Warren Miller Write In

sander_h

Active member
So I my step dad showed me this interesting article it really brought to my attention of why warren miller films have been made the way the way they are.; http://www.mtexpress.com/index2.php?ID=2005123557&var_Year=2008&var_Month=11&var_Day=12



Ski economics 101









By WARREN MILLER

I lived in the Sun Valley parking lot in a

4-by-8-foot trailer during the winters of 1946-47 and 1947-48. In 1947,

I painted cartoon murals on the employee cafeteria walls in exchange

for a season ski pass. The general manager, Pappy Rogers, let me eat my

meals in the employee cafeteria as long as I was working on the murals,

which took me the entire winter to finish.

That was when ski lift tickets were $4 a day and a

season's pass was $150. Wages were $125 a month plus room and board. In

1948-49 I taught kick turns at the bottom of Dollar Mountain for Otto

Lang and then taught the next winter at Squaw Valley, where I produced

my first feature-length ski film.

In November 1950, while living in my panel

delivery truck, I drove from Seattle to Sun Valley to show that first

film in the Opera House. I agreed to pay my own expenses and split the

gross income 60/40 with no guarantee. I thought all my old friends

would show up and pay $1 to see my first cinematic effort. The Opera

House was almost empty with only 13 people in the audience. Later that

night I split the take and my 40 percent of $13 was $5.20.

With this background, you can imagine my shock

when a friend called to tell me that he couldn't take his children to

see the latest ski movie because it was $18 for a ticket. This is

certainly not why I produced the feature-length films for over 50 years

and for almost 40 of those years made an annual trip to the Opera House

to introduce and narrate the film in person. For 36 of those early

years, Sun Valley was also featured in my annual movie. Obviously low

prices are no longer the case and I want to set the record straight

with my many longtime friends in the Wood River Valley. I sold my film

company many years ago to my son Kurt, who ran it for 10 years, and

since then it has changed hands two more times. One of the subsequent

owners asked me to continue to write and narrate the films and take a

75 percent pay cut. I declined and for the last six years or so have

had absolutely nothing to do with the films or the various companies

that have bought and sold my name. For many years the different owners

have taken previously recorded sentences out of my old ski movies and

inserted them in their latest film to try and convince the

$18-per-ticket customers that I had something to do with their film.

My only involvement with the ski industry today is

writing a weekly newspaper column for half a dozen newspapers and

skiing almost every day all winter as honorary director of skiing at

the Yellowstone Club in Montana.

Since 1947 I have always told anyone who will

listen to me, "Baldy is the best developed ski mountain in the world."

I also add, "Unfortunately, there are too many lifts to the top of it

so you have to ski early in the morning if you want to get the good

snow."

I still pause for a moment every time I drive

through the Sun Valley Lodge parking lot and think about how living

there for two winters changed my life forever. For over 50 years I

changed people's lives with my many films. In 2000, I switched careers

completely and began publishing my experiences in weekly syndicated

newspaper columns.

Stay tuned because it snowed 3 feet in South

Dakota on Nov. 6. It came with 80 mph winds, 30-foot-deep snowdrifts

and with Al Gore's latest global warming alert.






 
good to know becasue his last few movies sucked hard, but before that they were a ton better, and actually featured skiing, not gay ass bands, and mountain biking.
 
so i was sitting at work doing emails or something and i hear our CEO chatting with someone and sure enough walks by Warren Miller, i had seen a lot fo the movies when i was a kid but wasnt into them anymore since they weren't very cool but holy shit i was in awe. sking owes that dude everthing and its dissapointing that Warren Miller Entertainment is what is is today, no offense Johnny "Big Air" Mosely
 
Dude, Warren Miller is the shit.
I now live in Sun Valley, and have been coming here since I was 6, and went to those classic Opera House shows he is talking about, every year!
My grandparents have been skiing here since the 40's, and used to always have apre-ski tea parties at the condo and Warren Miller would always be there.
Its a shame how bad the movies suck now.

"I'll see you next winter- same time, same place"

 
When Schmuck and I interviewed him over a year ago for NS, I was more than nervous. I don't think I've ever revised my questions that much. Granted, the interview was via email but I was in awe, much like Malczyk.
It's a shame his films aren't the same and they charge $18 for tickets.
"If you don't do it this year, you'll be one year older when you do"
 
Word man. Part of the reason is that he actually doesnt run the company anymore. He handed it down to his son (i think) and retired. That was also the same year that they dropped Nissan and picked up Jeep as their big name sponsor (i think). Journey and Storm were my favorites and i think were his last. Its just under his namen now
 
what was the deal with the Mountain bike segment? Children of winter ... hmmm. Its good to see that the new owners are still sticking with the original Warren Miller themes .. like the snowboard segment.. they still talk about snowboarding like its this weird new thing that kids do.

Its good to hear that warren miller isn't behind any of the crap they are putting behind his name. if I hear Johnny Mosley talk about his 360 mute grab one more time...

as for the 18 bucks ... I don't have much to say about that. I bought 2 tickets because they were giving away free lift tickets.
 
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