AI Summary
→ WHAT IT COVERS Emmy-winning filmmaker and Portland State University professor Dustin Morrow discusses pitching strategies, collaboration in film production, teaching students practical communication skills, and his work with actress Kathleen Turner on acting theory. → KEY INSIGHTS - **Pitching fundamentals:** Successful pitches require four core elements: clear structure, confident delivery, demonstrating you're pleasant to work with, and strong writing skills. Oral communication matters as much as written proposals in film industry collaboration. - **Student pitch training:** Force film students to present ideas standing before classmates despite discomfort. Most initially look at ceiling or feet, mumble without structure. Refining elevator pitches builds confidence essential for any film role, including technical positions. - **Book pitch strategy:** When pitching Kathleen Turner collaboration, demonstrated market gap by showing successful actors rarely write acting books. Compared to Jenna Fischer and Michael Caine texts, positioned Turner's celebrity status as unique selling advantage for aspiring actors. - **Editing workflow discipline:** Always allocate three to four times your estimated editing duration. If you think three hours, plan nine minimum. Step away two days after finishing, then watch with another person present—their silent presence reveals flaws you missed. → NOTABLE MOMENT Morrow convinced Kathleen Turner to write an acting theory book despite her anti-theory stance by arguing successful actors rarely share practical knowledge. The collaboration revealed theories she didn't know she had, fundamentally changing how he directs actors after twenty years. 💼 SPONSORS [{"name": "LifeLock", "url": "lifelock.com/podcast"}] 🏷️ Film Education, Pitching Strategies, Collaborative Filmmaking, Acting Theory
