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UPDATED THROUGHOUT: Sources tell me the Writers Guild Of America is intending to grant David Letterman’s independent production company Worldwide Pants an “interim agreement” that allows the Late Show host and his writers to return to the airwaves during the strike because it doesn’t involve CBS.
This comes after Letterman’s long-time executive producer Rob Burnett, who’s also president/CEO of Dave’s production company Worldwide Pants, has repeatedly tried to secure a WGA waiver for The Late Show. (See below for details of the bills Letterman has been paying since his show went off the air.)
This trumps NBC’s announcement coming Monday that Jay Leno and Conan O’Brien will be returning by January 7th 2nd. Presumably, ABC’s Jimmy Kimmel won’t be far behind. “A major announcement will be made by more than one network on Monday,” an insider noted. But Jay and Conan, who are just hired hands and not show owners like Dave, won’t have their writers to rely on when they come back on the air. And Dave will. The Late Late Show with Craig Ferguson, also owned by WP, would return with writers.
Here’s the statement from Rob Burnett:
“Worldwide Pants has always been a writer-friendly company. Dave has been a member of the WGA for more than 30 years, and I have been a member for more than 20. Because we are an independent production company, we are able to pursue an interim agreement with the Guild without involving CBS in that pursuit. Therefore, since the beginning of the strike, we have expressed our willingness to sign an interim agreement with the Guild consistent with its positions in this dispute. We’re happy that the Guild has now adopted an approach that might make this possible. It is our strong desire to be back on the air with our writers and we hope that will happen as soon as possible.”
This clearly is part of the WGA’s new “divide and conquer” strategy (see my previous, WGA Starting Monday Will Say To Moguls: “Let’s Make An Individual Deal”. Though it’s worked with Letterman, it’ll be a much tougher sell with the Hollywood moguls.
2ND UPDATE: That’s why Letterman’s network CBS felt the need today to disassociate itself from his pending WGA deal today, obviously worried that Les Moonves’ AMPTP colleagues will be miffed. CBS issued this statement this afternoon:
Regarding David Letterman’s company, Worldwide Pants, seeking an interim agreement with the WGA: We respect the intent of Worldwide Pants to serve the interests of its independent production company and its employees by seeking this interim agreement with the WGA. However, this development should not confuse the fact that CBS remains unified with the AMPTP, and committed to working with the member companies to reach a fair and reasonable agreement with the WGA that positions everyone in our industry for success in a rapidly changing marketplace.”
At present, the other late night hosts — Jay, Conan, and Jimmy (paid the least of all and csaid to be close to bankruptcy) are paying for staff to one degree or another out of their own pockets, presumably. But Letterman isn’t just doling out $300,000 a week in salary for the non-writing staff of two shows, his and The Late Late Show starring Craig Ferguson which Worldwide Pants also owns. Dave also pays for the rent of the Ed Sullivan Theatre Building in NYC and insurance for 200+ workers, I’m told. “So, triple that figure and you’ll be close to what he’s been shelling out a week for six weeks,” a source says. “I’m tired of everyone being lumped together for taking roughly the same out-of-pocket hit. It’s not close.”
I’ve learned that Worldwide Pants approached the Writers Guild early before the strike and tried to get a waiver and stay on the air. The company’s argument was that it’s a small production company that supports the WGA And that whatever deal the guild negotiated, Worldwide pants would adhere to. At first, I’m told, the guild thought making side deals might weaken its bargaining position. But now that the labor action is dragging on seven weeks without an end in sight, the guild has rethought its position in an attempt to induce individual studios and networks to cut separate deals with the WGA.
UPDATE: I’ve been trying to reach Letterman head writers Justin and Eric Stangel (they’re brothers and share that title) for comment. But Late Show staff writer and strike captain Bill Scheft (photo right) just told me he knew nothing about Letterman’s attempt to obtain the WGA waiver. ”I got the update letter today from the WGA about separate deals and then thought, ‘If we were smart, we’d be first on that line,’ he said. “They should give Dave the waiver just for singlehandedly keeping six shows off the air for two months and choking off a revenue stream the networks had counted on.”
I asked Scheft how he feels knowing there’s even a possibility he could return to work in a matter of days, not months. “Nikki, you have no idea. Very emotional just to think about it. Every single day on the picket line, every day, people from the staff come and visit us. My goal is always to get through the visit without sobbing. A goal not always reached.”
In an earlier email exchange, Scheft told me, the WGA “can thank Dave for the other guys staying off and paying their staffs, in my opinion. You have to wonder if they can wield more influence as on-camera advocates for the cause. As I have said since the beginning, Dave Letterman on the air without writers, pissed off he has no writers, railing nightly against network weasels and haircuts, is the greatest ally writers can have. And he will reach a much wider audience about the strike than we have been able to so far.”
- WGA On Monday Will Say To Moguls: “Let’s Make Individual Deals”
- The Line To Break Mogul Ranks Is Here…
- Jimmy Kimmel Does It Again And More…
- Jimmy Kimmel Did It Early Without Props
- Leno Digs Into Own Wallet To Pay Staff?
- This Is No Time To Be Jaywalking, Leno
- Conan O’Brien To Pay Staff
- It Doesn’t Mean What You Think It Means
- WGA Scolds Carson Daly For Returning ‘To Support Staff’ And Seeking Scab Jokes
- Letterman Confirms He’s Paying His Staff
- Dave Opens Own Wallet To Pay His Staff
- Tonight Show Returns With Guest Hosts After Leno’s Nonwriting Staff Laid Off
- Strike Forces Late Night TV Into Repeats
Editor-in-Chief Nikki Finke - tip her here.








Rob Burnett said “since the beginning of the strike, we have expressed our willingness to sign an interim agreement with the Guild consistent with its positions in this dispute. We’re happy that the Guild has now adopted an approach that might make this possible.”
If the WGA lawsuit claims it’s a labor violation not to bargain in good faith in a timely fashion, isn’t the WGA guilty of same thing by making Letterman wait 2 long months?
How does this help the WGA? I just want the strike to be over.
“The 1988 writers strike began on March 7. Johnny Carson returned May 11, not four months later. And he returned without writers. Don’t ask who wrote his monologue for the last three and half months of the strike.” — macherron
Carson went without his writers for one month. His show on June 8 was the first with hired Union writers, under a separate contract.
I find this an intriguing development… but as another WGAE writer (one of the relative few feature writers out there) walking the line in the cold, I’m not quite sure I see the fairness here.
Don’t get me wrong. I feel for The Late Show staffers and do see them visiting their striking writers every day in a show of solidarity…. but when do the rest of us go back to work? I’m broke, and tired, like everyone else — staff writer on Letterman or otherwise. I’m not collecting unemployment, do NOT have health insurance covered by the strike fund, etc.
Isn’t CBS going to benefit here? “More money… less Moonves!”… right?
Forgive me as I do see what’s well and good about Dave’s intentions here… but aren’t we all in this together?
If ‘some’ of us go back to work, I’m not going to keep picketing…
I think if the writers are smart, those returning writers will donate a significant portion of their salary to the strike fund while the strike is still ongoing. That way there won’t be any chance of infighting between other writers saying, “Why can they get back to work and not me?” As long as there’s no infighting among the writers, I think this strategy is fantastic and decisive and will slowly (or hopefully quickly) break the AMPTP apart.
the reason this is a big deal even if the other shows eventually go back on the air, is because DAVE WILL HAVE WRITERS!!
the other shows will not.
if you were in SAG, which show would you want to book?
hopefully dave will be flooded with huge name guests who will go on his show because he’s supporting writers.
and during the christmas holidays, CBS will be raking in some huge advertising dollars for these original shows.
i’m sure all the other members of the amptp will love that. no matter what cbs says in a press release.
this will ruffle some feathers, no doubt about it.
and anything that makes the moguls fight amongst themselves is good for the wga.
Late Night w/Dave Letterman #1
It’s not a “slam dunk”, but this should be good for the WGA, which probably needed to do something to shake things up. Yes, Viacom is going to start making money in latenight again. However, the WGA now has one production company that has essentially said “whatever you can get in this agreement, we can afford.” So think about next week. The initial headlines will be about the return of latenight and not everybody will understand the difference between Dave’s return and Jay’s return. But they’ll certainly get the difference between Will Smith, Tom Hanks, and Julia Roberts on the guest list as opposed to Victoria Secret models not named Heidi or Gisele. If the WGA can turn the screws and make sure potential Jay or Conan guests are afraid to cross the picket line, that could be a huge victory. No writers, lame guests…. these shows should be enormous crap. I could go on, but the bottom-line is that if the WGA plays this right, the money made by Viacom will be a small concession to the negotiating and publiclity gains that should be made.
Btw, yes, I know Gisele is no longer with VS. But who? Adriana Lima? Just not the same.
I have to say that, as a writer on strike, this is not okay with me. I have been on the picket line with the letterman writers and now all of a sudden they won’t be there. They’ll be working through the hollidays. Late Show doesn’t run on the World Wide Pants Network, it runs on CBS and is goign to give them revenue without caving. SO why is this okay? Burnett, as is stated here, has been working since the beginning to cross the line and now he did it. It was selfish. And what about the other shows under development by world wide pants? Probably being produced by Burnett, who now gets his writer fees while we don’t?
And do you really think that WWP is big enough to make the other companies cave? That’s crazy. IT’s one tiny company that produces one show. People on here are acting like World Wide Pants is on par with Disney or Paramnount.
This is bullshit. If I’m on strike, we’re all on strike. The only people being divided are us.
really hope daily show, colbert, kimmel and maher follow suit…
Let Letterman be anoited sainthood right here and now. He handled this exactly right. it will be impossible for leno or kimmel, however, to get any such waiver as they work for a huge conglomerate. and it’s interesting that letterman actually has been paying close to a million dollars a week (including insurance for his staffs and rent on Ed Sullivan theater). let the record also show that letterman willingly paid, and didn’t have to be shamed into it like his counterpart. I think Dave riffing on the AMPTP with writers will be a great asset to the wga. After carson returned in ’88 he poked venom at the studios on a nightly basis and I expect no less from Dave.
Does this mean that… Gavin Polone was right?
Today’s events totally capture Letterman’s and Leno’s essence in a nutshell.
Dave, a man of true character, flexes his muscles, and ends the strike for his writers.
Leno, the soulless tool, announces that he too will be back, but as a scab. Leno had no allegiance to anyone or anything but the suits at NBC. They paid him back by kicking him out of the Tonight Show chair 10 years only. And what’s his next move? He sells his union down the river for the love of these same suits.
Leno is the Willy Loman of comedy.
He’s also a scab, and I will never watch him again.
I LOVE HOW CBS IS STABBING THEIR AMPTP BUDDIES IN THE BACK!!!!
IF CBS REALLY HAD A PROBLEM WITH THIS, THEY COULD MAKE DAVE GO ON WITHOUT HIS WRITERS.
MOONVES IS GETTING THE LAST LAUGH TONIGHT. ZUCKER AND SILVERMAN ARE CAUGHT WITH THEIR PANTS DOWN.
A mad Dave could be great for the writers. He’s tenured enough to be able to speak his mind.
I hope I’m right in assuming that once Leno and Conan go back on there will be picket lines at their lots so Dave will be the only one able to get guests that won’t cross a picket line. Otherwise the divide and conquer won’t be too divisive.
What does this mean for Jon Stewart and Stephen Colbert?
While I think that Letterman is doing a good thing, from one point of view. I have to agree that this really ends up helping the networks in the long run. They get original late night programming and get the standard ad rates that they were about to have to provide give backs (and in some cases refund money)for.
I get what he is trying to do. He just wants to get his people back to work and stop the bleeding for them and I find that to be honorable. However, from a collective point of view, how does this help the WGA’s cause? I’m also curious as to how this works for the writers that return. Don’t they have a responsibility to stand with all the other writers and maintain a united front? If all the late night shows return doesn’t that just give the networks a bigger cushion to work with?
Aw hell!! I hold no ill will against Dave for doing this. If I were in his shoes I’d want to do anything I could to help my people.
One last thing:
Where does this leave things for Stewart and Colbert?
Shelly:
Google owns YouTube.
If not for anti-trust laws, they could probably buy all the nets & studios & still have billions left over!
The way this will help is if Leno goes to his boss at NBC and says, “I’m not going back until I get the same deal Letterman has. I want my writers, too.”
The shows (including Letterman) were going back anyway, but now Conan and Jay might not be able to go through with it. They all follow each other, as they did in paying their staffs, so Conan and Jay will pressure Zucker and company to fall in line. They do not want to look like bad guys in this. Kudos to Dave, and kudos to the WGA negotiators. The one, two punch of filing the charges and offering to make separate deals, were followed by Letterman’s uppercut. Nice work.
I don’t see how this helps us that much. As Bill Sheft points out, he’s been choking off a revenue stream, and now that’s opening up again. It doesn’t hurt us if the feelers NBC’s been putting out that their late night shows are coming back Jan 7 are true, but it doesn’t help us. It’s nice that Letterman was willing to deal directly with us, and yeah I’m sure he’ll have a lot to say about the greedy moguls, but I can’t see how this is going to push moguls to break ranks. Small writer-friendly producers like Stewart, sure, but does he even own his show? That’s the problem.
And what about Conan and jay? If they return without forcing NBC into the same agreement as Worldwide Pants, they’re in the exact same position as Ellen and Carson Daly, we have no choice but to come down on them equally hard, in spite of the fruit baskets and supportive messages.
And let’s not forget that there’s a guy going around now saying that he secretly wrote scab material for Johnny Carson during the last strike, Daly’s reading material off cue cards, if the other hosts come back it’s very possible some of them will not be writing all their material themselves.
Can someone please explain how this is a good thing? Considering CBS will be raking in the advertising dollars, the studios will be able to advertise their films, and essentially, this is like giving the WGA giving a waiver to an awards show except every night of the week…??? Can someone please list the PROS and CONS please?
I know that I shouldn’t be surprised by anything Hollywood gets away with, but how on earth is all this collusion legal?
Why on earth would CBS’s shareholders want to position “everyone in [the] industry for success”? I know this has been said before, and in this post, but these company’s should be trying to screw each other over, not lend a helping hand. I hope Lawrence Lessig is working as fast as he can.
Dave’s deal is a huge PR win for the WGA.
Because for the general public, it now means: “The writers can’t be asking for too much, if David Letterman is willing to agree. So what’s everybody else’s problem?”
A simple concept that anyone can understand, instantly, and with no need to work through all the details.
Whether it’s more complicated than that or not, THAT is what the public now knows. “Dave made the deal. How bad can it be?”
And the AMPTP’s expensive PR firm will now be working overtime to counteract that bombshell realization.
But then, they don’t CARE what the public thinks, right? Right…