In other words: this young girl is telling me that I better not plan on proclaiming my beliefs in a public space on camera from now on, because they certainly won't stop sending out copyrighted material on TV and radio to the public - turning everyone within range of their mass media emission into a Read/Listen/Watch-Only person.Meanwhile Tom is speaking to the GEMA, the major German performance rights organization almost every professional off-line artist has joined. Their mission is to "shape the cultural and commercial identity of musical life and [to] build bridges between the authors, the music industry and the general public". Tom was told to pay for every download of his own song from his own website. He would get about 80% back; GEMA and the most popular mainstream-media-artists would get the other 20%. What is this - a joke?
They basically forbid their members to put their music on-line and call it "shaping the culture". Their mission should read "Welcome back to the 20th century. We are leaders in the market of locking your stuff down!"
That was my first contact with the off-line entertainment industry and it would not get much better.
We decided to dub every single second of "Route 66" in which the Madonnas and Mobys are contaminating our audio track. Tom quit the GEMA membership and thus turned his back on all potential radio and television revenues from his former and future works, to allow "Route 66" to be released to the Internet as a free cultural work under a Creative Commons License.
The next day Heise and other major sites posted the news of our movie release. My sister reads about it in the subway in the north of the country, Toms Mom hears it on the radio in the west and an old school buddy calls from the east, to ask for a job in our next movie.
Half a year later we are counting 1 million downloads and the movie is out on 600.000 DVDs.
Thanks to newthinking we are introduced to the German Free Culture scene and we realize that our release was relevant in the history of free Internet culture. It doesn't pay $50.000, but it creates the motivation to start our next movie project.

Two month later, at the set of "The Last Drug": Tom is managing the audio recording almost single handedly. Everybody is at his limit. Is this the rain rumbling on the roof of our studio? Is somebody saving on the gas quality of our current generator? Is there a goose hunting going on in front of our studio doors?
"Keep going!"
That's guerrilla film making, the way you get yourself into three years of post production, but still getting a high budget look with a crew of 5, $30.000 in cash and a few credit cards.
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