Episode

Finding The Good Guys | Deep Dive on Ep.271 With Joe Amodei

Podcast
Documentary First
Published
Feb 19, 2026
Duration seconds
1031
Processing state
not_requested
Canonical source
https://tinyurl.com/DocFirstPod
Audio
https://episodes.captivate.fm/episode/44d221a1-292b-4829-8a1a-d9e2aa7c4e49.mp3
JSON
/v1/public/podcasts/documentary-first-1033526/episodes/finding-the-good-guys-deep-dive-on-ep-271-with-joe-amodei
Markdown
/podcast/documentary-first-1033526/finding-the-good-guys-deep-dive-on-ep-271-with-joe-amodei.md

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Summary

How do you know if you’ve found a Joe Amodei—or a predatory film distributor? That’s the question Christian Taylor explores in this episode of Documentary First: The Deep Dive, after her conversation with Joe Amodei—filmmaker, 40-year industry veteran, and owner of Virgil Films Entertainment (Supersize Me, Restrepo, Forks Over Knives). What struck her wasn’t just what Joe said about Cat Fest 2026—it was the warmth and trust in their conversation. In her experience, that kind of rapport between filmmaker and distributor is genuinely rare. So she did some digging. What she found was both infuriating and clarifying: there’s no Better Business Bureau for film distribution. No government agency protecting filmmakers. No licensing board. The system that exists is word of mouth, peer networks, and a few dedicated nonprofits trying to shine a light in the darkness. What You’ll Learn: - The 5 essential steps for vetting a film distributor before signing - Red flags that should make you walk away from any distribution deal - Why The Film Collaborative’s Distributor ReportCard is the closest thing to “Yelp for distributors” - What filmmakers really say about predatory distributors (anonymous quotes) - Christian’s own distribution horror story—and how she got her film back The Framework for Finding the Good Guys: 1. Talk to other filmmakers (not the distributor’s references) 2. Check The Film Collaborative’s Distributor ReportCard 3. Watch for red flags (15-year contracts, Netflix promises, no expense caps) 4. Get an entertainment attorney who specializes in distribution 5. Know the system is broken—community is the safety net Plus: A powerful story from Minnesota about pizza shops and doughnut shops becoming the safety net when no infrastructure exists—and what it teaches us abou…