re:"On the Media" did a similar story (Score:2)
Re:Newsweek.MSNBC?!?!? (Score:1)
But not only is NBC News letting one of its employees use the nighly news program to push his own book(s), NBC has a deal with the book publisher that entitles them to a proportion of the profits from the book sales. I don't remember exactly what the numbers are, so I won't guess at them. But it doesn't matter; anything over zero is unethical....
We talked about this last summer in the Mass Media Ethics class I took. If anyone cares, I'll try to dig up a reference for them....
Nate
Re:This absolutely shocked me... (Score:1)
----
"Here to discuss how the AOL merger will affect consumers is the CEO of AOL."
Re:Duh (Score:1)
Bah, I can top that (Score:2)
--
Re:slander?? (Score:3)
Thus, saying that a restraunt's food is terrible, that the proprieters are ugly, and the staff is rude are not slander. Saying the beef is actually rat meat, and you are in trouble.
Likewise, if you say that George Bush shot Lincoln, it is obviously false, and therefore not slander.
The 2600 case is interesting as it isn't clear what they were saying -- they never really said "ford registered fuckceneralmotors.com" -- in fact the nameserver responses presumably came from 2600's nameservers. On the other hand, most people do not know enough about internet infrastructure to realize that you can't really prevent people from pointing domains at your website.
The real lesson here is that if you don't want this kind of thing to happen to you, set your webservers to reject Host: headers not from your domain.
Re:"On the Media" did a similar story (Score:2)
Re:Really bad examples there, dude. (Score:2)
That's right. They strictly enforce their "no-labelling" policy for genetically modified (GM) foods. You're not allowed to label your Frankenfoods, nor are you allowed to label your food as "non-genetically modified". In short, the FDA has made it illegal for the consumer to tell the difference. Which is why 70% of the produce (by mass) sold in the United States is untested genetically spliced food.
To learn more about how the FDA (Monsanto's marketing department) is out to poison the public, read this book [amazon.com].
Strict standards. Heh. Like anyone cares. Movie PR, food PR, industry PR, it's all the same - programming.
Re:Sony, say hello to the FTC (Score:2)
The FTC recently began cracking down on advertisements that feature "testimonials": although this sort of thing was accepted a few years ago, it has come under closer scrutiny nowadays. Moreover, they attributed their remarks to a real newspaper, and thus made blatantly false claims. They could even be subject to civil suits for their erroneously attributed remarks.
Re:as always... (Score:1)
Re:Trust only the Filthy Critic (Score:1)
Re:Capatilism is... (Score:1)
--
movie reviews (Score:1)
Hit 'em hard (Score:2)
Movie ads have sucked for a while now (Score:2)
But even when ads were good, I would never trust the word of the reviewers they use in their ads. Of course they are going to use the best reviews for their movie even if the movie reeks there will be one or two positive reviews so that is not a good gauge for movie quality.
Right now the only purpose movie ads serve is to alert the general public that the movie exists but they aren't going to convince me one way or another. If I want to know about a movie I will look it up on Rotten Tomatoes [rottentomatoes.com] or some other review site and look at all the reviews.
Re:APPLE COMPUTER does this... (Score:1)
First, I didn't think Guy still worked for Apple, and that his mailing list was in no way related to Apple. I may be wrong, but I didn't think there was anything remotely official about it.
Second, how is that remotely similar to making up fictitious reviewers and quotes?
Re:as always... (Score:1)
Filthy (Score:1)
Re:omg (Score:2)
Hey!
I simply must take issue with your criticism of movie trailers. They offer incredible savings in both time and money!
For most modern Hollywood movies, I've found that I can adequately capture all the significant moments, the special effects, the character development and the entire plot of the movie by simply viewing the trailer instead of the actual 110 minute film.
Irony: Fake Reviews from the Fake News site (Score:3)
Am I the only one to appreciate the irony of this story, appearing on M$N ?
This seems to me as just the sort of Anti-Sony FUD I've been expected from arch-King of FUD; Micro$haft. Especially likely when you consider that very soon, Sony becomes Micro$haft latest competitor.
Just ask the question "Who do you trust to produce quality content of any type?" M$ or Sony, tough one that :)
Trust only the Filthy Critic (Score:2)
Wooo. *twirls finger* (Score:2)
Geez. Pretty sad when Public Radio gets the scoop on everyone, considering the millions that the networks pump into "generating" news...
--Fesh
Re:Summer movie reviews (Score:2)
Summer movie reviews (Score:5)
Re:This absolutely shocked me... (Score:2)
It seems to me that in terms of product awareness advertising probably does do something; people who have a need that is met by a new product may go out and buy that product once the've been exposed to the ad.
I don't really see how ads can affect the sale of existing products, however. One doesn't drink Coke instead of Pepsi or vice versa because of their respective adds, one drinks one because of the taste, or merely because it's what's available whereever one happens to be.
I suppose that advertisements of sales and such do also have an affect, as they are also awareness related ads.
ya mr cranky is great (Score:2)
Let's face it: The possibility of a couple of repressed computer geeks blowing a load after hearing a germane computer term is substantial. To a hardcore geek, "Open" and "Source" are like the nipples on the breasts of Jennifer Love Hewitt
Correction (Score:2)
Let the Lawsuits Begin (Score:2)
slander?? (Score:2)
Please explain the statement that 2600 has made. What 2600 did is register httpfuckgeneralmotors.com [fuckgeneralmotors.com] and have it resolve to 164.109.135.183 [ford.com] which is Ford's website. Ford claims that this implies that Ford has done this. Even if it did imply that Ford did this, it only implies that Ford is low class -- not something actionable under libel. In a Mass. case, calling a couple (who ran a restraunt) pigs was not actionable.
Trademark infringment (Score:3)
Ford is suing 2600 [fordreallysucks.com] for implying that Ford is sponsoring the www.fuckgeneralmotors.com domain because 2600 is pointing the domain to Ford.
This is a situation where Sony is actually stating that this non-existant person actually works for this newspaper.
Look at the source, not the quote! (Score:3)
Rather, I look at who the studio is quoting. If it's Scooter McGee of the Hicksville Tribune, the movie is crap. If it's, say, Roger Ebert, then the movie is worth considering. This system hasn't failed me yet.
Bonus fact: The junket-critics mentioned in the article are referred to by real critics as "quote whores".
TheFrood
Re:Really bad examples there, dude. (Score:2)
FDA is a fuck off agency, who has better quality standards than the "watch dog organization for reviewers", and might be a little harder to bribe, but follows the rule, same shit, different pile.
Mass bribery?
Why can I buy claritin in canada over the counter (shit, they have it in attractive displays in the aisles) for $10 Canadian (6.50 US$ with tax) and the same damn package in the USA costs $70 AND needs a perscription ($40ish, even if your insurance pays).
Bribery is called "campaign contributions" or "donations to the US Treasury" in the USA. Again - same shit, different pile.
The slashdot 2 minute between postings limit: /.'ers since Spring 2001.
Pissing off hyper caffeineated
Re:Mod down... It's not that "funny" (Score:2)
krystal_blade
WHAT!? (Score:4)
So, Sony's a "Karma Whore" too?
COOL!
krystal_blade, going to invest in Sony because "They're Just Like ME!!"
screw Napster... I want BOOKSTER!!
Fake reviewer (Score:4)
Re:Sony, say hello to the FTC (Score:2)
That is specifically the reason why the FTC may may have a nice long talk with Sony Pictures about the advertising for their recent movies. The reason is simple: it may the first time someone has tried to pull this type of deception off and got caught red-handed.
Sony, say hello to the FTC (Score:3)
I think it won't be long before the US Federal Trade Commission has a nice long talk with Sony management on what appears to be a violation of our Federal laws in regards to deceptive advertising.
So now the question on everyone's mind is... (Score:2)
Re:"On the Media" did a similar story (Score:3)
I never understood the purpose of giving a movie an R rating. I mean, some of these movies that get them I would feel comfortable letting my 14 year old daughter watch. Take Office Space for instance, the only mildly offensive substance was the occasional f-word and one not-so-erotic sex scene where there wasn't even ANY nudity. If that's what get's you an "R" rating, I might just start seeing "NC-17" only. However, the last film that I remember seeing in that category was Showgirls and it sucked.... Just my little rant.
Newsweek.MSNBC?!?!? (Score:4)
Given how quickly all major news outlets are congealing into one corporate mouth piece, it's startling they let even this mildly anti-Hollywood article seep through the cracks. I like the central message though -- "The movie industry basically lies to you constantly, but tough, it's not like you can do anything about it. You'll watch what we tell you to watch, you mindless drones. Hahahahahaha."
Does this mean those constant Survivor stories on CBS "news" outlets, weren't just solid reporting on a popular social interest? CBS did those stories on iWon.com because it's a groovy site, not because they invested $50 million in it, right?
You can read science fiction books about people getting brain washed en masse, or you can flip on the television for the interactive version.
Wait. We're not a brain washed society. The Chinese are the brain washed ones. We're all about democracy and free speech. Sure, Napster tried to crush free speech by misuing "free use" copyright concepts, but that's been fixed now. The New York Times Company says this is a fair democratic land we live in, and that if it weren't for a couple stray politicians having sex and their underaged children drinking beer, everything would be just perfect. Whew! I was scaring myself there for a minute.
Anyway, I've gotta go. I'm late, and those "Knights Tale" tickets are selling out quickly for some reason.
as always... (Score:2)
It also reminds me of the hollywood studios paying web designers a lot of cash to make fan pages that look like they were done by amateurs.
They do really shitty things to their comsumers, and I like the rest of them still pay to see movies...We are such losers...
Hmm... (Score:3)
Upon further investigation, this reviewer and one other (who said "A great family film") seemed to hate nothing. Supposedly, they get paid off to say they love the bombs.
I'm wondering why we would ever dream of trusting these no-name critics. Would you trust a complete stranger to tell you how to spend your money? The only critics I remotely trust to review a movie fairly well are Ebert (he doesn't seem to be too commercially influenced) and my friends.
That said, I always knew Jon Katz used pseudonyms.
Capatilism is... (Score:2)
I sure I would have a lot more fun if I was making movies and lying to people about how good they are so I could make money.
This isn't "bad judgement", this is fraud. It's a pretty that the companies we work for lie like this every day, about the things we are making. (Only we call it marketing.)
F**K YOU SONY!
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Re:Wooo. *twirls finger* (Score:2)
Ohhh, I don't know, maybe that they deceptively tell the public what their new law called the DMCA will do for everyone to 'sell' their point to America!
What part of your operating system are they responsible for?
Well, pretty soon, they'll be responsible for the part that doesn't let me make copies of my own files without a permit for each file. Or to even write up a critical review of a crappy movie and post it to the web that opposes all those with 'jornalistic' licenses (like "Mr. Manning"), 'cause hey, maybe I'm copying someone else's work somewhere in the world, and we certainly wouldn't want that?!
Re:It's possible to judge without seeing (Score:2)
A friend of mine in high school had to write a 2 page essay on a magazine article from a National Geographic (we all did in this particular class). After reading the first page, he turned it to find that the rest of the article had been ripped out of the magazine. Not having the time to start reading another article, he simply made up the rest of his essay on the article! So it went a little something like this:
"Gorilla's in the wild have had a declining population over the past 20 years as studied by scientists. They have found that deforestation and ... (Oh crap! The rest of the story is gone, oh well, here goes nothing) ... male mating patterns have added to the loss of gorilla population. After extensive study, it was found that the male will seek out the best looking female gorilla and display wild dancing acts to attract her. When he has gotten her attention, he will find a fallen tree branch, club her over the head, and drag her back to his cave to mate." - (Summarized for brevity).
The teacher bought it, gave him an A+, and commented at the top of his paper on this alarming research, and that she hoped they would find a way to dissuade the clubbings of the females. :)
Needless to say, she's one of the many types of person today that buys into crap movie reviews and has no idea what the world is all about.
Re:as always... (Score:2)
Sometimes they get it just right though. Check out the Galaxy Quest [www.galaxyquest] site. It purports to be a fan page, but a fan of the (non existent) series, who talks about meeting the series actors (e.g. Gwen Demarco, not Sigourney Weaver) at conventions.
The tongue is very firmly in the cheek, it's just a shame that the legal weasels made them put a (C) DreamWorks at the bottom. :(
Re:"On the Media" did a similar story (Score:2)
This absolutely shocked me... (Score:2)
Seriously, though, it really doesn't pay to rely on ads to give you any meaningful information, other than the existence of the product/service.
Caveat Emptor -- still the best advice
Decades from now ... (Score:4)
"An absolute must read!"
- Ridgefield Review of Books
"... engaging
- Edmonton Self-Examiner
Re:Hmm... (Score:3)
Having said that, the day I see "3 3/4 Babylons!" on a movie poster is the day I stop reading his reviews.
--
Re:It's possible to judge without seeing (Score:3)
Hell, I once wrote a report on a book that doesn't exist.
Got a B on it too. In the context of the MSNBC article, I suppose you could say "It was the best review the book ever got!"
*snicker*
For software (Score:2)
RedHat ad ---- "Windows 2000 Server is the worst operating system EVER".