下载wenxue 网站建设|网站推广统计母婴用品 babyflash儿歌视频会议英语翻译 浙江视频人才网daoshop92898newsmusic
BusinessWeek magazine: The most-read source of global business news
SEARCH SITE

Advanced Search
Top News BW Magazine Investing Asia Europe Technology Autos Innovation Small Business B-Schools Careers BusinessWeek Channels : BW Magazine, Daily Briefing, Investing, Asia, Europe, Technology, Autos, Innovation, Small Business, B-Schools and Careers
 
 

Get Four
Free Issues

Register
Subscribe to BW
Customer Service


Full Table of Contents
Cover Story
Special Report
Up Front
Readers Report
Corrections & Clarifications
Voices of Innovation
Technology & You
Media Centric
The Barker Portfolio
Business Outlook



News: Analysis & Commentary
In Biz This Week
Asian Business
European Business
Global Outlook
Retailing
Entertainment
The Corporation
People
Legal Affairs
Information Technology
Finance
Science & Technology
Developments to Watch
Government
Marketing
Inside Wall Street
Figures of the Week
Ideas -- Books
Ideas -- Viewpoint
Ideas -- Editorials


INTERNATIONAL EDITIONS
International -- Readers Report
International -- Corrections & Clarifications
International -- Finance
International -- Global Figures of the Week




NOVEMBER 7, 2005
PEOPLE

Lights, Action, And Bleeding Hearts
EBay billionaire Jeff Skoll is backing a flurry of movies with political messages

Coming soon to a theater near you: Jeffrey Skoll. Or, more accurately, a star-studded film with backing from the billionaire who developed eBay Inc.'s (EBAY ) business plan and was its first full-time employee. Skoll's company, Participant Productions, is off to a rousing start in its quest to promote social awareness on the big screen. Three of the highest-profile movies this fall have funding from the former eBay president: Good Night, and Good Luck, about Edward R. Murrow's battle with Senator Joseph McCarthy; North Country, starring Charlize Theron as a miner confronting sexual harassment (both films in theaters now); and Syriana, an oil espionage thriller starring George Clooney and Matt Damon due out Nov. 23.


Hollywood has a history of drawing in newly made millionaires anxious to buy access to the right parties with vanity projects. Some in the industry question if Skoll, worth some $3.5 billion, is any different. "I see guys come here and lose their fortunes all the time," says Brian Robinson, senior vice-president of worldwide marketing for Morgan Creek Productions.

But Skoll, who launched his firm with $100 million in early 2004, is not your usual rich dilettante (though the Financial Times did name him one of eight most eligible billionaire bachelors). The Montreal native moved from Silicon Valley to Beverly Hills last year to spend time questioning Hollywood players about why they don't make more movies with political messages. "The system's set up for safe bets: sequels, superheros, romantic comedies," he says. "All the people I met had a particular interest in doing something more meaningful. I thought if I could start a company that takes the risk out of doing these films, they'll get done."

One thing that sets Skoll's efforts apart is that each film has a social issues campaign. Just as he built an online community for eBay, he's trying to build one around his movies. The firm partners with nonprofits to launch Web awareness campaigns that it hopes will nurture a network on its Web site, participate.net. Users can start blogs -- even submit audio and video reports that may be picked up by "partners" such as PBS and XM Satellite Radio. Bloggers include people who inspired films, such as journalist Shirley Wershba, who was played by Patricia Clarkson in Good Night, and Good Luck.

BLOCKBUSTER, REDEFINED 
That's a smart way to build networks, and it's smart business. The National Organization for Women and the Family Violence Prevention Fund plug North Country front and center on their Web sites, urging members to support the film and promoting sneak previews at 20 college campuses across the country.

Skoll wants his venture to make money, but says that's so he can plow it into more films: "For me, it's philanthropy. I don't expect to see any money come back to me personally." He measures social returns as well, so in theory, money-losing films can be successful. Skoll plans to look at things such as how much a film raises for nonprofit partners and how active social networks on the Web sites become.

This is not Skoll's first foray into "strategic philanthropy." He has given $567 million to support social entrepreneurs. He started a program at Oxford's Saïd Business School to train nonprofit leaders and funded a PBS miniseries about people making a difference in their communities. Next up on the big screen: director Richard Linklater's film of the book Fast Food Nation, a critical take on the fast-food industry. Skoll hopes it will beat out, say, Superman Returns.
 READER COMMENTS





By Jessi Hempel in New York

 BW MALL  SPONSORED LINKS
Buy a link now!

Get BusinessWeek directly on your desktop with our RSS feeds.XML

Add BusinessWeek news to your Web site with our headline feed.

Click to buy an e-print or reprint of a BusinessWeek or BusinessWeek Online story or video.

To subscribe online to BusinessWeek magazine, please click here.

Learn more, go to the BusinessWeekOnline home page

Back to Top



TODAY'S MOST POPULAR STORIES

  1. China's First Global Capitalist
  2. Am I in Heaven, or Am I in My Hotel?
  3. The 25 Best Affordable Suburbs in the U.S.
  4. How to Ease Workers' Worries
  5. Smashing The Clock

Get Free RSS Feed >>
  MARKET INFO
DJIA 12262.78 +68.60
S&P 500 1406.10 +9.39
Nasdaq 2447.14 +33.93



Media Kit | Special Sections | MarketPlace | Knowledge Centers
McGraw-Hill Cos.


下载wenxue 网站建设|网站推广统计母婴用品 babyflash儿歌视频会议英语翻译 浙江视频人才网daoshop92898newsmusic