If someone gets up on stage and tells me that she can give Aretha Franklin a run for her money, then that girl better deliver.
Would seem equally petty to me for the same reason. I guess I just take publicity as
an aspiration and not
a guarantee, and I'm unimpressed by people who insist on treating it as the latter because the specific nature of the aspiration offends them. It's a crabs-in-a-pot mentality.
If you tell everyone you have a broadcast/series pilot quality production, and they drop money on it in the hopes that is what they'll get, then they should receive a broadcast/series pilot quality production.
Go to a Broadway performance where the cast has been replaced with a middle school theater group, and tell the people as they're paying that it will be a Broadway quality production. Let's see how well that goes over when half the kids forget their lines, and the other half can't find their cues on the stage. It's not about being petty, it's about truth in advertising.
People are going to expect top quality if you keep reinforcing the notion that you are pushing top quality; if you push the idea that you've got a meeting with the suits, and they're looking into making your production the pilot for a new TV series, you're going to get very strong expectations of quality. Don't make promises on which you cannot deliver. Self-deception is no excuse for poor quality, either. Most people don't let you keep their money just because you tried. Most critics won't go easy on you solely because you did your best.
Using
Renegades as an example, they made so many big promises, and even late into the game they were still asking for money and making big promises. I went by their words, and watched the film with cautious optimism. They failed to deliver on every single level, and I judged them for what they said they could do.
I have seen a large number of fan films, some great, some awful, but you could tell the people cared, and just wanted to make something they loved. While I cringed at many, I knew what they were trying to do, and they didn't tout themselves as some kind of professional production. The ones that do? I will judge them with their own words. If I hear "pilot ready," "professional," and other lately fashionable words of the fan production trade, then they will be judged as a TV pilot, or a made-for-TV film. I have seen some fantastic TV pilots and made-for-TV films. So I will expect high quality.
If they can't bring it to that level, then they shouldn't say it. They need to be honest with me. Yanking my crank in order to get money from me, only to deliver a subpar result is not on me to justify, it's on them.
I realize I repeat myself, but I have to make this point clear: intent is everything. A couple of people using their basement to make a fan film, and humbly submitted as a love letter to their favorite show is one thing. I will watch it, and I will enjoy what I can of it without being too critical (beyond basic suggestions). An amateur production that stars fans who only want to make Star Trek they can enjoy, who do it for the sheer love of it? They don't get judged harshly, either. Oh, I'll be more critical of some things, if they're blatant enough, but otherwise I take it in the spirit it is offered. A team of people who push professionals as their main attraction? Who ask for piles of money? Yes, I will judge them, and I will do it as a professional level production. Why you see that as petty, I don't know, because it's not at all petty, it's being fair to all involved. The higher the stakes, the better the payoff, or the greater the loss. That's just common sense.