The Impact of Digitalization on Global Screen Industries NECS Pre-Conference, 2017 Sponsored by the NECS Screen Industries Work Group Organizers: Nolwenn Mingant, Petr Szczepanik, Paul McDonald Université Paris 7, Salle Pierre Albouy, Grands moulins, C building, 6th floor 13.30 -17.30hrs Wednesday 28 June 2017
13.30: Introduction 13.45-15.30: Panel I: Digital Distribution and Screen Media Industries, Change or Continuity? 15.30-16.00: Coffee break 16.00-17.30: Panel II: Digital Single Market, the Impact of the European Commission’ s Strategy on Business Models and Practices. *** Introduction: Nolwenn Mingant PANEL 1: DIGITAL DISTRIBUTION AND SCREEN MEDIA INDUSTRIES: CHANGE OR CONTINUITY? Chair: Paul McDonald (King's College London) Studio System 2.0: The Digital Major in the Age of Netflix Jaap Verheul (New York University, US) During the Golden Age of Hollywood (1920-1960), a handful of major studios regulated what was then known as ‘the studio system,’ in which these ‘majors’ effectively controlled all stages of the production, distribution, and exhibition process. The majors produced their own content, mostly by hiring creative personnel under long-term contracts, while the vertically integrated studio system allowed them to distribute and exhibit these films in their own theatre chains. If the Paramount Case dissolved the studio system in 1948, eliminating the majors’ monopoly on film exhibition, this presentation will examine the rise of the ‘digital major’ as exemplified by such online streaming services as Netflix and Amazon. Initially established for the distribution of film and television – and for their domesticated exhibition – these digital majors have begun to consolidate their growing monopoly on distribution and exhibition with a more active involvement in the production of content for the screen. This presentation thus argues that the digital majors contribute to the re-emergence of a studio system in a converged media landscape. References Crawford, S. (2013) Captive Audience: The Telecom Industry and Monopoly Power in the New Gilded Age. New Haven: Yale University Press.