100-day strike: Hollywood writers frustrated as talks languish
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[August 09, 2023]
By Dawn Chmielewski and Danielle Broadway
LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - The Hollywood writers' strike marks 100 days on
Wednesday with contract talks stalled and people on the picket lines
protesting what they describe as a disregard for their demands.
The strike began on May 2 after negotiations between the Writers Guild
of America (WGA) and the major studios reached an impasse over
compensation, minimum staffing of writers' rooms and residual payments
in the streaming era, among other issues.
Writers also sought to regulate the use of artificial intelligence,
which they fear could replace their creative input.
Entertainment industry executives have been trying to navigate the
cross-currents of declining television revenues, a movie box office that
has yet to return to pre-COVID levels, and streaming businesses that are
largely struggling to turn a profit.
"We are in some uncharted waters," Warner Bros Discovery Chief Executive
David Zaslav told investors last week, as the company warned that
uncertainty over labor unrest in Hollywood could impact the timing of
the company's film slate and its ability to produce and deliver content.
Actors represented by the Screen Actors Guild (SAG) went on strike on
July 14 also over pay and artificial intelligence, effectively halting
production of scripted television shows and films and impacting
businesses throughout the entertainment world's orbit. It is the first
time both unions have gone on strike since 1960.
A meeting last week to discuss resuming talks between the WGA and the
Alliance of Motion Picture and Television Producers (AMPTP), the group
representing the major studios in negotiations, resulted in no firm date
for returning to the bargaining table.
The WGA sent a message to its 11,500 members later that same day,
complaining about details leaking from the confidential session, but
asserting the guild's negotiating committee "remains willing to engage
with the companies and resume negotiations in good faith."
The WGA did not respond to requests for comment for this story, and the
AMPTP declined comment.
Out on the picket lines this week, resolve mixed with anger.
"We are in it until we get the deal we need and deserve, but we can't
help but be discouraged by the attitude that we're getting from the
AMPTP," said Dawn Prestwich, whose credits include the TV drama "Chicago
Hope." "The indifference, and in some ways, it's sort of outright
cruelty."
Prestwich said studio executives are supposed to be writers' creative
partners, as they have in the past.
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The Writers Guild of America West
offices are seen in Los Angeles, California, U.S., April 25, 2023.
REUTERS/Mike Blake/File Photo
"This business is changing now," she
said. "It doesn't feel like a human business now."
The three-month-long strike has occasionally taken on the rhetoric
of class warfare, with writers assailing the media executives'
compensation.
Walt Disney Chief Executive Bob Iger, fresh off a contract extension
that gave him the opportunity to receive an annual incentive bonus
of five times his base salary, was criticized for calling the union
demands "just not realistic."
"What makes me sad isn't thinking we're not going to win," said TV
writer and WGA member Jamey Perry. "What makes me sad is being
exposed to greed and the cruelty of what these companies are doing
and the absolute wrongness of what they're doing. It feels really
bad."
As with past writers' strikes, this job action responds to Hollywood
capitalizing on a new form of distribution - and writers seek to
participate in the newfound revenue.
The first strike, in 1960, revolved around writers and actors
seeking residual payments for showing old movies on television. Two
decades later, writers walked off the job in 1985 to demand a share
of revenue from the booming home video market.
The 100-day strike in 2007-08 focused, in part, on extending guild
protections to "new media," including movies and TV downloads as
well as content delivered via ad-supported internet services.
This time around, a central issue is residual payments for streaming
services, though demands for curbs on emerging AI technology have
also gained importance. Reuters reported that Disney has created a
task force to study artificial intelligence and how it can be
applied across the entertainment conglomerate, signaling its
importance.
"When technologies create new revenue streams, workers want a share
of that revenue. Period," said Steven J. Ross, a professor of
history at the University of Southern California. "When it comes to
artificial intelligence, it is an existential crisis. They have the
potential of losing their jobs forever."
(Reporting by Dawn Chmielewski and Danielle Broadway in Los Angeles;
Editing by Mary Milliken and Sandra Maler)
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