One of the things I’m always curious about when talking with producers and filmmakers is how everyone keeps themselves informed about what’s happening across the industry.
Between new distribution models, changing audience habits, production trends, technology shifts, and the constant movement of projects across studios and platforms, it can feel like the landscape evolves every day. Staying informed can make a real difference when you’re deciding what to develop, how to position a project, or where opportunities might be opening up.
For me, I like to keep an eye on a mix of traditional trades and creator-driven commentary. A few outlets I check regularly include:
Deadline – https://deadline.com/
Variety – https://variety.com/
Y.M. Cinema Magazine – https://ymcinema.com/category/news/
CBR – https://www.cbr.com/
Cartoon Brew – https://www.cartoonbrew.com/
I also enjoy following film and industry-focused YouTube creators who break down trends, filmmaking techniques, and production insights. Some channels I watch pretty often include Corridor Crew, Frame Voyager, ScreenRant, ScreenCrush, FilmSpeak, InDepthCine, FilmStack, WatchingtheAerial, Thomas Flight, and The Cosmonaut Variety Hour.
Hearing different perspectives, especially from creators and technicians working in different corners of the industry, always gives me new angles to think about.
So I’d love to hear from you: What resources do you rely on to stay aware of industry news and trends in your specific creative field?
Do you follow the trades like Deadline, THR, Variety, or The Wrap?
Are there newsletters, blogs, podcasts, YouTube channels, or social media accounts that you find particularly insightful? The Stage 32 Blog?
Drop your favorites in the comments. It would be great to build a shared list, so everyone here can strengthen their own process for staying informed.
3 people like this
I typically avoid music cues. Music rights can be very expensive and it's certainly an emotional risk to pigeonhole yourself into one note for a scene because the chances that scene is going to have t...
Expand commentI typically avoid music cues. Music rights can be very expensive and it's certainly an emotional risk to pigeonhole yourself into one note for a scene because the chances that scene is going to have that music in a finished product are incredibly low and if you haven't been through it before, it may be upsetting to you.
Also, it's a risk because if you name drop a song you like and the reader evaluating your script doesn't know what song that is, they have two options:
1) put your script down, go look up the song. This is bad because you have now sent your reader away from your script. They are no longer reading but engaging with something else. Which is typically not a desired outcome.
2) don't care about what the song is and move on. This is bad because it means they are disconnecting from your script anyways already if it doesn't matter to them.
neither of these are great outcomes for the writer. thus, I typically avoid music cues.
2 people like this
Pat Alexander another very painful but much needed insight....the pain..........