The news should come as no surprise. Hyperion announced it
was selling off most of its adult backlist last March in an effort to reorient
the imprint “synergistically” with its ABC programming. In this case, synergy
does not mean “the combination of multiple elements to produce an effect
greater than its parts.” There is only one part: TV.
The creation of print tie-ins to television shows hardly qualifies as an addition to the content, or the impact, of the original. However, in limiting its scope to what it can profitably sell, Disney is only doing what everyone else in the industry is doing - hiding from Random House/Penguin and the other Big Five. It is only by focusing on undesirable, or unpoachable, products that everyone else in the industry can escape being swallowed at a future date, or simply being chewed up right now into an unprofitable pulp.
The creation of print tie-ins to television shows hardly qualifies as an addition to the content, or the impact, of the original. However, in limiting its scope to what it can profitably sell, Disney is only doing what everyone else in the industry is doing - hiding from Random House/Penguin and the other Big Five. It is only by focusing on undesirable, or unpoachable, products that everyone else in the industry can escape being swallowed at a future date, or simply being chewed up right now into an unprofitable pulp.
The clock started ticking, not last March when Hyperion
announced its backlist sell-off, but last September, when Hyperion president
Ellen Archer – known for her forward-thinking views on cutting author advances –
hired former talent agent Laura Hopper as editorial director for franchise
publishing. This marked Hyperion’s first serious move to increase “product” at
the expense of whatever it was writers once did. The following January, Ruth
Pomerance, a long-time veteran of the Hollywood talent scene, was brought
aboard as senior editor, where she continued to do what she had been doing for
the last 30 years – “synergy” (i.e. reformatting books into other media, and vice
versa).
In spite of these last-ditch efforts to stay in the game,
Hyperion was a lost cause. Transforming TV shows into original content (what we
used to call “books”) wasn’t enough to convince the Disney execs that they
should stick to their publishing guns.
According to Publisher’s Weekly, Disney announced that it
would be retaining its children’s imprints and any media-related titles, such
as its Castle series, which ties into the ABC television show about the fictional
detective novelist, Castle. In what can only be described as nearly excruciating
synergy, the “Castle” books are authored by the fictional character Richard
Castle.
Originally published on Blogcritics.
Wonderful site, Erica. Did you do this yourself? I snooped around a bit and you sure have a lot of goodies. Will be back.
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Unless indicated otherwise (attribution is at the top) I write my own blog posts. Sometimes, I guest post on another site first. (This post went onto Blogcritics.) This is what I call "precycling."
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