Jack Valenti

Jack Joseph Valenti (born September 5, 1921) was "special assistant" to Lyndon Johnson's White House. In 1966, he resigned and became the president of the Motion Picture Association of America. During his tenure there, he was generally regarded as one of the most influential pro-copyright lobbyists in the world. His salary in 2004 was reported to be $1.35 million, which made him the seventh-highest paid Washington trade group chief, according to the National Journal. In 1968, Mr. Valenti created the MPAA movie "rating system" (G, PG, PG-13, R, NC-17), thereby managing to avert the possibility of government efforts to censor or edit films. During the late 1970s and early 1980s, Mr. Valenti became notorious for his colorful attacks on the Sony Betamax VCR, which the MPAA feared would devastate the movie industry. He famously told a Congressional panel in 1982, "I say to you that the VCR is to the American film producer and the American public as the Boston strangler is to the woman home alone." Despite Mr. Valenti's prediction, the home video market created by the VCR ultimately came to be the mainstay of movie studio revenues throughout the 1980s and into the 1990s, until the DVD displaced the VCR in the American living room. In 2003, he found himself at the center of the so-called screener debate, as the MPAA barred studios and many independent producers from sending screener copies of their films to critics and voters in various awards shows. Under mounting industry pressure, conceded a small victory to pro-screener forces to allow screeners to be sent out to Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences voting members only (and only on condition that voters sign an extensive contract agreeing to not distribute their copy), leading to further outcry from film critics, producers, non-voting Academy members (legendary agent Ed Limato resigned his Academy membership over the issue) and other awards. In August 2004, Valenti, then 82 years old, retired and was replaced by Dan Glickman.

Books by Jack Valenti

  • Speak Up With Confidence (2002; ISBN 0786887508)
  • Protect and Defend (1992; Doubleday; ISBN 0385417357)
  • A Very Human President (1976; ISBN 0671808346)

External links

Valenti, Jack Valenti, Jack Valenti, Jack Valenti, Jack Valenti, Jack

 

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