India, Oct. 8 -- Actor Channing Tatum recently aired out his frustrations with the current state of Hollywood. Describing the industry as a "confused pipeline" where actors feel pressured to prioritise certain projects over others, Channing said, "At times it really feels like you're incentivised to make bad things to get paid, rather than make something really, really good, for the f***ing people that actually get to see these movies." The actor, who will next be seen in the comedy drama The Roofman, added that pathways for production and distribution have become increasingly unclear with the rise of streaming services. "These platforms came in and effed up the industry a bit - for good and for bad. You're incentivising [artistes] to go make a subpar movie and a B script. The studios are confused and so are the streamers," he explained during a recent appearance on Hot Ones, noting that this had made it harder to make "something really, really good." Channing also made fun of some of his past projects, calling the 2010 romance Dear John "such a generic" movie and saying that he did not feel like he was "part of" 2024's Deadpool & Wolverine, since "I was only in it for two seconds." The 45-year-old continued, "I'm like, 'Man, I want to give my money to good movies.' It's such an upside-down moment, but I do believe that this disruption is going to lead to something good. The system had to change."htc...