Charli
cool little "title"
How "Classified Intelligence" became part of American Radio Broadcast history
"Classified Intelligence" was exhibition only for Scarefest, however Elton and I accomplished something that has now put us on the map of being a part of one of the most famous radios plays (if not the most famous) of American history.
Here's how it went down. As Elton and I brainstormed an idea for the fest, we wanted to steer away from the blood/gore/slash that often occurs with these types of October fests. We then decided to go with a period piece which then lead me to state to Elton,
"Hey, why not use some of the broadcast from the famous radio play War of the Worlds by Orson Wells?" To which I don't think I understood the magnitude of what I just said. Elton told me to go for it.
So how does someone get the rights to use such famous copyright material?
I looked up who wrote the teleplay, who had the rights. I thought it was going to be a long research problem, but it took a matter of minutes actually. I had the lawyer's name, phone number and email address that represents the widow of the play writer.
I tightened the script, sent it as an attachment, then emailed the guy with the polite but "we're a couple of poor filmmakers who are doing everything for free, blah, blah, blah." I didn't lay it on too thick, but I certainly didn't want them to think we had money.
A few days later I got this in my email box:
Charli:
My clients have said you can have a gratis license to use the indicated excerpts from WAR OF THE WORLDS by Howard Koch on the soundtrack of your 9-page, 6-minute film CLASSIFIED.
Norman Rudman
We got permission to use this for FREE! Elton and I were on the phone literally jumping up and down screaming. We do have permission to ask for other festivals, so that door is still open to us.
Had I not asked, we would have gotten nothing. The lesson here is no matter how big or famous a piece of copyright material is, ask the right person, state your case, be polite, and next thing you know have permission to use something that seemed ridiculously impossible to attain.
You never know what you'll get unless you ask, so don't be afraid of copyright material.
So now, "Classified Intelligence" is a legitimate part of American Radio History. How? a simple phone call and email.
"Classified Intelligence" was exhibition only for Scarefest, however Elton and I accomplished something that has now put us on the map of being a part of one of the most famous radios plays (if not the most famous) of American history.
Here's how it went down. As Elton and I brainstormed an idea for the fest, we wanted to steer away from the blood/gore/slash that often occurs with these types of October fests. We then decided to go with a period piece which then lead me to state to Elton,
"Hey, why not use some of the broadcast from the famous radio play War of the Worlds by Orson Wells?" To which I don't think I understood the magnitude of what I just said. Elton told me to go for it.
So how does someone get the rights to use such famous copyright material?
I looked up who wrote the teleplay, who had the rights. I thought it was going to be a long research problem, but it took a matter of minutes actually. I had the lawyer's name, phone number and email address that represents the widow of the play writer.
I tightened the script, sent it as an attachment, then emailed the guy with the polite but "we're a couple of poor filmmakers who are doing everything for free, blah, blah, blah." I didn't lay it on too thick, but I certainly didn't want them to think we had money.
A few days later I got this in my email box:
Charli:
My clients have said you can have a gratis license to use the indicated excerpts from WAR OF THE WORLDS by Howard Koch on the soundtrack of your 9-page, 6-minute film CLASSIFIED.
Norman Rudman
We got permission to use this for FREE! Elton and I were on the phone literally jumping up and down screaming. We do have permission to ask for other festivals, so that door is still open to us.
Had I not asked, we would have gotten nothing. The lesson here is no matter how big or famous a piece of copyright material is, ask the right person, state your case, be polite, and next thing you know have permission to use something that seemed ridiculously impossible to attain.
You never know what you'll get unless you ask, so don't be afraid of copyright material.
So now, "Classified Intelligence" is a legitimate part of American Radio History. How? a simple phone call and email.