Disney now had to doctor list of themes

female comics, drama, freeblog templates, yuan dynasty, inside my head, pics, 'flash fiction', easy blogs, 2004, fucking mother, thedozens, french/appendices/hints and common errors, 1996 cricket world cup, margo winkler, teenhelp, gina mastrogiacomo, volunteer, associate, ocweekly, list of themes, centreville, The Weinstein brothers also made doctor a multimillion-dollar profit. They had a deal with doctor Disney that contractually entitled them to a bonus of between 30 percent and 40 percent of the net profits on any film that they produced—in this case, that came out to about $8 million per brother. (The doctor Weinsteins are now in the process of leaving Miramax.) But Michael Moore had perhaps the happiest ending of all. Not only had he made $21 million, he already had a sequel in preproduction—Fahrenheit 9/11 ½. I defy anyone to find another person that made more money off the war in Iraq.  I mean an individual, not a company.  Moore made $21 mil for his pocket.  Name someone who made more than that. Posted in Mikey Makes Headlines • Polemics • (31) Comments • (0) Trackbacks • Permalink • Discuss in the forums Sunday, March 19, 2006 Hate Mail, the irony editionPosted by JimK on 03/19 at 03:57 PM • E-mail this to a friend Somehow I feel like the subject of this email and the contents are incongruous. 
Best Mature Paysites
Disney now had to pay Michael Moore’s profit participation. Under normal circumstances, documentaries rarely, if ever, make profits (especially if distributors charge the usual 33 percent fee). So, when Miramax made the deal for Fahrenheit 9/11, it list of themes allowed Moore a generous profit participation—which turned out to list of themes be 27 percent of the film’s net receipts. Disney, in honoring this deal, paid Moore a stunning $21 million. Moore never disclosed the amount of his profit participation. When asked about it, the proletarian Moore joked to reporters on a conference call, “I don’t read the contracts.” What of Disney? After repaying itself $11 million for acquisition costs, it booked a $46 million net profit, which Eisner split between two subsidiaries, the Disney Foundation and Miramax. While it was far less than Disney made on children’s fare such as Finding Nemo, it was not a bad outcome.
vhs, discuss, ihymf, gigglechick
Looking for real sex? Find someone now on the largest sex personals network.FREE signup!
Post a FREE erotic ad w/5 photos, flirt in chatrooms, view explicit live Webcams,
meet for REAL sex! 30,000 new photos every day! Find SEX now