UPDATED: All along the issue, the really big issue, was whether the striking writers would still feel united if some of them went back to work and others stayed on the picket lines. I’ve learned that was just one of the many worries voiced by the WGA to the posse repping Worldwide Pants when it applied for an interim agreement allowing the two late night shows it owns, The Late Show With David Letterman and The Late Late Show With Craig Ferguson, to return to the air on January 2nd fully staffed with scribes. ”It was a tough decision,” a source close to Letterman acknowledged to me just now. “This happened by the slimmest of all possible margins.” So tough that Dave’s negotiating team didn’t know whether the pact would be approved by the WGA until the very last minute today.
It was, finally, at midday following several meetings and a lot of phone calls, sources say. The Letterman camp — which included Worldwide Pants CEO and longtime Late Show exec producer Rob Burnett, ex-CAA partner and now Worldwide Pants exec Lee Gabler, and the Hollywood entertainment law firm of Jackoway Tyerman and Wertheimer — was sworn to secrecy until the WGA could first talk to Jay Leno and his writers and then produce a press release. But the news leaked out early, reputedly from Leno’s side.
“I am grateful to the WGA for granting us this agreement. We’re happy to be going back to work, and particularly pleased to be doing it with our writers,” Letterman said in a statement issued by his company. “This is not a solution to the strike, which unfortunately continues to disrupt the lives of thousands. But I hope it will be seen as a step in the right direction.”
On the one hand, this is the first side deal cut by the WGA with a producer since the strike began on November 3rd as part of its new and articulated “divide and conquer” strategy. ”Worldwide Pants has accepted the very same proposals that the Guild was prepared to present to the media conglomerates when they walked out of negotiations on December 7,” the WGA said in its announcement today.
But I’m told the WGA leadership was particularly worried how Leno’s writers would react since it gives Letterman’s show a real leg up on late night competition for guests like celebrities and politicians (i.e. Democratic presidential contenders who don’t want to cross picket lines). “I don’t think they wanted to upset Jay or those writers because they’ve all been incredibly supportive of the WGA during this strike,” an insider explained to me. “But it’s not Jay’s writers’ fault that Dave’s lawyers made a deal for him to own his show and Jay’s lawyers made a deal for him to be an NBC employee.”
Indeed, the WGA statement announcing the deal took care to note how “it’s time for NBC-Universal to step up to the plate and negotiate a company-wide deal that will put Jay Leno, who has supported our cause from the beginning, back on the air with his writers.”
But a statement by SAG prez Alan Rosenberg hailing the deal underscored the huge advantage which Letterman’s two shows will have booking big celebrity guests — an endorsement by the actors guild itself: ”Screen Actors Guild members will be happy to appear on The Late Show with David Letterman and Late Late Show with Craig Ferguson with union writers at work and without crossing WGA picket lines,” Rosenberg made clear.
Another argument against granting the interim agreement was that Worldwide Pants didn’t control the New Media rights to Letterman’s shows. But CBS said in its statement issued tonight: ”CBS controls the Internet exploitation rights for both programs, and will comply with any eventual negotiated agreement between the AMPTP and the WGA.” But then Letterman’s side showed that its company and not CBS is the one responsible for paying residuals to the WGA writers for Internet use of the shows.
Still another argument, and perhaps the most convincing, was that by granting the interim agreement the WGA would enrich CBS which collects the ad revenue from Dave’s shows and therefore help the AMPTP. Indeed, the AMPTP’s own statement accused WGA’s negotiators of “misrepresenting the fact that Worldwide Pants is an AMPTP member”.
But inside the WGA, a source told me, ”the question was whether the hurt felt by NBC in late night would be worse than the benefit given to CBS. Some people didn’t accept that. Those people also wanted to make a side deal with a much bigger company than Worldwide Pants,” an insider told me. “But there was an actual strategy behind today’s decision.”
That strategy goes something like this: In order for this gambit to work to the WGA’s benefit, two things must happen: Leno’s writers can’t go Financial Core, and SAG has to tell its people to only go on Dave’s shows. “Then you have Jeff Zucker in huge pain. You also have to remember that Les Moonves has very little power in the AMPTP. Jeff Zucker and Jeff Immelt have much more power in the AMPTP. If they see their Tonight Show franchise going down the tubes, they’ll put a lot of pressure on the other CEOs to return to the talks,” a source explained. “In the final analysis, they hoped this is a watershed.” (I can confirm that, at one point, Dave’s camp argued that NBC would break ranks with the AMPTP and do a side deal with the WGA in order to save its late night lineup, especially with Conan O’Brien about to succeed Jay Leno. But, in the end, no one at the WGA bought into that, so Letterman’s side dialed it back.)
But now there may be rifts within the WGA over the deal.
Before today’s announcement, I received phone calls and emails from some well-known WGA members, especially feature film writers, angry that the WGA was even contemplating such an agreement while at the same time dumping those issues important to screenwriters like possessory credit, free rewrites and endless meetings without pay. They told me they planned to stop picketing and possibly go Fi-Core over what they see as a strike that’s become more about television that movies.
Tonight I’ve managed to reach one of those successful screenwriters who phoned me and he’s furious. “I’m going back to work,” he said, asking me not to use his name. ”I have gotten five phone calls tonight from feature writers and every single one of them has said some variation on, ‘Bullshit on this. Why am I looking at staying out of work until April when these guys are going to start picking up paychecks on Tuesdays?’”
The writer continued: “All you’re doing every time a movie or TV star goes on Letterman is making money for a member of the AMPTP. If you’re going to strike GM, then you strike GM. You don’t say, ‘We’re going to give a waiver to the guys making pickup trucks because they’re really good guys.’” You don’t maintain solidarity by letting a handful of guys go back to work. So what’s next: Lorne’s people go back to work? Then Colbert’s people go back to work?
“I read the reasoning behind this on your site just now that they’re trying to break Jeff Zucker. Are they out of their minds? NBC Universal’s numbers are a rounding error in the grand scheme of General Electric. All GE has to do is sell one power plant in Dubai and it covers the entire revenue stream of NBC Universal.”
But another successful feature film writer, Mike Werb (The Mask, Face\Off, Lara Croft: Tomb Raider) just told me he applauds the Letterman deal and doesn’t see it as divisive. “I’m thrilled for the Letterman writers and for Letterman that as one of the most important people in the entertainment business he can take this stance. From my point of view, I don’t see any negatives in this deal. To me, it just serves as an example of how a side deal can be made. Personally, I applaud Worldwide Pants whether there’s a domino effect or not to be seen. If the deal is acceptable to the guild, it’s completely acceptable to me. That’s why I was one of the 90% who voted to empower this strike and my partners in this, which is the negotiating committee.”
Werb noted that during the last writers strike in 1988, he was working for a firm that also secured an interim agreement with the WGA, Sam Arkoff’s AIP, and recalled no controversy over that deal. “You never heard any arguments. People seemed happy.” Nor does Werb think there’s a movie vs TV writer schism developing. “I can tell you that during this strike now I’ve been on the picket lines every day and the spirit is significantly stronger this time than then. I’ve met so many screenwriters and TV writers all fusing together.”
Here are the various statements about today’s decision:
First, the WGA’s email to its own members about the decision:
To Our Fellow Members,
We are writing to let you know that have reached a contract with David Letterman’s Worldwide Pants production company that puts his show and The Late Late Show with Craig Ferguson back on the air with Guild writers. This agreement is a positive step forward in our effort to reach an industry-wide contract. While we know that these deals put only a small number of writers back to work, three strategic imperatives have led us to conclude that this deal, and similar potential deals, are beneficial to our overall negotiating efforts.
First, the AMPTP has not yet been a productive avenue for an agreement. As a result, we are seeking deals with individual signatories. The Worldwide Pants deal is the first. We hope it will encourage other companies, especially large employers, to seek and reach agreements with us. Companies who have a WGA deal and Guild writers will have a clear advantage. Companies that do not will increasingly find themselves at a competitive disadvantage. Indeed, such a disadvantage could cost competing networks tens of millions in refunds to advertisers.
Second, this is a full and binding agreement. Worldwide Pants is agreeing to the full MBA, including the new media proposals we have been unable to make progress on at the big bargaining table. This demonstrates the integrity and affordability of our proposals. There are no shortcuts in this deal. Worldwide Pants has accepted the very same proposals that the Guild was prepared to present to the media conglomerates when they walked out of negotiations on December 7.
Finally, while our preference is an industry-wide deal, we will take partial steps if those will lead to the complete deal. We regret that all of us cannot yet return to work. We especially regret that other late night writers cannot return to work along with the Worldwide Pants employees. But the conclusion of your leadership is that getting some writers back to work under the Guild’s proposed terms speeds up the return to work of all writers.
Side-by-side with this agreement, and any others that we reach, are our ongoing strike strategies. In the case of late-night shows, our strike pressure will be intense and essential in directing political and SAG-member guests to Letterman and Ferguson rather than to struck talk shows. At this time, picket lines at venues such as NBC (both Burbank and Rockefeller Center), The Daily Show, The Colbert Report, and the Golden Globes are essential. Outreach to advertisers and investors will intensify in the days ahead and writers will continue to develop new media content itself to advance our position.
We must continue to push on all fronts to remind the conglomerates each and every day that we are committed to a fair deal for writers and the industry.
Best,
Michael Winship
President
Writers Guild of America, EastPatric M. Verrone
President
Writers Guild of America, West
Then the WGA’s public statement:
“The Writers Guild has reached a binding independent agreement today with Worldwide Pants that will allow The Late Show with David Letterman and Late Late Show with Craig Ferguson to return to the air with their full writing staffs. This is a comprehensive agreement that addresses the issues important to writers, particularly New Media. Worldwide Pants has accepted the very same proposals that the Guild was prepared to present to the media conglomerates when they walked out of negotiations on December 7.
Today’s agreement dramatically illustrates that the Writers Guild wants to put people back to work, and that when a company comes to the table prepared to negotiate seriously a fair and reasonable deal can be reached quickly.
It’s time for NBC-Universal to step up to the plate and negotiate a company-wide deal that will put Jay Leno, who has supported our cause from the beginning, back on the air with his writers.”
From David Letterman’s Worldwide Pants:
Worldwide Pants Incorporated, David Letterman’s independent production company, announced today that it has agreed to terms with the Writers’ Guild of America on an interim agreement that will allow The Late Show With David Letterman and the Late Late Show With Craig Ferguson to resume production on January 2, 2008, with the writing staffs of both shows.
“I am grateful to the WGA for granting us this agreement. We’re happy to be going back to work, and particularly pleased to be doing it with our writers,” said Letterman.
“This is not a solution to the strike, which unfortunately continues to disrupt the lives of thousands. But I hope it will be seen as a step in the right direction.”
“This is a positive result, both for the WGA and for our shows, and we are appreciative that the leaders of the Guild dealt with us reasonably and in good faith,” said Rob Burnett, President and CEO of Worldwide Pants and Executive Producer of The Late Show.
The January 2nd original episode of The Late Show With David Letterman will air at 11:37–12:37 AM, ET/PT on CBS. Guests will be announced at a later date.
And finally from the AMPTP:
“While it is good news for viewers that the jokes will be back on the late night shows, the biggest joke of all appears to be the one the WGA’s organizers are pulling on working writers. The people in charge at WGA have insisted on increasing their own power by prevailing on jurisdictional issues such as reality, animation and sympathy strikes. Yet today the WGA made an interim agreement to send writers back to work that by definition could not have achieved these jurisdictional goals — gains that would at a minimum require the company making an agreement to actually produce reality and animation programming. WGA’s organizers are also misrepresenting the fact that Worldwide Pants is an AMPTP member. Today’s agreement is just the latest indication that the WGA’s organizers may not have what it takes to achieve an industry-wide deal that will create a strong and sustainable economic future for writers and producers alike.”
From Screen Actors Guild president Alan Rosenberg:
“We are pleased that Worldwide Pants has reached an independent agreement with the WGA and The Late Show with David Letterman and Late Late Show with Craig Ferguson will be back on the air with their WGA writing staffs. We hope this encourages all of the talk shows to follow suit and use only WGA writers. Screen Actors Guild members will be happy to appear on The Late Show with David Letterman and Late Late Show with Craig Ferguson with union writers at work and without crossing WGA picket lines.”
- WGA Met With Reps For Worldwide Pants
- Official: Stewart/Colbert Return Jan. 7th
- Dave’s Company Meets Friday With WGA
- Dave’s ‘Only Focus’ On Air With Writers
- WGA Reminds Returning Jay And Conan: No Monologues
- Dave Cooks Up WGA Deal That NBC & ABC Won’t Enjoy
- WGA On Monday Will Say To Moguls: “Let’s Make Individual Deals”
- The Line To Break Mogul Ranks Is Here…
Editor-in-Chief Nikki Finke - tip her here.







I’m a feature writer, and I know I’m supposed to be upset by this…but I’m not. I think this shows that our negotiators are not simply “organizers” who want to strike for the sake of striking. There is a deal to be made with signatory companies who want to make a deal with us, simple as that.
This doesn’t make me want to stop picketing. In fact, I’m ready and willing to get right back out there after the break. Maybe that makes me a sucker, I don’t know.
There was a prediction for 2008 in Forbes mag. that GE will sell the NBC/Universal since it’s not making from it.
WGA worst move ever was to put the reality/animation TV on the table when the only thing left to negotiate was the downloadable content. Now everyone J. Leno+ Conan+Others will get back to work and the rest of the writers don’t have a leg to stand on and be forced to go back to work.
BTW when you get back to work please write something worth watching.
NBC is a division of GE, enormous company; Fox, News Corp., pretty large; ABC, Disney, also diverse. But the Viacom split left CBS heavily dependent on network TV. Of all the AMPTP companies, I’d bet CBS would be the most eager to settle. So it would seem the decision to make a deal with Letterman implies that the pressure on the other parties to make a network-wide deal b/c Letterman will be beating them late-nite outweighs the loss of the pressure on CBS to force an AMPTP deal or make a separate deal covering all of CBS. Personally I don’t agree with that conclusion, I thought it was better to leave CBS out to dry. This sense has made no sense financially from the AMPTP’s side; now the WGA is making questionable moves as well.
What a way for the WGA to alienate its own members! How does this help negotiate a new contract? Someone please tell me…please! Also, how many DVDs and Internet watchers are there for Letterman or Ferguson? At this point it seems that both the AMPTP and the WGA do not care at all about people keeping their jobs or working…. what the hell is going on here???
Well done by the WGA and Worldwide Pants. These writers who are complaining need to get their heads together and think this through. This is a crucial moment in the strike and how they handle it will speak volumes about what the outcome will be. Will they stay united and force the AMPTP to break apart or will they let anger cloud their judgement and split apart. STAY WITH THE STRATEGY WGA! YOU CAN WIN THIS!
This is good news for WGA! They’re splitting up the AMPTP as a negotiating entity! Stripping support away from the enemy is the right move.
This is a small but powerful victory. The only way it could get fucked up is if individual bitchy writers decide to pout about other people going to work instead of taking the strategic view. Look at the momentum, people: piece by piece the AMPTP companies are peeling off and surrendering to the WGA. Other shows and networks are going to get jealous when WWP does well for a month and then they’ll all start caving in.
Their only hope is if the writers fall apart out of jealousy.
If it’s true that some feature writers are going to use this as an excuse to go Fi-core, it will confirm my worst fears about writers in this town; that they are essentially short-sighted, cowardly and selfish. (Yes, I’m a working guild member)
This strategy of the WGA making side deals may work or it may not. But the one, sure-fire, guaranteed way to make it fail is for some of us to get up on our self-righteous high horses and ride off into the sunset, pissed-off that we’re not going to be getting paychecks next week like those lucky Letterman writers.
Think about all the problems people face in this country, from foreclosures to dying in combat, yet here on the cushy westside of Los Angeles we’re throwing hissy fits because we may not be able to afford to spend spring break in Hawaii.
To that anonymous writer who made the GM comparison. That’s really the point isn’t it? The AMPTP is the equivalent of GM, Chrysler, Ford, and hundreds of smaller parts manufacturers negotiating as one entity. The guilds are in a stronger position if they can deal with each of the studios/networks separately, as our UAW brothers and sisters do.
The interests of the studios/networks are not in full alignment. Fox – with American Idol – stands to gain in the short term against the other networks. Sony is apparently interested in driving down the value of CBS to make it a more affordable buy. The Worldwide Pants deal helps to underscore all of this.
Also, there is precedent for this. Carson cut an interim deal with the WGA during a previous action. And given how pro-Guild Letterman is, and that he was happily acceding to all of the WGA’s demands, how would it have looked to shine him on? Talk about being unreasonable….
I hope cooler heads prevail within the WGA’s ranks.
Well I’ve been saying this all along. As soon as some people get to go to work while others are expected to continue walking around in circles on the pavement, the smell of shit would get too much and those unable to pay the bills would go fi-core in order to make a living.
It’s a joke to think that there wouldn’t be trouble if some are allowed to work and some aren’t.
No different if there was a food shortage and you saw your neighbors shoveling food down their throats while your family starved.
The thing about Jay Leno’s people not pushing to make him an owner of the show reminds me of that HBO movie about him and Letterman that aired in the 1990s. The scene in particular where Kathy Bates (as his agent) tells him something like “You want me to bring you a steak but you don’t want to know about the cow being hacked to death.”
That’s always been Leno’s problem. He’s too fucking passive.
And he wonders why Letterman owns his own show and now has writers on his show during a strike.
Nice try, AMPTP. “Worldwide Pants is not an AMPTP member.” No, but Worldwide Trousers, the WWP subdivision that produces the Late Show, is.
I don’t get how this is a problem. World Wide Pants agreed to WGA terms. They’re leading the way for all production companies to do the same. This shows that the WGA is making reasonable demands. The argument that CBS is making money is ludicrous. That money is chicken feed as is any money they stand to make or lose regardless of who goes back to work, or if no one does. They don’t care about money. They only care about power and control. This move disrupts their power and breaks the monopoly. It’s a tough break that Letterman is one of the few with balls enough to run his own company and be in this position. But that’s what you get for signing with who you choose to sign with.
I see this as a good move, if only because there is no longer any doubt that the contract presented in December is economically feasible. If it is possible for a relatively small company like WWP, it is definitely possible for the companies in the AMPTP. So any rhetoric they spin about how the WGA’s demands are impossible have been proven wrong. Notice how the AMPTP response is an attack on the WGA leadership, and says nothing about the contract that was the whole point of this strike in the first place.
I really hope that the WGA can stand together. I can understand being upset that others are working while you aren’t, but I can’t understand not being able to see the bigger picture and get over it. I fully admit that I’m not in Hollywood, so maybe I’m missing something…but it seems to me that it was inevitable for writers to go back to work little by little as opposed to one big mass. To respond to that one analogy, no, if you strike GM you don’t make separate deals for separate workers…but the auto unions deal with GM first. Then with Chrysler. Then with Ford. So, if you’re a Ford worker, you have to watch two groups go to work before you and still stand strong with the knowledge that it’ll be your turn soon, and when it is, you’ll be better off than if you just walked into the factory yourself.
I’ve been against this deal because of a reason that I thought was fundamental – WWP does not control the Internet exploitation rights for its programs. CBS does.
However, it turns out that there may be some hair splitting involved. WWP states it “is responsible for paying residuals to [its] writers” (per this Variety article) regardless of who can broadcast the shows on the Internet.
That clarification makes me more willing to accept the deal, but WWP wasn’t the point of “divide and conquer.” The point was to get at least one major to ink a deal independent of the rest of AMPTP. That would start the dominoes falling. This probably won’t.
All the visitor comments in other posts about shareholders being upset about company losses during the strike is pure fantasy. The #1 stock market issue is home foreclosures, potential home buyers’ lack of access to credit for mortgage loans, and the resulting problems those things create. The WGA strike is never going to impact the stock market (or even individual conglomerate stocks) in that way, and nothing about the WGA strike can impact CBS/Paramount/Viacom because Sumner Redstone controls the majority interest in those through National Amusements.
It will be an unfortunate irony if the WGA’s “divide and conquer” strategy results in dividing itself rather than AMPTP.
My first concern is the analogy to striking General Motors. To the person who gave that quote, I say this: Is Ford allied with General Motors? If not, then if you get an agreement from Ford, go back to work at Ford and continue to strike General Motors.
If I were a writer, I see if there’s an opening for a writing gig on Letterman. There’s probably only so many, but I try at this point to make NBC come to the table. To do that, you must make CBS look good in comparison, but be aware that NBC Universal is a small piece of a conglomerate. There needs to be an embarassment factor on top of this to get General Electric to take notice. I would dare suggest a GE boycott and demonstration. I would also, as mentioned several times in the solution suggestion thread, go after the AMPTP in the courts – collusion, antitrust, and bargaining in bad faith. Since it is now clear that the AMPTP does not care if they wither and die over the next year, you’re going to have to be creative in making them. I wish them luck.
Do you have this right?
Screenwriters are upset because maybe two dozen writers, who took the first hit of the strike and immediately lost paychecks, now have the chance to go back with a deal that sets a template for future deals?
I’ve walked the picket lines in New York for weeks now with screenwriters and none of them voiced this sort of petty fi-core bullshit. Everyone was grateful to the Late Night guys for walking every day, when the issues in this strike were hardly make or break for them. Indeed screenwriters are the ones who stand to lose any chance on ancillary income if the guild doesn’t get internet coverage.
If someone goes back to work because of this deal, they were looking for an excuse to scab. Good riddance. The rest of us will wish the Letterman group godspeed, while we wait for our fair deal.
WGA East on the line
Amended:
This is a mess. The Writers’ Guild picked the wrong time to strike, economically speaking, and now…they are paying for it. Ellen and Carson Daly have gone back to work, absent an agreement with the writers, and now Leno, Conan, Jimmy Kimmel and John Stewart…etc., are all coming back to the air waves without a contract with the Writers’ Guild– Letterman, his company and their exclusive contract deal with the WGA…being the sole exception. The result??? The Writer’s Guild’s position will be drastically weakened in these negotiations.
Even worse, their (The WGA ‘s) failure to grant waivers to award shows like the Golden Globes and the Oscars will lead to an implosion of the sympathies that many throughout the industry have given the WGA with respect to the strike, and set-up a number of increasingly split loyalties. Failing to grant those waivers is a tactical mistake…as was the ridiculous decision to strike during this period, our nation’s economic downturn, one that is fueled by the ongoing real estate market crash. Hello folks??? Writers have morgages to pay just like anyone else. When they begin to face foreclosures on their homes, as I suspect a good number already have, and are…strike, or no strike…well, many will soon be forced to cross the picket lines, and that isn’t a prediction…that is a reality. The studios and networks know this…and are moving to cause as much pain and suffering to WGA members as possible…by either busting or weakening the union…serving to put the fear of hell into other entertainment guilds in terms of negotiations, hence, thwarting future strike efforts, by intimidation and example.
In the end, all I can say for certain is the following: The leaders of the Guild need to seriously re-evaluate their positions, as well, the members of the WGA must re-evaluate their union leadership, as their strategies…again, that of the leadership, have been lacking at best. As I said in a prior post…this is a worthy strike, however…they chose the wrong time to strike, in respect to the short term, and long term financial well being of their members. By the time this strike is resolved, the writers will be forced to accept a contract with the studios, networks and producers that will be drastically less in its worth than the contract they would have gotten if they had waited another 2 to 3 years from now to strike, when the country’s economic outlook would have been much brighter, giving the writers some much needed financial leverage (strength), thus helping them to hold-out during a lengthy strike, if needed. Now as things stand, the writers will take a major loss, one that is going to result in this whole strike being a sizable bust for them. The writers, and all artists…who create content which the studios, networks and producers exploit, deserve much better.
Writers, actors and directors…must pull together to form their own companies to create films and television series, and other “creator owned” content, that they exclusively control…absent the participation of third parties, save for Angel Investors. Owning content (the product…such as film prints and authorship of scripts/stories) will put the creative community back in charge of itself, rather than continue to play convenient court jesters for greedy Fortune 500 Companies that buy their way into Hollywood via seemingly never ending corporate mergers, year after year. That is where the writers’ royalties are going to, financing the “Golden Parachute” deals of film and TV company executives (corporate raiders/criminals) who are stealing the futures of the Hollywood artists (writers, actors, directors, etc.) and that of their families…and most insultingly, their children.
It is time to take back Hollywood, through creator owned content–this through establishing independant film companies and networks that the artists own. In addition to creating the content therein, the artistic community can seek out distribution through alternative means…,i.e., Netflix, Apple’s new I-Tunes Online movie service, Blockbuster Online, Independant Theatres, and Independant Film Distributors–so on, and so forth. This is the wave of the future…and studios, networks and producers need to be told, in no uncertain terms, that the artistic guilds…and their membership are prepared to do what they must in order to protect their royalty interests…even if it means going partially or completely independant of studio and network management, so be it. It is the ultimate scorched Earth Nuclear option that the WGA and other creative artist guilds can play in these negotiations which the powers that be in the executive suites can appreciate, and fully understand. If they, the studio and network management, fail to act as honest negotiation partners with the unions and their members, in respect to fairly sharing royalties, then that very creative community will move to become their direct competition in the marketplace.
Any screenwriter who thinks this is an excuse to say “To hell with it, I’m going back to work,” doesn’t understand this strike and probably has been just waiting for an excuse to say that anyway. We’ve gotten what we wanted from Letterman’s company. Why shouldn’t they be rewarded with going back to work? At worst, it clearly says that our demands are not unreasonable. At best, it shows the companies who won’t make a deal with us as greedy and intransigent. Which they are.
“WGA’s organizers may not have what it takes to achieve an industry-wide deal that will create a strong and sustainable economic future for writers and producers alike.”
The leaders don’t have anything going for them except ire. The WGA will fracture by Jan 15 and get NOTHING. Quoted for truth.
Feature writers are angry? What a joke. Features have been shooting throughout the strike. Writer/directors are “deleting” scenes, not “writing,” on films that are scheduled to start this spring. TV writers have been carrying the strike. Your anonymous feature writer is being incredibly disingenuous.
I’m a produced feature writer with a quote in the high six figures. I’ve worked continuously for the last eight years. I’m not ready to go fi-core yet but I agree this strike has been all about TV and feature writers have largely been hung out to dry. It would only take a few high profile names to go fi-core for me to go the same route.
The GM analogy is flawed and actually works against the point the reactionary feature writer was trying to make. Auto unions negotiate with individual companies, not an organization of competing companies who collude against labor at a single negotiating table. The WGA deal with WWP is actually more in keeping with traditional labor negotiations than not. Would that the entertainment industry negotiated with unions like the auto industry does, because a strike would probably have been averted altogether.
Check with Leno???? WTF??? Jesus Christ! We don’t need to be giving backrubs to scabs here. The only point in making this deal was to then picket the hell out of the scab shows and try to get all the actors on Letterman instead. If we’re going to be too busy offering pony rides and hair braiding then this deal is not only pointless, but idiotic. What the hell are we doing? Jesus, if Leno is really that supportive, but not supportive enough to stay off the air where it really counts, then what he can do to help is to publicly refuse to book any A-listers until this is over and tell them to go on Letterman instead, rather than having his executive producer out mocking the idea that they’d have a tough time booking SAG members. Ditto for Conan and Craig Ferguson. Sorry dude, but there are more important issues here than how much money you can make for the company that shitcanned your ass and your personal rivalries.
Yet today the WGA made an interim agreement to send writers back to work that by definition could not have achieved these jurisdictional goals — gains that would at a minimum require the company making an agreement to actually produce reality and animation programming.
Someone please explain to me how this isn’t true? This deal seems like a very bad mistake on the part of WGA leadership.
I’m a successful screenwriter who fully supports the guild. We shouldn’t point fingers at each other and characterize this as a “TV Strike” or any of that nonsense. This is a Writers Strike — for the benefit of all writers, including those of future generations.
By the way, did that AMPTP release suck, or what? It’s almost unreadable.
Real Quick…
I’m a little unclear here on who these name writers are. While I don’t doubt you spoke to them, what confuses me is that they seem more interested in sending you e-mails than they are in attending WGA Strategy Meetings called to inform everyone what’s going on with the strike.
Here’s a quick recap for you and all those writers who are too busy complaining to attend the pre-Christmas Meeting…
1) Although it was announced that negotiations with Worldwide Pants were beginning, David Young had serious reservations. His point was the only deals that were going to carry any weight, were those with major signatories…
2) He further said that any such deal would still have serious repercussions, in that it would allow some writers to go to work while others would be forced to stay on the line and they would only make such a move if they thought it would make a difference in the long term…
In short, the strategy of talking with individual members of the AMPTP was discussed and negotiations with Worldwide Pants was placed in context of the bigger strategy…
Everyone in the auditorium seemed to understand the issues and the stated goals of the negotiating committee (despite the obvious disagreement on whether or not they should be talking to Worldwide Pants at all).
Now I don’t want to speak for the negotiating committee of the WGA, but it seems to me that since every talk show was heading back on the air regardless of whether or not they had writers (Leno, O’Brien, Kimmel, Stewart, Colbert and even Letterman). Now, that being the case, they all were going to be having the guests your friends were complaining about.
It seems to me, if they were all going back anyway, why not broker a deal with the only host who has repeatedly and incessantly attacked his corporate masters whenever he got the chance. Don’t you remember Letterman’s last year at NBC, after they had screwed him out of the Tonight Show? This is DAVID LETTERMAN we’re talking about, you think he won’t go after Rupert Murdoch and Summer Redstone every night till he’s blue in the face and do you really think his writers, our brothers in arms, won’t supply him with plenty of material?
And at the end of the day, how many strikers have we lost? 20? Out of the thousands of members that are on the line every day?
For the first time since the strike began we’ll finally have a voice on National Television and that’s got to be worth something. To me, it’s more than worth losing a few “big name” writers who can’t even be bothered to call their own Guild to see what the reasoning was behind their move and further, can’t even see the potential public relations boon this gives the Guild in light of mass return of Late Night as soon as January 2nd…
As a screenwriter for 8 years, whose worked for 5 major studios, as many mini-majors, and who has only recently begun working in Television, I can only say I’m disappointed by any working writer that takes this moment to walk away from the fight of his generation.