87 episodes

When you’re filming a movie or a television show, when it’s the last shot of the day, the first assistant director will call out, “This is the Martini Shot!” I call these stories “Martini Shots” because they’re exactly the kinds of stories we tell — and lessons we learn — after we’ve wrapped for the day. - Rob Long theankler.com

Martini Shot TheAnkler.com

    • News

When you’re filming a movie or a television show, when it’s the last shot of the day, the first assistant director will call out, “This is the Martini Shot!” I call these stories “Martini Shots” because they’re exactly the kinds of stories we tell — and lessons we learn — after we’ve wrapped for the day. - Rob Long theankler.com

    Famous vs. Unfamous

    Famous vs. Unfamous

    Movie stars and aristocrats are just like you and me: They put their trousers on one leg at a time. We don’t really have a proper aristocracy anymore, so there goes half that saying. But do we even have stars? Rob Long considers what a star was, what a star is, and what it means for the industry. Also, if you should wear a t-shirt with your name on it. 
    Transcript here. For more entertainment news subscribe to The Ankler.
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    • 9 min
    Paramount: Buy, Sell, Fight

    Paramount: Buy, Sell, Fight

    Rob knows a quote . . . from which Chinese philosopher, he’s not sure. It goes, “If you sit by the river long enough, you will see the body of your enemy float by.” Showbiz translation: If you stay in Hollywood long enough, you’ll see Paramount bought and sold many times over.
    Transcript here. Subscribe here for more showbiz news from The Ankler.
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    • 11 min
    Dumpster Diving on the Studio Lot

    Dumpster Diving on the Studio Lot

    No doubt, the internet and technology vastly improved the tedious labor of writing scripts and making revisions. But Rob Long believes something was lost in the disappearance of an actual paper trail: Archaeological artifacts that reveal the process of jokes moving, characters losing lines, and test audiences wanting (and getting) a happy ending. And it turns out, like his friend, you didn’t even need to read Save the Cat! to learn how to write TV. All you needed was to roll up your sleeves and sift through the studio garbage. 
    Transcript here. For more entertainment news, subscribe to The Ankler here.
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    • 11 min
    Burger King Kids Club

    Burger King Kids Club

    Remember the Burger King Kids Club, the chain’s ad campaign targeted to “the kids?” There was Kid Vid, the white, video game-playing leader; Jaws, the Black kid who loved to eat; and a boy in a wheelchair named (seriously) Wheels. The idea, Rob Long speculates, must have been devised at one of those offsite retreats, the kind TV execs love to do in Laguna. But hits rarely are born from suits tossing around banal concepts. Instead they begin with a writers’ novel idea, the equivalent of a delicious-looking hamburger.
    Also, we’ve been nominated for a Webby Award, vote for us here by April 18th!
    Transcript here. For more entertainment news, subscribe to The Ankler here.
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    • 10 min
    Gossipy, Critical, Snippy

    Gossipy, Critical, Snippy

    Legendary fashion designer Karl Lagerfeld once complained about the way a room was decorated: “It was a lot of Louis Quinze mixed with Louis Seize,” he said. And then added: “Ugh!” The entertainment business runs on this sort of Lagerfeldian Ugh, a sort of lingua franca of Hollywood. But what if we tried, just for a while, to not slag others as conversational filler? Rob Long says then, very likely, you could expect a whole lot of deafening silence. 
    Also, we’ve been nominated for a Webby Award, vote for us here by April 18th!
    Transcript here. For more entertainment news, subscribe to The Ankler here.
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    • 12 min
    'It Only Made, Like, $50 Million'

    'It Only Made, Like, $50 Million'

    Howard the Duck might not have won Best Picture, but if you’re a sandwich shop worker, or a young Rob Long at lunch with high-up producers, it’s probably best not to espouse how big a flop you thought it was. See, failure in Hollywood is a relative term. Movies fail, pilots fail, but after a failure of your own, it’s tough to see anything that makes it to the screen as defeat — especially if it came with a check. After all, getting paid in show business is getting paid to try. The later checks — the bigger ones — are about getting paid to succeed.
    Transcript here. For more entertainment news, subscribe to The Ankler.
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    • 13 min

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