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  • Tollana1234567@lemmy.today
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    1 day ago

    people thought pratt came into his own, yea he was poor, but he was also given roles through his wife/agent, thats nepotism as well. now hes a shitty right winger about to be washed out.

    • exasperation@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      1 day ago

      By the time Chris Pratt got married, to an actress that was much more famous than him, he had already been cast in a bunch of roles, including his breakout role in Parks and Rec.

      Yes, networking helps, but applying the nepotism label to all forms of networking (including meeting and marrying a celebrity) dilutes the label to near meaninglessness.

    • Blackmist@feddit.uk
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      1 day ago

      Even people like Tom Holland, his dad (Dominic) is fairly well known in the UK.

      He’s not mega rich or influential, but once you’ve got a few million in the bank and can afford to send them to acting school, and for far away auditions, that’s a massive leg up on everyone else.

      Just look at all the former members of the Footlights club. They’re not nepo babies exactly, and most are talented in their own right, but their parents still had the money to send them to Cambridge.

      I can’t really blame them for it, because almost everyone wants their kid to do well in life. But it does rub your nose in it when anyone says “hard work will get you anywhere”, when 99.9% of hard workers are wage slaves.

    • Dr. Bob@lemmy.ca
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      2 days ago

      There is a known phenomena among the wealthy where they vastly over rate their classes accomplishments relative to others. So rich kid paints a picture and it should be in a gallery. Poor kid wins an art scholarship and it’s due to affirmative action.

      • NigelFrobisher@aussie.zone
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        1 day ago

        True, and they don’t even understand how vital that art scholarship is. There was a recently noted phenomenon where all the big breakout British actors of the last two decades were pretty much all from wealth or from an acting dynasty (T Hidds and Benny C, not Benny W), because for the working and lower-middle class the cost of trying to get into the arts and failing is too damn high - what’re you going to live off for years while you try to get a role? The 80s and 90s seem like a golden age for non-silver-spoon actors by comparison, because of “affirmative action”.

    • Donkter@lemmy.world
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      2 days ago

      For the slightest bit of defence: it makes sense. “Nepo baby” generally refers to some kid who doesn’t have the qualifications for their role but got it through their parents giving them an unfair chance.

      But it makes perfect sense that if you grow up in a house with actors and writers for parents they can both teach you about the business, they’ll be happy to pay for that kind of education, and they’ll be super encouraging because unlike most families, to them becoming an actor or director is a perfectly reasonable goal.

      It’s like a child of doctors growing up to become a doctor. On one hand their parents could have just pulled some strings, on the other hand, having parents excited to teach you organic chemistry and advanced math in middle school probably helps you a lot when it comes to qualifying for med school.

      I don’t think all Hollywood nepo babies are like this. I’m just saying you would expect to see children of great actors become actors themselves.

      Edit: so some of these responses confuse me. I say in the first paragraph that “nepo baby” generally refers to a subset of children who take on their parents job who are given unfair opportunities despite not being the most qualified for it. It might not be the strict definition but it’s my modern understanding of it and it’s the thing that people are actually angry about, including me. Acknowledging this at the top is meant to caveat what I’m saying for the rest of the post that I’m not talking about those people.

      I agree that in a perfect world all people should get as much access as possible to any education and opportunities they want and I hope we get that.

        • Jax@sh.itjust.works
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          2 days ago

          Yes but the modern colloquialism of nepotism applies an undeserving attribute to the subject. At least, this is how I’ve noticed it used.

          Edit: oops neoptism

      • RagingRobot@lemmy.world
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        2 days ago

        But all of that training and extra support is exactly what that term is referring to. They wouldn’t have gotten that support unless they were born into it. The people aren’t as giving with their time to just any kid who wants to study their craft. Maybe some do. We need more of that.

      • ragebutt@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        2 days ago

        While what you say is true to a degree the part you’re leaving out is that the kids who don’t have actor/musician/doctor/etc parents are still perfectly capable of learning these things.

        They’re arguably better to bring into the various fields to challenge entrenched perspectives that get perpetuated by systems of momentum that you describe. In acting it’s what creates what led to metoo, in medicine it’s what creates wildly unfair work expectations and elitism, mainly because the old guard did it that way, and if you question the entrenched power “it’s because that’s the way we do things”. New blood is arguably more likely to push back against this because they aren’t as conditioned to play into the system from birth.

        The other part that you leave out, as a result, is that these nepo kids then get an unfair advantage. Take kid A - a nepobaby like Kate winslets son, and kid B, just some kid who was obsessed with acting and writing. Let’s say your perspective is true and the nepobaby kid is obsessed with acting and writing in a wild environment of access to intense creative minds. But kid b is no slouch either, living and breathing acting and writing, constantly accessing whatever mentors they can, watching content online giving advice on process, and most importantly just constantly writing (or playing, acting, whatever) for years and years and years.

        They’re both immensely talented individuals at this point. But what’s the difference? Kid A has connections capital to make films and eventually to production deals if they are any good. Kid B, at best, can scrape together a few grand to make a student film because they’re not affluent and their circle of peers is also broke. Even if they scrape together something noteworthy they have no connections whatsoever to industry.

        In more extreme examples it’s a mediocre singer getting connected to hitmaker producers and media promotion while there are 10,000 excellent artists on Spotify with under 1,000 streams because they don’t have the capital to professionally record and promote their shit

        Etc

        • Donkter@lemmy.world
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          2 days ago

          I edited the post to further acknowledge that I’m not talking about the advantage of parents being connected in the industry. Which I mention in the first paragraph of my post. It’s a larger problem in the entertainment industry than most because that industry is so cut-throat and competitive and frankly because more than most industries mediocre talent can be mitigated by the dozens of other people working with them to make the product, not to mention the ability of marketing to exalt people who might not deserve it. Rereading your post it seems you were responding exclusively to that which I thought was pretty clearly not the subject of my post.

          I was simply acknowledging the fact that things like passion, obsession, and talent are all things that are heavily influenced by parents. Kid A could be intrinsically worse at music than Kid B (for as much as we know about nature vs nurture) but if Kid A has musician parents who encourage lessons, or even teach the kid themselves from a very young age and Kid B only discovers their passion on their own in high school or later. Kid A will probably always be a better musician due to a form of nepotism.

          While I agree that that’s existentially unfair, and maybe we can create a world where all children are given identical education so that we only get the best of the best in every field, I think it’s a bit wack to say Kid A doesn’t deserve to express their art or even outshine Kid B because they tragically grew up in a music-obsessed family.

      • Ledivin@lemmy.world
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        2 days ago

        It’s like a child of doctors growing up to become a doctor.

        Except these aren’t remotely the same scenarios, because it simply doesn’t happen as often in any other industry. If anything, the 9/10 number is LOW for entertainment.

        • thallamabond@lemmy.world
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          2 days ago

          It’s a terrible comparison.

          Nobody’s going to give the child of a talented surgeon the chance to do surgery on themselves.

          But they might give the child of a talented actor a role in a film, this is a situation of connections not nurture.

          Example: After Earth (2013)

        • Donkter@lemmy.world
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          2 days ago

          My point with that comparison is precisely that. That child of doctors is a result of a type of nepotism and they are much more likely to make it in the medical field than a child who may be intrinsically smarter than them but did not have the advantage of having parents who instilled that passion to become a doctor and educated them for the profession at an early age.

      • plyth@feddit.org
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        1 day ago

        In a world of billionaires, having millions is poor. Most people in the west could sell their stuff and be an upper class business person in a third world country but can barely pay their bills at the end of the month and consider themselves poor.

  • binarytobis@lemmy.world
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    3 days ago

    Not super related but a friend of the family I’m visiting stopped by yesterday and was bragging about her son, who recently prompted an LLM to write a fantasy series “in the style of the Witcher”, did some loose editing, and published the books on amazon. She wrapped up with “He did some research and it isn’t even plagiarism!”

    I tried to look occupied with something else, but she explicitly called out to me “What do you think?” It took everything I had not to lunch into an anti-AI rant starting with “Actually, his pollution of the literary space syphoning money away from real authors is plagiarism, and here’s why!”

    • frunch@lemmy.world
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      2 days ago

      This is a perfect example of why AI will succeed no matter how mind-numbingly stupid it is: it will give people the warm and fuzzies without having to do jack shit. Yes, they “prompted” the LLM. Yes, they “edited” the output, and yes it was published on the biggest fucking commercial website to exist in the history of man. All of those “achievements” pale in comparison to writing an actual book with your own creativity and words and finesse. But since most people can’t expect themselves or their offspring to pull off such a difficult feat, this ‘second-place’ surrogate will do just fine and so we will all pay with what few resources we haven’t already annihilated in order to keep the gears grinding a little longer. 🙏

      • mojofrododojo@lemmy.world
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        2 days ago

        I weep. It was excruciatingly hard already to find someone interested in your work to bring it to market, agents literally drown in awesome books they can’t publish profitably. A perfect example - A Confederacy Of Dunces - couldn’t find an agent/publisher until after the writer’s death, then immediately won a pulitzer. this was the late 60’s-70s iirc.

        Now add the torrent of new writers with an interconnected world wide network.

        Then add the tsunami of AI garbage.

        We’re going to lose masterpieces because of that tsunami, and instead we’ll get AI garbage.

            • ∃∀λ
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              2 days ago

              The web also got bad before AI. The last time you could do a web search and find pages written by enthusiastic experts and hobbyists just sharing what they have to say on the topic of your query was, like, 2005. Then, it flipped. The advent of web ads meant people could easily make money from publishing websites. Sounds great. Except it brought in people whose main goal was making money, not sharing what they love. So then the results of your queries are links to pages covering the topic in the most superficial way and the author is a total nobody if you even know who the author is. There are businesses who figure out what users are searching for and then vomit out websites targeting those popular queries.

              The same happened to YouTube. Like 99% of YouTube at this point has to be video essay channels with clickbait videos on superficial topics way longer than they need to be and released on a very frequent schedule. Early YouTube was one hit wonders. Ain’t no incentive to publish regularly without ad revenue.

              The good was being drown out by the bad before AI. AI is only accelerating it.

              The participants in this are so selfishly rotten. I can’t imagine I’d be able to sleep at night.

      • Corkyskog@sh.itjust.works
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        2 days ago

        This generation of AI won’t “succeed”, I will be surprised if any current companies survive the eventual bubble pop. The LLMs will survive obviously as any other useful tech does.

        With the amount they have been funded, borrowed and valued at they need to replace a mass of workers with “Agentic AI” to make the trillions of return they expect/need in like 4 years from now. LLMs doing this is a pipe dream, more GPUs won’t make an LLM sentient. And every other use case is a losing proposition for these companies.

      • wtf12@lemmy.world
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        2 days ago

        and yes it was published on the biggest fucking commercial website to exist in the history of man.

        that doesn’t mean it will be bought and read, not in the large numbers, so hold your horses there.

        and i have to say i find the story not very trustworthy. i can’t imagine that llm would generate such long text and it would make enough sense that editing it wouldn’t need more work than writing the text from scratch.

          • voracitude@lemmy.world
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            1 day ago

            If it was indeed a take, maybe. What I wrote is known as a “joke”. At least, that’s what I call it when I say or write something that I don’t necessarily think is true, but I do think is funny to write or say.

            As far as the actual act of prompting a “novel” out of an LLM and self publishing on Amazon goes, it’s mostly harmless and I’m not mad. He could be doing much worse things with access to an AI model.

  • BarneyPiccolo@lemmy.today
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    2 days ago

    Well, that’s good to know, since my son has been trying to break into the film industry for a few years, and I don’t have any connections. I’m sure he’d let Kate produce and direct my son’s next script.

  • worhui@lemmy.world
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    3 days ago

    I mean it’s true. She doesn’t like hearing it.

    It’s like the old craft system. A cobblers son was most likely to be a cobbler because they grew up around the skills tools and equipment. If a parent has a high level of skill and resources it’s way easier to teach it to a kid for a kid and for them to succeed.

    I mean I would loved to have a parent in a position to help fund and guide my first business venture like that kids has.

    If I was successful, I would do that for my kids.

    • jack_of_sandwich@lemmy.sdf.org
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      2 days ago

      In her son’s case it’s going beyond that. She didn’t just encourage him to be an actor, use her connections to get him singing and acting lessons and get him in the door for auditions.

      She herself got a movie made for him. You know she didn’t do rounds of interviews and decide at the end that her son was the best fit for the part. She set out to make a movie for him.

    • fodor@lemmy.zip
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      3 days ago

      There’s a difference between skills based on practice and exposure because of your prarents, and then merely fact that your parents are rich and famous. I don’t blame the kid for taking advantage of the opportunity they got, no worries there. At the same time, it’s not a level playing field, so we should not pretend it is.

      • worhui@lemmy.world
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        2 days ago

        I mean likely. I live in a better school district than most and have time to spend to help my kids with homework. I usually attribute all kid success to kid efforts. Don’t foresee myself as an adult going full narcissist and claiming credit,even partial, for the kid success.

        It would be up to them to publicly acknowledge what they had other didn’t. Otherwise it’s kneecapping their achievements.

        • bearboiblake@pawb.social
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          2 days ago

          I can appreciate this perspective and I really respect you are being honest here.

          I guess it can be helpful to remind ourselves and our family members to truly consider the advantages we have over others, and to remember that we could just as easily be in the shoes of any other person on earth.

          If we experienced the same lives and had the same biology as anyone else, we would make the same decisions that they would.

          It helps me to remember this, when someone elses’ behaviour bother me. I think to myself, “what kind of life would I have to have led for me to act that way?”, and give people the benefit of the doubt that people are trying their best.

          • worhui@lemmy.world
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            2 days ago

            Thanks. Realize the kind of answer I gave won’t win me ‘points’ .

            realistically if I could do that for my kids I would. I think lots of wealthy families do, only when the opportunities are media facing does it get backlash.

            There isn’t a social media page devoted to farm families passing down multimillion dollar businesses as a matter of fact.

    • The_v@lemmy.world
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      3 days ago

      My parents and grandparents taught me how to go bankrupt…

      Step 1: Mortgage inherited assets to follow the latest fad.

      Step 2: Make no profit but spend tons money.

      Step 3: Accept government handouts right and left but still lose money.

      Step 4: Go bankrupt and lose everything you inherited.

      Step 5: Blame everyone else for your own stupidity. Extra emphasis on people with darker skin color.

        • The_v@lemmy.world
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          2 days ago

          Hydroponic greenhouses in the late 1970’s for one bankruptcy. Off a deep well on a high mountain valley with water that came out of the ground at 6-8C… Oh and brutally cold winters down to -30C The heating cost alone for the water was prohibitive. They blamed the Mexicans for “tanking the market” for that bankruptcy.

          On the other side, they always chased last year’s market. Sugarbeets were high so they doubled their acres - bank forced sale of 300 on that one. Beef was high so they bought steers ar extremely high prices and then sold them at a loss… bank forced the sale of another 400 acres plus they lost their grazing contract. The last one was lamas. Yep they bought 100 of them… Somehow it was the blacks fault for that one… never did quite figure out how. I currently guess the bank got a new loan manager who happened to have a darker skin color.

    • Robust Mirror@aussie.zone
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      2 days ago

      Reception Critical response On the review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, 67% of 76 critics’ reviews are positive. The website’s consensus reads: “A family affair both on screen and behind the camera, Kate Winslet’s directorial debut stacks the deck for tears a little too lopsidedly, but honest performances help put this drama’s heart firmly in the right place.”[11] Metacritic, which uses a weighted average, assigned the film a score of 55 out of 100, based on 25 critics, indicating “mixed or average” reviews.[12]

      Peter Bradshaw of The Guardian wrote that Goodbye June is “a well-intentioned and starrily cast yuletide heartwarmer, like a two-hour John Lewis Christmas TV ad without the logo”, but criticised its “treacly soup of sentimentality” and “cartoony quasi-Richard Curtis characterisation” that feels unreal.[13]

      • harrys_balzac@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        2 days ago

        Special like Lance Stroll, especially since it’s her directorial debut. More Ben Falcone than Francis Ford Coppola.

        I don’t trust Rotten Tomatoes anymore; they’re a Fandango company, which is owned by NBC Universal and WB/Discovery.

      • FinjaminPoach@lemmy.world
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        2 days ago

        Lol the actual reason is:

        spoiler
        • The way she talked about the Ammonite sex scene. Many articles on that & reddit discussions if you want to get a fuller picture, but the more you think about it the weirder it is. 1. Like why is she presuming that’s something the co-star, Saoirse Ronan, would want/need as a birthday present? 2. It seems infantilising 3. Other reasons…
        • also it weems like something that should be kept private? Isn’t it the other actress’s place to tell people about that? I understand why requesting female only technicians for the scene was important though.
        • There was another thing but I can’t find a source on it so she’s less weird in my eyes now that I’ve finished tne comment
  • Endymion_Mallorn@kbin.melroy.org
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    3 days ago

    At what point do we stop saying ‘nepo baby’ and start calling it a ‘dynasty’? Because let’s talk about a few.

    Francis Ford Coppola is a great director. Sofia Coppola is gorgeous, a midrange actress, and a very good director. Nicholas Cage is a great actor, a great producer, and not half-bad at direction either. Sofia got her start because her father wanted to give her a shot in Godfather Part 3. Nick tried to distance himself (hence the name change).

    George Clooney is a fine actor (I’d argue the worst live-action Batman but the best live-action Bruce Wayne). Would he have gotten his start if it wasn’t for Rosemary Clooney?

    Would Mariska Hargitay have gotten the shot at SVU (one of the most-watched TV shows of the 21st century) if she wasn’t the daughter of Jayne Mansfield?

    How about Sean Astin? Son of Patty Duke, and adopted by John Astin. Could you imagine a better Sam Gamgee, though? Is he a nepo baby?

    That’s where I have issues. Talent can pass in families. Why should we be hateful toward it?

    • Dr. Bob@lemmy.ca
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      3 days ago

      I think there is a point to be made here - talent is the easiest part of success. You can drop by bars in any major city and hear musicians who have the talent to be a top 40 star. What is difficult is to get your “break” and toehold in the industry. I think that’s what the core issue is. Their parents are right in that their kids have the talent to be mid-tier in the industry. What’s infuriating is that they are not more talented than anyone else. They have an escalator into the industry whe everyone else has to fight their way up the back stairs.

    • skisnow@lemmy.ca
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      2 days ago

      I think a lot of people who trumpet the “but they’re so talented!” line, don’t realize just how much genuine talent is actually out there washing dishes in between doing plays in 300-seaters.

    • MrVilliam@sh.itjust.works
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      3 days ago

      Others have responded to you with part of what I wanted to bring up, but I also have another aspect to add to the rationale. These nepo babies aren’t just inheriting access and opportunities, but also a wealthy and comfortable upbringing. The child of a multimillionaire actor/musician/athlete not only has the inroads of their parents’ network and reputation, but also access to premium diets, exercise, doctors, schools, coaches, etc AND didn’t have to worry about getting a job at Chipotle or whatever while in high school or right after, and definitely didn’t have to balance that in order to help their family with bills.

      It’s a lot easier to get into Hollywood when your parents are already famous, but that really only gets you the auditions. Being able to work on honing your craft for 40+ hours per week without becoming homeless, going hungry, or losing sleep is a motherfucking luxury. I rarely get to practice guitar anymore because my job is so taxing both mentally and physically, so I’ll probably never get better, so access to a producer still wouldn’t really help me to win out over a nepo baby. They could truly be the greatest of their generation because they were able to and encouraged to perfect their skills for their craft without having to spend their time on literally anything else.

      • rainwall@piefed.social
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        2 days ago

        A great example here is Taylor swift, one of the first billionare performers. Her parents were both insanely wealthy stockbrokers, who moved to Nashville from a 15 acre farm in Pennsylvania to support her music carrear. She started door knocking at 11 years old in Nashville until she got her first contract at 14. Her family could afford to uproot and move a 1000 miles to spend 3 years directly supporting their preteen daughter attempting to break into country music.

        Taylor clearly has a lot of talent and is a hell of a performer, but even without all the direct contacts like a Winslet, intense wealth gives you amazing tools to win at life.

    • jack_of_sandwich@lemmy.sdf.org
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      2 days ago

      Nicholas Cage certainly got benefits from his family name. Helping him get in the door at interviews.

      But he chose not to use his family name so the movie going public didn’t associate him with his Uncle.

      And he started his career with small supporting parts before working his way up to leading man.

      He didn’t have his famous mother write and direct a movie explicitly for him to star in.

    • FerretyFever0@fedia.io
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      3 days ago

      I don’t think we should shit on legitimately talented people because of their relationships with other talented people. Less talented people that only got chances because of their families? Well, we have a duty to make fun of them as much as possible. I also think that we need to acknowledge when talented people get roles in large part because of their families.