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Post a Comment On: Mayerson on Animation

"Brad Bird and Management"

11 Comments -

1 – 11 of 11
Anonymous Anonymous said...

Great read Mark.


For those that don't want to register:

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(thanks bugmenot.com)

April 16, 2008 7:33 PM

Blogger Mitchel Kennedy said...

Thanks Mark! That's really great stuff!

April 16, 2008 8:07 PM

Blogger rdms said...

That is a great article! Another example of why Brad is such a great director. Thanks Mark and Jim.

April 16, 2008 8:35 PM

Blogger Larry Levine said...

Great article!!!

Along with his artistic talent, Brad knows how to turn teamwork into Oscar gold!

April 17, 2008 11:32 AM

Blogger Chris Palmer said...

thanks for pointing this out. really is gold.

April 17, 2008 2:11 PM

Blogger Floyd Norman said...

Brad Bird nailed it.

In my fifty years in the animation business, one thing has become clear. Companies fail from the top down.

All too often, the crew takes the blame for a failure. Of course, we know who the bozos are.

April 17, 2008 4:55 PM

Blogger Nancy said...

Brad simply revived the Disney 'sweatbox' system, where you saw dailies and had them criticized as a group by Walt Disney.
You know why he did this? Because it works. Animators, and any team workers, learn from each other. The criticism is constructive, aimed at improving the movie, not destroying the artist. I believe that poor managers think that artists will ask for more money if they are praised...and so they make the artists' jobs as unpleasant as possible to keep them scared and afraid for their jobs. Exactly the opposite is true, in practice.
Talk is cheap. Occasional praise is gold. Morale improves when the artist feels they are being treated fairly and receive praise for a job well done. This also improves the film.
What is it about this simple cocept that makes it so difficult for some managers to understand?

April 19, 2008 6:46 AM

Anonymous Anonymous said...

I worked at two different studios during the past three decades that took the 'keep 'em terrified they'll lose their jobs' tack, never offering words of competent, positive reinforcement. Both shops died ugly business deaths.

April 21, 2008 1:26 PM

Anonymous Anonymous said...

Thanks! That was a very inspiring passage. There really is no better way to operate in a production environment. You need to have a constant flow of creative ideas.

April 23, 2008 3:12 PM

Blogger Diego said...

awesome. thanks for the article. and thanks for the registration deets.

April 25, 2008 5:35 AM

Anonymous Anonymous said...

That was extremely generous of you, Rick May! Thank you so much, and thank you for initiating, Mark!

November 05, 2008 10:48 PM

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