1. Hollywood as content creator - this is the Hollywood that most people seem to think of - making movies, tv shows, and so on. If your intent is to change content creation, then it's a question of what type of media and who is producing the media. Is there room for distributed content creation that appeals to the average Joe? Is there a market for interactive television shows? 2. Hollywood as distributor - How do movies and tv shows get distributed to the end users? There are the traditional approaches such as tv and theaters, but there are also alternatives such as Netflix streaming. I suspect that the content producers would welcome an alternative to Netflix streaming. 3. Hollywood as executive producer - How is capital raised and spent to produce television shows?
Personally, if you want to kill Hollywood, I think you need to start at the content creation. If Hollywood owns the content, any distributor is ultimately going to be playing their game. If you could fund new content, and offer a competitive means of distribution, then I think you might have something. In the tabletop RPG industry, there is http://RPGNow.com, that allows for publishers to upload and sell PDFs and POD books, and now eBooks. The publishers own the content, and can withdraw it at any time. It works very well. Perhaps just a site that allowed independent film producers to upload their films? Let people pay to stream them, and profit share.
1) Content creators create movie 2) Content creator uploads movie to website, and perhaps pays a small fixed fee (to prevent spam and crap) 3) Consumers go to website and can stream movie, get disc pressed, or perhaps even an image for use in a theater for a fee 4) Content is delivered to the consumer 5) Consumer fee is paid over to content creator minus a fee for the distribution The question becomes then, is can you get enough content that is worth paying for in order to cover the bandwidth costs and the storage costs?
The question becomes then, is can you get enough content that is worth paying for in order to cover the bandwidth costs and the storage costs? It's a good question. That's probably where someone like YC comes in. They provide the seed money to find out. I'd be eager to pay to watch some independent films if I knew that the creator got a good share of the profit. Of course, there could be a whole rating system, and you could find people with similar taste that made recommendations, etc.