Seth Rogen Gets Candid About How 'The Interview' Sparked the “Biggest Act of Industrial Espionage in History”

via Imago
Credit: Imago
Seth Rogen has finally opened the vault on the time The Interview became Hollywood’s most expensive punchline, thanks to a hack that he now describes as the biggest act of industrial espionage in entertainment history. In 2014, the Guardians of Peace attack on Sony Pictures was linked by the United States government to North Korea and directly targeted the James Franco and Seth Rogen comedy over its fictional a************ plot.
Now, Rogen is getting candid about the saga, while joking about the sheer historical grandness of the cyberattack that turned one comedy into an international incident.
Seth Rogen revisits the infamous The Interview incident
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Seth Rogen is finally getting candid about the bizarre fallout from The Interview, revealing just how dramatically the 2014 Sony Pictures hack transformed a comedy into an international incident. Speaking on Armchair Expert with Dax Shepard, Rogen looked back on the chaos with a mixture of disbelief and amusement. The conversation revisited the moment a movie became geopolitical news.
“Biggest act of industrial espionage in history, I believe,” Rogen said, reflecting on the Sony Pictures hack and its extraordinary fallout. Dax Shepard reminded listeners that North Korea was accused of hacking Sony Pictures over the comedy, while the conversation joked about the incident briefly threatening to disrupt world relations. Rogen, naturally, saw the absurdity.

via Imago
Credits: Imago
Rogen also offered a surprisingly sharp lesson from the entire saga on Armchair Expert with Dax Shepard: sometimes a joke can hit its target too effectively. The Interview had placed Rogen and James Franco, with whom he will not work ever again, at the center of a conversation far larger than any comedy could reasonably expect. Years later, Rogen can laugh about the historical scale of it, even if jokes about the movie itself still hit a little closer to home.
Although Seth Rogen may not be exaggerating the sheer scale of the event, considering the enormous aftermath it unleashed across Hollywood.
The after-effects of the Sony Hack
The Interview did more than survive an extraordinary cyberattack; it helped push Hollywood toward a new era of digital distribution. After major theater chains backed away from the film following threats, Sony Pictures released the comedy in select cinemas while making it available online. The crisis showed studios that theatrical exclusivity was not the only way to launch a movie.
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via Imago
Credits: Imago
The hack also made Hollywood far more cautious about the risks surrounding potentially dangerous stories and corporate communications. Executives became acutely aware that private emails, salary information, unreleased films, and sensitive negotiations could suddenly become public, while studios began investing heavily in cybersecurity. In the end, The Interview changed Hollywood by making both digital release strategies and cyber threats impossible to ignore.
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What do you make of Seth Rogen's candidness about the infamous The Interview incident? Let us know in the comments below.
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Edited By: Itti Mahajan
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