Wednesday, April 21, 2010

Having An Idea Ripped Off... ever happen to you?

I was thinking about all this, this morning and I was just wondering what you guys thought and wanted to know if there's any horror stories out there...

So, I've been reading "The Writer Got Screwed (but didn't have to)" by Brooke A. Wharton... I just started it, really. The first chapter is called "Why Do My Ideas Always End Up In Someone Elses Script?" - it's all about copyright and protecting yourself. After reading it, it's pretty amazing when you realize the myths that persist around copyright, such as registering your idea with the WGA is an effective copyright (it's not), mailing your script to yourself can prove ownership through the postage dates (it doesn't) or that you can sue someone if they steal your idea (you can't). Truth is, there is absolutely nothing stopping anyone from stealing your idea. This is why you always see movies with similar premises, this is why The Asylum is allowed to make films like "Snakes on a Train", "Pirates of Treasure Island" and "AVH: Alien vs Hunter". You can copyright an original piece of work, but an idea? A premise? A thought? No. There are ways to protect yourself, but an idea is just an idea. Now, having said that...

I was listening to a podcast from The Advertising Show this morning, where they were interviewing a guy named Scott Belsky. He authored a book called "Making Ideas Happen" and founded a company called Behance, which develops products and services for the creative industries. He was talking about how a lot, if not most, of the creative ideas in the world either just die or fizzle out because they're never executed properly. The reason being is that most creative types don't thrive in corporate environments and they hate to actually share their ideas. He says that we need to share, we need to discuss and we need to write these things down and create action steps around them. We need to create an infrastructure that nurtures and develops creativity, not hinders it. So, talk about your ideas, put them out there and find people who want to discuss them. The more you do that, the better your ideas become and the better chance there is that they'll actually be executed.

So, it would seem that these two things are a bit contradictory, right? Well, yeah... one is the left brained, legal thing and the other is the right brained, creative thing. So, what to do? Here's the thing... I've talked with SO many people who won't disclose their ideas and they hold them tight. "This idea is so great, I just can't tell anyone about it". I can't think of the last time that any one of those people actually made anything... The truth is, most people won't steal your idea. The studios only steal successful ideas and if your idea is successful, you're already sipping mai-tai's on the beach, so don't worry about it. However, let's go worst case scenario, you're pitching an idea and you get turned down, only to see your idea on the screen a few years later and the guy you pitched to is involved. Well, there are ways to prevent that from happening (you'll have to read "The Writer Got Screwed"), but it does happen. But, is that a reason to continue to hold your ideas tight? I mean, if you just hold on to all your ideas, they may never get out. If you look at risk vs reward... Personally, I would risk having an idea stolen for the potential reward of furthering my career and having one of my concepts come to fruition. Maybe I haven't been screwed over enough, maybe I think that most people are honest and trustworthy, I don't know. At the end of the day, I'm going to keep throwing my ideas out there in the hopes that one of them catches. If it gets stolen in the meantime, at least I tried.

What do you think? Are there any horror stories out there? Just interested to hear what other think about this...

4 comments:

Bill said...

As you stated an idea is only an idea...and it's fairly unlikely that you're the only person in the history of the world to have any particular one. It is the way we color and deliver our ideas that is truly unique. That's why the idea for a story is not open to copyright, but the story itself is. If you have a brilliant idea, write the story or get someone you trust to work with you to get it on paper.

Share the idea with everybody, while it's still just an idea. You may well discover that your master plan is not received well...easier to take before you write 110 or 120 pages. You may also get spins on the idea that you never imagined.

To me, the "I can share my idea" concept is right up there with the "I have a great script...now if somebody from Hollywood would just drop down from Heaven w/ a billion dollars and a couple Oscar winning actors it could be a movie" excuse...

Go make your freakin' movie!!!

Bill said...

...Oops, should read:

"I can't share my idea"

Jason Heath said...

Ah, shoot! and I was totally going to write an article about this topic, too...

Zadora said...

a few years back when there was this reality show for filmmakers, can't remember the name right now, but it was a Spielberg production I believe.

They received several thousands of entry shorts for the selection of who was going to be on the show. Anyway, there was this one kid (late teens) who entered a short, he even sat there with a smile on his face in his video bio and told the world how he had written the script and blah blah. Well, that script was not only a friend of mine's, but also produced for the same contest with permission by another filmmaker. That kid's film was exactly like the other film, word for word! Needless to say all of us friends of the writer e-mailed Fox and the next day the "stolen" film was taken down from the website and the "kid" was tarred and feathered!