Keep us posted, for sure, Rupert.

Fingers crossed for ya!

Jan

On Wed, Jan 21, 2009 at 7:52 PM, Rupert <rup...@fatgirlinohio.org> wrote:
> I'm putting together a project that will hopefully allow people to
> take a share proportional to their investment.
> Basically just a limited partnership profit-share model.
>
> Robert Croma sent me a great book called My First Movie - interviews
> with famous indie filmmakers about making their first features.
> The first interview is with the Coen's.
> They did this for Blood Simple.  Made a trailer, then spent a year
> going to see small businessmen in NY and Minnesota, getting them to
> invest.  They raised $750,000 this way.  Just a limited partnership,
> with the production company as the general partner.
> Apparently it was the way lots of NY horror movies were made in the
> 80s - they got the idea from Sam Raimi, who funded The Evil Dead this
> way, too.
>
> I figure that if it worked in the 80s, with these two guys travelling
> thousands of miles lugging a 35mm projector around from meeting to
> meeting, it should be even more possible to do now with an internet
> crowdfunding approach (combined with the same old real-world
> presentations to local punters).
>
> Paying an accountant and a lawyer to set up the legal structure and
> contract/terms is more costly than bunging up a ChipIn widget,
> obviously, and not practical if your budget is very small.  With
> larger budgets and projects, getting the odd $10 ChipIn isn't going
> to cut it - you've got to go out looking for investors.  Even if the
> majority of them are still only putting in $10, it's an extra
> incentive - this way it's not just a philanthropic donation - there's
> actually a (small) chance of a return.  And you can help build trust
> and interest at the same time with total online transparency in your
> production process and budgeting.
>
> My main shoot for this will be in November - details of the project
> to follow when I'm ready.
>
> Rupert
> http://twittervlog.tv
>
> On 21-Jan-09, at 4:27 PM, Jay dedman wrote:
>
> We cringe and argue about money and videoblogging often on this list.
> (probably because it's important and always in our face)
>
> Here's an example of community funded media projects:
> http://spot.us/pitches/101
> David Cohn has done a great job making the site usuable.
>
> I've said before that I think the same thing can happen for anyone's
> videoblog.
> If you are creating video projects that people care about, they will
> fund it.
> You got to hustle just like with anything...but I think it's a great
> alternative to straight up advertising.
>
> Notice that this is more than a Paypal Button on the sidebar.
> You must actually create a Pitch with a clear explanation of the
> project, who you are, deliverables, a specific monetary goal, and a
> timeframe.
>
> You probably wont get rich doing this, but you'll make the projects
> you love and building a body of work.
> You'll also know if anyone cares since they'll be putting their money
> where their mouth is.
>
> Jay
>
> --
> http://ryanishungry.com
> http://jaydedman.com
> 917 371 6790
>
>
>
> Rupert
> http://twittervlog.tv/
> Creative Mobile Filmmaking
> Shot, edited and sent with my Nokia N93
>
>
>
> [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
>
>
> ------------------------------------
>
> Yahoo! Groups Links
>
>
>
>



-- 
Jan McLaughlin
Production Sound Mixer
air = 862-571-5334
aim = janofsound
skype = janmclaughlin

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