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PDF Editor FAQ

How do multi-picture deals work in the movie industry?

This is a complicated answer because there is no standard template for a true "multi-picture" deal, which is rare. Let's try to break this down:Multi-Picture DealThe most likely version of this deal is one in which the studio has guaranteed the filmmaking talent employment on a set number of mutually agreed-upon projects. Some of the projects will be identified in advance, others will be decided later, but the filmmaker's compensation for all the projects will be set within the agreement. It is likely that the filmmaker's representation will have negotiated escalating compensation with performance-based bonuses. For a very highly desired filmmaker, there may be money up front (which may or may not be reducible against fees earned on films in production), and the most sought-after talent will get a "put" picture, which means that they can bring a project to the studio and force the studio to either produce the film or pay a penalty. There will likely be a set time period for the deal and if all services have not been rendered there may be some payment to settle out the remaining projects.Overall DealThis type of deal is much more common (although shrinking). A studio gives a filmmaker (this includes writers, directors, producers, actors) a set amount of money per year which may or may not be reducible against fees earned on films produced, and they will also cover some combination of office space, overhead expenses, and staff salaries for the filmmaker's production company in exchange for either exclusivity or "first-look" options on all projects developed by the filmmaker during the time the deal is in force. Rarely the filmmakers in an overall deal will also get one or more "put pictures". Other negotiable perks might include access to the corporate jet or (in the case of Universal or Disney) free theme park passes.

College Applications: How do universities ensure that the essays they receive don't have any kind of plagiarism?

As many people know, there are now a number of search engines that faculty and admission officers can use to see if an essay contains strings of words that have appeared in other essays. To check on an essay a person simply needs to cut and paste a part of the text into the site; if there are any matches, they will show up.When the first word string search engines were rolled out over a decade ago significant numbers of students, mostly in colleges and universities, were caught and charged with plagiarism. Many were expelled. But cheating of this sort has not ended. Just this weekend the ongoing cheating scandal at Harvard continues to generate headlines in the New York Times.But whether these scandals represent an increase in cheating among students is another matter. For example, over the course of many generations files were kept in fraternities at certain schools that contained papers written by ‘brothers’. As class sizes increased, and TAs often took over the role of graders, the chances of being caught for plagiarism were small; therefore, many students took advantage of these treasures. There is not enough data to make an informed guess as to how widespread this phenomenon was and still is. The more salient point is that the treasure troves once reserved for the few groups who could store and share them has now become an antiquated way of finding other’s words. The practice of passing on papers is far from a dead art.This past weekend I took part in interviewing students who were part of a focus group from a well-respected private high school. The topics we covered were varied, but the subject of cheating did come up. I asked the students if teachers banned the use of Wikipedia for papers. They all said most of the teachers did. I then asked if the students still used Wikipedia anyway and all of them said yes. I knew the answer before the students responded but I am grateful for their openness in confirming what I have heard from virtually every student I have talked to over the last several years about this topic. Wikipedia is low-hanging fruit. And like the apple in the garden, a simple prohibition is not enough (and some would argue it is the prohibition itself is a part of the equation).I realize I am being politically incorrect, but expecting students to ignore one of the greatest and largest sources of information in the history of the world seems unrealistic. Whether the information on many of the entries is correct is a separate issue, but the fact is that virtually any topic a teacher could assign will have Wikipedia entries that could prove useful. If nothing else many of the entries cite sources at the end of the entries that are clearly helpful. The significant issue for me is the practice of establishing a game in which teachers know students are using Wikipedia but either pretend not to know or follow through and fail the few who do not know enough to paraphrase or change some of the data by referring to sources already creates a de facto acceptance of plagiarism.The current climate of creating rules that very few will follow instills a sense of de facto acceptance of plagiarism on the parts of students. I think that Wikipedia is too important and enticing a resource for students looking for quick sources of information. In a time when a Google search will often lead first to paid sites, and then to sites that charge money for access to materials, it is difficult to believe that educators would expect students not to take advantage of Wikipedia.Instead of forbidding the use of Wikipedia, I would encourage teachers to train students to use it in ways which will help them to learn but also to instill in them a healthy skepticism of sources—something David Hume and many other skeptics of human knowledge would, I believe, agree is one of most important parts of learning about learning.If what I have just written seems like a longwinded digression, I apologize. On the other hand, I mention this Wikipedia phenomenon in order to underscore what anyone living in the world today knows. We are awash in information and a great deal of it is just sitting out there on the Internet. More information has been generated in the last week on web than was compiled in the history of the human race until just very recently.The surfeit of words applies to admission essays too. For example, I just did a quick search on Google for ‘sample admission essays for college’. The number of results? 246,000. It would take longer than I have years left just to go through each of these to see what essays are there. But there are indeed essays out there. Jacques Steinberg, who gained famed for his wonderful book ‘The Gatekeepers, based in part on his NY Times job of following the fates of a select group of students from application to decision, has given snippets of great essays: A Few Essays That Worked (And a Few That Didn't).I am guilty too. In the piece I wrote for US News on writing admission essays, I also include snippets of essays. It is a common practice. It is, therefore, all too easy for a student to find examples of ‘essays that worked’ to cite a title of a book that contains many essays written by successful candidates to highly selective schools. The sheer number of these essays that are now on the web makes it possible for a student to find a great essay on virtually any topic. But I think that only a small percentage actually resort to plagiarism. Instead, what students often do when given an example of a great essay is to look past the creative voice and form that has been used well once and then to perceive this structure as a roadmap to follow to a successful admission outcome. In other words, students adopt the formal approach of other students but change the words to fit their own experiences.The most famous admission essay ever, which I have posted on my blog before, generated many an offspring. While I have never seen a student submit this essay word for word I have seen many knock-offs. What happened after this essay went viral was that many teachers took this essay and used it in classes to demonstrate a creative approach to the essay. What some students learned, however, was not creativity; rather, they took the approach as a template for success. Instead of exactly quoting the various impossible feats described in the essay, the subsequent writers made up other hyperbolic statements and then finished with the same sentence the original essay did: “But I have never been to college’. In talking with a few students about this I was told that the teachers had assigned them to do this. Whether the teachers meant for the student to send these assignments as admission essays was unclear, but the student took what they felt was a sure fire method of success and in the process doomed their chances for admission. Mimicking another’s voice and approach is not what colleges tend to look for in students. Examples of great essays are useful for helping to give writers inspiration but imitation of this sort will not convince anyone of the academic strengths a student might have and it will certainly not provide a reader with anything remotely approaching the student’s genuine voice.Whether this counts as a strict form of plagiarism is debatable, but certainly the student who adopts a template for writing an essay whether it be a 5 paragraph McEssay or a wild romp like the one I have just cited, the student is simply pouring words in to a frame developed by others. A typical 5-paragraph essay is certainly not plagiarized but it is also not representative of a student’s voice either. But many essays that are now submitted have been lifted, in terms of form, by students seeking what has worked well for others. I do however think it is not in the best interest of students to train them to write admission essays from a template. And unfortunately, a number of people who are so called ‘experts' do indeed put forward strategies that are template driven. I believe this is one of the reasons that the vast majority of essays are virtually interchangeable with those submitted by other students. To craft a personal essay means: to devise an approach that fits the way the words work at the level of the sentence. We think in sentences as William Gass and other luminaries of writing, argue so persuasively. So it is at the level of sentences that essays should be crafted. Starting from an overall template will almost always produce a McEssay.The last point about plagiarized essays I wish to make is that I believe it is very unlikely that most people who do steal words will get caught. There are indeed many search tools to detect plagiarized essays but there is very little time to do the necessary detective work. Admission officers are under a huge time crush; therefore, it is unlikely that many of them will take the time to check on an essay unless something very odd stands out. If a student with very low testing and average grades in English submits a Joycean essay, then it might get close scrutiny. But the reality is that very few essays get flagged in the overall scheme of things. But some do and is it really worth the chance of getting caught?My story of plagiarism is almost too good to be true but I have the email exchange to back it up. Several years ago I was reading an applicant who had impressive numbers and grades. I thought at that moment he had a real shot at getting in. Then as I read the essay I was sure I had read these words before. Actually, what happened was that this student had plagiarized my essay from the US News. Really. One of the paragraphs was word for word with my work. I wrote the student and he at first tried to defend it, but then disappeared from view. The odds of a student getting caught by the author for plagiarism in admission are slim; there are, however, some ways of writing that will get close attention of the sort that may not help the student.But it now seems as if those who resort to actual plagiarism are simply not up with the times. These students are those who are desperate or are very unsophisticated in their approach. I would say based on my experience that the percentage of students at the low end of the economic scale often resort to plagiarizing essays more than do their wealthier peers in the pool. This is not because people at the poor end are more likely to cheat; instead, the people at the top end have options for submitting essays that are not plagiarized. They are original essays. The problem is that the author is not the student himself or herself. For a fee, sometimes as high as six figures, writers of every stripe will come up with an essay. Some of them are quite good, and others laughably bad.Thank you for asking this question. It has given me the motivation to begin a series on borrowed words for my blog.Parke Muth, consultant: Essays: 'borrowing' words, Part I

What is the best outstanding college admission essay that you have read written by a high school student?

This is a vey tough question to answer for several reasons. I have read at least 50,000 admission essays and so my file of great ones (and terrible ones) is deep. I do have one personal favorite but I do not post it anywhere as it will then be used as a template for others to copy its form. What I can do is to give you the essay that is looked upon as the greatest ever, although there is a bit of background to what it is and isn't. I have posted it on my blog and then wrote 'the rest of the story' on it the following day:Parke Muth, consultant: The Most Famous Admission Essay Ever: questionsThe Most Famous Admission Essay Ever: questionsGregory Peck as AhabWhat follows is the most famous admission essay ever. It is old but it is still used in many classrooms and workshops.***********************************************************************Space Group award winning train station designI am a dynamic figure, often seen scaling walls and crushing ice. I have been known to remodel train stations on my lunch breaks, making them more efficient in the area of heat retention. I translate ethnic slurs for Cuban refugees, I write award-winning operas, I manage time efficiently.Occasionally, I tread water for three days in a row. I woo women with my sensuous and godlike trombone playing, I can pilot bicycles up severe inclines with unflagging speed, and I cook Thirty-Minute Brownies in twenty minutes. I am an expert in stucco, a veteran in love, and an outlaw in Peru.Army ant biting fingerUsing only a hoe and a large glass of water, I once single-handedly defended a small village in the Amazon Basin from a horde of ferocious army ants. I play bluegrass cello, I was scouted by the Mets, I am the subject of numerous documentaries. When I'm bored, I build large suspension bridges in my yard. I enjoy urban hang gliding. On Wednesdays, after school, I repair electrical appliances free of charge.Rothko ChapelI am an abstract artist, a concrete analyst, and a ruthless bookie. Critics worldwide swoon over my original line of corduroy evening wear. I don't perspire. I am a private citizen, yet I receive fan mail. I have been caller number nine and have won the weekend passes. Last summer I toured New Jersey with a traveling centrifugal-force demonstration. I bat 400.George SislerMy deft floral arrangements have earned me fame in international botany circles. Children trust me. I can hurl tennis rackets at small moving objects with deadly accuracy. I once read Paradise Lost, Moby Dick, and David Copperfield in one day and still had time to refurbish an entire dining room that evening. I know the exact location of every food item in the supermarket. I have performed several covert operations with the CIA.I sleep once a week; when I do sleep, I sleep in a chair. While on vacation in Canada, I successfully negotiated with a group of terrorists who had seized a small bakery. I balance, I weave, I dodge, I frolic, and my bills are all paid.On weekends, to let off steam, I participate in full-contact origami. Years ago I discovered the meaning of life but forgot to write it down. I have made extraordinary four course meals using only a mouli and a toaster oven. I breed prize-winning clams. I have won bullfights in San Juan, cliff-diving competitions in Sri Lanka, and spelling bees at the Kremlin.Ernest Hemingway and Antonio Ordóñez in MadridI have played Hamlet, I have performed open-heart surgery, and I have spoken with Elvis.But I have not yet gone to college.*******************************************************************************1. What makes this a great essay?2. Are personal statements supposed to true, and if so, how does this essay fare?3. What character traits can you generalize about the writer of this essay based on his words?4. Would you categorize this essay as a sure bet, a risk, or something in-between?

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