UPDATE: Here’s what the moguls have to say:
This is a day of relief and optimism for everyone in the entertainment industry. We can now all get back to work, with the assurance that we have concluded two groundbreaking labor agreements – with our directors and our writers — that establish a partnership through which our business can grow and prosper in the new digital age. The strike has been extraordinarily difficult for all of us, but the hardest hit of all have been the many thousands of businesses, workers and families that are economically dependent on our industry. We hope now to focus our collective efforts on what this industry does best – writers, directors, actors, production crews, and entertainment companies working together to deliver great content to our worldwide audiences.
Peter Chernin, Chairman and CEO, the Fox Group
Brad Grey, Chairman & CEO, Paramount Pictures Corp.
Robert A. Iger, President & CEO, The Walt Disney Company
Michael Lynton, Chairman & CEO, Sony Pictures Entertainment
Barry M. Meyer, Chairman & CEO, Warner Bros.
Leslie Moonves, President & CEO, CBS Corp.
Harry Sloan, Chairman & CEO, MGM
Jeff Zucker, President & CEO, NBC Universal
Here’s the official WGA announcement to striking writers:
On Tuesday, members of the Writers Guilds East and West voted by a 92.5% margin to lift the restraining order that was invoked on November 5th. The strike is over.
Writing can resume immediately. If you were employed when the strike began, you should plan to report to work on Wednesday. If you’re not employed at an office or other work site, call or e-mail your employer that you are resuming work. If you have been told not to report to work or resume your services, we recommend that you still notify your employer in writing of your availability to do so. Questions concerning return-to-work issues should be directed to the WGAW legal department or the WGAE’s assistant executive director.
The decision to begin this strike was not taken lightly and was only made after no other reasonable alternative was possible. We are profoundly aware of the economic loss these fourteen weeks have created not only for our members but so many other colleagues who work in the television and motion picture industries. Nonetheless, with the establishment of the WGA jurisdiction over new media and residual formulas based on distributor’s gross revenue (among other gains) we are confident that the results are a significant achievement not only for ourselves but the entire creative community, now and in the future.
We hope to build upon the extraordinary energy, ingenuity, and solidarity that were generated by your hard work during the strike.
Over the next weeks and months, we will be in touch with you to discuss and develop ways we can use our unprecedented unity to make our two guilds stronger and more effective than ever.
Now that the strike has ended, there remains the vote to ratify the new contract. Ballots and information on the new deal, both pro and con, will be mailed to you shortly. You will be able to return those ballots via mail or at a membership meeting to be held Monday, February 25th, 2008, at times and locations to be determined.
Thank you for making it possible. As ever, we are all in this together.
Best,
Patric M. Verrone
President, WGAWMichael Winship
President, WGAE

Previous: At approximately 7 PM, Writers Guild of America West President Patric Verrone will announce the results of a vote that would end the writers strike, a guild official says. (Photos by Jim Stevenson.) Above, Verrone arrives to supervise member voting on whether to end the strike. Below, screenwriters Howard Himelstein (A Good Woman) and Allison Burnett (Untraceable) finish voting. “We picketed every single day at Fox.” Far below, the line to vote in LA extended down the block.
Editor-in-Chief Nikki Finke - tip her here.



Uh, could the screenwriter of “Untraceable” go ahead and keep picketing indefinitely, even after the strike is over?
THE STRIKE IS OVER!!!!!!!
Sweet. This means more LOST!!!
And now that you have settled this tiff, please think about how you will get back the 100% of the audience you had before (which was, by polls taken before – not doing very well). Or rather, consider every day you were on striake as losing another small percent of your audience and while MANY will return, they all will not. Many will be writing for projects soon to be terminated. You need the people A LOT more than the people need you.
Congrats to all of you! Good job! Now–back to work. And try to turn out something worth watching, will ya?
Thanks
Nice.
92 percent? Even though it cost me a couple days pay, I’m actually glad they had this vote to placate the people whining about how this was being “shoved down our throats.” Now they can see how pathetically out of touch they are.
Congratulations to the WGA!!!! To be honest, this is slightly bittersweet for me as a non-union writer because I was actually enjoying the picketing, the conversations, and the daily walk before I headed off to work. As a writer I felt compelled to picket along with other writers, even though I never sold a single spec or worked on any shows, but it was still important to hit the sidewalk and let everyone know we were united as one, regardless of success. I enjoyed that equality. I’ll miss it. However, with that said, I’m happy for all writers, union or non-union, because we finally got justice… or the closest thing to justice in this town. It’s about time writers get paid for their work. Once again, congrats to all WGA members!
What’s very troubling is the absurd pack mentality at work here. 90% voted to strike back in November and now 92.5% vote to end it without getting anything they were led to believe would be theirs.
You can call it solidarity if you want but I believe it’s a reflection of lousy leadership and a majority of members without any independent thinking ability of their own.
The majority who voted to strike were duped and misled. There was no need to strike without SAG also striking for a double punch victory. The timing was horrible. It was six months premature.
And because of the lousy leadership and terrible timing of this strike the members had no choice but to vote to end it just when they were reaching their maximum leverage points all across the board.
Now a slightly larger majority have been duped yet again into thinking they have achieved this great victory. The gains are so minimal they are laughable. That’s because the demands at the start of this thing were not nearly large enough to get any type of gain.
Hillary should hire Verrone and Young to run her fizzling campaign. They will convince everyone that Obama is a certain loser and Hillary is already our next President. *rolls eyes*
yay!.. now there will be fresh propaganda and opinion control on all our idiot boxes once again.
yay.
Congrats everyone! You deserve everything you got and more. As someone who is not a writer I understand that the writer is the foundation upon which all films stand. I’m happy to get back to work but the circumstances make it even better.
eggcellent
OKAY WGA– you destroyed my livelyhood, ruined my xmas holidays, made us take a 2nd mortgage– and for what? my show is gone, my buddys have lost their OH deals, and we really didn’t get much AT ALL. What a waste.
PROUD TO BE/
ONE OF 283!
We’ll rue this day, but for those of you celebrating tonight, congratulations and godspeed.
Signing off.
StickingWithMyUnion
Yay!
The words I’ve been waiting three months for. I have nothing to say right now but thank you, Nikki. And thank you, WGA! Let’s get our shows back on the road!
From all of us actors that finally got a ride on a show, we are so grateful you got your lousy $1,200.00, the chump-change from those amazingly lucrative Internet feeds and of course the three people that have actually downloaded a movie from the internet last year. I would gladly give up my chance at continued employment on a network television show for which I have worked so hard and sacrificed so much to help you line your already amazingly abundant pockets. I am firm believer it is much better to pick up those shiny nickels on the ground while those pesky $20.00 bills fly over your head. Just brilliant. The future is safe. Great job…….
Thank God it’s OVER!!!!!!
Congrats to all. Great job of showing your solidarity and sticking to your guns. Hopefully this will set a great precedent for future contracts in all of hollywood.
Now once we are all back at work it will be time to actually interact with your crews that were put out of work and suffered for your gain. Get to know them. Learn their names. Say “good morning” and “thanks for a great day”. Get a coffee cart for the crew or bring in the “In and Out” truck. We’re really good people. Don’t make a beeline for video village and only talk to the actors, the director and the producers. The people that actually bring your visions to life are hard working and fun and would love to actually be acknowledged once in a while.
Cheers! See you on the set.
Glory and halleluiah!
Bless you, Nikki. This makes me sound like a sycophant, but without your coverage, I really think this thing would have dragged on longer.
Thanks for being a real journalist.
Congrats to the WGA!!
You deserved what you were striking for and I’m only sorry that it took this long for the Directors and other parties to come to the table.
While I was pretty “depressed” at the lack of decent programming, not to mention the loss of some of my favorite programs, I understood what the strike was about and was behind you 1000%.
Now get back to work and make those programs and movies!! (humor, seriously…)
Cheers!!
oh please. . . in a market of re-makes and un-original screenplays, you beg for our pity? are you kidding me? all of you are the reason why this land has become the epitome of hero-worshippers and the ‘land of the paps’. give us all a break. quit crying like a bunch of 6th grade girls, and get to work like the rest of us. waah.
Congratulations to the writers/members of the WGA. Your win shows that it is STILL possible to fight and win. This is a victory for all workers.
This is great news!
hooray.
Freaking Finally! I hope the writers and all involved will be rewarded for may years to come! Thank god all my catering friends will get paid again…