Close Menu
    Monsoon News
    • Search Page
    • Bollywood
    • Exclusives
    • TV Shows
    • Movies
    • Privacy Policy
      • Privacy Policy
      • Terms of Use
      • Cookie Privacy Policy
      • DMCA
      • California Consumer Privacy Act (CCPA)
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Monsoon News
    Home»Exclusives»Barry Diller and the Death of the Hollywood Memoir
    Exclusives

    Barry Diller and the Death of the Hollywood Memoir

    adminBy adminMay 28, 2025No Comments4 Mins Read
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Reddit WhatsApp Email
    Share
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest Reddit WhatsApp Email

    Barry Diller’s colorful, candid new memoir Who Knew is a book that can’t help but read a bit like a bookend. Not necessarily for himself, or even for his cohort, but for the era of colorful, candid memoirs authored by Hollywood heavyweights.

    It’s an entertaining shelf. Paramount head Bob Evans’ The Kid Stays in the Picture is the lodestar, followed by volumes from a pair of trailblazing female producers: Julia Phillips’ You’ll Never Eat Lunch in This Town Again and Lynda Obst’s Hello, He Lied. Those at the margins of the business have told some of the most memorable stories (recall Golden Age sex broker Scotty Bowers’ Full Service), although there have been revealing accounts at or near the top from managers Bernie Brillstein and Jerry Weintraub, indie legend Christine Vachon and the super-agent Michael Ovitz.

    These days, two factors are pushing the fun out of memoirs. For one, the entertainment business itself is, as has been much remarked, a far more conservative, risk-averse, vanilla place than it once was, when the personalities and tastes of its potentates defined and dictated its evolution. Reed Hastings may have conquered everything with his all-knowing algorithms and management principles, but No Rules Rules is best ingested by LLMs and MBAs, not rebels and romantics.

    For another, the Hollywood memoir, previously a career capstone — allowing for say-anything vulnerability and indiscretion — is now all too often reduced to brand-burnishing extensions into self-help, typically of the creative entrepreneurship koan-providing varietal, with eyes toward further vistas. This is how Bob Iger ended up with The Ride of a Lifetime and Mark Burnett published Jump in! Even If You Don’t Know How to Swim, leveraging his rags-to-riches story to impart life lessons. Such books become the calling card for the TED Talk and the 92nd Street Y conversation. Or, at least, grist to get booked on the podcast circuit. To be fair, the genre’s shift from rollicking to restrained may also have to do with how memoirs’ factuality is now so regularly challenged. (Evans was a masterful storyteller, not a reliable narrator.)

    There’s still plenty worth sharing from the most recent moments of Hollywood history. But who might even dish? It’s doubtful that the disciplined likes of Bryan Lourd, Kathleen Kennedy, Kevin Feige, Donna Langley, Bob Bakish and Sherry Redstone would ever go no-holds-barred enough to keep readers from skimming. Yet maybe they’d surprise us.

    You don’t need to be a great writer to write a great Hollywood memoir. (There are ghostwriters for that.) You do require an excess of egotism, the gift of gab, a strong point of view, an interest in openness, a relish for gossip and a weakness for recklessness. It also helps to possess a baleful desire to settle scores. Agendas — if they’re charmingly or otherwise compellingly expressed — are the secret admixture for this literature’s success.

    The most important qualification of all is chutzpah. A generation or two ago it was perhaps the unifying trait among the mavericks, pirates and outliers who built and battled over Hollywood. Today, it appears to be a rare and vanishing quality.

    As such, it’s easy to draw up a short list of who should write a memoir, leaning into the genre’s allowances for misremembering, spinning and raconteuring. Ron Meyer, of course, along with Barbara Broccoli, Jason Blum, Ava DuVernay, John Landgraf and Miky Lee. Remember, one doesn’t need to be a likable protagonist to be a captivating one. Ari Emanuel, Ryan Murphy, Joel Silver… Scott Rudin: This can be your moment.

    Regardless, get on it. Wait too long, and nobody may be left who’s willing to read it. Or even to listen to the audiobook.

    Gary Baum, a senior writer at The Hollywood Reporter, will publish his debut novel In Pursuit of Beauty — about a memoirist and their ghostwriter — on July 1.

    Source link

    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn WhatsApp Reddit Email
    Previous ArticleHow Friends Almost Cast Someone Else As Rachel – What That Would’ve Meant For The Show!
    Next Article Hi.5 actor Ahn Jae Hong calls kissing Yoo Ah In a ‘emotional reconciliation’
    admin
    • Website

    Related Posts

    Fosse Made Me Sleep in the ‘Star 80’ Murder Apartment

    April 20, 2026

    Did Patrick Muldoon Have Children? Find Out if the Actor Had Kids

    April 20, 2026

    Why You Need to Watch Netflix’s ‘Love on the Spectrum’ (Guest Column)

    April 20, 2026

    How the ‘Days of Our Lives’ Actor Died

    April 20, 2026

    UEG Expands Celebrity Brand Building Business Ventures Division

    April 20, 2026

    Who Was Patrick Muldoon? 5 Things About the ‘Days of Our Lives’ Actor

    April 20, 2026
    Add A Comment
    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    Recent Posts
    • Passes The Monday Test & Beats Bade Miyan Chote Miyan’s Lifetime!
    • Fosse Made Me Sleep in the ‘Star 80’ Murder Apartment
    • Lee Cronin’s The Mummy North America Box Office: Earns $13.5 Million In Opening Weekend
    • Did Patrick Muldoon Have Children? Find Out if the Actor Had Kids
    • The Drama North America Box Office: Delivers A24’s 3rd Biggest 3rd Weekend
    • Why You Need to Watch Netflix’s ‘Love on the Spectrum’ (Guest Column)
    • Surpasses The Global Earnings Of The Oscar-Winning Japanese Animated Fantasy Spirited Away
    • How the ‘Days of Our Lives’ Actor Died
    • Zack Snyder’s Justice League Takes No.1 Spot On Jio Hotstar Top 10 After HBO Max India Launch
    • UEG Expands Celebrity Brand Building Business Ventures Division
    • Home
    • Movies
    • TV Shows
    • Gaming

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.