Sabitlenmiş Tweet
J.Kiel
20.9K posts

J.Kiel
@Pattypockets1
Texan Gig'em Sea Aggies Go Bears #GigEm
Clifton, Tx Katılım Ekim 2022
478 Takip Edilen102 Takipçiler
J.Kiel retweetledi

@TheRoyalSerf Dye your hair pink or blue and shave the mustache off.
Then come back and see the weirdos not have it anymore
English
J.Kiel retweetledi
J.Kiel retweetledi
J.Kiel retweetledi
J.Kiel retweetledi
J.Kiel retweetledi

Oh damn core memory unlock
Had Taz
Nostálgico en los 90@90Nostalgico
Las tazas de Looney Tunes!
English

@AnishA_Moonka Mel Brooks wrote a whole movie just to make a joke about merchandise
English

George Lucas traded $350,000 in directing salary for something Fox executives thought was worthless: the right to sell Star Wars toys.
It was 1976. Over 40 studios had already passed on his script, including Disney. Fox only greenlit the project because they wanted Lucas for other films. Nobody at the studio expected to make money on a space opera with no stars, so when Lucas offered to cut his directing fee from $500,000 to $150,000 in exchange for merchandising and sequel rights, Fox said yes on the spot. Movie merchandise was a dead business. Fox had lost money on Doctor Dolittle lunchboxes a decade earlier. They thought they were getting the better deal.
Lucas couldn’t even find a toy company that wanted in. Kenner, a division of cereal company General Foods, finally bought the licensing for a flat $100,000. Then Star Wars opened. Between 1977 and 1978, Kenner sold $100 million worth of toys off that $100,000 investment. They couldn’t make enough for Christmas ’77, so they sold empty boxes with IOUs inside, promising to mail the action figures later. Parents paid real money for cardboard and a promise.
Nobody around the production saw any of this coming. Alec Guinness, who played Obi-Wan, privately called the script “fairy-tale rubbish.” But he was shrewd enough to negotiate 2.25% of royalties instead of a flat fee. About 20 minutes of total screen time earned his estate somewhere between $50 million and $100 million. Lucas himself was so convinced the film would flop that he offered Spielberg a bet while visiting the Close Encounters set: swap 2.5% of each other’s profits. Spielberg took it. That handshake has paid him around $40 million.
And then the money started compounding. Lucas poured his Star Wars profits into ILM, the effects house he’d built for the film. When its computer graphics division got too expensive to maintain, he sold it to Steve Jobs in 1986 for $10 million. Jobs renamed it Pixar. Disney bought Pixar twenty years later for $7.4 billion. Then in 2012, Disney came back for the rest, buying Lucasfilm itself for $4.05 billion.
Total franchise revenue today sits around $46.7 billion, over $20 billion from merchandise alone. The filmmaker 40 studios passed on is now worth $5.3 billion according to Forbes. Fifty years ago today, cameras rolled on a desert in Tunisia.
The $350,000 pay cut that made it all possible might be the best trade in business history.
DiscussingFilm@DiscussingFilm
50 years ago today, ‘STAR WARS’ began filming.
English

@wereshnefer @ErdwicktheHero Proof is community notes. He just flagged it
English

@ErdwicktheHero
Yeah it was you the whole time.
Just cause I'm named pockets everyone harass me
The Husky@Mr_Husky1
Police in Central Park thought they were hunting down a skilled pickpocket after multiple visitors reported their phones mysteriously disappearing without anyone noticing a thing. But while officers were questioning people in the park, a raccoon suddenly ran up, grabbed a phone, and exposed itself as the real thief. After chasing it through the trees, police found a hidden stash of stolen phones tucked away in a raccoon’s hiding spot. They later announced that anyone missing a phone in Central Park could check with the station to claim it.
English
J.Kiel retweetledi

@wvfunnyguy Maybe not spend thousands on a new counter top and cupboards
English













