首页
登录
职称英语
Creative CapitalismA)The main building on Disney’s
Creative CapitalismA)The main building on Disney’s
游客
2023-07-02
30
管理
问题
Creative Capitalism
A)The main building on Disney’s studio lot has seven huge replicas(复制品)of Snow White’s dwarfs holding up its roof, a reminder of how Hollywood does not take itself too seriously. Nor do many outsiders. Film is an eccentric business, filled with egos and excess. For most of their history, studios have had neither the stunning returns of startups nor the steady profits of mature firms. They are famed for blowing vast sums on high-profile turkeys. "Heaven’s Gate" , an extravagant flop in 1980, crushed United Artists, the studio Charlie Chaplin and other stars founded in 1919.
B)Few business-school professors would ever think to walk the red carpet and use Hollywood as a case study. However, it is time they tuned in to Tinseltown. One reason is that other industries are coming to resemble the film business in some ways. In today’s knowledge-based economy, bosses are having to spend more time managing flighty " stars". Food and consumer-goods makers are, as the studios have already done, seeking to focus more on a narrower range of "blockbusters": and in industries from electronics to carmaking, the pace of product and brand launches is increasing, so Hollywood’s ability to create a buzz rapidly about a new film may offer valuable lessons.
C)Furthermore, movie-making is an American success story. It is one of the few remaining industries in which the country’s grip on the global market is as strong as it has ever been. China’s Chollywood and India’s Bollywood do not make films that people in other countries line up to see. America’s film and television industry reckons its exports are worth around $ 16 billion a year.
D)Every company that employs creative people must think about how to harness their strengths for commercial gain without strangling their free-spiritedness. Hollywood has a century’s experience in this. Studios recruit a fresh creative team for each film, leaving its members to work intensely together with a minimum of interference, stepping in only when things are clearly going wrong. This gives team members a feeling of control and pride in their project: and to cap it all, everyone has their contribution duly acknowledged in the closing credits.
E)Such teamwork is rare in other businesses, argues Mark Young of the University of Southern California’s Marshall School of Business. People work hard and collaborate well in the movie business in part because they have little job stability. Many are freelancers, who will not get hired for the next film unless they prove themselves on the current one. The tough lesson from Hollywood, then, is that job insecurity can lead to greater productivity, as long as workers believe in what they are doing and have their achievements recognised.
F)Hollywood is a land of retakes. Everyone understands that constant revisions improve the product. In a recent book, "Creativity, Inc. " , Ed Catmull, the founder of Pixar and president of Disney Animation, argues that every film starts out as an "ugly baby" , growing through countless changes into a graceful adult. "Up" , Pixar’s hit film from 2009 about a widower who travels around the world with the help of balloons, began with a completely different premise. It was reworked drastically on the advice of the " Braintrust" , an internal group set up to give frank feedback. Mobile-app firms can also be adept at adjusting products in response to internal and external feedback, and makers of consumer goods are learning to tweak their products and packaging in response to reviews. But in many businesses, bosses still tend to spurn constructive criticism.
G)Like Hollywood, California’s other world-beating industrial cluster, Silicon Valley, has overcome the fear of failure. Films are like tech startups in that flops are tolerated because they are so common, even when the initial idea seemed promising. In both cases, the value of failure as a learning experience is well understood. So in this part of American life, there are second, and third, acts. Studio heads sometimes roll when a film flops, but executives, directors and other talent can find redemption.
H)Perhaps Hollywood’s most remarkable skill is in launching brands that achieve global prominence in a matter of days. Each film is a separate product that needs its own marketing, and the stakes are incredibly high: if it has not gained sufficient momentum by its opening weekend, it may sink without trace. Studios spend vast sums on promotional campaigns, often as much as they spend on producing the film itself. Businesses that are sceptical about the value of marketing, and about the possibilities for creating consumer awareness rapidly, should look closely at how Hollywood manages to come up with new brands on a near-weekly basis. The key is to treat the marketing as a core part of the project, rather than as an afterthought.
I)Sunrise Boulevard
For all the film industry’s reputation as a licence to lose money, the media conglomerates that own the big studios nowadays run them more professionally, and keep a closer eye on profitability. Three of the six Hollywood "majors" are now managed by business-school graduates. Film companies no longer have extravagant(奢侈的)numbers of projects in development, and focus more on action-packed "franchise" films featuring comic-book characters, which sell well abroad and lend themselves to sequels. Learning from Silicon Valley, Hollywood is relying more on outside financing, which means sharing the profits from hits but also protects against crippling losses when a film flops.
J)No one likes to talk about age in Hollywood, but it has enjoyed remarkable longevity. The studios have survived the threats from new technologies like television and the Internet, and "pivoted" repeatedly to adjust their output to audiences’ shifting tastes. Few businesses have refreshed their product line-ups so often. And few have restructured so thoroughly: studios have evolved from being vertically integrated groups that owned cinemas and kept actors on the payroll to become asset-light, flexible renters of talent. In the 102 years since the founding of Universal Pictures, the oldest of the majors, Hollywood may have provided plenty of " how not to" examples for business—-but it has plenty of positive ones too. [br] The film industry is just a few of the greatest industries in America which can grasp the global market.
选项
答案
C
解析
定位句提到“电影业是美国仅余的几个有史以来最能牢牢掌控全球市场的产业之一。”题干中的grasp是对论述中的grip的同义转述。因此选项C)正确。
转载请注明原文地址:https://tihaiku.com/zcyy/2800768.html
相关试题推荐
Thesedays,manylargecitybuildingsareequippedwiththeirownair-condit
Thesedays,manylargecitybuildingsareequippedwiththeirownair-condit
Thesedays,manylargecitybuildingsareequippedwiththeirownair-condit
Thesedays,manylargecitybuildingsareequippedwiththeirownair-condit
[originaltext]TwohoursfromthetallbuildingsofManhattanandPhiladelph
[originaltext]TwohoursfromthetallbuildingsofManhattanandPhiladelph
CreativeBookReportIdeasA)Areyouatalossforcreative
CreativeBookReportIdeasA)Areyouatalossforcreative
CreativeBookReportIdeasA)Areyouatalossforcreative
CreativeBookReportIdeasA)Areyouatalossforcreative
随机试题
Thepriceofbeer______(从50美分到4美元不等)perliterduringthesummerseason.range
有人认为:“保证合同有效成立后,一旦履行期限届满债务人不履行债务,保证人即无条件
多利亚调式和弗里几亚调式是()民间音乐旋律构成的基础。A.墨西哥 B.菲律宾
松散岩石的给水度与容水度越接近,说明()。A.岩石颗粒越细 B.岩石颗粒不
甲公司生产急需5000个零件,承包给乙工厂进行加工,每个零件的加工费预算为20元
增强肌力训练时应遵循以下原则,但应除外A.阻力原则 B.过度负荷原则 C.多
历史文化名城、名镇、名村保护的根本目的是( )。A.传承文明 B.加强城镇分
某地公安机关在侦查一起贩毒犯罪案件的过程中,侦查人员通过对初步查明的涉案人员,地
我国传统道德中的“诚”的含义包括() A.自然万物的客观实在性B.对
镀锌钢板及含有各类复合保护层的钢板,不得采用( )连接。A.咬口连接 B.螺钉
最新回复
(
0
)