Hollywood writers vote on strike: ‘At stake is the viability of TV as a career’


Hollywood writers vote on strike: ‘At stake is the viability of TV as a career’​

WGA union argues companies have ‘leveraged the streaming transition to underpay writers’

Michael Sainato
@msainat1
Sat 15 Apr 2023 01.00 EDT


Hollywood writers have until Monday to authorize their union to call a strike amid contentious contract negotiations with major studios.
The authorization, based on a vote by guild members, would grant the leadership of the Writers Guild of America (WGA) the ability to call a strike if it can’t reach a contract with Alliance of Motion Picture and Television Producers (AMPTP) by 1 May.

“Writers are not keeping up,” the WGA argues in a 2023 report. “The companies have leveraged the streaming transition to underpay writers, creating more precarious, lower-paid models for writers’ work.”
In the report, the WGA, which has more than 11,000 members, argues the shift in the entertainment industry to streaming services has resulted in cuts to pay for writers, despite an increase in investments in content and consistent profitability.

“What’s at stake is the viability of television as a career,” said Brittani Nichols, a writer on Abbott Elementary and WGA member. “Right now a lot of people are struggling to string together quality jobs that can allow them to exist in a city like Los Angeles.”
Nichols compared the demands of members to those of other workers facing increasing pressures of economic inequality and rising costs of living.
“It’s not that the studios can’t afford these things. It’s, in my opinion, that they don’t care about what’s right or fair and they want to extract as much value from us for the least amount of money as possible, and that’s something we’re standing up to.”
The AMPTP represents entertainment media corporations that include Amazon, Apple, CBS, Disney, NBCUniversal, Netflix, Paramount Global, Sony and Warner Bros Discovery.
Since 2013-2014, the proportion of writers working at minimum pay levels has increased from 33% of all TV series writers to 49% in 2021-2022, with recorded increases in all writer positions, according to the report. Over the last decade, median writer pay has declined by 4%, or 23% when adjusted for inflation.
The WGA is calling for increased compensation and residuals from features, ending the practice of mini-rooms (smaller writing rooms where a showrunner and a limited group of writers develop scripts), and increases in contributions to pension and health funds for workers.
In a message to members, the WGA stated that the AMPTP had pushed for “rollbacks designed to offset any gains” in contract negotiations. “In short, the studios have shown no sign that they intend to address the problems our members are determined to fix.”
“The way that writers’ rooms work now, the way that we’re being paid, the way that we’re dealing with cuts in episode orders, all of that has slowly eroded our ability to make a living doing this,” said Susan Hurwitz Arneson, a writer in the industry for 15 years who has worked on shows such as AMC’s Preacher and the forthcoming John Wick prequel television series The Continental. “For a showrunner, it’s excruciating and impossible. For younger writers coming up, they’re never getting the mentoring and teaching to be showrunners because they are never allowed to be on set.”
Mini-rooms were originally meant to be supplementary support for a project but have been exploited as a loophole to pay minimum compensation to writers and avoid paying producer or showrunner fees for additional production duties, Hurwitz Arneson argued. She voted “yes” on the strike authorization, she said, in an effort to oppose trends she says are deteriorating pay and working conditions for writers.
“This is about people that create, from nothing, a product that everybody across the world enjoys, a product that makes billions of dollars for giant corporations. What we’re asking for is less than 2% of the dollar of what these companies are making, in order for us to benefit from our hard work and be paid fairly for it,” said Hurwitz Arneson. “We should be paid for the talent, hard work, the heart, the sweat, the tears and for the generation of worlds and products that employ thousands of people in this industry.”
The union has also taken aim at arguments by the studios of financial woes in the industry, as several entertainment media corporations have conducted layoffs in the past year; Disney announced cuts of 7,000 jobs that began this year, Netflix cut 450 jobs in 2022, citing decreases in subscription revenue, and about 120 workers were laid off at Showtime this year after a merger with Paramount.
Operating profits at the largest entertainment media companies in 2021 were about $28bn, a decrease from pre-pandemic profit levels, but the WGA cited continuing investments in streaming services, mergers and restructurings, and spending billions on stock buybacks.
CEOs of the largest entertainment media corporations receive exorbitant salaries. The Warner Discovery CEO, David Zaslav, received $39.3m in total compensation in 2022. The Netflix co-CEO Ted Sarandos received $40m, his co-CEO Reed Hastingsreceived $34m, and the Paramount Global CEO, Bob Bakish, received $32m.
The last time Hollywood writers went on strike was in November 2007, an action that lasted 100 days and halted production of major TV shows. The strike of 12,000 writers largely focused on disagreements with the AMPTP over emerging digital media platforms and streaming residuals. The Directors Guild of America and Screen Actors Guild will begin their new union contract negotiations this year with AMPTP.
The Actors’ Equity national council, which represents more than 51,000 professional theater workers, authorized a strike as new union contract negotiations with the Broadway League, the trade association for the Broadway industry, continue, with 90% signing a strike pledge if an agreement isn’t reached.
It is hard to predict which shows would be affected by a WGA strike, but during the 2007-2008 strike, top programs including Breaking Bad and Prison Break went on hiatus or had shortened seasons.

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The last time the Writers Guild went on strike, we wound up getting the current crop of dumb talentless hacks that managed to ruin everything from Star Wars to Ghostbusters. So I imagine the outcome of this will be just as bad if not worse.
Ask ChatGPT give you an [insert genre here] TV show synopsis and see what happens. Chances are it will be more creative than what 90% of these writers could produce.
Life once again imitating South Park.
 
Really guys? You think TV has been shit for the last decade?

Most shows are shit, some are fantastic.

Go watch some of the "best" shows from the 1980s and get back to me on how shit TV is nowadays.

FFS, they couldn't tell a complicated story because if you missed an episode, that ship sailed into the sunset, never to be seen again. "Twin Peaks" got cancelled because of this.

To wit, here are Rotten Tomatoes best shows from the 1980s:

Murder, She Wrote
ALF
Dynasty
Knight Rider
The A-Team
Three's Company
Moonlighting
21 Jump Street
Hill Street Blues
Family Ties
Saved by the Bell
MacGyver
Dallas
Miami Vice
SNL
Magnum, PI
The Golden Girls
The Cosby Show
Cheers

How many of these are people still watching in 2023?

Precious few.

How many of these got high ratings from people who remember the show as being good but they haven't seen it in ages so they can't accurately rank how it measures up to more recent stuff?

Virtually all of it.

I mean hell, I think X-Files is one of the best shows I've ever seen but the structure of the show feels very antiquated. Most of the episodes are stand-alone because the audience couldn't handle having to plan their lives around watching a TV show.

Now I can stream "Yellowjackets" and my fronds in other parts of the country can see it within the same couple days and we can catch up on it at both of our leisures.

It's a golden age.
 
“What’s at stake is the viability of television as a career,” said Brittani Nichols, a writer on Abbott Elementary and WGA member. “Right now a lot of people are struggling to string together quality jobs that can allow them to exist in a city like Los Angeles.”
And this is the audience's problem how? Get fucked.
 
Really guys? You think TV has been shit for the last decade?

Most shows are shit, some are fantastic.

Go watch some of the "best" shows from the 1980s and get back to me on how shit TV is nowadays.

FFS, they couldn't tell a complicated story because if you missed an episode, that ship sailed into the sunset, never to be seen again. "Twin Peaks" got cancelled because of this.

To wit, here are Rotten Tomatoes best shows from the 1980s:

Murder, She Wrote
ALF
Dynasty
Knight Rider
The A-Team
Three's Company
Moonlighting
21 Jump Street
Hill Street Blues
Family Ties
Saved by the Bell
MacGyver
Dallas
Miami Vice
SNL
Magnum, PI
The Golden Girls
The Cosby Show
Cheers

How many of these are people still watching in 2023?

Precious few.

How many of these got high ratings from people who remember the show as being good but they haven't seen it in ages so they can't accurately rank how it measures up to more recent stuff?

Virtually all of it.

I mean hell, I think X-Files is one of the best shows I've ever seen but the structure of the show feels very antiquated. Most of the episodes are stand-alone because the audience couldn't handle having to plan their lives around watching a TV show.

Now I can stream "Yellowjackets" and my fronds in other parts of the country can see it within the same couple days and we can catch up on it at both of our leisures.

It's a golden age.
I keep the complete series of Moonlighting on a constant loop.

You mentioned Twin Peaks; people had VCRs, the show got canceled because they revealed Laura's killer and then gave boring-ass James his own plotline. David Lynch was off doing other stuff and it wasn't ever going to recapture that audience.

It's Garry Shandling Show was actually funny fourth wall humor. Night Court is funnier now because all of the sexual jokes are verboten. Same with The Kids in the Hall, and none of their stuff was political or topical so it's totally still relevant. Tales from the Crypt is much more watchable than the new Twilight Zone.

It's only been a few years but there's nothing that's come out this decade that I'll go back and watch unless it started a while back, like Always Sunny. I watch too much tv, but it's all older stuff. TV was better in the 80s than it is now. And every decade prior really, Ernie Kovacs was fucking nuts.
 
Ask ChatGPT give you an [insert genre here] TV show synopsis and see what happens. Chances are it will be more creative than what 90% of these writers could produce.
ChateGTP is politically correct trash. It creates garbage for the same reason Tumblr creators do. It's designed to be as non-offensive as possible.
 
Industry is on it's last legs, future is in doubt, workers face layoffs en masse or being unable to pay typical cost of living on meager compensations that parent companies aren't interested in raising...

The solution?

Obviously, we strike and add fractious labor relations to that mix!

Surely that will show them our value!

Gutsy move, Cotton......

(Didn't work for the British car industry in the 70's, won't work for you, but you'll do it anyway, won't you?)
I just hope to Christ government doesn't step in and decide it's the duty of the taxpayer to protect America's storied cultural heritage by subsidizing this trash. But in Clown World, anything is possible.
 
They are being replaced by AI now, granted its even shitier than them but we where already at rock bottom in terms of writting so not a big dip in quality
This effectively happened a long time ago. With "genre" (adventure) books, too. TV/movie writing was even more at risk because it's explicitly work for hire.

Much has been said about the media not trying to entertain the audience (instead pushing woke politics on them), but an even greater problem is that writers aren't even trying to entertain themselves with the totality of their work; they're lazy coomers who, instead of being committed to their fetishes, use them to fill the blanks in a template. Like, they have these nonbinary neurodivergent transmasc self-inserts, but they can't insert them into anything interesting. The plot is a chore. Chris-chan had a more original output (and a better work ethic, too), you can tell he liked making shit up even though he was too lazy to put it down in writing.
 
Holy fuck that paragraph at the end by The Guardian though. What a fucking joke they are lmao
They're not wrong. There is irony in Murdoch-owned agents like Carlson and whatever his equivalents in the Sky Network are, as well as his newspapers, railing against the MSM or globalist conspiracies whilst working for a globalist media empire that serves Rupe's interests.

The rest of it is retarded, but The Guardian is upfront about its obvious biases.
 
I just hope to Christ government doesn't step in and decide it's the duty of the taxpayer to protect America's storied cultural heritage by subsidizing this trash. But in Clown World, anything is possible.
As Hollywood is the propaganda arm of the U.S. government whenever the democrats are in the White House. It is a near certainty there will be a bailout of some sort to keep Hollywood's TPTB in charge.
 
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