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7:01 pm - 04/10/2012

"Think Like A Man" is the BEST-Testing Film in Hollywood. But Will It Attract White Audiences?

Hollywood: Can "Think Like A Man" Cross Over to White Audiences?

Byline: Most important, those who have seen the film love it: Audience research numbers leaked to Vulture show that the film has scored some of the highest marks ever recorded at audience research screenings, with 95 percent favorable at a preview in the largely black neighborhood of Inglewood, California, and 99 percent in the more diverse Long Beach area. But that reflects an audience corralled for a free screening: A film that tests this well should be able to bring in general audiences, but this can be difficult as studios tend to shortchange marketing for movies geared to an "urban" audience (as in, movies with an all African-American cast), giving them little promotion.


One reason may be what could be termed the Tyler Perry problem: Perry became the highest-paid artist in show business making films with almost entirely black casts that feed African-American stereotypes of black America while simultaneously dining out on them. Thanks to Perry, the sight of a film with an all-black cast practically telegraphs to most white audiences: This isn’t for you.

Hollywood has great difficulty marketing “female movies” to men, let alone “urban movies” to white audiences — which is why everyone in Hollywood is simultaneously confounded and astonished by the forthcoming Think Like a Man. It’s based on a female self-help book, but it’s a guy’s movie. It has a black cast, but tests through the roof with racially mixed audiences, too. It is, in short, a movie that defies easy pigeonholes — and so now faces a fascinating conundrum: Will its studio be able to convince some audiences to try something they’d instinctively pass up but have been demonstrably proven to like?

It’s a good problem to have, because the upcoming romantic comedy Think Like a Man already has much in its corner: Headlining the movie as one of four guys who turn the tables on their better halves by using the ladies' favorite advice book is Kevin Hart, the hugely charismatic stand-up comedian whose 2011 concert film Laugh at My Pain was a surprise smash. More, Think is based on a best-selling book by popular comedian and talk-show host Steve Harvey, one that serves as the central Art of War used by both genders in the film. 


Yet Sony's Screen Gems, which is distributing the film, has determinedly been waging a steady, grassroots campaign to build interest in Think, with the ambitious goal of going beyond the rom-com's obvious base female African-American audience: They want to not only bring in black males, but also whites, too. Those are two traditionally daunting hurdles: getting men to embrace “female” source material, and white audiences to try “urban” films. But Screen Gems is trying not to think like Hollywood.

The film’s secret weapon, insiders say, has been producer William “Will” Packer — a Hollywood outsider who commutes from Atlanta to Los Angeles almost weekly, but is little known in Hollywood despite the fact that his last three films opened at No. 1 at the box office. For almost half a decade, Packer has been quietly making modest hits with black casts for Screen Gems. He produced the 2007 film Stomp the Yard, a $13 million film that made a hefty $75 million worldwide. Packer then followed it up with Obsessed, a $20 million thriller starring Beyoncé Knowles and Idris Elba that grossed $68 million in theaters, then surprised everyone by selling over 1.2 million copies on DVD, where it made another $20 million. Packer then released Takers, a 2010 Screen Gems crime drama that would gross just shy of $70 million worldwide.

For Think Like a Man, Packer has been quietly and steadily working his keen understanding of black demography and marketing. More than half the nation’s black population lives in the South, and so Packer is shuttling the film and much of its cast to markets where movie stars rarely venture. And while black women would be expected to show, getting men aboard is another matter. And so, Think Like a Man has screened or will be screening at more than a dozen fraternities at historically black colleges and universities, with its talent schlepping to schools like Morehouse in Atlanta, Bennett College in Greensboro, North Carolina, Hampton University in Virginia, and LeMoyne-Owen College in Memphis.

In addition, the cast is doing screenings, public appearances, and press days in Chicago’s Cook County (which has the largest black population of any county in the nation), Dallas, Philadelphia, St. Louis, and Washington, D.C.; and has also held red-carpet screenings at the Los Angeles Pan African Film Festival and in Orlando (for the NBA All Star weekend), Atlanta, and of course, New York. The aggressive outreach is working: Almost 85 percent of black audiences are aware of the film, and a whopping 70 percent have “definite interest” in seeing it.

In this respect, Packer is shrewdly taking a page from the outsize success of last summer’s The Help, another “surprise hit” — that is, a surprise to everyone except Disney’s marketers, who engineered it. A marketing insider familiar with The Help campaign tells Vulture that the secret to that film's success was that Disney moved a large percentage of the marketing budget for The Help out of paid media and into screenings, spending three times more than what it usually spent on word-of-mouth showings and red-carpet receptions. “We had to work a fine line with [The Help],” recounts our Disney spy, “It wasn’t super popular with African-American women at first. So while we started with white women 25 and over, we wound up getting black men, too, once we could show them that there was a personal story that related to their grandmothers and in some instances, their mothers’ histories. We had grown black men leaving the theater in tears.”

Of course, despite their predominantly black casts, The Help and Think Like a Man face very different challenges: If The Help had to attract blacks to cross over, Think Like a Man will have to attract whites, a far more difficult task by leaps and bounds. How do you get white audiences to see a film that they are mostly unaware of but that audience research shows they actually love once they see it? The key words being “once they see it.” As of late last week, only slightly more than one in three white moviegoers (37 percent) were aware of the film, and only one in four (23 percent) expressed "definite interest."

Packer has deployed Steve Harvey — a crossover comedian himself thanks to his old sitcom and his regular job as a perpetually shocked Family Feud host to sell the "everybody's welcome!" message to the general public, sending him out to tub-thump Think Like a Man on CBS’s This Morning and ABC’s The View, shows that Packer explains, “don’t necessarily over-index with African Americans.”

And Screen Gems is working intently to get on board the mainstay of romantic comedy: white women over the age of 30. To do so, it is relying on a TV campaign that marketing experts say is unlike the kind usually given a film with an all-black cast. “I look at the campaign, and I don’t see an ‘ethnic’ campaign,” says one former studio marketing head. “This looks like classic Romantic Comedy 101. In fact, it looks like a Nancy Meyers movie, with black people. Which is fine …. All it has to be is funny, and make it clear that the concept has no race. In this case, it’s a romantic comedy — it has a genre; it doesn’t necessarily have to have a race. And that’s the key to crossing over: What men want or think or feel has no age or race. Look at What Women Want. Or Tootsie. It’s Complicated. Or He’s Just Not That Into You. Is this [movie] probably full of blanket statements and ‘Men are dogs!’ clichés? Sure. But in true romantic comedy, those messages never get old.



”Another studio's marketing president wasn't as convinced by the campaign. “There’s no general audience stuff [in this campaign],” laments the exec. “They’ve done a fabulous job with the urban community. [Black] women will go anyway, and marketing to African-American males makes utter sense. But I think they need to expand that out through the audiences who are most accepting of ‘cross over’ entertainment: white kids, 18 to 24. There’s so much crossover in every other genre of entertainment: sports, music, television — and yet we don’t do that with movies. Why? I have no idea what the answer is, but there’s a bigger question here: Why don’t we make these movies stretch?”

One reason may be what could be termed the Tyler Perry problem: Perry became the highest-paid artist in show business making films with almost entirely black casts that feed African-American stereotypes of black America while simultaneously dining out on them. Thanks to Perry, the sight of a film with an all-black cast practically telegraphs to most white audiences: This isn’t for you.

Still, Packer is reluctant to blame Perry for this. “I don’t think that that’s Tyler’s fault,” he says. “I think he’s shown there’s a lot of money to be made [in that genre], but well before Tyler, the issue existed: Plenty of films with black casts have been made that a lot of people would say are of the highest quality — films that Spike [Lee] has made, for instance — that didn’t cross over. I think it will change. You have to get audiences to try something. We don’t have anything like the Rooney Rule in the NFL, where you have to try to at least interview African-American coaches. But there is a process to get those audiences. It starts with making a film like this, which is broad, smart, and one where there’s no cultural or ethnic specificity that would not be relatable to mainstream Americans — whether they be black, white, green, or purple.”

Of course, stretching any film’s reach beyond its core audience takes both initiative and know-how, but when it comes to marketing a black cast beyond “just” black America, Hollywood is often lost in a forest of its own making: The fact is that it is precisely because black audiences are so wildly underserved by Hollywood that they are usually so reliable when they are served at all.

And this financial reality, says one rival studio’s distribution chief, is exactly why most Hollywood studios don’t usually bother trying to cross over their black films.

“I am sure Sony is struggling with this right now,” says a rival studio’s distribution chief. “If [Sony’s vice chairman] Jeff Blake thinks he can get a general audience, he may decide to chase it. But he also knows that that can get expensive. To get there, do you really want to eat into your margins when you know you already have a film that’s going to be profitable with black audiences?”

Source: http://www.vulture.com/2012/04/think-like-a-man-kevin-hart-will-packer.html?mid=rss
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brucelynn 10th-Apr-2012 11:11 pm (UTC)
I feel like Megan Good has been recycling the same glue in tracks for 10 years
fakevoices 10th-Apr-2012 11:32 pm (UTC)
lol
egalitarianmuse 10th-Apr-2012 11:33 pm (UTC)
I feel like she's being playing the same whack character since she Drumline, too.
lori22 10th-Apr-2012 11:47 pm (UTC)
Meagan Good was not in DRUMLINE. That was Zoe Saldana.
in_styles 11th-Apr-2012 04:59 am (UTC)
She kinda does play the same type of role in every movie. idek like she plays the "best friend" or the "really attractive girlfriend"..or like a skanky role

Edited at 2012-04-11 05:00 am (UTC)
sodapopconnect 10th-Apr-2012 11:39 pm (UTC)
She'll sort it out soon, since she's dating a pastor and all.
spoiled_water 10th-Apr-2012 11:55 pm (UTC)
I swear she had them when she was on punk'd way back and had the nerve to be like "but, sir, I'm a famous actress". HA.
in_styles 11th-Apr-2012 04:58 am (UTC)
loool
treebraids 11th-Apr-2012 01:03 pm (UTC)
said the same thing in the last post about this film! Gosh, is so damn greasey as well. she has such a "look" and she didn't even try to change it up for the film.
superdogbiter 10th-Apr-2012 11:12 pm (UTC)
Image and video hosting by TinyPic
mistyraven 11th-Apr-2012 02:54 am (UTC)
Image and video hosting by TinyPic
dorcasgailen 10th-Apr-2012 11:12 pm (UTC)
its probably because Michael Ealy is ridiculous attractive. I plan to see based on his sex appeal alone.
jollygoodthat 11th-Apr-2012 12:12 am (UTC)
friend snapped this at the premiere here in atlanta:



*_____*
hotbroccoli435 11th-Apr-2012 03:24 am (UTC)
unf! yesplz
dnttllhrry 11th-Apr-2012 03:39 am (UTC)
i hate when people are all about light skinned guys with pretty eyes, but DAMN, he pretty.
jesusbitches 10th-Apr-2012 11:13 pm (UTC)
I've seen so much promo for it over the last couple of months. lawdhavmercy
sandstorm 10th-Apr-2012 11:16 pm (UTC)
Yeah :/ I'm sure there is more than enough black people who want to see this and may do so more than once.
ioso 10th-Apr-2012 11:18 pm (UTC)
I don't think "poor white people are excluded" is the point tbh. It's better for everyone involved in a film if the film does well, and for a film to do well it has to have crossover appeal instead of only appealing to a certain market.
browniecakemix 10th-Apr-2012 11:31 pm (UTC)
...Did you read the article?

This movie is gonna do well with black audiences no matter what; that's not the issue. If it attracts white audiences, though, that could open doors for the idea of all-black casts in movies that aren't just Tyler Perry products/knockoffs. Like it or not, studios want that white audience--and if this movie can attract it maybe all-black movies will stop being shoved off into the Perry ghetto (which, ugh, that is the least appropriate term but I can't think of a better one rn).
boss_sister 10th-Apr-2012 11:13 pm (UTC)
Ugh, this sexist crap. I can't even.
vivisexion 10th-Apr-2012 11:20 pm (UTC)
mte.
love_keiko 10th-Apr-2012 11:38 pm (UTC)
same
ritzyroxie 10th-Apr-2012 11:38 pm (UTC)
yep.
batty_gal 10th-Apr-2012 11:52 pm (UTC)
Exactly.
hollymarchosias 10th-Apr-2012 11:56 pm (UTC)
ikr
negative_fucker 11th-Apr-2012 01:04 am (UTC)
ty.

the commercials on comedy central are Kevin Hart and he's saying some shit like "Women should think like men because the way men think is right."

Guuuurl
hndshksatsunrse 11th-Apr-2012 05:02 am (UTC)
this gif SLAYS me everyyyyytime!!
msloserrific 11th-Apr-2012 01:31 am (UTC)
Right? I know that's why I'm not seeing this foolishness
laceleather 11th-Apr-2012 05:26 am (UTC)
it's just not cute. who would want to watch this crap?
bonjourchloe 11th-Apr-2012 05:21 pm (UTC)
ia
tankmachine 10th-Apr-2012 11:14 pm (UTC)
i feel like this is one of those movies that'll find an audience outside of its target demographic, kind of like how Bridesmaids was a hit across the board rather than just among women

like it'll definitely be a hit with Black people bc of the cast and w/e but I'm pretty my White cousin and his Hispanic girlfriend wanna see it too

Edited at 2012-04-10 11:15 pm (UTC)
tradskins 10th-Apr-2012 11:20 pm (UTC)
why do you feel like that?
tankmachine 10th-Apr-2012 11:23 pm (UTC)
because it's about "thinking like a man" aka an ages old concept that couples seem to love talking about

idek how to explain it but it's a "thing"
whitegirlthin 11th-Apr-2012 12:02 am (UTC)
I think so, too. IA w/ u
shameless_re 10th-Apr-2012 11:14 pm (UTC)
Tbf I don't think whites don't go because it's a black cast...usually it's Tyler Perry so 'nuff said.

Also I know this isn't Tyler Perry, but in general.

Look at how well Takers did.
bee_xx3 10th-Apr-2012 11:22 pm (UTC)
Did Takers really do that well? I liked it tbh lol
shameless_re 10th-Apr-2012 11:25 pm (UTC)
I thought it did, I know a lot of people saw it
boltonlove 10th-Apr-2012 11:25 pm (UTC)
i'll watch tyler perry movies on tv, but i'd never go see them in theaters
shania_cares 11th-Apr-2012 12:42 am (UTC)
I'm neither black nor white, but being subjected to Tyler Perry's idea of comedy is what turns me off to watching movies with all black casts, which is weird, since I grew up watching tons of shows with all black casts (and I even watched many pre-TP all black cast movies in my youth). I really would rather not watch someone play a caricature of a person in drag. It just really makes me uncomfortable.
kimberwyn 11th-Apr-2012 03:22 am (UTC)
Idk, the only movie I've been to with a predominantly black cast that had even half a white audience was DreamGirls.
loony_moony 10th-Apr-2012 11:14 pm (UTC)
Yes, but the trailer is heinous.
rubyboots 10th-Apr-2012 11:14 pm (UTC)
The race of the actors won't prevent me from watching this, but the premise will. (Though I might hunt it down online at some point and skip forward to all Michael Ealy's scenes, but that's it /shallow)
boss_sister 10th-Apr-2012 11:15 pm (UTC)
mte
sandstorm 10th-Apr-2012 11:15 pm (UTC)
Same here.
letmypidgeonsgo 10th-Apr-2012 11:18 pm (UTC)
+1
givemethepeasx 10th-Apr-2012 11:18 pm (UTC)
basically
music_lover56 10th-Apr-2012 11:19 pm (UTC)
That's what I was thinking too, that it won;t be because of the race of the cast, but what it's about. I'm black and I have no intention of seeing this lmao
batty_gal 10th-Apr-2012 11:53 pm (UTC)
+1, not interested at all.
stellarlyssa 10th-Apr-2012 11:19 pm (UTC)
mte
handsdowntoo 10th-Apr-2012 11:19 pm (UTC)
This
brenden 10th-Apr-2012 11:20 pm (UTC)
#thingswhitepeoplesay
vivisexion 10th-Apr-2012 11:21 pm (UTC)
same here
deja_vu822 11th-Apr-2012 01:15 am (UTC)
ia on all accounts
kimberwyn 11th-Apr-2012 03:31 am (UTC)
yeah, ok...
blocaholic 11th-Apr-2012 09:20 pm (UTC)
mte
saltireflower 10th-Apr-2012 11:15 pm (UTC)
Honestly, I don't give a damn about white audiences and their opinions.
lidahbidah 10th-Apr-2012 11:25 pm (UTC)
Exactly.
fakevoices 10th-Apr-2012 11:34 pm (UTC)
ia

but they do make the decision in hollywood :(
thepapermill 10th-Apr-2012 11:40 pm (UTC)
seriously. like everything else, no matter what we'd do to cater to them, they'll never stop treating us as an afterthought, so what's the point?
batty_gal 10th-Apr-2012 11:54 pm (UTC)
Lol for real.
stylista_11 10th-Apr-2012 11:54 pm (UTC)
Okay?!
whitegirlthin 11th-Apr-2012 12:04 am (UTC)
LOL love it
browniecakemix 11th-Apr-2012 12:22 am (UTC)
Hope you're happy not being included in Hollywood, then.

Because, sorry, that's just the truth of the matter: if you want major studios to stop putting the kibosh on any black-cast film that isn't a Tyler Perry flick, you'd better hope this (or some other) all-black-cast film manages to become a hit with white audiences. Shit, even indies aren't gonna solve the problem: Pariah played in two theatres for like a week. :-\

Edited at 2012-04-11 12:23 am (UTC)
myroomiswhite88 11th-Apr-2012 01:32 am (UTC)
you think that matters? blacks could piss glitter and shit gold and it still wouldn't mean shit. I wonder what other minorities think because they aren't hardly in anything at all.
heart_iswild 11th-Apr-2012 01:24 am (UTC)
how nice for you?
dnttllhrry 11th-Apr-2012 03:40 am (UTC)
ikr, i dont care about white opinions.
unclesamonmars 11th-Apr-2012 03:43 am (UTC)
ok
venetianglass 10th-Apr-2012 11:16 pm (UTC)
Isn't Chris Brown in this movie? All of the misogynistic shit aside, that would keep me from seeing it.
in_styles 11th-Apr-2012 05:02 am (UTC)
lol you seem pressed. He's been in like 5 movies clearly someone wants to see him.
tx5mym5 11th-Apr-2012 11:28 am (UTC)
I hear he's in it for less than 5 minutes.
lucciolaa 10th-Apr-2012 11:16 pm (UTC)
I have more of a problem with the title/sexism of this movie than the cast. The cast is fucking gorgeous.

Edited at 2012-04-10 11:17 pm (UTC)
sandstorm 10th-Apr-2012 11:17 pm (UTC)
I wondered why everyone kept calling it "Think Like A Man" - I thought the entire book title had transferred. I wish it had.
in_styles 11th-Apr-2012 05:03 am (UTC)
I don't even care. The fact that all the men and flawfree and the women are really pretty is enough for me. I mean, there are so many funny people in it. I think it'll do well at the box office. Who ever did the casting was on point.
childish 10th-Apr-2012 11:17 pm (UTC)
This movie is a fucking joke, it's infuriating black movies always have to follow these kind of lines.
teamdowney 10th-Apr-2012 11:17 pm (UTC)
Michael Ealy why you in this trash?
scotchsour 10th-Apr-2012 11:31 pm (UTC)
Because like a lot of black/minority actors, it is hard to find work that isn't a stereotype.
soul_amazinn 10th-Apr-2012 11:35 pm (UTC)
$$$$$$$
smilofax 10th-Apr-2012 11:39 pm (UTC)
He really seems to want to support back films which is nice, it's just a shame this is the only way he's able to go about it.
teamdowney 10th-Apr-2012 11:46 pm (UTC)
I know, and I love him for it, but the misogyny inherent in this whole project makes me sad that he's involved with it. I've loved him since the first Barbershop.
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