Movies have huge credit rolls that tell you everyone involved from the director down to the person who made the cups of tea. But why? I can understand why actors, who need exposure to maintain a career, would want this. But is it important for the person who drove the truck full of props around to be credited for their future prospects?

You don’t see a plaque when you walk into a building listing everyone who laid a brick as part of the construction. I assume there’s a historical reason why the entertainment industry, and only the entertainment industry does this.

Edit: To all those that took my geniune question about what historically lead to this, and turned it into accusations of me being some sort of thoughtless “asshole”, what is even the point of someone trying to contribute to these online communities if you are just going to be made to feel horrible?

  • And009@lemmynsfw.com
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    1 day ago

    Don’t think someone is a good person just because they did a good thing

    Action IS the only thing that matters, the reasons don’t affect others.

    • Empricorn@feddit.nl
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      4 hours ago

      Sure, if it’s the only thing they’ve ever done, good or bad… Then, it’s a net positive! But your reasoning is like a Republican MAGA boomer making a one-time donation to a charity. Both examples have supported horrible organizations their entire lives. Cherry-picking a single good act isn’t just unfair, it’s literally dishonest.