Pivot

How did Heated Rivalry’s Producers Make Their Massive Hit?

43 min
Feb 7, 20262 months ago
Listen to Episode
Summary

Kara Swisher interviews Jacob Tierney and Brendan Brady, creators of the hit Canadian series 'Heated Rivalry,' discussing how they produced the queer hockey romance on a low budget while retaining IP ownership. The conversation explores the Canadian production system versus US studios, their anti-fascist filmmaking approach, and the show's unexpected global success.

Insights
  • Canadian production system allows creators to retain IP ownership while US system offers higher upfront payments but studios own the content
  • Romance genre, particularly queer romance, represents an underserved but massive audience that traditional media has dismissed due to misogyny
  • Efficient production methods like writing all episodes before shooting and limiting daily hours can significantly reduce costs without sacrificing quality
  • Creator-owned IP enables long-term revenue streams through merchandise and licensing that can exceed traditional producer fees
  • Anti-fascist filmmaking approach that embraces collaboration and actor input can produce better results than rigid directorial control
Trends
Shift toward creator-owned intellectual property in entertainment productionCanadian production system gaining attention as alternative to US studio modelQueer content finding mainstream success when focused on joy rather than traumaRomance genre adaptation from books to screen becoming more viableEfficient production methods reducing per-episode costs significantlyStreaming platforms acquiring international content rather than producing domesticallyAI tools being considered for administrative tasks rather than creative workMerchandise and licensing becoming significant revenue streams for IP ownersBlock shooting methods replacing traditional episodic productionInternational co-production and distribution deals becoming more complex
Companies
Crave
Canadian streaming platform that commissioned Heated Rivalry and is owned by Bell Media
Bell Media
Canadian media conglomerate that owns Crave and provided additional funding for the show
HBO
Acquired international distribution rights for Heated Rivalry outside Canada
Netflix
Mentioned in context of streaming content strategy and potential Warner acquisition
Sphere Abacus
UK distribution company acquired by Bell Media that provided funding for the show
Shopify
Podcast sponsor providing e-commerce platform services
Indeed
Podcast sponsor offering hiring and recruitment services
Public
Podcast sponsor providing investment platform services
Sky
Acquired distribution rights for Heated Rivalry in UK and Ireland
Vox Media
Parent company of the Pivot podcast network
People
Jacob Tierney
Creator and director of Heated Rivalry, previously worked on Letterkenny
Brendan Brady
Executive producer of Heated Rivalry and business partner with Tierney
Kara Swisher
Host of Pivot podcast interviewing the Heated Rivalry creators
Mark Carney
Canadian Prime Minister who praised Heated Rivalry at a media industry event
Eileen Chaiken
Executive producer of The L Word who submitted a question about creative vindication
Matt Damon
Actor whose comments on streaming's impact on creative process were discussed
Hudson Williams
Actor who plays Shane in Heated Rivalry, praised for his performance
Tim Fontaine
Indigenous writer whose project 'The King is Dead' is being developed by the producers
Matt Felker
Talent agent who represents both Tierney and Chaiken
Keanu Reeves
Mentioned jokingly as potential casting for future projects due to resemblance to Hudson Williams
Quotes
"If this show was about a boy with a gun, somebody would have optioned this book 10 years ago"
Jacob Tierney
"We don't take female desire and stories seriously in media. A lot of the times I think a show like this that came out of nowhere is kind of... there is a built in audience there"
Brendan Brady
"I would rather be surprised by an offering from an actor than control every last aspect of their performance"
Jacob Tierney
"The romance genre carries the publishing industry in terms of fiction. And I think it's dismissed because of the misogyny that we all endlessly live with"
Jacob Tierney
"We just don't get to have a story that chooses to not focus on trauma, to focus on other parts of the queer experience as fantasy"
Jacob Tierney
Full Transcript
3 Speakers
Speaker A

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Speaker B

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Speaker A

Now with Indeed Sponsored Jobs and listeners of this show will get a $75 sponsored job credit to help get your job the premium status it deserves@ Indeed.com VoxBusiness just go to Indeed.com VoxBusiness right now and support our show by saying you heard about Indeed on this podcast. Indeed.com VoxBusiness Terms and Conditions apply. Hiring do it the Right Way with Indeed.

0:23

Speaker C

Support for the show comes from Public, the investing platform for those who take it seriously. On Public, you can build a multi asset portfolio of stocks, bonds and options and now generated assets which allow you to turn any idea into an investable index with AI. Go to public.com podcast and earn an uncapped 1% bonus when you transfer your portfolio. That's public.com podcast paid for by Public Investing Brokerage Services by Open to the Public Investing Inc. Member FINRA and SIPC Advisory Service by Public Advisors llc, llc SEC Registered Advisor Generated Assets is an interactive analysis tool. Output is for informational purposes only and is not an investment recommendation or advice. Complete disclosures available at public.com disclosures. Support for the show comes from Shopify. Every worthwhile journey starts with a handful of what ifs, but one day you'll be able to look back and realize that all those what ifs were small steps towards turning your dream into a thriving business. Shopify can help you get there. Shopify is the commerce platform behind millions of businesses around the world and 10% of all e commerce in the US. Join them and turn those what ifs into with Shopify today. Sign up for your $1 per month trial today at shopify.com Vox Business go to shopify.com Vox Business that's shopify.com Vox Business. Hi everyone, this is Pivot from New York Magazine and the Vox Media Podcast Network. I'm Kara Swisher. Today we've got a special bonus episode and it's not about anything terrifying or depressing. It's about the most addictive, delightful surprise cultural phenomena of the decade. Heated rivalry. I'm joined today by the show's creator Jacob Tierney and executive producer Brendan Brady. Welcome you two. You guys are two already. I already.

0:55

Speaker B

Thanks Kara.

2:48

Speaker C

We've been beset by some Tech issues. But nonetheless, the gays will prevail. The success of the show is about so many things. Queer joy, sex, inclusion. It's amazing business story and that's really what I wanted to talk about. But first for the fans, are we getting a standalone episode before season two?

2:49

Speaker B

I love saying now. This is Brendan. So I would say that much like the best parts of this show, just enjoy the yearn.

3:08

Speaker C

Enjoy the urine. Is that on your T shirts?

3:21

Speaker B

Oh, no. Soon. Trademark. Trademark. We trademarked it.

3:24

Speaker C

Yeah. Okay. Because that means no. That's a no.

3:27

Speaker A

We'll see here. This is Jacob speaking. Now. That's a. Here's the. Here's the truth and that nobody actually wants to hear is that we just don't know yet. We are, you know, we actually only finished this show basically a week before episode six aired. And so this has been a massive surprise and endeavor, and endeavor and we didn't really have a moment to catch our breaths before answering questions like this. So the truth is we're getting a plan in place. We will have more information for folks soon. We understand that there's an appetite for a lot of this and we're just trying to figure out what we can physically accomplish in. In the next year.

3:30

Speaker C

In the next year. So one thing, this show has been a giant PR boost in the entire. Your entire country. Here's Prime Minister Mark Carney at a recent media event. You had to. Speaking of, feel the yearn, but go ahead.

4:08

Speaker A

The world knows that Shane and Ilya.

4:19

Speaker B

Are rising hockey stars who fall for each other as they face off in.

4:21

Speaker A

One of the greatest rivalries the game has ever known.

4:26

Speaker B

But they're also two young men who.

4:29

Speaker A

Are terrified of being their fullest self. And we live in an increasingly dangerous, divided and intolerant world. A fundamental Canadian value is that people.

4:34

Speaker B

Should be able to be whoever they want to be, to love whoever they want to love.

4:48

Speaker C

So the narrative has become that it was a little show out of Canada, obviously made in Canada, because American distributors were afraid of the sex content. Why don't you start, Jacob? The reaction, first of all, and the kind of what you think is happening here from. I mean, I'm sure you've answered this question, but he sort of articulates it rather well, is that people are upset and divided and this brings a respite. But I think it's more than that, in my opinion. But why don't you start, Jacob? And then you. Brendan.

4:57

Speaker A

I mean, I think that there's. I think that what the show did in a kind of an unpreachy un trying to teach you a lesson way is just present queer joy. And I think that that's its soft power. You know, that's the thing that I think people are surprised and that has hit people at least from what I'm getting. And I think that while there are queer stories out there, I don't think there's a lot of joy. And I don't think that the kind of profound joy that you only find in romance really that kind of heart filling fantasy fulfilling desire fulfilling things that you get to see don't happen to queer people in media. And I think that that is the kind of whoosh of it all.

5:24

Speaker C

Especially men. Especially there's a lot of lesb content out there, I can tell you.

6:14

Speaker A

I think especially men and I. And I think that yeah, we just don't to have a story that chooses to not and you know, there are obviously our queer lives are filled with trauma and I get that and we, I think we all know that. But I think that this show's desire to not focus on that to focus on other parts of the queer experience as fantasy and I fully admit, right.

6:19

Speaker C

It's a romance.

6:43

Speaker A

It's from a romance novel romance that, that I think that that partly the reaction to it. There's a lot. I don't pretend I can explain but I do that it is that that is kind of. That's the big difference.

6:44

Speaker C

Yeah, it's different experience for gay people versus straight people, I think and because I was always waiting for the hit.

6:57

Speaker A

Yeah, I think we all are. And I think especially because they have sex so early and we are trained that if we have sex we will be punished. So if we can not have sex we might be able to be happy, but we can't do both. You don't get to have a sex life and be happy. If you want to have a sex life, get ready to die. And if you want to be happy, get ready to not have sex.

7:02

Speaker B

I. I think like the other part of this which Jacob has talked about a lot and it was kind of how we were pitching this when we were going out to people which is this is a story written by women and it's consumed primarily by women. And we don't take female desire and stories seriously in media. A lot of the times I think a show like this that came out of nowhere is kind of. We were. When we were pict pitching it, we were really crossing our fingers hoping that we were right. We were like there is a built in audience there. The these Books are consumed. So there's so many readers of all types of romance novels. They're there and they are yearning for. For these stories to be told. So I think that was the other, like, secret sauce in this is just like, this is a massive fan base that have not had their stories taken seriously. And they got to see it taken seriously and they loved it.

7:21

Speaker C

We'll talk about that. Because romance, I always say, everyone's like, why it's so popular? I'm like, it's a romance novel. It's from. Romance novels are pop. It's one of those genres that people don't realize how big it is. How big.

8:16

Speaker A

And as a genre, it's been around since the dawn of time. Like, it's as old as a detective story. You know, it's as old as all of, like, romances. There would have been a time when. When Jane Austen would have been considered romance. I mean, that's. These are. And it's dismissed. I think, to Brendan's point, it's dismissed despite the fact that it. The romance genre carries the publishing industry in terms of fiction. And I think it's dismissed because of the misogyny that we all endlessly live with, because it's something that appeals to women, is often written by women and consumed by women. And so why would any. I've said this before. I was like, if this show was about a boy with a gun, somebody would have optioned this book 10 years ago, you know, 10 years.

8:26

Speaker C

Well, a hockey player with a gun. Any boy with a gun. Anyway, talk about this. But getting it made, like we talk on this success on. On what it symbolizes, the difference between Canada and the U.S. though, even how these productions are funded. Let me talk about this idea of. Was made in Canada because American distributors. And let me play very quickly a part of Mark Carney's speech about that and how it was funded on behalf.

9:06

Speaker B

Of Canada's new government.

9:32

Speaker A

Look, I'm a politician. I'm not above taking credit for the Canadian funding that helped you share this story with the world. I might not have been here when the decision was made, but I'm here now. So, yeah, I made. I greenlit this thing.

9:35

Speaker B

I stood up to the Americans. That's amazing.

9:51

Speaker C

That was an amazing speech.

9:54

Speaker B

Yeah, I think that, like, you know, this speech that he gave was at an event called Prime Time, which is hosted by the producers, Canadian Producer of Media association, like the Canadian version of the pga. And the point of this was to raise awareness of what's going on in our industry because because the entertainment landscape is under attack right now. We've been trying to update our systems, and because of Kuzma, because of the U.S. you know, wanting to come in and tell us how to run our country and how our cultural sector needs to be dictated, there's a lot of concern about whether or not we're going to have a system in place that has cultural sovereignty for Canada. And so for us, what was so amazing about this experience and getting to see Mark Carney there is our show was made in the Canadian system, and it is very different from the U.S. well, explain it.

9:56

Speaker C

Explain it for people who don't understand.

10:55

Speaker B

So basically, the Canadian film and TV system has subsidies and equity and grant systems that are propped up by the Canadian government. So we, you know, when you go to a broadcaster, like we did with Crave, which is the streaming platform in Canada that commissioned the show, they go and say, okay, great, here is a license fee. Typically, It'll run between 20 to 30% of the budget. Then we have a tax credit, both provincial and federal, and that brings another 20 to 30% of the budget. And then it's always that last little piece that you're looking for. Right. So the benefit to us in Canada as producers is it's unfortunate that we don't get necessarily the whole budget out of our broadcasters, but we, as the producers, own all the underlying ip.

10:57

Speaker C

I see.

11:48

Speaker B

So that is the biggest.

11:48

Speaker C

So you don't sell it to a studio.

11:49

Speaker B

Exactly.

11:51

Speaker A

We are the studio in the system.

11:51

Speaker B

But the limitations on that are you have to go, then raise money. So how we did this with our show is we ended up talking to a couple of studios, some of them American, some of them Canadian. And ultimately, it wasn't the right fit from a creative perspective, and we understand where everybody was coming from. This was, you know, on paper, didn't seem like an amazing massive hit right out the gate. And so luckily, when we were going through this process, Crave's parent company, which is Bell Media, Bell Media, is like if Comcast and Disney were merged into one in our country. They own everything from telecommunications to Internet to sports.

11:53

Speaker C

And they have divisions like Crave, which is extremely. Is that their only streaming platform?

12:39

Speaker A

They have others, yes, yes.

12:44

Speaker B

It's their only streaming platform.

12:45

Speaker C

So it's like a Disney Hulu or whatever.

12:47

Speaker A

But they're also. It's like. And. And they have ctv, which is their abc. So they have a terrestrial. They have a terrestrial channel, and they have streaming.

12:51

Speaker B

They have cable channels. They have a streaming platform, and they had just acquired A distribution company called Sphere Abacus out of the UK. And so we were looking for that last 30% of the budget and they came in for 20 more percent on a distribution advance. So the last 10% was. Jacob and I put our producer fees and we put in almost all of our producer fees less what we had to keep back because you still have to pay for taxes. So it was a big gamble for us. But ultimately I can.

12:58

Speaker C

So what you would have earned for this, the fees that are standard, right?

13:30

Speaker B

That's exactly right.

13:34

Speaker C

When you, when you. What was the total budget here?

13:35

Speaker B

So we were just under 3 million Canadian an episode.

13:39

Speaker C

Amazing. That's pretty low. Which is what.

13:43

Speaker A

I don't know if you know what a big deal this is, but Brendan is telling the truth. Yeah, we've been.

13:46

Speaker B

Carol Swisher gets the truth. She gets the truth.

13:52

Speaker A

She gets exclusive.

13:54

Speaker B

So.

13:55

Speaker C

That's right.

13:56

Speaker B

We were. We were just under three per episode. Per episode Canadian.

13:56

Speaker C

Right. Because it looks great, by the way. It didn't look on the cheap or anything else. Because we can't.

14:01

Speaker B

Well, that's also. That speaks to Jacob and his amazing abilities. He's directed over a hundred episodes of television. So he knows what he's doing. And also speaks to a way in which we like to work, which we feel really important is. Is different than the US system or typical.

14:06

Speaker C

That's an enormously low amount. And for people who don't know, it's. It's very low for television shows. I mean the salary.

14:20

Speaker A

It's low for a sitcom. It's deeply low for a one hour drama.

14:27

Speaker C

Yeah, deeply low for most. Those are the salaries of certain people, depending. So you know, obviously these were not well known people. But still, it's still an expensive thing. I think most US ones, I feel like 10 million is the lowest they make. Right?

14:30

Speaker B

It depends. It's like between 6 to 4 to 10 million DOL dollars an episode. US is typical, depending on what your level is. But yeah, I mean costs have really skyrocketed over the last decade.

14:45

Speaker C

Is it less expensive to make this in Canada? From a production perspective?

14:58

Speaker A

No.

15:02

Speaker B

We have an efficient model. And I mean, yes, it is because we don't have the same level of money that is being thrown around. So we by necessity have to spend less. But we also like did something here where we shot all six episodes in 36 days. Jacob shot J. Have directed all six of them. We block shot them like one giant movie. We talk about this when studios, especially US studios come and say, how do you guys do this? And we go, it's crazy. You have all of your episodes written before you go into prep. And that's typically when we lose people. And they don't understand.

15:02

Speaker C

Right. Because they write it through. Although that's changing in the US Actually.

15:41

Speaker A

It is crazy to do it the other way. Especially when you're not doing 22 episodes anymore. Like back in the old model. When you're doing this volume of episodes where it's not possible to have them.

15:45

Speaker C

All ready, well, you have writers on staff.

15:53

Speaker A

Well, you have to just be writing all the time. But if you're doing, if the new model is eight to 10 episodes, there's almost no reason why this can't be accomplished before you start shooting.

15:55

Speaker C

So you start shooting. Go ahead. Go ahead.

16:03

Speaker B

Yeah, we start shooting and then we do 10 hour shoot days primarily. Like, I'm not going to say it's not every day, but we try to keep our hours low. And there's a, a couple of reasons for this. A, as soon as you get into 12, 13 hours with crews, you end up paying for an additional day by virtue of the overtime. But we also just feel that like, you know, my wife is an assistant costume designer. She was the assistant costume designer on this show. She's five months pregnant. The departments that. Thank you. The departments that get hooped are hair, makeup, wardrobe, with these pre calls a lot of the time. Who are those departments run by? Primarily women. And so we also just feel that like they're in our business. We need to change this mentality of endlessly shooting 15, 16 hour days. Which is where the cost balloon.

16:05

Speaker C

Right, Right. What are you, a lesbian? What's happening here? Anyway, so, Jacob, talk about your production style. Besides being, you know, truncated, like making it tight, you keep it, keep it tight kind of thing. You call it anti fascist. Explain what you mean by that.

16:55

Speaker A

Well, I mean, I guess what I, what I mean about that is there's a desire often for perfection that is, I think, not only unachievable, but also insane and cruel to be even attempting. There's no reason to do. If you're doing 25 takes of a scene because you don't like the performance of the actor.

17:10

Speaker B

I'm an actor.

17:33

Speaker A

I've been doing this since I was 4 years old. The problem is the scene. It's not the actor. You haven't written it properly. If you're not accomplishing what you need to accomplish, there's a fundamental issue. And by torturing people into repeating and repeating and repeating, I don't know what you're gaining. And so that's kind of.

17:34

Speaker B

I just did.

17:48

Speaker C

I just did a pride. It was all day. I was like, why? I kept saying, why?

17:49

Speaker A

Why is it all day to do nine different sizes on a close up is insane. All of this stuff is crazy. It's just like it doesn't add to anything except exhaustion and to overworking people. I would. And what I like to say is I would rather be surprised by an offering from an actor than control every last aspect of their performance. And I've used the scene as an example, like on the day when we were shooting. There's a scene in the sixth episode in the cottage after the boys have been caught by Shane's, where Hudson and Connor have a scene together. And they essentially, he decides that he's going to go talk to his parents. Ilya's going to come with him. And when we were shooting it, I thought. I wasn't convinced that I was going to use what Hudson was doing in that scene. I thought it might be too much. He was reacting. He had a big reaction, which is interesting for Hudson because he's a very internal actor, especially when he's playing Shane. And I didn't say anything and I just kind of watched it and I was like, this is interesting. I think I can cut around this. I think I can figure out how to get what I want out of this scene. And then when I got to the editing room and my editor put the scene together, she loved what he had done. And I looked at it again with new eyes and I was like, oh, I actually love this too. And I'm so glad I didn't insist on some idea that I had in my head, because what he brought to the table was more interesting and it was surprising and it was full of life and it wasn't part of some insane jigsaw plan that I had in my head that needs to fit together or everything falls apart.

17:53

Speaker C

Well, it's a different way of creating, right?

19:17

Speaker A

It is a different way of creating. But also I do believe fundamentally that film and TV is an ensemble process. Is otherwise, go write a book, you know, go paint a picture. There's lots of ways to be in total control. But as soon as you invite other talents in, as soon as you invite. You're in a medium in which that is a part of how it's going to have to happen to ask these brilliant people to work with you and then not listen to them or not use their skills.

19:19

Speaker C

Although that's sort of the director genre, right? Like the director gets to Run. Everything gets to run.

19:42

Speaker A

And I think it's a crazy system, you know, like, I want to work with talented people and I want to. What are they doing here if I'm not going to listen to them, if I'm not going to incorporate their ideas, if I'm not going to incorporate what makes them so talented, why I wanted to work with them in the first place. And so, you know, anti fascist might be a big statement, but it is kind of. It's a rejection of an idea that everything has to come from one person. And like what, you know, the brilliant.

19:47

Speaker B

Idea is very top.

20:10

Speaker C

Yeah, I've had very. I've had very little experience, but I've been on several sets.

20:12

Speaker A

I mean, the idea of somebody taking your cell phone from you when you get to work because they want you focused on their art is so, so, pardon my French, so male and boring stupid to me. Why does the group can't. He can't text his wife about dinner because your genius extends that. It's just exhausting. It's.

20:15

Speaker C

Yeah, yeah. It's also long. I. I kept saying to people, I got things to do.

20:34

Speaker A

This is a job.

20:40

Speaker C

So when you talk about owning this intellectual property, what does that mean now for you all? Because I own all my intellectual property, just so you know. And I think it's important explain why it is for you, especially in this space, because that's something that's anathema to the industry.

20:41

Speaker B

Well, I'll tell you what it means is like Jacob and I, you know, worked on a show called Letterkenny and Sh. And the producers of that show made it in Canada as well, and they had a robust merchandise business. And when we were in post production, we decided, because we have, we, you know, retained all the intellectual property behind the series, that we wanted to take advantage of that and make a line of merchandise which we're doing, which is now incredibly like it's. It's become this amazing part of our business that we're super excited about. But it also means that ultimately, like when we, we made the decision to reinvest our fees, it was because we knew that if this goes really well, we're going to benefit for the next 25 years off of this. And that is the difference. And I think, like, what, you know, people always ask about, I guess you look at the Canadian system versus the American system, the Canadian system, you as the producers, if you want to take advantage of being a really, truly Canadian show. Part of the offering is the broadcasters can't own the ip. The producers get to. And some people will look at that. But the flip side in the US is you're making way more money up front. I don't think that either is right or the other is wrong. I just think that our system is something to protect. Because what's happening in the US you can kind of look to and say, I mean, is this fully working right now? Like, can we really argue that this system is better than ours? No. But I can say that for a hundred years, this business was run on the idea that creators and the people who made it got to own and benefit from what they did for their entire lives. And I think that that's something worth fighting for.

20:56

Speaker C

I think so completely. At some point, I wasn't going to make something for someone and I said, you just have to get give me ip. And they said, why do you have to have it? I said, it's none of your business. Yeah, because I want it. Yeah, because it's mine, it's not yours.

22:50

Speaker A

Right. It was like, own your own publishing.

23:03

Speaker B

Right.

23:04

Speaker A

Because why would you let somebody else administer your work and take all the profit from it?

23:04

Speaker C

That's correct.

23:09

Speaker B

And like we're gonna, we have opportunities and we will work in this system that doesn't have that and it'll be fine as well. But I just think that, like, yeah, when we talk about, you know, there's so many reasons why budgets have exploded. You know, the economy, like the economy of scale on, on TV has just completely fallen out because we don't make episode enough episodes. We don't contain them into certain locations. But also, it doesn't matter if you have a massive hit or kind of a middling hit, you seem to win no matter what at that level. So I think that there is something to look at as we move forward in these systems of like giving people back end again like these, these old ideas should be right, which they have changed.

23:10

Speaker C

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25:37

Speaker C

Or prefer to do things yourself. Get a custom ready to use website in minutes with Wix's AI website builder or choose from more than 2000 templates, get built in solutions tailored to your business and enjoy easy fuss. Free domain registration, web hosting included. WIX powers more than 280 million businesses around the world because with Wix you can own your individuality, create freely and scale fearlessly. Ready to create your website? Go to wix.com that's wix.com. We're back with ecom's executive producers Jacob Tierney and Brendan Brady, who are behind the the people behind this huge hit, heated rivalry. I'm friends with Eileen Chaikin, the executive producer of the L Word, Handmaid's Tale and many other shows. And of course the groundbreaking sort of gay show in the United States was this one, which was many moons ago. She had a question. We're going to play for you right now, Jacob.

25:39

Speaker B

I love your show.

26:41

Speaker C

Absolutely love it.

26:42

Speaker B

Congratulations.

26:43

Speaker C

Here's my question. Our mutual friend, colleague, agent, ally Matt.

26:44

Speaker B

Felker shared with me the outlandish and stupidly familiar story of getting heated rivalry on air. All the rejections that preceded your fabulous.

26:50

Speaker C

And well deserved massive success. So do you feel vindicated?

26:59

Speaker B

Pissed?

27:04

Speaker C

Annoyed?

27:05

Speaker B

Smugly satisfied? Grateful? Just enjoying the process? More determined than ever to tell sexy queer human stories.

27:06

Speaker C

Some other emotion that I didn't describe or perhaps haven't yet even experienced?

27:14

Speaker A

That's a. It's a great question.

27:20

Speaker C

She's great for people that don't know.

27:22

Speaker A

Elwood, really brilliant show.

27:24

Speaker C

Groundbreaking.

27:26

Speaker A

Absolutely.

27:27

Speaker C

At the time was shocking and showed people happy.

27:27

Speaker A

Yes, it did. It showed a lot of complexity. I mean, yeah, it was a. Yeah, that's a real. Thank you for the question and thank you for being a fan of the show. That's so cool. And I'm sorry that Matt Felker is both of our agents.

27:32

Speaker B

It's a joke.

27:46

Speaker A

I love Matt Felker, but, you know, I can't pretend there isn't a part of me that's slightly smug. I mean, you know, a show like this, what we're experiencing here with this show is so like beyond the beyond in the land of. You can have a successful show, as I did with Letterkenny previously. And it does not explode in this way and this. This level of attention. You know, I try to not. I. I'm in therapy and I try to not be. I try to not be toxic exteriorly. And I think that the lesson that I want to take away from this experience is to continue to trust myself creatively because that. That paid off is that I felt very strongly and I luckily had enough backing and support. Brendan primarily, obviously, and then my creative crave family, all these executives there. And. And I did trust something inside me that was like, I'm not doing that. I'm not doing what these folks want me to do. And I, I just. To be very clear, it wasn't just Americans. It was other Canadians too. It was a lot of people like this. They all like the lean in, like, oh, you have a gay hockey show with sex. And they were like, that's not what we meant. Too much sex, too much hockey, too little hockey, too little sex. Whatever it was, it was all like, why is it like this? Can it be different? And I really was like, I don't.

27:46

Speaker B

Think it should be.

29:01

Speaker A

I think it should be what it.

29:02

Speaker C

What was the craziest thing. My ex wife started Planet out and then they merged with gay.com and one of the venture capitalists said, couldn't they just be hip people versus gay people?

29:03

Speaker A

I mean, listen.

29:14

Speaker C

And she said. She said she was like, what? Like, just hip.

29:15

Speaker A

The thing that was the most. You don't get this note that we got, I think was the idea of needing a female entry point into this show because women wouldn't want watch this show if there wasn't a woman protagonist. And I was like, you know, women read these books. Women write these books. Gay men don't even know these books exist. Like, these are for women. And so the missing that gap in understanding. And I do think there's a thing with tv, you know, a lot of executives, they get. It feels like they get paid by the note. And so if they are not coming in with a big thought, what are they even doing in the room? The most of the best executives that I know are the people that actually speak the least. And that kind of trust in creators. And then when they do give a note, I take it, because this is somebody that is rowing in the same direction as me. This is somebody trying to make the same show as me.

29:20

Speaker C

So in general, we call it drive by editing.

30:06

Speaker A

Yeah, there you go.

30:08

Speaker B

Yeah.

30:10

Speaker A

And so I think that there was such a misunderstanding of who the. What the audience wanted out of this. And what I chose to trust was my gut and the IP and the audience that was already enjoying it. And I was like, why would you change this when it's already being consumed and obsessed over to this degree? Why do you think you know more. More.

30:10

Speaker C

What about you, Ren?

30:30

Speaker B

Oh, I've also. Listen there. The best thing that happened was we. We are friends with a couple of folks who ended up passing because their. Their bosses wouldn't get on board. And getting them letting them come to us and be like I told my boss, look what you missed out. That is the fun part of the, like, kind of smugness, I think, you know, but to be be honest, this has been absolutely nuts, Cara. Like, we're. This has been so crazy. It's so much bigger than we ever thought. I think the.

30:32

Speaker C

Now everybody's your friend, right?

31:03

Speaker B

Yeah. But also, I just feel that I'm going to sound a little Pollyannish here, but I mean it. We are trying to also stay grounded by being of service to people. Part of the reason why we were at the CMPA thing with Mark Carney was to kind of raise awareness for our industry. And we're just trying to figure out ways. Ways to. To stay grounded with the people and the things that make. You know, we've got this incredible platform. We want to use it to. To actually promote positive issues. And we're hoping that that's what we can kind of do. And that's been the most fun thing that we've gotten to. To experience right now is like hearing from people how their lives are being changed and how we are now able to actually affect a modicum of change, even if it's just pushing everything in the right direction. We're not going to change the entire univers course.

31:05

Speaker C

Not. Right.

31:58

Speaker B

But the specificity of the things we are able to Change has been really positive and lovely.

31:59

Speaker C

So in that genre, I want to play something Matt Damon said on Joe Rogan last month about how streaming has impacted the creative process. Because a lot of it, part of it are people breaking free, right. Like myself many years ago, or I have a lot of people coming to me. I'm like, it's great out here. Like, you don't need all that stuff. But let's talk. Let's hear what he had to say. And this is a very successful actor and producer.

32:04

Speaker A

So you said Matt Damon.

32:23

Speaker B

Matt Damon, okay.

32:25

Speaker C

Yeah. He's talking about the. The business.

32:26

Speaker A

I've heard of him. I think I've heard.

32:28

Speaker C

You've heard of him. You've heard of him.

32:29

Speaker A

Like, for instance, Netflix, you know, standard way to make an action movie that we learned was, you know, you usually have like three set pieces.

32:31

Speaker C

One in the first act, one in.

32:40

Speaker A

The second, one in the third. And, you know, you kind. They kind of ramp up. And the big one with all the explosions, and you spend most of your money on that one in the third act. That's your kind of finale. And now they're, you know, they're like, can we get a big one in the first five minutes to get somebody? You know, we want people to stay tuned in and can. And, you know, it wouldn't be terrible if you reiterated the plot three or.

32:41

Speaker C

Four times in the dialogue, because people.

33:02

Speaker A

Are on their phones while they're watching.

33:05

Speaker C

You know what I mean? So talk about that. He would, by the way, make an excellent gay hockey player, but too old. Too old. An old gay hockey.

33:06

Speaker A

A retired one. Sure, retired one. Listen, I should be clear. I love Matt Damon. I've always loved Matt Damon.

33:15

Speaker C

So talk about that. What's happening now in the creation. Do you, either of you feel pressure?

33:20

Speaker A

We have yet to really experience that, if I'm being perfectly honest, crave was not like that. And I will say that part of what the reaction to the show that has been so kind of interesting to me is people saying, like, this is a show you have to pay attention to. If you're on your phone, you're not going to get it because it's so much about what is not being said, about catching looks between people. It is dialogue as avoidance and obfuscation. And the storyline is actually really simple. They're in love. They can't admit it. So, like, it's actually not a super complicated plot in that way. But so much of it is about the ways in which they're avoiding each other, the ways in which they cannot speak. That's why the sex is so important, because that's when they're being honest. And so I think there is definitely a move towards oversimplification. That being said, you know, I. I don't. I wouldn't want to be too much of a big deal about this. Like, everybody wants an opening that captures you.

33:27

Speaker B

Like, that's not new.

34:20

Speaker A

Like that.

34:21

Speaker C

That.

34:21

Speaker A

That's been a note since the dawn. Stories like, let me in. What's the first scene? Why are you capturing my attention? I don't think that's insane. And I think that, like, I think that that's, you know, I think that this thing, you can see it, I think, in a lot of streamers, you know, where you're like, oh, boy, you've just explained a thing to me that I already know. I get. I get that that can be frustrating. But I would also add, I am on my phone when I look up and realize you've said it to me, this for the third time. And I'm like, yeah, you're not wrong. I did drip.

34:21

Speaker C

Right?

34:50

Speaker A

But. And I think that there can be room for both. Popcorny, fun stuff that, like, I kind of don't care. And then every once in a while, something comes along and you need to pay attention, and that's okay, too.

34:51

Speaker C

And then.

35:01

Speaker A

And then it's up to you to choose. Do you. Is that too much for you?

35:01

Speaker B

That's okay.

35:03

Speaker A

Move it along.

35:04

Speaker C

Yeah, I actually didn't look at my. I have a rule, like, how many. How many text looks is it in a movie? How good is it if I don't pick it up at all?

35:05

Speaker A

We have shows in my household with my boyfriend that we put on to be on our phones with. We're aware of this, and we think of them as, like, visual podcasts.

35:13

Speaker C

The Grammys.

35:20

Speaker B

Sure.

35:22

Speaker C

Grammys was a good one. When you have the Netflix acquisition of Warner, does that affect it?

35:22

Speaker B

Yeah. Yeah. Well, yeah, we don't. I think we don't. You know, we have no actual information on that. I would say, again, we just want more competition in the marketplace. And I think that this. This is part In Canada, in everywhere. Everywhere, really. But I think, you know, it's kind of to the point I was making about, like, is this system in the US Working really well right now? I don't know. Is that good? Is this going to be good for creators? It's really hard to tell at this point, but I would say, like, I don't love that there's less places to go, because in Canada. What we have, like, the reason why we ended up on HBO around the World is because. Because Crave and Bell Media have the exclusive rights to all of HBO's catalog in Canada, we don't have HBO. So if we don't have HBO, you have Crave and that has HBO on it. And so, like, if we don't have that on Crave, does that affect Crave? What happens to them? That's a big part of why people go there. I mean, now and now in heated rivalry, obviously, but yeah, like, I think that. But it's a scary time as we see more and more mergers happening. And I for one would love to see just more competition because I think it's way better when we have more.

35:29

Speaker A

But what I would say I just go ahead. Is just that because we're an acquisition, you know, HBO is not actually creatively involved in the show. I think they like. They say nice things about it, which is great. Exactly. So we're not like. I think that, that, that part is not really going to change, at least in the foreseeable future. Future.

36:53

Speaker C

So. But now, now that the show's blown up, they're not suddenly have an opinion about it.

37:11

Speaker A

No, because they're still getting it for the same price. I think it's worked out great for them. It's worked out really right for them. Like, this is a very successful acquisition. And I mean, it's clearly working well enough that I don't think they feel the, you know. Yeah, I, I think that this is just like, keep doing it, guys.

37:16

Speaker B

That's the.

37:29

Speaker A

That's at least what Casey has explicitly quite said to us is like, keep going.

37:29

Speaker C

But it can go elsewhere. Right around the world.

37:34

Speaker A

Correct. So it's been sold territory by territory or chunk of territory by Territor General, picked up by HBO outlets, Sky in the UK and Ireland and in New Zealand, a couple of other exceptions to that rule. But basically what they do is they buy it for and then they have an option on the second season and potentially third season. So they get. It's like a kind of a right of first refusal. So with. With an increase, they get it. So it's not really even to be renegotiated. It's just kind of like you either want this or you don't. There's no input into the content.

37:37

Speaker C

Right, Right. I have a couple more quick questions. One is about, obviously everyone here in the entertainment industry in LA seems to be in. In many ways in terms of what's happening, including with competition with AI and stuff. Do you do you. Is there a big fear from you all about AI? Because this is the. Some of the big hits this year have been the most non AI type of content, like sinners weapons, yours.

38:05

Speaker A

You know, I think that, Yeah.

38:30

Speaker C

I want each of you to tell.

38:31

Speaker A

Me Brendan has more thoughts on this than I do.

38:32

Speaker C

Okay.

38:34

Speaker B

Yeah, I think that, listen, there is going to be a place for AI in how. How we work in this business. I actually think that there are a lot of opportunities, but I think it is in that tool for creators, not as the creative engine behind costuming. I don't think even scheduling, budgeting and prepping, like those kinds of things where you take an immense amount of time trying to just input data. So much of our jobs are data driven, like just trying to get information. And I do think. Exactly. I think that those are the opportunities right away that we will see and where I would love for people to focus their attention because we were experiencing this. And I'm sure, Kara, you can. You have had this with your team. Those moments of friction when you're trying to explain something to someone and they don't get it. That is hard to replicate. That is hard to do with AI in a way that actually gets you to a place where you're like, okay, cool. We have now communicated together and we are on the aligned and friction.

38:35

Speaker C

Speaking of friction, your whole show's about friction.

39:42

Speaker B

Hell yeah.

39:45

Speaker C

Hell yeah.

39:46

Speaker B

But yeah, I think that, I think it's hard. I think we underestimate the importance of friction in the creative experience.

39:47

Speaker C

Yep. I would agree. That's. That's exactly how I say it. I talk about it. The words tech people use are always seamless, frictionless, convenient. You know, they're always using those words. I'm like, no, friction's critical for you being here.

39:53

Speaker B

Yeah.

40:06

Speaker C

100% know. Yeah. What about you, Jacob?

40:06

Speaker A

Do you think about it all confuses me. No is the answer. Like, I don't think. Like, I again, like the way that, the way that Brendan speaks about it is like that makes sense to me. Like, I can imagine it helping me with some stuff, but like it's not going to write for me. I don't, I don't want that either. I love what I do. I don't want to. I don't want someone. I don't need that kind of help is the way I would say. Yeah.

40:08

Speaker C

So before we go, what would you want to do if you could do anything like you guys are now the world is yours to kind of thing like you can do? Obviously you're Going to do another season of this, maybe two, three, whatever. Because there's lots of books for people who don't realize. What would you want to make? Would you direct, say, a pointed Point Break remake with your agent? Another one where they finally fuck. Where they finally fuck.

40:32

Speaker A

I don't know that I'm very open to a father son story with Hudson Williams and Keanu Reeves. However, you know, they do look a. Like, do they really do. And Keanu's Canadian. He can come home. We can do a fun thing together. You know, we are being.

41:01

Speaker B

We.

41:17

Speaker A

I'm certainly being offered a lot of things and. And yeah, I'm very excited about what's next.

41:18

Speaker C

And is there anything you're like, Gosh.

41:24

Speaker A

I can't really say. But I can tell you that once I can talk about a couple of things they are. One of which in particular is a dream come true. So, yeah, I'm excited to be able to eventually talk about it, but I can't at this point.

41:26

Speaker B

We've got. Yeah, we also. We have a whole productions company that we're running with, like, a lot in development. So it's about getting these projects, the projects that, you know, from a producer standpoint, what we really want to get made are we have a number of shows. The one that is about to go out is called the King is Dead, and I'm going to plug it right here because it's from an amazing, amazing indigenous writer out of Canada named Tim Fontaine. Crave is already signed on for development. We're looking for that other partner because it's basically an action adventure comedy set in the 1700s. I know. Bear with us.

41:44

Speaker C

No, no. Hello, outlander.

42:24

Speaker B

Yeah, 100%. But it's a comedy about a group of indigenous folks tired of all these white people coming to North America. They take a boat, traverse back to England in an attempt to kill King George iii.

42:27

Speaker C

Oh, my God.

42:43

Speaker B

So it's a very history.

42:43

Speaker A

It's like Monty Pyron energy. It's very funny. And we're very excited about that show. Yeah.

42:45

Speaker B

So that's in development with Crave right now, and we're very excited about that one.

42:51

Speaker C

All right, well, everybody loves you. All the boys are getting a lot of attention, which they must be having a ball, it looks like. But you guys deserve equal amounts of attention. We think what you make is amazing.

42:55

Speaker B

Thank you.

43:05

Speaker C

Thank you. And in this time in the United States, it was just what was needed for now. So get that episode out. Get that special episode out.

43:05

Speaker B

We will do our best and thank you for having us on.

43:14

Speaker A

Yeah, we really appreciate it. Thank you Kara.

43:16

Speaker C

Thank you Jacob, and thank you Brendan. Thanks to the audience for listening to our special bonus episode of Pivot. We'll be back in our feeds on Tuesday and I will read us out. Today's show was produced by Lens Lara Naiman, Zoe Marcus and Taylor Griffin. Brandon McFarlane engineered this episode. Jim Mackle edited the video. Nishat Kurwa is Vox Media's Executive Producer. Podcast. Make sure to follow Pivot on your favorite podcast platform. Thanks for listening to Pivot from New York Magazine and Vox Media. You can subscribe to the magazine@nymag.com pod we'll be back later this week for another breakdown of all things tech and business. And Scott, eat your heart out. I got the heat of rivalry guys. Whether you write code or shape strategy, if you build, you belong. Twilio's Customer Engagement platform is the ultimate toolbox for developers, designers, business leaders and everyone in between looking to create truly memorable customer experiences. With Twilio, you can combine data, AI and real time content communications in one open, flexible space. So you can build without limits, without workarounds and without compromise. So what will you build today? Learn more@Twilio.com that's twilight.com be a builder With Twilio.

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Speaker A

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44:43

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46:01