Jason, thanks for the unexpected plug! This is something we have spoken about for a while now but your coverage caught me by surprise. The fact is, we aren't quite ready yet!
The article was written back in September when we thought we had an approved project. There are 22 pieces of music in the film and everyone signed off on uses. The magazine and disks went to press. Enter Murphy's law. EMI Music NYC wants payment on an actor who sings a few verses of a seventies hit to himself. However a quote that was supposed to take a week is now in its fourth month!
What does this mean? I cannot ship without approval. If you would like to register at pdafreebie(at)yahoo.com, we will email you when/if EMI approves. When this happens the 650MBs of content ships on a CDROM. Content includes the film, its music, an ebook, a graphic novel and a bunch of cool extras. Shipping is $2.95. The participating artists pay for all the costs of the copyrighted material ($50,000) so that the content is "free" and unlocked to the registered user. This will work for artists and users as users share the Freebie URL with friends and eventually purchase some of the artists' products. Sharing the URL instead of the content gets everyone a virus-free master copy of the legal and licensed "free" content on a collectable archival disk, builds a user base for a monthly freebie and establishes a legal foothold in the industry as I pay for the mobile content I distribute.
By the way, the whole concept for this project came from this board. Users wanted free content - creatives wanted control of and payment for their work. This meets everyone halfway. New content is available to registered users with the expectation that some users will go on to support a favorite artist or filmmaker. It also assumes that everyone will work to make the project thrive by sharing the URL to bring friends to the user base giving me bargaining power to buy/produce future monthly collections of indie content. Rob Reilly is already writing the next "Frankie & Paulie" PDAFilm (the slacker loan sharks in "Back To Manhattan") .
The only problem? EMI Music Publishing, 150 5th Avenue, New York, NY 10011!
