If you've ever wondered how much money folks in Hollywood make outside of the heavy hitting $20 million club like Denzel Washington, Steven Spielberg and Leonardo DiCaprio, then look no further.

The folks at industry publication The Hollywood Reporter have broken down the dosh for a barrage of roles in the industry, both TV and Film. It's fascinating stuff. 

Television Actor - New actors will pocket $15,000 to $20,000 per episode. Experienced actors take home as much as $75,000 to $100,000 while bigger names can get as much as $150,000 per episode for a first season.

Craft Services on the lot - About $1200 per worker per week.

TV Writer - The Writer's Guild scale is $37,368 for an hourlong script, $25,408 for a half-hour. Bigger names can also command producing fees in the tens of thousands.

Gaffer  - For 3 months plus of work they can earn as much as $45 an hour for a shoot duration.

Producer - Those who produce major Hollywood productions can expect, dependant on their deal, between $1.2 million and $2 million up front, with more coming in 'back end' deals.

Publicist - A 'unit publicist' hired directly by the studio can earn serious dosh. About $41,000 per film. Personal ones to the rich and famous would be closer to half a million a year

Show Creator - A big hitter like Vince Gilligan takes home $50,000 an episode for Better Caul Saul. Established network shows (like The Blacklist) would be similar and increase as the series continued.

First Assistant Director - Anyone who has ever been on a set knows how important this person is. And they're paid well, sometimes as much as $160,000 per film for a 15 - 20 week shoot.

Script Supervisor - On a network or cable series they can expect to make around $40 an hour.

Warm Up Comedian - The folk who warm up the audiences at the likes of Kimmel and Fallon can expect to make between $3,000 and $5,000 per show. Not bad dosh.

Studio Chief - The base salary is between $3 - $5 million for a studio head honcho. Bonuses not included, obviously.

Director of Photography - A major DOP can take between $10,000 - $30,000 A WEEK for the duration of a shoot.

Film Director - A rookie director can expect about $500,000 for their first feature, while the bigger names would in the mid millions dependant on the project.

TV Director - If you've directed the pilot for a series that was picked up you can expect to get a regular check for every episode produced in the single thousands. Regardless of the work you do. Otherwise hour long work can bag about $42,000 per episode while sitcoms can bag you $35,000 a show for your time.

Extra - You can earn between $150 - $200 a day for chilling out in the background on a film set.