Grildon Tundy
Member
I've been listening to podcasts of people running in Hollywood social circles (Joe Rogan, It's Always Sunny, How Did This Get Made), and something that stands out is how the conversation stops for effusive praise of every other actor/director/producer/cast/crew member that gets mentioned in passing, and even if the conversation is about dunking on the work for comedy as in the case of How Did This Get Made. It always struck me as phony, but recently, I'm thinking it's not a bad practice: it's a small world, and word gets around, so you better not say anything that could hurt your chances in the future.
Seems like it could come off weak and disingenuous, but maybe I'm being cynical. It's good practice to say nothing of someone not in the room with you if it's not positive. Like Thumper said in Bambi, "If you can't say something nice, don't say nothing at all."
However, if Hollywood has ex-communicated someone (ex: Harvey Weinstein), the gloves come off. Funny how once someone is no longer in power and can't help a career, "true" opinions come out.
So, are Hollywooders a bunch of phonies?
Bonus: Since you took the time to read this, I wanted to share trivia on the origin of the term "phony", which comes not from the poor audio quality of phones, but from "The Fawney Rig", which is a con with Irish origins explained as thus: "The confidence man would drop a Lady’s purse containing a cheap ring and wait for someone to spot it. He would then pretend to notice at the same time and claim half the loot for sharing in the discovery. The confidence man or an accomplice would appraise the ring at three or four times its real value, and offer the dupe his half of the find for about double its actual value."
Seems like it could come off weak and disingenuous, but maybe I'm being cynical. It's good practice to say nothing of someone not in the room with you if it's not positive. Like Thumper said in Bambi, "If you can't say something nice, don't say nothing at all."
However, if Hollywood has ex-communicated someone (ex: Harvey Weinstein), the gloves come off. Funny how once someone is no longer in power and can't help a career, "true" opinions come out.
So, are Hollywooders a bunch of phonies?
Bonus: Since you took the time to read this, I wanted to share trivia on the origin of the term "phony", which comes not from the poor audio quality of phones, but from "The Fawney Rig", which is a con with Irish origins explained as thus: "The confidence man would drop a Lady’s purse containing a cheap ring and wait for someone to spot it. He would then pretend to notice at the same time and claim half the loot for sharing in the discovery. The confidence man or an accomplice would appraise the ring at three or four times its real value, and offer the dupe his half of the find for about double its actual value."