See also: Axanar Response to Annual Report Analysis
On December 15, 2015, producer Alec Peters issued a revised Annual Report, a 23-page document to donors, outlining the Axanar Productions’ finances covering the Prelude to Axanar and Axanar Kickstarter campaigns.
This is one in a series of AxaMonitor articles examining Axanar’s crowdfunding efforts, its spending, its goals and how it has reported on those activities. The entire series is listed here.
The report includes:
Upon the report’s release, Peters praised its demonstration of Axanar’s openness and transparency:
DOWNLOAD the Axanar Annual Report, 2015, Revised. 2.1 MB PDF
There are many Star Trek fan films that are raising 6-figure amounts. But none show you exactly where that money is going. None gives you daily updates or visibility into the operations as Axanar does. This is our commitment to you.1)
That transparency, however, was intended only for donors, Peters told one questioner:
Q. Does the Axanar team plan to make this report public (to non-donors) at any point in the near future?
Peters: Why would we? What vested interest does a non-donor have in our finances? Our fiduciary obligation is to our donors, not the general public.2) [emphasis added]
Editor’s Note
REPORTS LIKE Axanar’s are not required by the crowdfunding platforms. Peters admirably chose to release this Annual Report in the interests of “financial accountability and transparency in the world of crowd-funded projects.”3)
While the report does indeed contain a great deal of information, analyzing presented various challenges. One spreadsheet, for example, was a bitmap graphic with entries organized chronologically.4) The information had to be re-entered into a new spreadsheet, then categorized and sorted in more meaningful ways. The document even lacked page numbers.
AXANAR RESPONSE Spokesman Mike Bawden responds to the findings of AxaMonitor‘s analysis of the Annual Report.
SIGNIFICANT, THOUGH, was how salary data was obscured. Few job positions are specified, some employees’ wages are bundled together with non-personnel costs, expenses are sometimes vaguely described, requiring additional research to discover they were actually personnel-related. Also, it’s not clear whether other personnel were inappropriately paid as independent contractors instead of employees, a common problem among independent film productions.
Once the data were transcribed, coded, sorted and analyzed, a pattern of possible problems emerged, from unreported salaries to ballooning costs and repeated deficit spending. They are noted below as ‘questioned costs’ in charts for Axanar’s two Kickstarter campaigns, and are presented here in the interest of seeking greater openness and transparency from Axanar Productions.
— Carlos Pedraza,
AxaMonitor editor
Despite successful Kickstarter campaigns that both exceeded their goals by large amounts, both the Prelude budget and Axanar infrastructure costs ran deficits requiring cash infusions from their successive crowdfunding campaign.
Kickstarter Financials
Income | Expenses | Deficit | |
---|---|---|---|
Prelude to Axanar Campaign | $113,833 | 123,285 | -9,452* |
Axanar Infrastructure Campaign | $638,471 | 641,797 | -3,326† |
* Deficit covered by Axanar Kickstarter campaign. † Deficit covered by Axanar Indiegogo campaign. |
See also: Prelude Kickstarter details
About the Prelude Data The analysis in this section is based on the spreadsheet image labeled Prelude to Axanar Income and Expenses on pages 5-6 of the Annual Report. The data has been transcribed into the Axanar Financials Excel spreadsheet.
Spending data for Prelude to Axanar in the Annual Report was displayed in an image rather than an actual spreadsheet, and listed in chronological order — presenting obstacles to easily analyzing project income and expenses. The data had to be transcribed into an Excel spreadsheet, each item labeled with a spending category and then sorted with like items.
Prelude expenses were grouped into these subtotaled budget categories:
Figure 1
Category | Amount |
---|---|
Administration | $2,378 |
Art | 1,500 |
Sets | 2,000 |
Costumes | 13,987 |
Craft Services | 2,337 |
Entertainment | 716 |
Equipment | 4,158 |
Loss & Damage5) | 2,450 |
Makeup | 7,440 |
Marketing | 7,416 |
Perks | 18,516 |
{!Pick up:Additional footage shot}} | 1,460 |
Post-production | 1,000 |
Salaries | 20,086 |
Shipping | 5,059 |
Soundstage | 9,128 |
Travel | 2,651 |
VFX | 15,000 |
Unattributed* | 6,003 |
Total | $123,285† |
* Four expenses lacked sufficient detail to assign to a budget category. See Budget questions below. | † $113,833 raised, leaving deficit of ($9,452). |
The chart below illustrates the proportion of spending by budget category, based on the amounts in Figure 1 (above).
Various items in the spending report are unclear, and noted below. The item number corresponds with the Item column on the Axanar Financials spreadsheet tab labeled “Prelude.”
Item No. | Description | Amount | Questioned Costs |
---|---|---|---|
3 | Insurance | $198 | Was this the total expenditure for production insurance? |
28 | Stripe Deposit(s) | 22,826 | UPDATE Stripe collects and process all payments for projects hosted on Kickstarter, starting in 2015.6) However, the report does not explain this, requiring additional research to determine. |
106-109 | • Anderson Live Media • Robert Romero • The Film Group • Camadeus Film | 6,003 | These vendors are not identified, so the expenses are not attributed to any budget categories. They make up 5 percent of the Prelude expenditures. |
Personnel | |||
88 | NPI Production Services | 6,815 | What personnel were covered by this payroll service vendor? Cast? Crew? Both? Presumably, these were employees, not contractors. |
89 | Metamorfic,7) “Cast” | 5,000 | Listed as 1099 payment for contractors, but cast members should be paid as employees. This is a serious employment compliance problem; back taxes may be owed. |
90 | Brad Look | 3,208 | Not identified in Annual Report; independently ID’d via IMDb as makeup design and supervisor. |
91 | Gary Perticone | 2,000 | Not identified in Annual Report; independently ID’d via IMDb as hair and wigs designer and supervisor. |
92 | Tony Todd,8) promotional fee | 2,000 | No description of what promotional services the actor provided the production. |
The spending described for Axanar solely comprises funds raised during the second Kickstarter campaign, the ‘infrastructure Kickstarter,’ a month-long effort in 2014, following release of the short film, Prelude to Axanar. The effort succeeded in raising $638,471 from 8,548 backers; its original goal was $100,000. Of the three crowdfunding campaigns, this one raised the most in the shortest time.
CONTROVERSY This campaign is also the production’s most controversial, as it marks the production’s departure from its original goal of simply producing Star Trek: Axanar, the feature film, and instead investing a significant portion of donors’ dollars in the infrastructure of Ares Studios, a for-profit venture by Axanar Productions to produce future Star Trek-related films and other science fiction properties.9)
See also: Axanar Kickstarter details
About the Axanar Data The analysis in this section is based on the figures presented on pages 7-10 of the Annual Report. The data has been transcribed into the Axanar Financials Excel spreadsheet.
Income and expenses for Axanar spending appear in a line item format. For analysis purposes, line items were grouped into one income and 10 expense categories.
Figure 3
Category | Amount |
---|---|
Salaries | $121,527.88 |
Admin (includes ~$67K Kickstarter fees) | 107,876.81 |
Computer | 1,098.18 |
Equipment | 35,155.87 |
Marketing | 13,919.25 |
Perks | 37,258.30 |
Production | 60,322.56 |
Studio | 246,456.66 |
Transportation | 9,163.62 |
Travel | 9,018.29 |
Total Expenses | $641,797.42* |
* $638,471 raised, leaving ($3,326.42) deficit. |
The chart below illustrates the proportion of spending by budget category, based on the amounts in Figure 3 (above). The spending on the Ares Studios assets consumed the lion’s share (38 percent) of the money raised in this Kickstarter campaign.
« 54 percent of the salary total is unaccounted for in terms of personnel names, services, or tax liability. »
The following charts detail questions arising out of spending from Axanar’s Kickstarter campaign.
One of the most controversial parts of the Annual Report are the salary expenses paid out of the proceeds from the Axanar Kickstarter because of the plaintiffs’ allegation of the defendants’ “direct financial benefit.”
Payee | Amount | Questioned Costs |
---|---|---|
Salaries 1099 | $17,420.00 | The contractors paid out of this line item are not identified, nor the services they provided, so it’s not possible to know whether they should have been employees instead. If so, the production would liable for unpaid taxes. This is a common problem among independent film productions.10) |
Alec Peters | 38,166.57 | This may be the defendant’s “direct financial benefit” to which the lawsuit refers. It’s unclear if applicable employer taxes were paid as part of this amount. |
Peters’ Union Fees | 3,099.00 | Although not specifically identified as producer Alec Peters’ initiation dues for SAG-AFTRA,11) he has confirmed he joined the actors’ union as a result of his portrayal as Captain Garth in Prelude to Axanar.12) This would be an additional financial benefit Peters gained. He has stated he will not portray the younger Garth in Axanar. |
Diana Kingsbury | Deferred til 2016 | Her position is reported as heading fulfillment. It’s unknown what amount her deferred salary is, nor how much is owed for applicable employer taxes. Kingsbury is also listed on IMDb as a producer. It’s not clear if she receives compensation for the latter position.13) |
Robert Burnett | 5,000.00 | This salary as director is a round figure, making it possible that this does not include applicable employer taxes, in which case it’s unclear what line item taxes were paid out of. |
Curtis Laseter | 9,800.00 | Construction coordinator. He is no longer with the production. The Annual Report notes that construction workers’ salaries are not reflected in the salary section of the report but in the Set Construction line item. Dean Newberry replaced Laseter. His salary is not reflected in this part of the report.14) |
Salaries | 48,042.31 | The report fails to name how many people were paid out of this line item, whether they were employees or contractors, nor whether this figure includes applicable employer taxes. |
Total | $121,527.88 |
The unreported salaries and personnel total $65,462 — 54 percent of the salary total is unaccounted for in terms of personnel names, services, or tax liability. Note that this does not include the unknown amount of Diana Kingsbury’s deferred compensation and the unknown set construction personnel.
The following expenses are red-flagged with questions or concerns. The items are referred to by the line number on which they appear in AxaMonitor‘s Axanar Financials spreadsheet on the tab labeled Axanar 2014-15.
Line No. | Description | Amount | Questioned Costs |
---|---|---|---|
30 | Insurance | $9,320.52 | This appears to be the annual cost for production insurance, but only a short-term policy would’ve been needed for shooting the Vulcan Scene in June 2015. |
35 | Event Cost | 1,061.52 | No information about the event, what it was for or cost breakdown. |
39-42 | Perks (shipping and production) | 37,258.30 | $25,142 alone has been spent on producing perks, yet four of the Top 5 rewards cannot be delivered until Axanar is produced. Those four perks represent more than 69 percent of the total number of donors. |
44 | Prelude to Axanar deficit | 7,000.00 | This makes up the shortfall between Prelude‘s costs and the amount raised in the previous Kickstarter campaign. Though this listed as $7,000, the actual amount was $9,452.15) This additional shortfall should be added to the bottom line for the Axanar Kickstarter, which is currently listed as -$3,326.42, for a total -$5,778.42, presumably to be carried forward to proceeds from the Indiegogo campaign. |
46 | Set Construction | 36,372.56 | This line item conflates labor costs with materials and other costs related to constructing Axanar‘s sets.16) Apart from construction coordinator Dean Newberry, the report fails to account for additional employees, their salaries and applicable employer taxes. Without this information it is impossible to calculate what the non-personnel costs were for Axanar‘s sets. “Building our sets is a much more expensive process,” the Annual Report states. “But with a locked script finally in, we now know how many sets we have to build. … The initial budget of $100,000 is certainly low. The entire process of set construction will cost $150,00-200,000.”17) Since only $36,373 is encompassed in this spending report, the balance of as much as $163,627 will presumably come from the subsequent Indiegogo campaign funds. |
47-49 | Studio | 246,456.66 | This amount includes facility fees, studio build-out and rent. However, the total projected infrastructure cost is expected to exceed $400,000,18) Since those costs do not appear to be encompassed by this spending report, they will presumably be covered by proceeds from the subsequent Indiegogo campaign. |
50 | Auto | 9,163.62 | These costs are not broken out. |
51 | Travel | 9,018.29 | These costs are not broken out. |
37 | Convention Expenses | 2,670.00 | These costs are not broken out, nor correlated with possible associated travel expenses. |
n/a | Vulcan Scene | Unknown | Costs for preproduction, principal photography and post-production for the three-minute ’Vulcan Scene’ are not specified. They are likely spread out over several line items in this spending report (e.g., unspecified salaries, insurance, equipment and equipment rental, music, makeup and set construction). |
Download the source documents for the crowdfunding series of articles. The data was assembled into spreadsheets from publicly accessible information made available by the crowdfunding platforms and/or the Axanar Annual Report. Click on the citation number to access the downloadable spreadsheets. 19)
Readers who make interesting findings by sorting the crowdfunding and financial data on their own are invited to submit them to AxaMonitor. Please use the Feedback page to submit new information. Thank you!
Main article: Axanar Kickstarter Details
See also: Fan Films and Infringement and Fan Films: Breaking the Unwritten Rules and Defining Profit
The trajectory of the Axanar project’s crowdfunding effort, as it was articulated in the Prelude Kickstarter, began like this:
Prelude to Axanar will then allow us to launch into Axanar having proven our ability to deliver professional quality Star Trek. There will be a subsequent Kickstarter for the feature-length Axanar.20)
The Prelude Kickstarter started out with a modest $10,000 goal. It ended up with $101,171. Of that amount, executive producer Alec Peters allotted $10,000 to what he called “infrastructure for Axanar Productions.”
This means the legal paperwork needed to create our production company and the rather expensive insurance to cover all our productions over the coming year. It allows us to set up production offices … and start to produce Axanar.21)
The release of Prelude to Axanar and subsequent acclaim may have been a game-changer, because the second Kickstarter campaign, for Axanar itself, turned out not to be really for producing the film.
[The] Axanar Kickstarter was launched with some very specific goals in mind, namely, building the infrastructure that would allow us to make Axanar and other Star Trek properties.22) [emphasis added]
In Axanar’s 2015 Annual Report, Peters acknowledges the public perception of the Axanar Kickstarter was to “incorrectly assume that the money was to go to production costs.”23) [emphasis added]
Instead, this Kickstarter money was destined for infrastructure — and the first mention of a grander commercial production plan. The campaign described these costs as:
Sci-Fi Film School - After the sets our built, we will be holding a Sci-Fi film school. Learn all about film making from our veteran industry staff including David Gerrold (writing), Richard Hatch and Gary Graham (acting), Robert Burnett (Editing/Directing), Christian Gossett (writing/directing) and Academy Award winner Kevin Haney and Star Trek veteran Brad Look (make-up). Donors will get first shot at the initial film school session.
Curiously, this last item — part of the Kickstarter campaign page — does not correspondingly appear in the Annual Report. The project needs articulated during the campaign totaled $404,000 (including Kickstarter fees and the cost of backers’ rewards). The total raised was $638,471. Peters concluded the campaign on August 24, 2014, with this statement:
Well, due to all your generosity, we have everything we need for the sets and studio and are well on our way to covering most of the budget.27) [emphasis added]
As it turned out, costs — especially to build out the studio Peters intended to use for commercial projects, and to rent out to bring in revenue28) — rapidly grew from lack of planning.
We outlined costs … for infrastructure that we would need to raise roughly $400,000 for. … That was before we found out what everything would really cost and what we didn’t even know we needed.29) [emphasis added]
According to the Annual Report, even the $638,471 raised — more than six times the campaign’s original $100,000 goal30) — was insufficient to cover all the infrastructure costs Axanar Productions encountered.31)
By the time Peters embarked on his third crowdfunding campaign, this time on Indiegogo nearly a year later, not only had the costs ballooned … so had his ambitions for Axanar Productions.32)
In the end, it was agreed that more time and more money would equal greater quality.33)
And so Axanar moved forward to its most ambitious campaign, this time on a rival crowdfunding platform — Indiegogo — and a new target, $1.32 million — to actually move Axanar into production.34)
Main article: Axanar Indiegogo Details
See also: Fan Films: Breaking the Unwritten Rules and Defining Profit
The move from Kickstarter to Indiegogo in 2015 marked not only a change in platform but a significant increase in producer Alec Peters’ estimate of Axanar‘s cost as well as plans for Ares Studios, an effort for commercial production of other science fiction properties and rental of the production facilities paid for with donor money.
Kickstarter, where Axanar had raised $739,642 — the most of any fan film — and Indiegogo operate on very similar business models: Run a time-limited campaign, if you meet your goal you get all the money pledged, minus a percentage to the crowdfunding platform and transaction fees to the company who handle payments. But Indiegogo offered several advantages to Axanar over Kickstarter.
Kickstarter operates on an “all or nothing” basis — campaigns that fail to meet their goals lose all the money that’s been pledged to them. Indiegogo allows campaigns that don’t meet their fiscal goals to keep everything that’s been pledged but with the platform taking a larger percentage of the proceeds.
While both platforms offer maximum campaign lengths of 60 days35) 36), Indiegogo offers an “In Demand” category for select projects, allowing them to raise money indefinitely, and the platform offered Axanar that designation.
[Indiegogo] love Axanar and really want our business and so have come with an aggressive offer to woo us away from Kickstarter.37)
Also on the table was:
Peters was also persuaded by the success of the year’s two biggest film projects, Super Troopers II, which raised $4.5 million, and Con Man, which raised $3.2 million — both on Indiegogo.38)
He also announced his intention to run at least four more crowdfunding campaigns and wanted to compare his successes between the two platforms:
See also: Ambition vs. Achievement
With each successive (and successful) crowdfunding campaign, the cost to produce Axanar continued to increase, in large measure because of the decision to build its own commercial studio. Studio expenses alone consumed 38 percent of the proceeds from the second Kickstarter campaign.40)
“This decision changed Axanar dramatically,” Peters explained. “In the end, it was agreed that more time and more money would equal greater quality.”41)
See also: Merchandise
Building his own studio, which he named Ares Studios, also presented Peters with an economic opportunity. He would now have a permanent facility to produce not only more “independent Star Trek productions” but to earn income from renting out the facility and from Ares’ own original films, which would be freed from the intellectual property restrictions of fan films.42)
Axanar is not just an independent Star Trek film; it is the beginning of a whole new way that fans can get the content they want, by funding it themselves. Why dump hundreds or thousands of dollars a year on 400 cable channels, when what you really want is a few good sci-fi shows? Hollywood is changing. Netflix, Hulu, Amazon, and other providers are redefining content delivery, and Axanar Productions/Ares Studios hopes to be part of that movement.43)
In March 2016, Peters announced the Ares Studios assets were to be transferred to a secret group of investors for up to $400,000 that would go into the production of Axanar. At the time, and in a video interview with TrekZONE, Peters refused to say whether he was part of that investment group.
Even so, by May 2016 Peters felt he was sufficiently empowered to offer a 2 percent stake in the studio to departed chief technologist Terry McIntosh in exchange for the Ares Digital fulfillment software.
The crowdfunding campaigns had required Axanar to set up a full-fledged merchandising and fulfillment operation featuring a full line of Star Trek-based apparel, five blends of coffee, posters, artwork, patches, models and books in a Donors’ Store, which Peters realized presented a potential revenue stream he launched with co-producer McIntosh called Ares Digital.44)
However, Ares Digital utterly failed to enable Axanar to deliver promised perks to its donors, forcing the production to start its fulfillment efforts from scratch.
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