Cherreads

Chapter 139 - CH : 135 The Fat Jewish Man

Hey, where did all the commenters go?

We require 4 additional Power Stone donors, 1 more reviews, and 800 more collections to unlock the next bonus chapters.

Get those stones going boys and tomboys, we need to get those numbers up!

Join my Patreon

GodofPleasure

(dot)com/GodofPleasure

******

* **Disney:** "Rejected outright. They said the script is brilliant, but the thematic elements of death and psychological trauma absolutely do not fit their established, family-friendly brand architecture. They won't touch it."

* **Warner Bros. & Paramount:** "Radio silence. They haven't even dignified us with a formal pass yet, which means it's trapped in development hell on some junior executive's desk."

* **Universal Pictures:** "A hard pass. They ran their market analytics and concluded that a slow-burn horror film without a traditional slasher villain has no viable commercial market. They don't think it will sell tickets."

* **20th Century Fox:** "They are actually hesitant, which is a step up. Bill Mechanic loved the twist ending. But they are completely out of liquid cash. Even if they wanted to greenlight the picture, they wouldn't be able to fund production until late 1999."

"Fox is broke?" Marvin raised a perfectly sculpted eyebrow, a dark, knowing amusement dancing in his nebula-blue eyes.

"Fox is bleeding from the neck," Jeff corrected grimly. "As the entire industry knows all of their operational capital is currently chained to the bottom of the ocean. It's all tied up in *Titanic*."

Marvin leaned back, suppressing a chuckle.

*Titanic.* The transmigrator's mind instantly recalled the future. He remembered the iconic, triumphant image of James Cameron standing on the Academy Awards stage, holding a golden Oscar and screaming, *"I am the king of the world!"*

But from this current vantage point in September 1997, the reality was starkly, hilariously grim. Who in the public would ever believe that the legendary director had reportedly prepared razor blades in his editing bay, completely ready to slit his own wrists if the movie bombed?

Twentieth Century Fox had so little confidence in the massive, bloated epic—which had cannibalized over $215 million in production costs—that they had actually brought Paramount Pictures in halfway through to share the financial risk. It was a desperate move to stave off bankruptcy, and it was a decision that several Fox executives would bitterly regret for the rest of their lives.

And because of that exact desperation, Marvin had already won.

The synchronization and master use license Fox had paid him for *My Heart Will Go On*—and for his extensive, co-credited contributions to the film's overarching background score—had officially settled at four million dollars. It was a clean wire transfer covering both the synchronization rights (the right to use the composition) and the master recording (the right to use the actual audio track). It had been negotiated through Jeff, Max Marvin at Cheiron/Wolf Cousins, and the Zenith legal team with the efficiency that comes from one party owning everything.

There was no obligation to split the fee with a secondary label, a co-writer, or a publisher.

Fox had pushed back initially, of course.

Studios always threw a tantrum when leverage was used against them. But Cameron had already fought tooth and nail for the inclusion of the theme song; the studio desperately needed the commercial viability of Marvin's vocal track more than the director did. A failed negotiation would have left Fox with either an expensive, inferior last-minute commission, or a two-hundred-and-fifteen-million-dollar film release without a defining piece of musical marketing.

So, they paid. Four million dollars for both rights, in one single deal, from one single party.

Every cent of it had landed securely in the Zenith Trust, with nobody standing between the wire and the balance, because Marvin had ensured there was nobody left to stand there.

It wasn't a bad deal for Fox, either. Who in 1997 could have possibly imagined that *Titanic* possessed the potential to gross over $1.8 billion worldwide during its initial run? After multiple subsequent 3D re-releases in the future, its final box office sales would exceed $2.264 billion.

The movie was slated for release in December 1997. The tidal wave was only two months away.

"There's another macroeconomic factor at play here, Marvin," Jeff continued, sinking into the sofa opposite his client. "The major institutional investors and independent financiers who usually co-fund these mid-budget studio pictures are completely distracted. They are all currently busy playing with the Asian currency markets."

Marvin's eyes gleamed with satisfaction. The seeds he had planted were bearing fruit across the globe.

"The Asian Financial Crisis is generating massive, rapid volatility," Jeff explained. "Why would a Wall Street financier risk thirty million dollars on an unproven horror script when they can make faster, guaranteed profits by shorting the Thai Baht or the South Korean Won?"

It was the cold truth of global economics. The sudden collapse of the Asian currency markets had consumed the attention of the financial elite. Even the mainstream Hollywood news trades were dedicating column inches to the Eastern crash.

And the American public? They were absolutely eating it up.

Throughout the late 1980s and early 1990s, the Asian markets—particularly Japan—had been rapidly catching up with Europe and the United States. Japanese conglomerates had been aggressively buying up iconic American assets: Rockefeller Center, Universal Studios, Columbia Pictures. It had created a deep resentment and anxiety in the Western hemisphere; the fear that America was being systematically bought out by the East.

Now, the tables had turned. The American markets were enjoying a prolonged period of booming prosperity, while the Eastern economies were in freefall. The schadenfreude was palpable. The crisis was far enough away that it had no immediate, negative effect on the US domestic market, so the American financial sector and normal public was thoroughly enjoying watching their former rivals crash and burn.

"I understand the macroeconomic headwinds, Jeff," Marvin said smoothly, pulling his mind back to the script. It was somewhat surprising.

In his memories of the original timeline, *The Sixth Sense* had been a massive sleeper hit, setting a historic box office record for North American horror films—a record that remained entirely unbroken until James Wan revolutionized the genre decades later.

To see it deemed 'unfundable' before filming even began, especially when Marvin himself had established a track record by carrying *The Parent Trap* to a $140+ million domestic gross, was a testament to the rigid, unimaginative cowardice of studio executives.

"Okay, okay," Marvin sighed, a smirk touching his lips. "Is it all completely bad news? Or did you bury the lead?"

Jeff offered a tight, complicated grimace.

"No," Jeff admitted carefully. "It's not that no one is willing to invest. There is one buyer. Harvey from Miramax read the script over the weekend. He is aggressively optimistic about the project."

'Miramax.' 'Harvey Weinstein.'

Marvin's mind instantly pictured the man. A hulking, physically imposing figure; a fat, unkempt man with a large, heavy head and a notoriously explosive temper.

Regardless of his deeply grotesque personal character, Marvin had to acknowledge the undeniable industry reality: Harvey Weinstein had possessed an incredibly sharp eye for cinematic talent. The man had built a sprawling empire by sniffing out small, independent films at festivals like Sundance, acquiring them for pennies, then marketing them with brilliance until they exploded into astronomical profits.

Critics and press had hailed him as the "God of Hollywood," the "Savior of Modern Cinema," the bold pioneer who dragged high-art indie gems from arthouse obscurity onto the commercial big screen. Pulp Fiction, Shakespeare in Love, The English Patient—Miramax had turned them into cultural touchstones and Oscar goldmines.

His influence had been terrifying.

Careers rose or crumbled at his whim.

Hollywood had worshipped at his altar, executives and stars alike bending the knee for a chance at his golden touch. To curry favor during one particularly cutthroat Oscar campaign, a certain award-winning actress had once quipped—half-jokingly, half-desperately—about getting his name tattooed on her genitals. The room laughed. The favor had been secured.

But Marvin knew the dark, inevitable future that awaited the Miramax titan. Weinstein would grow blinded by his own arrogance, intoxicated by decades of sycophantic praise from an industry that rewarded monsters as long as they delivered hits. He would begin to operate with reckless, sloppy impunity, forgetting the oldest unwritten law of the game.

The casting couch was as ancient as the studios themselves—one of the darkest, most universally understood rules of the Hollywood machinery. It was a transactional pit where glamour met raw flesh, where morality was bartered daily for screen time, residuals, and that elusive next big break. Directors, producers, agents—they all partook in some form. The real rule, the one that kept the machine humming for generations, was discretion. Keep your appetites behind closed doors. Draw the curtains, even if they're see-through. Maintain the glittering illusion of propriety for the red carpets, the magazine covers, and the gullible public who bought tickets and dreamed.

Weinstein forgot the rules of the shadows. He became an open, gluttonous beast. He wielded his power too overtly—summoning young actresses and models to hotel suites under the guise of "meetings," demanding massages that turned into assaults, screaming humiliations one moment and dangling lead roles the next.

He left trails: voice memos, settlements, rumors that grew too loud to ignore. The drugs flowed freely at his infamous parties—coke on mirrored trays in the Hamptons, pills to keep the willing pliable, the unwilling numb. And beneath it all, darker currents swirled: whispers of girls who weren't just aspiring stars not legal, or even much younger still. The kind whose parents had signed them into the machine as child prodigies, only for the "mentorship" to twist into something far more predatory.

Marvin's lips curved slightly as he reflected on it. The entertainment industry didn't stop at feature films. It was a global web of rot. In Los Angeles, the pipelines ran from child pageants to teen sitcoms on networks that churned out "family-friendly" stars while feeding them amphetamines to survive eighteen-hour shoots, just as they had done to Judy Garland decades earlier. Boy bands and girl groups in glossy studios faced "image consultants" who broke spirits and bodies alike.

K-pop factories in Seoul operated on militaristic schedules, with trainees as young as twelve facing sexualized training and silent endurance of abuses to debut. European arthouse circles hid their own elegant predators behind "artistic freedom." Private islands and yachts hosted the elite—echoes of Epstein's network, where Weinstein himself had once brushed against those circles, trading introductions and favors until even the monster found another too crude.

Corey Feldman had screamed it for years: pedophilia was Hollywood's number one problem, an open secret wrapped in NDAs and threats. Child actors like Drake Bell and others later exposed the grooming on kids' TV sets—coaches and crew who crossed lines while parents looked away for the paycheck. The "Quiet on Set" revelations were just the latest cracks in the facade.

Drugs and money kept the young compliant or quiet: uppers for energy, downers for sleep, all dispensed like candy by handlers who profited from broken dolls. Rehab cycles became PR spins. Suicides and overdoses were "tragic accidents." The public mourned for a week, then moved on to the next blockbuster.

Weinstein had angered the public by making it impossible to ignore. He alienated political allies who had once overlooked his "eccentricities" for donations and access. He manipulated Academy Awards campaigns so aggressively—buying, bullying voters, planting stories—that even the monolithic Walt Disney Company, which had acquired Miramax, finally saw him as a radioactive liability.

When the New York Times and others finally shone the light, the very system that had enabled him for decades turned with gleeful savagery. The rising #MeToo tide became the perfect wave to ride. His empire crumbled.

When his sloppy arrogance finally caught up with him, the very system that had enabled him for decades would happily turn on him, utilizing the rising cultural tide to completely dismantle his empire and send him to a concrete prison cell. It was the inevitable end for a human who let his gluttony outpace his intellect.

Settlements poured out. He ended up in a concrete prison cell, the fall as brutal as his rise had been vulgar.

Just a clumsy predator shitting where he ate.

Something that nearly everyone in this glittering circle of glamour and power has done at one point or another sent him to prison. In Hollywood, it has always been as much a business of bodies as it is a business of money.

In reality, the vast majority of the more than ninety women who publicly accused him of sexual assault were not victims in the traditional sense. They were ambitious, consenting participants who willingly traded their bodies for a shot at the big screen — an unspoken currency that has greased the wheels of the entertainment industry for generations.

It was a exchange: sex for opportunity, silence for stardom. Many knew exactly what they were signing up for, yet when the winds shifted and the scandal became profitable, they rewrote their stories as pure predation. The same transactional dance that had launched countless careers suddenly became a one-way ticket to ruin for him alone.

This is the darker underbelly few dare to admit — a world where beauty, youth, and desire are commodities, where power is exercised through the bedroom as often as the boardroom, and where the line between consent and coercion is deliberately blurred until it becomes convenient to sharpen it into a weapon.

Sitting here in the sunlit drawing room, Marvin evaluated the situation with zero human empathy or moral outrage. He was an incubus—an lust demon from a realm where human constructs like right and wrong held no sway. His kind fed on the dark, twisted desires of mortal souls, harvesting the energy of lust, greed, and surrender without judgment. To him, Weinstein was simply a crude manifestation of humanity's eternal appetites: raw greed and unchecked hunger operating in an industry where flesh, youth, and ambition had always been the primary currency.

Marvin held no particular fondness for the man—the lack of finesse was almost offensive. But neither did he feel disgust. Human morality was a thin, hypocritical veil that shifted with cultural winds and public outrage. The two human souls that combined into his left almost no mark on Marvin's soul. He had seen empires rise and fall on similar foundations: Roman orgies, Renaissance courts, modern boardrooms. Hollywood was merely the latest glittering stage.

*****

I can't reply to your comments but don't let that stop keep commenting. My Discord link is in my profile and also here.

Join my Patreon

GodofPleasure

(dot)com/GodofPleasure

More Chapters