Writers Move To End Strike Quickly
Guild Recommends Members Vote Fast On Ending Walkout, Meetings Set For Tuesday
-
Play CBS Video
Video
Striking Writers Eye Contract
After months on the picket line, Hollywood writers appear to be on the verge of ending their strike. The WGA and the producers alliance have reached a tentative contract deal. Sandra Hughes reports.
-
Video
Writer's Strike Over?
As the Hollywood screenwriters' strike comes to a close, many viewers now wonder what's in store for the return of some popular shows. Ben Tracy previews what to expect on the tube.
-
-
Photo
Writers Guild of America East president Michael Winship makes a statement to the media prior to a membership meeting to discuss the latest contract proposal between the WGA and Hollywood studios, on Feb. 9, 2008 in New York. (AP Photo/Gary He)
-
Photo
Writers Guild of America board member Nancy De Los Santos, who's also a film and television writer, waits for a news conference to start Sunday, Feb. 10, 2008, in Los Angeles. (AP Photo/Ric Francis)
-
By calling for separate votes on ending the strike and accepting the new three-year deal, the union cleared the way for the entertainment industry to return to work almost immediately.
"We all look forward to going back to work," writer Kate Purdy told The Early Show. "We love writing stories."
Membership meetings will be held Tuesday in New York and Los Angeles to allow writers to decide whether the strike should be brought to a speedy end, said Patric Verrone, president of the guild's West Coast branch.
"This is the best deal this guild has bargained for in 30 years," Verrone said.
The tentative contract secures writers a share of the burgeoning digital-media market, he said, including compensation for Internet-delivered TV shows and movies.
"If they (producers) get paid, we get paid. This contract makes that a reality," Verrone said. But, he added, "it is not all we hoped for and it is not all we deserved."
Still, the union's negotiating committee recommended Saturday that the contract be accepted, and the West guild's board of directors and the East Coast guild's council agreed. They called for a membership ratification vote, which will be conducted by mail over about two weeks.
Member approval of the contract and the strike's end appeared likely. At heavily attended membership meetings Saturday in New York and Los Angeles, there was resounding support for the proposed deal that could put TV and movie production back on track, salvage the rest of the TV season and remove a boycott threat from this month's Oscars.
Verrone thanked television viewers who "tolerated three months of reruns and reality TV."
The guild's major bargaining concession to studios was agreeing to take unionization of animation and reality TV shows off the table, Verrone said. The guild has said it still intends to pursue those goals.
The Alliance of Motion Picture and Television Producers, which represents the studios, said it had no comment Sunday on the guild's actions.
The American Federation of Television and Radio Artists, which represents more than 70,000 performers, broadcasters and others, lauded the writers guild for winning gains in digital media.
"A union in the United States of America stood up to corporate America and said 'We're not going to take this anymore," documentary filmmaker Michael Moore told The Early Show. "I wouldn't have thought it would be the writers."
The federation is preparing to begin its own TV contract talks and intends to be "focused, deliberate, and prudent as we engage with the employers to negotiate the best possible agreements for performers," its president, Roberta Reardon, said in a statement.
Despite friction between the federation and the Screen Actors Guild, the two groups traditionally negotiate together on a contract covering feature films and primetime TV. That contract expires in June.
Show runners - industry lingo for the executive producers in charge of a TV series - are expected to be back at work Monday, preparing for the return of writers as soon as Wednesday, industry members said.
Although show runners are also guild members, they are allowed to work while the strike remains in effect as long as they focus only on producer-related tasks.
It is not all we hoped for and it is not all we deserved.
Patric Verrone,Writers' guild, West Coast branch
A minimum of four weeks would be needed for producers to start from scratch with their first post-strike episodes of comedies and get them on the air, industry members said. A drama would require six to eight weeks from concept to broadcast.
"It will be all hands on deck for the writing staff," said Chris Mundy, co-executive producer of CBS' drama "Criminal Minds." He hopes to get a couple of scripts in the pipeline right away, with about seven episodes airing by the end of May.
"It's a real balancing act," he said, "to get up and running as fast as possible, but not let the quality slip."
Negotiating committee chairman John Bowman said a turning point in negotiations was last month's Golden Globes, when the star-studded ceremony was scrapped after actors refused to cross writers' picket lines.
The Globes showed the strength of the writers' resolve and solidarity, Bowman said.
The threat of a similar fate for this month's Academy Awards also was a powerful bargaining chip, said chief negotiator David Young.
"It was going to be a huge thing for the industry to lose the Oscars," Young said. The Feb. 24 ceremony now appears likely to proceed in its full glory and with writers on board to script host and presenter banter.
Academy spokeswoman Leslie Unger said Saturday that Oscar organizers were hopeful, but that writing on the ceremony could not begin until the strike was over.
The strike, the first in 20 years for the writers guild, began Nov. 5 and included bitter public exchanges between the guild and the producers alliance. Talks collapsed in December.
In January, the studios reached an agreement in separate negotiations with the Directors Guild of America. Top media company executives, including Peter Chernin of News Corp. and Robert Iger of The Walt Disney Co., asked the writers to resume bargaining.
What were termed informal talks between the executives and guild leaders led to the tentative contract that writers will be voting on.
Together, the East and West Coast guilds represent 12,000 writers, with about 10,000 of those involved in the strike that has cost the Los Angeles area economy alone an estimated $1 billion or more.
Based on the guild's summary of the deal, it's similar to the agreement reached with directors.
It provides union jurisdiction over projects created for the Internet based on certain guidelines, sets compensation for streamed, ad-supported programs and increases residual payments for downloaded movies and TV programs.
Writers would get a maximum flat fee of about $1,200 for streamed programs in the deal's first two years and then get a percentage of a distributor's gross in year three - the last point an improvement on the directors deal, which remains at the flat payment rate.
Both writers and directors guild deals include a provision that compensation for ad-supported streaming doesn't kick in until after a window of between 17 to 24 days deemed "promotional" by the studios.
Some writers have balked at that, saying Internet traffic is heaviest in the first few days.
But just like in a Hollywood story, there's a cliffhanger.
The Actor's Guild contract is up this summer and there's already talk of an actors strike, reports CBS News correspondent Hattie Kaufmann.
© MMVIII, CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.



I suggest you get a life.
I said they would end the strike before the Academy Awards. Geez they wouldn''t want the BIG CELEBRITIES to be pissed that they couldn''t strut their stuff on the RED CARPET, for heavens sake! Not only that, they might of missed out on it too!
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Posted by erasmus6 at 11:22 AM : Feb 11, 2008
+ report abuse
My but you Nazi''s know so much! ROFLMAO Tell us swastika breath how did you know this? Did you have someone on the inside telling you how the Writers would vote on the Contract? Maybe one of the CEO''s told you they couldn''t take the loss of NOT having the Awards Show so that''s when they would settle? No? Oh! I know! You''ve been using your Magic Swastika again haven''t you? It''s hard to imagine anyone hating Union''s more than you hero, Hitler, but you are sure giving it a try! Come on now shout it out you pathetic Nazi!! Let Heir Bush hear ya!! Sieg Heil Bush!!
First off let me say that I think that you are mentally ill.
Secondly it only takes a person with a brain and a wee bit of common sense to figure it out.
Celebrities are full of themselves. It is all about being seen and getting applause and being noticed.
The writers know that the celebrities have been supporting them but if it goes on too long they may end up loosing that support.
WHY? Because the attention and applause is an addiction to them, they are lost without it. The Academy Awards is the BIGGEST award show. The celebrities have not been able to go to the other award shows so the writers know that they would be pushing their luck by not making a real attempt at getting it resolved by then. Also this award show is a time that they can be rewarded as well.
If they are out too long there''s nothing saying that they couldn''t be fired and new writers hired.
Now we''ll finally be able to see CSI: Martha''s Vinyard, as well as a pile of derivative, predictable, plodding films.
swastika breath
your Magic Swastika
you pathetic Nazi!!
Let Heir Bush hear ya!! Sieg Heil Bush!!
Man you are ONE tough Nazi aren''''t you?
Come on now. let''''s hear it!!! SIEG HEIL MEIN FUHRER!!
posted by MCVet
You are indeed mentally ill. You are Obsessed and in need of psychiatric help.
oh good. The striking writers now have the support of the nazi party.
All shows should be available on the web since we grew up watching free broadcast TV and now have to pay for high speed internet.
There''s nothing much good to watch on TV these days anyway.
In the fall a lot of shows start late anyways and then the next thing you know it is Thanksgiving and they are putting on repeats. Then they will put on a couple more new ones and then it is Christmas and back to repeats again. The repeats usually run into the middle of January and then it is off and on repeats till the season finales.
Then of course they also move them to different times and days so you can''t find them.
And when you finally get into a show they then put it on hiatus? and stick another show in its place for months and then they wonder why people lose interest.
They know that people are obsessed with t.v. so they basically they know they can get aways with whatever they want.
I think they should be taught a lesson. Everyone should stop watching the idiot box!
-
by Scooter68
February 12, 2008 2:12 AM PST
- Have the writers actually been on strike? My I hadn''t noticed. The quality of the shows hasn''t gotten any worse and the reruns usually start in January right? So whats the diff? Sameol'' Sameol''
-
Reply to this comment
-
See all 18 Comments