Subtitles section Play video Print subtitles To be a woman and work as a director feels... Exciting. Ferocious. Crazy sauce. Evolving. A thunderstorm. Tough. Heartbreaking. Demanding. Grueling. Very trying. Climbing the ladder. Discriminatory. Very difficult. Woman are not paranoid, they really are not represented and don't get work because they're women. I feel like I have to work 10 times harder to prove myself. What am I doing wrong? Like, I make films that go to festivals and win awards, but I'm not getting hired. You get less offers, then you get less experience, then you're not hired because of less experience, so there's all these catch 22s. Of the 100 top grossing films, 4% are directed by women, less than 1% by women of color, and that number hasn't budged in decades. Because we just keep repeating, the same stories and the same storytellers. And even though there's been a lot of best intentions to diversify the landscape of storytellers, we haven't been able to do it naturally. We're trying to hire women, we just can't find them. There's a lot of talk, but I don't see a lot of action. There's pockets of support, and I think a lot of female filmmakers are starting to come together. There's so many organizations that are helping, and our hope is that we will all kind of combine in our forces and get all of us working. One such organization, is Free the Bid that has now become Free the Work, by Alma Har'el, who just directed "Honey Boy". She's filling your head full of fear, I'll pump you full of strength. No, no, no, no, no! That's amazing. She's a fantastic champion for women who she feels have underrepresented voices. I moved to Los Angeles and right away started to try and direct music videos. I guess that was my way in. ♪ Let the seasons begin ♪ ♪ Take the big king down ♪ It sort of opened the door to more music videos, but I was trying to break into commercials and I couldn't do it. So I would go to the production company and say, "How come I'm not doing any commercials?", and they would just say, "Well, it's just, "your reel is not strong enough, "and they're not interested in inviting you to pitch.", so I went out to the desert in my car with my dog and a camera that I bought at Best Buy, and I made this film. I was in jail for 100 years. That ended up winning Tribeca and then opening a lot of opportunities for me. And when I started to get those commercial offers, that's when I realized what was happening, that's when I could see that I'm always the only woman that's pitching, and the bigger the campaigns got, the more I could hear from really big brands that I thought were leading the way in advertising, that I'm the first woman they're working with. So I founded Free the Bid in 2016, and the idea was to get ad agencies and brands to take a commitment that in every triple bid that they make, one out of the three directors would be a woman. It should be easy considering we're one out of two people on Earth, so it shouldn't be hard to put one out of three. I've had the opportunity to bid on commercials because of Free the Bid. I'm actually on Free the Bid. The first database, which was built in my kitchen on my laptop, had about 70 directors at the time, and it rippled through the whole industry. We're in 20 countries around the world, we work with over 160 ad agencies, over 122 brands. The increase we've seen in women working at the highest levels of advertising and brand work is directly relatable to Free the Bid and the initiative that Alma and so many that have supported the initiative have taken. Yeah, Mozart had a sister. The crazy part? She was just as talented. It was very important for me to take all the things that I like about using Spotify, and using IMDB, and using Instagram, but for underrepresented filmmakers around the world. It's time to open our eyes. And what Free the Work is, which is kind of our evolution of Free the Bid, is really a global talent discovery that it is operated by machine learning and algorithms and intelligent discovery. Free the Work is a tool and is a way to fight systemic problems that are keeping women out. But we're not just fighting for women, we're also fighting for men of color, and we're fighting for trans-identifying and non-binary people. Our creative and tech team have been a company named Heat Waves. They are an all women team of programmers, marketers. We're doing the work and we're seeing results, obviously both in the advertising world and in TV and film. People going to the theaters thirsty, they're thirsty to see new stories, they're thirsty to see new people and new faces, and it's a beautiful time to witness that, and what we wanna do with Free the Work is really give them the tools to find that talent. I wanna be hired and valued because of the work I do as a director. I don't wanna be hired and valued because I'm their one, you know, female director. If people are, you know, open to women and people of color right now, and that's my foot in the door then I'll take it, because I will be able to then prove myself once I'm in the door. Anyone who's been otherized in the past, we do feel like we're in a moment with real potential. I mean, these are new worlds, new voices, new stories, and audiences are responding. And we haven't had that kind of diversity in storytelling until now. It's kind of an illusion sometimes to think that because popular culture is promoting something, that really the freedom that women deserve, both in the workplace and in their personal lives is already earned and owned. We have to keep fighting. Our work is not done, and none of us are free until all of us are free.
B1 bid hired thirsty director woman underrepresented This Revolutionary Director Wants To Fix Hollywood 2 0 林宜悉 posted on 2020/04/13 More Share Save Report Video vocabulary