(…refresh for latest posting) Part I is here.
Inevitably, the first Craigslist strike reference, posted under “Missed Connection”:
“Nerdy, Neurotic Writer Picketing Outside the Studio! “Hi! You were the neurotic, quiet and nerdy writer picketing outside the studio this morning! Did you write that sign yourself? That was so clever. I was the Big, Bad Studio Monster that paid you exorbitant amounts of money up front, then denied you a piece of the back end. Then I ignored all your requests to negotiate and tried to bully you into a deal! Can we kiss and make up? Please? I think we can work some magic together if we both just put our egos aside. Who cares about the Below the Line people? We’re above it for a REASON!!!”
First Obama. Now Clinton and Edwards. All released statements today supporting the WGA strikers — even though nearly all the Hollywood moguls have hosted major fundraisers for each of them.
–>Hillary Clinton: “I support the Writers Guild’s pursuit of a fair contract that pays them for their work in all mediums. I hope the producers and writers will return to the bargaining table to work out an equitable contract that keeps our entertainment industry strong and recognizes the contributions writers make to the success of the industry.”
–>John Edwards: “The striking Writers Guild members are fighting an important battle to protect their creative rights. These writers deserve to be compensated fairly for their work, and I commend their courage in standing up to big media conglomerates. As someone who has walked picket lines with workers all across America and as a strong believer in collective bargaining, I hope that both sides are able to quickly reach a just settlement.”
–>Barack Obama: I already reported his statement here.
Below is a photo of actor Robert Patrick picketing CBS on Fairfax Avenue this afternoon with The Unit writers.
At the Raleigh Hollywood Studios, where they film Ugly Betty, picketers were near the end of their shift at around 4:40 pm when actress Vanessa Williams from the show came out with a bowl of candy for them.
Actress Meg Ryan came to a WGAE picket location in NYC and visited some friends in line.
UPDATE: From a Fox studio lot worker bee claiming to be on the side of the writers: “I don’t mean to rain on the WGA’s parade but I work in the building closest to the Pico gate, building 89. It’s where the House production offices are. I was there from 9am to 6pm and didn’t hear a thing from inside the building. And when I walked outside for a break, I heard some horns honking from time to time but nothing too over the top.”
The WGAE strikers have such a wildly different experience walking the picket lines than do the WGAW’ers mostly because there’s sidewalk action. That’s right, they actually come into contact with pedestrians who often talk back. I think John Robin Baitz posts a very evocative account of the NYC picketing here on The Huffington Post. I like his title for the WGAE walkers: March of the Schleppers.
Stories coming in to me of strikers moonwalking, doing mime, and performing cheerleader routines on the picket line for the benefit of the cars passing by. Are we certain these walkers are writers and not carnies?
The above photo is from picketing at Fox. I was told that strikers were gauging how they were able to tie up lines of cars trying to get in and out of one of the studio’s garages there, especially around lunchtime, by focusing on just one entryway. Then again, the picketers also realized that the folks who park there aren’t the studio CEOs and top execs who all come in the Pico entrance.
Picketing at Universal today was boisterous not to mention noisy: trucks and cars loudly honked in support. Several members of SAG joined WGA lines including Frances Fisher, Justine Bateman and Marg Helgenberger and walked for many hours. Showrunners like Desperate Housewives‘s Marc Cherry, Frasier creator Peter Casey, Drew Carey creator Bruce Helford and CSI‘s Carol Mendelsohn were out there, too. Ahmet Zappa drove by and dropped off dozens of coffee drinks. Gifts of dozens of pizzas came from Joss Whedon fans and CSI production offices. Also, Patric Verrone and David Young made stops on the Uni picket lines giving strikers updates on the negotiations.
WGAW President Patric Verrone said tonight in a statement (excerpt):
“Let me now address an issue which I know is on the minds of many — our decision to remove DVD from the table, a decision which was met with significant disappointment and even anger from many of our members. The reason for that decision was strategic and followed several back-channel assurances that, if DVDs were dropped, we would be able to make sufficient progress in new media so that a strike could be averted. This offer, combined with our desire to do everything within our power to make a good deal without a strike (by removing management’s strike issue), as well as some small movement at the bargaining table early on Sunday, provoked our decision to make that move. Unfortunately, the response we got was not as promised and management broke off talks before our new media proposals were seriously addressed. Our new comprehensive proposal (including the DVD removal) was presented in an off-the-record session: our new proposal was then rejected. Based on what I saw and heard on the picket lines today, therefore, all bets are off and what we achieve in this negotiation will be a function of how much we are willing to fight to get our fair share of the residuals of the future, no matter how they are delivered.”
WGA has issued this picket count for the first strike day:
MONDAY PICKET COUNT
Location: Total # of Members on Picket Lines
CBS Radford 527
CBS Television City 195
Culver Studios 115
Disney 190
FOX Fox 520 + 25 SAG
Hollywood Center 93
NBC Burbank 121
Prospect 116
Paramount/Raleigh 286 +10 SAG
Raleigh Mahn Bch 111
Sony 215 + 7 SAG
Sunset Gower 125
Universal 220 + 4 SAG
Warners 195
TOTAL: 3,029 MEMBERS
—
A WGAW strike captain sent this email to his picketers: “I heard from someone who works in Fox Television that the honking horns were driving all the executives crazy. They were screaming in the halls about it, and couldn’t get any work done. SO KEEP UP THE GOOD WORK!”
See this fan tribute to Joss Whedon on the occasion of the writers strike. Also in his honor, the fans delivered pizza to the picketing writers at Universal in Los Angeles.
TV fans are contacting me for a way they can donate funds to the striking writers.
I can do more rumor-busting. Today urgent emails circulated claiming that Heroes hotshot Tim Kring was “fired” by NBC. A source close to him told me tonight Kring was “stunned” by this rumor. “Couldn’t be farther from the truth. Honestly.” The insider thinks the rumor came from Kring’s decision to honor the strike this week and walk the picket line. “Maybe somehow that came out as some kind of contention with his employers. It’s obviously not aimed at the people at the network and studio with whom he has such a wonderful working relationship. I know how it looks to be picketing your own network and show, but it’s really about making a stand with his fellow writers over what he believes are some very serious issues. Hope that clears it up for you.”
UPDATE: I have more Shonda Rhimes news. (See my previous posting here.) I and others have been sent an email from the creator and executive producer and writer of ABC’s Grey’s Anatomy and Private Practice about her support for the strike. “I have to tell all of you that this email directly reflects the stance I came to over a very long night in New York. I absolutely believed that I would edit our episodes. Until a thought hit me: how can I walk a picket line and then continue to essentially work? How am I supposed to look at myself in the mirror or look at my child years from now and know that I did not have the courage of my convictions to stand up and put myself more at risk than anyone else? So I choose not to render my services as a producer. I choose to honor the strike. And I am proud that you all stand with me. Shonda”
The Daily Show’s John Oliver was walking the picket lines early this morning and gave an interview to NPR mentioning that Jon Stewart has promised to picket at some point this week. The WGAE line tomorrow is in Long Island City at Silvercup Studios.
Best chant of the day was at CBS Radford: “MORE MONEY – LESS MOONVES!”
At Raleigh Studio Manhattan Beach, I heard there was a strong turnout from the writing staffs of CSI: Miami, Medium, Boston Legal, and Psych. Patricia Arquette of Medium delivered Starbucks coffee and pastries to the writers on the picket lines. I heard Teamsters from CSI: Miami honored the picket line but some from Medium did not. One driver crossed the line with a busload of background extras.
Also at Raleigh Studios Manhattan Beach, picketers stationed at the main gate were approached by the manager of the lot and informed that they were not allowed to picket there because it wasn’t a “registered” gate. He explained that the main gate is not used by employees who work on the shows run by the studios protested, but only used by guests to the lot. They even put up a makeshift sign that stated that the employees of CBS Paramount, 20th Century Fox and several other studios do not use that gate. The picketers initially protested the request to leave because many have worked on that lot for the last few years and entered to work “every single day” through that gate. According to one of the strikers, “It wasn’t until we saw the manager of the facility talking to a Teamster from CSI: Miami that we realized that this was because the Teamsters wouldn’t cross our picket line, and CSI: Miami was scheduled to be on location for part of their day. Eventually we were forced to move when they threatened to involve the authorities. “
Editor-in-Chief Nikki Finke - tip her here.







November 5, 2007
To Our Fellow Members,
Allow me to congratulate all of you on Monday’s action. Our members executed 14 pickets throughout Southern California with over 3,000 writers. Many of the lines were joined by other Hollywood union members especially SAG actors and Teamsters. Writing has stopped and, with nearly every TV showrunner walking the line, television production has been overwhelmingly hampered. The effort began at 5 am when the writers of The Office set up a line at their studio and Teamster drivers refused to cross it, shutting the production down for the day. This kind of collective action is unprecedented in Writers Guild history.
Our strike has made international news, and we have received support and acknowledgements from WGA members worldwide. Aside from SAG and the Teamsters, other unions are lining up to support us including Local 1877 SEIU, HERE Local 11, the ILWU, the National Writers Union (a UAW local), UHW-SEIU, and our sister Guilds in Canada, Australia, Great Britain, and New Zealand. We have received public statements of support from numerous political figures including Senators Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama.
I want to express my personal thanks to all of you who picketed and to the individuals and institutions that are expressing support. I managed to get to nine of the lines today, and I was warmly received at each, and for that I am additionally grateful and touched. I will try to get to the others tomorrow.
Let me now address an issue which I know is on the minds of many — our decision to remove DVD from the table, a decision which was met with significant disappointment and even anger from many of our members. The reason for that decision was strategic and followed several back-channel assurances that, if DVDs were dropped, we would be able to make sufficient progress in new media so that a strike could be averted. This offer, combined with our desire to do everything within our power to make a good deal without a strike (by removing management’s strike issue), as well as some small movement at the bargaining table early on Sunday, provoked our decision to make that move. Unfortunately, the response we got was not as promised and management broke off talks before our new media proposals were seriously addressed. Our new comprehensive proposal (including the DVD removal) was presented in an off-the-record session: our new proposal was then rejected. Based on what I saw and heard on the picket lines today, therefore, all bets are off and what we achieve in this negotiation will be a function of how much we are willing to fight to get our fair share of the residuals of the future, no matter how they are delivered.
As we continue to picket tomorrow I am hopeful that our collective power will convince our employers to return to the table, offer us a good contract, and end this strike quickly. With that hope in mind, I know that we are all in this together.
Best,
Patric M. Verrone
President, WGAW
Love the line at CBS Radford. Keep up the good work Nikki.
I was very happy with the huge turnout at Warner Bros today. I’ll be back tomorrow and picketing all day.
We had some SAG supporters out the Colfax Gate! Thanks guys!
Keep it up! The honking is driving them NUTS.
Get it? NUTS?
This strike is going to last a very long time.
I’m a working writer. I support the strike. I was out on the lines today. I will be out on the lines tomorrow and in the foreseeable future. That said, I really hope we all know what we’re getting ourselves into here.
This strike will be long. And it will get ugly for us long before it gets ugly for them. But we’ve made our move, and hopefully we can convince enough people to stick with us long enough to make it all worthwhile.
Good turnout at the Disney lot today, I hope you guys keep it up as this goes on rather than dwindling. I’m on the business side of the studio, so am management and will be going to work each day, but am sympathetic to the strike. And I’m not the only one.
But I want to know what’s up with the 9-5 official schedule. A lot of us, from executives to assistants, get to work before 9 and work well past 5 every day. If you’re only picketing 9-5 a lot of people won’t even see you. I’m not sure when the lines started at Disney today – I arrived a little after 9 because I stopped to buy Krispy Kremes to leave with the strikers at my gate – but I hope you’re showing up earlier than 9 to get noticed by as many people as possible.
Best wishes on a fast and fair resolution writers.
To all the writers out there walking the picket lines stand strong and wear comfortable shoes!
The fans are behind you, writers. Let us know what we can do to help.
Nikki, can you post a list of what shows’ writers are picketing where? ‘Cause I totally want to order some pizza deliveries to those folks. Can you get beer delivered in LA?
I can tell you that many fans feel for the writers and we’re in support of the writers. We have a bigger place now than we did twenty years ago and we intend to show our support and let our voice be heard, too. For me, personally, I want to be there at the picketing myself. I don’t live in LA, but outside in the IE, and I have difficulties getting over there. However, if there’s anything I can do/offer, I want to do it.
A million thank yous for the rumor busting. The rumor about Kring had a lot of us fans very concerned.
Just so you know Sympathetic Suit, the plan is to try to distrupt production as much as possible not to be seen by as many people as possible. The suits know that you writers are striking, but it doesn’t help when there are people picketing longer hours just so that Les Moonves would get the joy of walking through the picket line on the way to work. By picketing in 4 hour shifts and over an 8 hour day, the WGA is actually increasing their pool of strikers.
“The above photo is from picketing at Fox. I was told that strikers were “enjoying” how they were able to tie up lines of cars trying to get in and out of one of the studio’s garages there, especially around lunchtime. Then again, the picketers also realized that the folks who park there aren’t the studio CEOs and top execs who all come in the Pico entrance.”
I was one of the writers picketing at the entrance/exit to the Galaxy lot at Fox yesterday, helping to tie up the lines of cars trying to get in and out of the garage. I can tell you that I was not, under any circumstances, “enjoying” it at all, nor were my fellow writers. We didn’t want to be there. We wanted to be at work, pitching jokes, doing the job we love to do. If only the Alliance would give us four more cents for every $20 DVD we wrote (and if the Alliance would give us more than the zero cents they currently give us when they a webstream a show or movie that we wrote) we would *be* at work, starting today. The studios make, literally, billions of dollars a year in pure profit off of the shows and millions we write… they can afford four more cents. They can afford to make a fair deal. It’s just that they don’t *want* to… not to the writers, nor to the actors, directors, ADs, editors, drivers, or anyone else. And be assured, if they break the writers, it’s the rest of that list that the Alliance will be coming after next. Not ’cause they have to. Just because they can.
So, anyway, no, we weren’t “enjoying” being on strike at that Galaxy lot entrance. But we’ll be there again and again, impeding production as best we can, until the Studios cut us a fair deal… a fair deal that sets a precedent for more fair deals for our sister guilds and unions throughout this industry.
Patrick Meighan
Culver City, CA
p.s.: I realize that most of the Fox suits and brass enter and exit off the Pico gate. If we could tie that gate up, believe me, we’d be doing it. That gate has a stop light and a crosswalk, however, which means it’s actually illegal to be standing in the driveway, impeding traffic, after the “Don’t Walk” sign starts flashing. At the Galaxy gate, by contrast, there’s no crosswalk or stop light, which means that pedestrians (and strikers) have a legal right to walk back and forth on the sidewalk across the driveway, gumming up entrances and exits for brief periods, impeding (however slightly and imperfectly) whatever productions may be in progress inside.
Good Morning Nikki
Thanks for the awesome continued coverage…keep up the good work.
Is there any way we rank and file fans can support the WGA East writers? Addresses of where they’re picketing so that we can send them letters of support or drop by with food, coffee, bad weather gear or just generally cheer them on? Please post them…we want to help too!
I know of a lot of folks out here in my decidedly rural area (my county in the Shenandoah Valley of Virginia has less than 40,000 people in it but damn near everyone here watches TV or movies for their entertainment) that would strike against their employers if it didn’t mean their jobs would get shipped off to China or India (heck most of them that could go have gone already) or worse that the business would totally close forever and never come back. I also know some below the line people who are going to suffer the longer production is stopped but frankly they have even less power to do what the writers are doing and if the writers don’t try (or for that matter the actors and directors in June when their contracts are due) then the whole industry is going to be lost to utter greed and the incompetence of studio executives.
Anyways this Law & Order CI fan is here to help…just let us know how we can support the writers and if necessary the below the line people who are suffering.
Gotta love hollywood, it’s the only place where the picket lines take Starbucks runs…
Not all the Fox bigwigs used the main gate. I was among the dozen or so writers picketing the obscure “Gate Three” on Ave. Of The Stars where Peter Chernin tried to sneak in at around 9:30 AM with a little smirk on his face.
As clever as the CBS chant was, it played badly on the NBC Nightly News, where the “Less Moonves” part didn’t quite register. So, unfortunately for our image, an audience of millions saw a bunch of greedy writers screaming “More Money!”
I wanted to third the support of many devoted TV fans for our writers(and the rest of the creative staff who are enduring this as well). You should read how amazing those Whedonesque people are, and all their plans to try and support you. I’m sure they’d love to know whether ads in the Times or weekly food drops would be spirit-lifting or a combo of both.
Equally, might I also suggest talking to TWOP? While some in the tv critic industry are sadly backward and Quisling-y(cough MA at TVguide cough), I’m sure you could easily use the love of fans for the good of your cause. Many writers and showrunners have already spoken to us in the past about their shows, and I’m sure a little talk about this would do wonders. We all know tv fans, unlike the losers who are trolling this board spewing their venom, are as devoted to your work as you are, despite our habitually snarking on the plot twists et al, but as the motto of TWOP sums it up the best, we snark because we care, and I’m sure many of us support you in this. So tell us how we can help you, especially if we’re not in NYC/LA area, but as people like me are, in one of those flyover states:).
Oh, and another nice little shout-out/summary of news from the fan side is on Ain’t Cool’s summary page
I walked the morning picket at Raleigh ManBeach. I had a local who was a teacher on disability come up and say she supported the writers and hoped we were as united as her union had been in the past. She also said that the gate we were picketing had, to her knowledge, never been open or used in the last ten years.
Also a couple of engineer from nearby Northrop Grumman asked questions and wished us luck.
Heard several UPS drivers wouldn’t enter. They have their own tough labor history.
Spirits were high. Hope they stay that way.
I just want Shonda Rhimes on the picket line holding a sign that says “No fair share on internet? SERIOUSLY?”
To my fellow writers: stay strong.
All of this is just making me sick. I can tell you the pain and suffering the WGA wants to inflict is hitting the wrong people. The people most hurt are the below the line crew, who don’t make any residuals or share in any licensing or merchandising. Thousands of production designers, costume designers, directors of photography, line producers, editors, etc. will be struggling long before Les Moonves feels any financial pain. The others who will be hurt are the support staff at the agencies, studios and production companies. I read the blogs debating if the show runners get 100K or 30K per episode, well the support staff is lucky to get 30K per year. These people won’t even be able to get jobs waiting tables because all the expense accounts are cut off and soon the restaurants will be feeling the hit. If there is no pilot season this 08, then the networks will load up on reality and watch in 09 as there will be less and less new series produced and potential jobs for writers and crew.
The WGA likens themselves to the little guys fighting the big monster studios. Well, the above the line people are the elite. You don’t hear of any below the line people earning 4 million per picture like Paul Haggis. Nice that he can affort not to work after a payday like that.
Isn’t it cute that well known actors are buying Starbucks and pizza for the striking writers. Who is delivering food and rent money to everyone else that is out of work now?
Both sides are acting like spoiled children. Nikki you were so right when you said that this is business. Both sides need to put their emotions aside and look at the bigger picture. When the commercial actors went on strike years ago, the industry never recovered, commercial production dried up and didn’t return. Let’s not see that happen to all the people working in the trenches who depend on film and tv to feed their families. In this strike, that’s who loses.
question-
how do you apply for the strike fund?
I’m a youngster to the whole walkout thang.
neverenoughjam –
You can get info on where the picketing action through the WGA’s site – wga.org – I think drinking in public is against the law? lol…
sympathetic suit –
From what I’ve heard, there are tactical reasons why they pickets go from 9-5p…
To my fellow writers…if you are on the fence, and not really sure you want to join a picket line…trust me I know how you feel. I was hesitant too. I’m not as militant as some others in the Guild, but I do believe in our cause, and that’s why I decided to picket yesterday at Raleigh Studios in Manhattan Beach. There was a strong feeling of solidarity, and I met a lot of really cool writers from a wide range of backgrounds. We traded war stories, talked about our paths into this business, and generally kept each other’s spirits up. I hate to sound all corny…but it made me feel like I was a part of something bigger than my own interests. You might feel the same way.
First of all, I support the strike. I do just want to let people know that when strikers disrupt business in areas surrounding the studios innocent people are negatively affected. It’s one thing to picket the areas near the gates, but to go to a surrounding neighborhood isn’t fair to innocent bystanders who are just trying to live their lives. Think about that before acting.
“How do you negotiate with people you can’t trust?”
….Moguls
I can’t believe I’m admitting this… but I called the Governator’s main office before hitting the lines yesterday.
Political office folk do listen, so I figured, “F’it. I didn’t vote for the guy, but I’ve paid for, oh, just about every one of his flicks since CONAN. I’ll lob him a call.”
His rep was very kind and took my statement. I basically said, “Have him look into this conflict, would you? The guy can get on the phone with anyone he wants to.”
I also told the rep that Arnie is probably the only politician in the country who could understand or enter this conflict… because he’s generated BILLIONS AND BILLIONS of dollars for the studio chiefs. Then I said, “Please remind the governor about all the WGA members who helped him get to the Promised Land.”
(It’s my humble opinion that cooler heads – in the back channels – will prevail. Eventually. Hopefully before Easter. Why not Arnie?)
I’ll go hide in the corner now.