Planet Money - Romance on the screen and on the page: Two Indicators
Episode Date: October 23, 2024On today's show, we have two stories from The Indicator, Planet Money's daily podcast. They just launched Love Week, a weeklong series exploring the business and economic side of romance.First, hosts ...Wailin Wong and Adrian Ma fire up the gas logs and pour a mug of cocoa to discuss the made-for-TV rom-com machine, and how television executives learned to mass produce seasonal romance.Then, Wailin and host Darian Woods discuss another romance medium: the romance novel. Once relegated to supermarket aisles, these books are now mainstream. And authors, an often-maligned group within publishing, have found greater commercial success than many writers in other genres. We find out how romance novelists rode the e-book wave and networked with each other to achieve their happily-for-now status in the industry.This episode is hosted by Erika Beras, Wailin Wong, Adrian Ma, and Darian Woods. These episodes of The Indicator were originally produced by Julia Ritchey and engineered by Kwesi Lee. They were fact-checked by Sierra Juarez. Kate Concannon is The Indicator's Editor.You can listen to the rest of the series at The Indicator's feed, or at npr.org/loveHelp support Planet Money and hear our bonus episodes by subscribing to Planet Money+ in Apple Podcasts or at plus.npr.org/planetmoney.Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy
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This is Planet Money from NPR. So
there's this running joke that you can basically generate a holiday rom-com
from a list of options. Yeah so start with your main character maybe she is a
hairy corporate lawyer from the big city. Or a beat-down interior designer. Ooh or
a baker.
And she returns to her bucolic small town
at Christmas time, of course.
You know, she wants to enter some kind of folksy contest
or something.
Or maybe she has to save the family Christmas tree
farm from ruin.
But then?
Then she falls for an old flame.
Or maybe the other baker in town.
I don't know.
Ooh, as long as he's wearing plaid. Or maybe he has a dog. He always has a dog. They meet at the dog park, actually.
Oh my gosh. Holding cups of coffee that obviously don't have any coffee in them.
Maybe all of the above.
All of the above, yes.
I would 100% watch that movie. I actually have watched that movie multiple times.
I have too. It is a seasonal ritual with me. And it turns out it is a tradition for a lot of people.
And this formula we talked about is actually part of what
makes the industry so successful.
Everywhere you look, from holiday movies
to bestselling books, the romance genre is taking over.
Hello, and welcome to Planet Money.
I'm Erica Barris.
And I'm Waylon Wong.
Today, we're bringing you two episodes from our daily show, The Indicator from Planet
Money.
All week we've been diving into the economics of love.
Today, television executive Bill Abbott of Great American Family tells Adrienne Mahoney
about how holiday rom-coms took over the seasonal airwaves.
And then Darren Woods and I speak with media scholar Christine Larson about how romance
novels went from a punchline to a booming genre.
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Plus. Go to plus.npr.org. It's become kind of a national pastime to grumble about how the holiday marketing blitz
seems to start earlier and earlier every year.
But believe it or not, there was a time when it seemed like there was not enough Christmas.
At least, not when it came to made-for-TV movies.
Bill Abbott was CEO of Hallmark Channel's parent company for over a decade, and he remembers
those barren days way back in the early 2000s.
For the most part, the TV movie space was really only a few movies leading up to Christmas.
You know, maybe you do five or six Christmas movies a year.
Bill says he and others at Hallmark believed there was a big untapped audience
for Christmas content.
People who wanted presents, snowflakes, sleigh rides,
and most importantly, they wanted PG rated romance.
So in 2009, Hallmark launched Countdown to Christmas,
a collection of movies that would air in the weeks leading
up to December 25th.
And Bill says things really got going a couple years later.
That's when the network aired 12 original holiday films with titles like
A Princess for Christmas and Mistletoe Over Manhattan.
Did you pick that because it was like the 12 days of Christmas?
There was a little bit of that there to be candid.
Oh really?
You know, we kind of, what's a good number?
And 12 kind of made sense for the business model anyway.
A key part of this business model was frugality.
Bill says they spent around 12 to 15 million dollars on those dozen movies.
To give you an idea of how thin that shoestring is, around that same time Paramount released
a romantic comedy in theaters called No Strings
Attached starring Natalie Portman and Ashton Kutcher. That single rom-com cost a reported
$25 million to make.
Yeah, Bill did not have that kind of Hollywood budget. So there were some trade-offs made.
You look back there are Christmas movies that had no snow, that were clearly in warm weather,
things we would never do now,
because we didn't have the budget
to create that overall setting and location
that, as we've learned, is so critical
to making the viewer become immersed in Christmas.
And so those were choices that we had to make
just due to financial constraints.
Even without Hollywood A-listers and elaborate sets,
these movies have found both enthusiastic viewers
and advertisers.
Hallmark already kicked off Countdown to Christmas last week
and will play holiday movies 24-7 through the season.
And this year's lineup has over 30 new films.
Streaming services like Netflix and Hulu
have also aired their own original holiday rom-coms.
As the genres expanded, so have budgets.
But a lot of the cost-saving measures from the early days have stuck around.
For example, the movies tend to have simple, small town settings.
And they're shot quickly in just a few weeks.
We have so many years in the business that we don't need more than two takes.
You may recognize that voice as Danica McKellar.
She played girl next door Winnie Cooper
in the TV series, The Wonder Years.
She is also a Christmas movie mainstay.
Maybe you watched Crown for Christmas
or Coming Home for Christmas on Hallmark.
You'll see a lot of, you know, 90s child stars
like myself in these movies,
in part because we know how to do this stuff.
Danica is now at a network called Great American Family, which Bill Abbott
launched after leaving Hallmark. Danica followed Bill when he switched jobs and
so did several other actors, along with the holiday movie playbook that Bill
helped develop at Hallmark. One strategy in the playbook is shooting in Canada.
The provincial government in Ontario offers a tax credit
of 35 to 40% as long as productions meet certain
requirements around hiring local labor and services.
One movie Danica shot in Ontario was Christmas
at the Drive-In.
In this film, her character is trying to save
the town drive-in movie theater from getting torn down.
Christmas is a beautiful tradition. And so is the drive-in. If that goes away,
how could that possibly be a good thing for Brennington?
Classic. Rescuing a troubled local business is, of course, a recurring theme of these movies.
So, of course, we had to ask Danica about this economic angle.
We don't like to have a lot of bad guys because we don't want to model bad behavior.
So who's the bad guy?
The bank.
The rates have gone up.
The bank is going to have to foreclose, right?
You're not fighting against a person.
You're fighting against the big economic structure that works pretty well most of the time in
this country, but then there's some pitfalls, right?
Yeah, capitalism.
Are you allowed to say capitalism in a script?
Are we allowed to say capitalism?
It's never come up.
We know you don't want to get political in these scripts
because our goal is to make people feel good.
So if you bring up anything controversial at all,
that might interrupt their feeling good.
These stories present a pretty specific view of the world.
One persistent critique of the genre
is that it predominantly features straight white couples.
Although you can now find more of a variety of stories
at Hallmark and other streaming services.
Hulu released a rom-com called Happiest Season in 2020,
which starred Kristen Stewart.
And Variety said it was the first queer Christmas rom-com.
A lot of the movies though still tend to take place in small towns or the occasional fictional
European monarchy that's untouched by current events or even pop culture. Yulene Kwang realized
this in 2019 when she was hired to help write a Hallmark rom-com called Love on Iceland.
And, spoiler alert, it's part of my lore that I was fired by Hallmark.
Oh, Yulene says she worked on the script with a partner and they kept getting notes that
their writing was too hip for Hallmark. Like for example, one draft had a reference to
George Clooney and his wife Amal. Yulene said that had to go. So did a mention of a character
working in politics.
After maybe like three or four rounds of that back and forth,
I'm sure some beleaguered executive at Hallmark
was like, pull the plug.
Yulene and her partner were let go via a polite conference
call, but Yulene says they did get paid.
She remembers her earnings being $30,000.
And she and her partner are still
credited as writers on the movie.
That means they get residual payments whenever the film airs.
Uline has since moved on to rom-com projects with major studios.
But she says she's still grateful for the Hallmark gig as a milestone in her early career.
Before going into it, I thought they were very vanilla kind of cookie cutter romances.
What I have learned is that there's a lot
of work that goes into the making of a Hallmark movie.
That said...
I do hope that they continue to go more diverse and give more opportunities to other plucky
young screenwriters and other plucky not so young screenwriters.
As for Bill Abbott, he says a vanilla cookie cutter production was never his vision.
There's a fine line, he says, between familiarity and repetition,
between earnestness and something that's too sentimental.
One thing we have, it's like the cheese alert.
The minute we sniff it out, it's like, move on.
Is there like a button you press to play a sound in like
a screening room? I like that. That's a great idea. I watched a movie today that
I would have been pushing the button all day long.
Coming up after the break we dive into the romance genre and look at how
novelists have found success in a challenging industry.
Adrian, do you feel that nip in the air, the smell of pumpkin spice wafting from your local coffee shop?
Yeah, the overwhelming urge to suddenly watch holiday rom-coms?
Yes!
With all of these warm and fuzzies on the brain, it is the perfect time to explore the
economic side of romance on The Indicator.
We've got a week of episodes we're calling Love Week.
Subscribe wherever you get podcasts.
Coming up on The Indicator from Planet Money is Love Week, our week-long series exploring
the business and economics of romance.
Ever wonder how cable channels crank out so many rom-coms around Christmas time?
Or wish you could get relationship advice from an economist.
I'm listening.
That's Love Week from The Indicator.
Listen on your podcast app or smart speaker.
As we're all navigating a divisive election, no matter what happens, the question remains,
how the heck are we going to move forward together?
So in this season of the StoryCorps Podcast from NPR, stories from people who made a choice
to confront the conflicts in their own lives head on, and in sharing stories from the bravest
among us, maybe we can take their lead and find some hope for the rest of us.
Get the StoryCorps podcast wherever you listen.
Truth, independence, fairness, transparency, respect, excellence. This is NPR.
If the last romance novel you looked at was a paperback at your local supermarket with
a woman and a shirtless man embracing on the cover, well, fetch your smelling salts, because
things have really changed in the last couple of decades.
Yeah, romance has gone mainstream.
You'll find the books prominently displayed at Target and on the front tables at Barnes
and Noble.
Romance is one of the fastest growing and best selling categories within publishing.
And this growth comes with a lot of variety.
There are modern day stories and historical stories.
There's characters representing different facets of sexuality and gender and settings
from college campuses to fairy kingdoms to outer space. The romance genre is this vast and varied genre of books that feature a central
love story and an emotionally satisfying ending.
So that's the traditional definition of romance.
Christine Larson is a journalism professor at the University of Colorado, Boulder.
I define romance a little bit differently because I'm interested in media economics.
So I define romance as an almost entirely female dominated industry of books mostly written
about women, by women, and for women.
Christine is the author of the book Love and the Time of Self Publishing, written, about women, by women, and for women.
Christine is the author of the book Love and the Time of Self Publishing, how romance writers
changed the rules of writing and success. Her research involves studying authors'
incomes between 2009 and 2014. That window of time covers the early boom in ebooks, which
was fueled by Amazon's Kindle and Apple's iPad.
Using data from author surveys, Christine found that during this period,
romance writers saw their median income rise by 73%.
Contrast that to a 42% drop in income for other authors.
Christine lays out two big factors for the success.
Number one, an early adopter mindset and a willingness to experiment with digital technology.
Romance writers were actually the very first writers to start digitally self-publishing
even long before The Kindle came out.
They were selling PDFs of books online in the 90s.
When Amazon introduced self-publishing in 2007, romance writers took to the platform
right away. They were also really productive, often publishing multiple books a year.
And these authors didn't need the approval or marketing muscle of traditional publishers.
Many writers already had built relationships with readers online via early internet communities
like Prodigy.
Christine says they could mobilize their fandoms to buy books.
Romance readers historically buy more books than the average American, and these readers
flocked to e-books.
I mean, OnePlus as a reader is that with an e-book, if you're maybe feeling a little sheepish
about an explicit cover, I mean, no one knows what you're reading.
And so by 2011, 60% of romances sold were in digital form.
And plus, the payment structure for e-books
let self-published authors keep more of their sales revenue.
If I am a traditionally published author,
let's say my book sold for $10, I
would get about $1 in royalties.
But if I'm self-published, I sell the same book for $10, I get $7. I get
around 70%. So I can sell fewer books and make a lot more money.
So after ebooks, the second big reason behind the commercial success of romance writers,
Christine says, is that they formed something called open elite networks. This is where
more established or senior members of a group are willing to forge relationships with newcomers.
Christine says Open Elite Networks are credited for the growth of the Silicon
Valley biotech industry in the 80s. In the romance industry, she's found a long
history of authors helping each other get published and sharing information on
how much they make. Priscilla Oliveras is an author who has
published eight romance novels and four novellas.
Her latest book, Kiss Me Catalina,
is about two mariachi musicians who fall in love on tour.
I write closed door romance,
so things can get hot and heavy,
but then it fade to black.
I figure we all know what's happening there and I want to
give my character some privacy. Give them the room. They're practicing their songs.
Yeah, that's right. That's what they're doing. And when it came to networking with other romance
writers though, Priscilla had more of an open door approach. She's part of a group of Latina authors
who get together periodically for writers retreats and they share details about their careers.
Priscilla
says she believes helping other authors improves conditions for everyone.
Priscilla Hickman-Miller, Author, Author, Author
If I'm offered this opportunity or this contract at these numbers, why would I not think, you
know, my friend who I know is working equally as hard as I am, right? And so I think they
are equally as deserving. So for me, I think it's that idea of there is enough
for all of us and even more.
So who can we help?
One of the newer authors in Priscilla's network
is Natalie Kanya.
She discovered the romance genre in college
when she picked up a novel from the bargain bin
at her university bookstore.
I instantly fell in love with romance,
and I decided that was what I was going to write.
Natalie said that the beginning of her career was lonely,
but then she learned about a conference for romance writers.
And from there, she started making connections.
You know, I would meet somebody, and somebody would be like,
you have to meet Priscilla.
You got to meet Mia.
You have to talk to Adriana.
I really found having
that network super helpful, especially having and building a network with other women of
color because we know that the system works differently for us than it works for other
people.
Traditional publishing has long been criticized for excluding authors from marginalized backgrounds.
In romance, only about 10% of books published in 2023 were by Black, Indigenous, or Authors
of Color, according to one industry report.
For Natalie, the open elite network has helped her break through.
Early on in her career, she went to a luncheon, and she ended up sitting next to a romance
writer she admired named Kristen Higgins.
It was like a very fangirl moment. Kristen asked Natalie,
what kinds of things do you want to write about?
At the time, I was worried about writing
Latinx characters because I wasn't sure if they would sell.
Kristen Higgins said, always tell the story that you want to
tell because it will reach who it needs to reach.
Natalie eventually signed a contract to write three books about a Puerto Rican family in Chicago.
Next week, the third novel in the series comes out.
It's called Sleeping with the Frenemy, and it's about a firefighter reuniting with an old flame.
Unintended, Darian.
I get it. And I'm starting to maybe catch the flame of romance novels after this episode.
Check out The Indicator from Planet Money this week for the rest of their series on love.
Tomorrow they talk to the CEO of Hinge about the dating app Backlash, and on Friday they ask
economists to put their economic wisdom to the test and offer advice on love and dating.
These episodes of The Indicator were originally produced by Julia Richie and engineered by Quasi Lee.
They were fact-checked by C.R. Juarez. Cake and Cannon is The Indicator's editor.
I'm Wayland Wong.
I'm Erika Barris.
This is NPR. Thanks for listening. All this month, Shortwave is serving up tricks and treats.
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