Peter Thompson

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Peter Thompson

Peter Thompson

@JediPeter

I like to create stuff. "The secret of your success is determined by your daily agenda." - @JohnCMaxwell

Kansas City 参加日 Temmuz 2009
335 フォロー中253 フォロワー
Reads with Ravi
Reads with Ravi@readswithravi·
Is there anyone else who still favors reading physical books over e-books?
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Peter Thompson
Peter Thompson@JediPeter·
@ImKingGinger I have a degree in Creative Writing for Entertainment. I was taught to write for all sorts of different media and understand what goes into it. The fact that Christian media has a different set of rules is infuriating.
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Peter Thompson
Peter Thompson@JediPeter·
BECAUSE IT WAS TWO YEARS LATER WHEN THEY RELEASED THE MOVIE ON DVD. So a Christian movie, already facing all the same issues as other Christian media, was pushed further afield on home release. And I guarantee the majority of people who saw that film, so it on DVD. Bad --> Worse
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Peter Thompson
Peter Thompson@JediPeter·
The home release rights were different than the "theatrical" (loose term) rights. They had the movie and chopped in up into different pieces to put in on DVD. It was missing context and dialogue. It felt clunky. Because they couldn't go back and get the actors to do reshoots.
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Peter Thompson
Peter Thompson@JediPeter·
Ya know what, I'm not done. Another business facet to this is how parted out movies are. I was an extra in a Christian movie in high school. My "uncle" starred in it. The premier version was different than the DVD release version. Why? I'm so glad you asked.
Marcus Pittman@ImKingGinger

The Truth About Why Christian Movies are So Bad. I’ve spent the last four years building a streaming platform and talking to people at the very top of the faith-based entertainment industry. Studio heads. Distributors. Producers. Investors. And I’ve come to a conclusion that I think is going to make a lot of people uncomfortable. Christian movies are bad on purpose. The talent is out there. I’ve met them. I’ve sat with them at 3am over whiskey and cigars listening to pitches that should have been picked up immediately. So that left a question that any Christian filmmaker could quickly answer. If the talent is there, why is everything so mediocre? It starts with an avatar named Bookstore Betty. I’m not making that up. When the faith-based film industry was being built out, it was done in partnership with Christian bookstore executives. They weren’t asking “how do we make great cinema.” They were asking “who walks into our stores and how do we sell them a movie the same way we sell them a devotional.” The target was a 35 year old woman. The tone, the casting, the conflict resolution, the soft lighting, all of it was reverse-engineered to appeal to Betty. Not to a general audience. Not to men. Not to teenagers. Just Betty. Every major Christian film you can think of relies on distribution deals with secular studios. The same studios that blacklisted almost everyone who worked on The Passion of the Christ and refused to distribute Kirk Cameron's Pro Life movie. Think about that. Passion made over $600 million on a $30 million budget. The most obvious play would have been to duplicate that movie hundreds of times like it was the MCU. But instead of greenlighting more, Hollywood blacklisted the people involved. So what did they do instead? They set up a system where they get to be the gatekeepers. They only greenlight the safest, most formulaic, most non-threatening stuff possible. Because if Christian films ever started consistently competing with mainstream entertainment, those studios would have a real problem. So they make sure that never happens. And the church helps them do it. Christian movies don’t need word of mouth. They don’t need to be good. They need pastors to bulk-buy tickets. You make a movie with a “message,” market it to churches, and pastors subsidize the whole thing by buying hundreds of tickets to hand out on Sunday. You don’t have to compete in a fair market when your distribution model is guilt-driven generosity. And the funding is even more rigged. Most of these films are funded through Donor Advised Funds, which means donors get a tax write-off for their “investment” regardless of whether the movie makes a dollar. There’s no market pressure to make something good. The donors got their deduction. The studio got their budget. And Betty got another movie about a woman who finds a journal in the attic. What would happen if someone actually came along and made faith-based content that created pop culture instead of reacting to it? I think it would instantly expose how low-effort the current industry is. It would be like when Uber showed up and embarrassed the taxi industry overnight. The monopoly only survives because nobody has disrupted it yet. The talent is there. The audience is there. The only thing missing is capital that wants disruption instead of a tax write-off.

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Peter Thompson
Peter Thompson@JediPeter·
There are plenty of excellent writers in the Christian film space. Its not the writing. Its not the production. Its not the acting. Its the business they all fit into. You wanna get EXCELLENT Christian media out there? You gotta disrupt the business side of things.
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Peter Thompson
Peter Thompson@JediPeter·
I have a million things I could say in response to this. The simple fact is, IT IS TRUE. Its why every Christian Romance novel looks like the characters are Amish/Mennonite. No shade to those groups, but they've got a look, and its on every romance cover in Mardel.
Marcus Pittman@ImKingGinger

The Truth About Why Christian Movies are So Bad. I’ve spent the last four years building a streaming platform and talking to people at the very top of the faith-based entertainment industry. Studio heads. Distributors. Producers. Investors. And I’ve come to a conclusion that I think is going to make a lot of people uncomfortable. Christian movies are bad on purpose. The talent is out there. I’ve met them. I’ve sat with them at 3am over whiskey and cigars listening to pitches that should have been picked up immediately. So that left a question that any Christian filmmaker could quickly answer. If the talent is there, why is everything so mediocre? It starts with an avatar named Bookstore Betty. I’m not making that up. When the faith-based film industry was being built out, it was done in partnership with Christian bookstore executives. They weren’t asking “how do we make great cinema.” They were asking “who walks into our stores and how do we sell them a movie the same way we sell them a devotional.” The target was a 35 year old woman. The tone, the casting, the conflict resolution, the soft lighting, all of it was reverse-engineered to appeal to Betty. Not to a general audience. Not to men. Not to teenagers. Just Betty. Every major Christian film you can think of relies on distribution deals with secular studios. The same studios that blacklisted almost everyone who worked on The Passion of the Christ and refused to distribute Kirk Cameron's Pro Life movie. Think about that. Passion made over $600 million on a $30 million budget. The most obvious play would have been to duplicate that movie hundreds of times like it was the MCU. But instead of greenlighting more, Hollywood blacklisted the people involved. So what did they do instead? They set up a system where they get to be the gatekeepers. They only greenlight the safest, most formulaic, most non-threatening stuff possible. Because if Christian films ever started consistently competing with mainstream entertainment, those studios would have a real problem. So they make sure that never happens. And the church helps them do it. Christian movies don’t need word of mouth. They don’t need to be good. They need pastors to bulk-buy tickets. You make a movie with a “message,” market it to churches, and pastors subsidize the whole thing by buying hundreds of tickets to hand out on Sunday. You don’t have to compete in a fair market when your distribution model is guilt-driven generosity. And the funding is even more rigged. Most of these films are funded through Donor Advised Funds, which means donors get a tax write-off for their “investment” regardless of whether the movie makes a dollar. There’s no market pressure to make something good. The donors got their deduction. The studio got their budget. And Betty got another movie about a woman who finds a journal in the attic. What would happen if someone actually came along and made faith-based content that created pop culture instead of reacting to it? I think it would instantly expose how low-effort the current industry is. It would be like when Uber showed up and embarrassed the taxi industry overnight. The monopoly only survives because nobody has disrupted it yet. The talent is there. The audience is there. The only thing missing is capital that wants disruption instead of a tax write-off.

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Peter Thompson
Peter Thompson@JediPeter·
That's the story of how I ended up with about half of Jude Watson's Jedi Apprentice series. I am on the lookout for the second half because it never occurred to me as a child that those books wouldn't always be in Barnes & Noble for purchase.
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Peter Thompson
Peter Thompson@JediPeter·
This quickly spiraled and they had to add the stipulation that the money I "earned" be spent on books, but by that point, I had fallen in love with reading to the point where I didn't care, I just wanted more books, particularly ones my local library didn't have.
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Peter Thompson
Peter Thompson@JediPeter·
One of the most effective ways my parents stoked my love for reading as a kid was one summer they set a reading goal for me. Something like 7500 pages to be completed between certain dates. Anything I read beyond that, I got a a penny a page.
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Peter Thompson
Peter Thompson@JediPeter·
@ImBlake Reminds me of how 75th and Mission for about a decade got torn up the week before school started so all the high schoolers had to reroute to get to class. And this was before they put the additions onto SME.
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Blake Miller
Blake Miller@ImBlake·
Welcome to Kansas City, where we rip up the same road every year for the love of the game.
Blake Miller tweet media
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Peter Thompson
Peter Thompson@JediPeter·
@robertoblake EXACTLY. Shorts was late to the game, comparatively, for short form content, as a result of the pandemic era. Without the pandemic era, TikTok’s rise wouldn’t have been as meteoric, Reels wouldn’t have been ripped off as quickly and Shorts wouldn’t have come out at that time.
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Roberto Blake 🇺🇸🇵🇦 Creative Entrepreneur
People blame Shorts for what they think happened to Long Form YouTube Views... but the real culprit is the PANDEMIC ERA. YouTube Shorts was an option that coincided with that, but the Pandemic was the shift to TV viewing for long form becoming more normalized. It also ushered in the rise of Streaming.
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Peter Thompson
Peter Thompson@JediPeter·
@FantasyGalaxies Haters gonna hate. As someone who was there for it but didn't get into forums about it, everyone I spoke to in person about it agreed it was PEAK.
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The Dark Side
The Dark Side@FantasyGalaxies·
I genuinely can't understand how the previous generation saw this in 2005 and said "this sucks"
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Roberto Blake 🇺🇸🇵🇦 Creative Entrepreneur
I pull everything into a personalized internal Business intelligence tool I built behind just my brain. 🧠 But mostly I’m using these to produce tangible artifacts in many cases so I have the work produced. The outlines or scripts from Claude go into Google Docs and Apple Notes. And that’s until my YouTube Script Writing tool is done. Manus + Claude are building my tools and apps so I don’t have to guess. The Research Gemini does goes into Notebook LM to tutor and train me and I export those MP3 files and even built myself a private podcast for them I can listen to. Grok being my intellectual sparring partner doesn’t need to produce and artifact beyond it clearing my head.
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Roberto Blake 🇺🇸🇵🇦 Creative Entrepreneur
My AI Council and Legion of Doom: Gemini - my research assistant Grok - my intellectual sparring partner ChatGPT - my mental models architect Claude - my cowriter, copy editor, and dev team Manus - my builder and and systems administrator Notebook LM - my personal tutor Otter AI - my note taker, stenographer, and translator They are all fighting to be employee of the month.
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Sam Sheffer
Sam Sheffer@samsheffer·
okay let's see who can reply to this
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Peter Thompson
Peter Thompson@JediPeter·
@JoshPhillipsPhD This was always my confusion as an English major who wanted to be a writer. “I want to write, not read” is idiotic. You gotta read your own writing? How did you discover a love of writing if not through reading first?? I just don’t get the disconnect.
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Joshua D Phillips
Joshua D Phillips@JoshPhillipsPhD·
“Oh. You want to be an English major?!” “Yes.” “Great! Here’s some books to read.” “No.” 🙄
Joshua D Phillips tweet media
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Peter Thompson
Peter Thompson@JediPeter·
This is absolutely something that should be kept in mind. Even if a brand is THOUGHT to be using AI, no matter how good it gets, the next gen of buyers will likely abstain. Authentic, real ‘work product’ (🥴) will differentiate you from the the market, regardless of your genre
Bearly AI@bearlyai

78% Gen-Z can spot AI-generated images and it hurts conversion (one marketer saw click-through-rates fall 40% when it tried AI-generated lifestyle images)

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Peter Thompson
Peter Thompson@JediPeter·
A mentor of mine at one point said he loved reading because “I can be wrong about something, read a book on it, change my mind and be right, and nobody ever has to know I was ever wrong!” He said it somewhat facetiously, but it brings up a very interesting point.
Yousr@rsuyoy

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