Killed while filming. How do we backtrack from where we are?
Neck beard your solution is an interesting thought exercise, but not applicable to the modern ski "film" economy. Sure there are a few companies doing big, yearly films that you could maybe pin your insurance idea on, but the reality is in 2016 yearly films from those types of companies accounts for a pretty tiny percentage of the total ski film media made every year.
Look at Cody Townsend's video from last year for example - I admittedly haven't seen it and don't know who paid for it, but I believe he "produced" a lot of it, right? How would that fit in your model?
Or what about the POV hero racking up thousand of YouTube views from the video he shot and edited himself?
I don't have answers for the above questions - but the ski media world is way too complicated to try and create some (most likely illegal) laws about insurance.
Honestly guys - ski films are made for one purpose: to sell skis, boots and soft goods. Thats literally it. It's just marketing. You want to make a change? Publicly call out the gear companies supporting small time film companies and sketchy skiers that have a suspect safety record. You still have a snowballs chance in hell of changing things, but at least that way you're going after the root of the issue and not the middlemen.
Killed while filming. How do we backtrack from where we are?
I think neck beard is overestimating any tangible benefit of a film company having "the best athletes". These days the level of talent in ski films across the board is almost completely indistinguishable to all but tiniest percentage of viewers.
And honestly as the end viewers are any of you actually paying retail for a ski film? I'm sure many of you go to see ski films when the tour comes to your house in the fall, but would you pay double to get into that flick if you knew the skiers were really, really good and had insurance? Not a chance.
Finally, all this hand wringing is interesting, but remember that every post we make here is probably indirectly helping TGR make more money. And TGR made a transparent effort to promote and market the worst crashes in their film last year to drum up sales for Paradise Awaits:
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=bf3EkZRdYio
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=MvQxVE32BQo
And that marketing camping paid off huge with spots on major news networks, good morning America, etc.