Do not, repeat, do not, believe anyone who claims that the writers strike is over yet. (Like the sign says in photos taken by Jim Stevenson from today’s WGA picket at Disney Studios.) Here is what informed sources are telling me as to the WGA’s plans for the next few days…
The WGA leadership is hoping to finish tonight or early tomorrow drafting the language of the deal they’ve negotiated with the moguls. (“Our friends at the DGA didn’t leave us language that could serve as a template. In fact, the DGA has no language beyond what was in their press release because they figured they had until June to work it out,” an insider tells me.)
Then the WGA intends to email to members and/or post on the WGA.org website that language so the members will have an opportunity to digest it before Saturday’s meetings.
On Saturday, the WGA West membership meets at the Shrine Auditorium and the WGA East convenes at the Crown Plaza Hotel in Times Square for a definitive informational confab with the leadership. (A guild phone bank has been making calls to members today urging them to attend.) The WGA governing bodies intend to “take the temperature” and “get a sense of the room” at this time. There’ll be lots of open mike time ”where people can say whatever they want,” I’m told. Everyone anticipates these will be very long and very contentious meetings on both coasts.
On Sunday (not Monday, as some thought), the WGAW Board and the WGAE Council both meet and will have to vote to approve any tentative deal before it goes to a membership vote. So, the WGA’s Negotiating Committee, WGAW Board and WGAE Council all must approve the contract before any decision on a strike can be made. Board members tell me that, since the WGA governing bodies were authorized by the membership to call the strike, then those bodies are authorized to call it off. (In Article IX, Section 3b, it states that the restraining order has to be authorized by the membership to start, but that it remains “in effect until withdrawn by the Board.” So the Board has the constitutional right to lift the restraining order at their discretion.) As I’ve reported previously, the moguls have insisted that the WGAW and WGAE governing bodies call off the strike before the membership ever formally votes on the contract, apparently so the CEOs, especially Disney chief Bob Iger, can count on an unpicketed and well-attended Academy Awards in 16 days.
I’m told that one of the purposes of Saturday’s informational meetings is for the governing boards to decide whether the membership will approve the contract or not. This, insiders say, will determine if the bigwigs call off the strike or not.
Once the governing bodies recommend the contract and call off the strike, then procedures will kick in to send out ballots to the membership on both coasts to vote on the contract.
Of course, some snafus may occur. For instance, I’m told that if no draft language is ready in time for Saturday, “it’s a very different ballgame”.
- Writers Strike Isn’t Over (…Despite What FrankenEisner Says)
- Last Gasp Picket At Disney Tomorrow?
- WGA To Meet With Membership Saturday
- STRIKE STATUS REPORT (UPDATED)
Editor-in-Chief Nikki Finke - tip her here.







I don’t buy into the ram down the throat thing, but… it’s 12:43 on the east coast, and our WGAE meeting is at 2 — 11AM in LA. We’ll have far less time than you west coasters to look at the deal. And you’ll be hearing all about it on sites like this and the WGAE’s reactions far before the west coast meeting starts. Might get awkward.
Here’s hoping we can all be rational and realize we won’t get everything we want, and here’s hoping our leaders did get us what we must have, so we can go back to typing in Final Draft instead of comments sections. Stay gold, ponyboys.
WGA Member wrote:
“If not, this whole exercise was a complete waste of time, talent and money for everyone who walked out 3 months ago. I’m not a hardliner. I’m not a moderate. I’m a writer. I just want to know I went on strike for a reason and the people I trusted to help us through this fight have the capacity to realize that rushing this thing through makes them appear to be AMPTP shills.”
Sorry to break the news to you WGA Member but you have been played by both sides. Your Guild leaders sold you down the river. They were lousy generals to have in command to start with. This strike was totally preventable and it was waged incredibly badly.
The reality is you and everyone else who walked in circles for three months wasted your time and energy. You have all lost money on this strike. So has everyone else who lost their jobs from it. Fiasco is an apt description for it.
Verrone should have waited until July when SAG could have joined with WGA but instead he decided to shoot first and ask questions later. Just like Bush going to war in Iraq. No exit strategy will always get you bogged down in a quagmire. There will be no surge of striking writers here. The Guild leaders have decided to cut their losses and send everyone back to work.
You have to vote for new leaders if you want a better deal in 2011. The good news is you have lots of time to prepare for the next strike. Internet profits will be enormous by then and very visible. Studios won’t be able to hide all the money. However you will have to picket for at least six months three years from now.
Work hard write well make as much money as possible between now and then and you will realize a great victory next time around.
The Joss Whedon letter ought to be required reading for every writer in this town…
so well done.
Amen.
Y’all are just groping for drama.
Guess what. Come Monday — no more strike. Resume life again.
Imagine that. No reason to complain.
Two step process on the table. 1st vote is to decide on whether to continue picketing. The second vote is to decide on whether membership is going ratify current contract.
1st vote — is this contract good enough to stop striking?
2nd vote — do we take this contract?
DVD is not favored nations. It’s possible SAG can get DVD, leadership believes that they can get DVD through pattern bargaining if SAG is successful in restoring the DVD chip to the bargaining table. Favored nations guarantees if SAG gets it, WGA gets it. Pattern bargaining means if SAG gets it, we can make an argument to get it too, but it’s not a guarantee like favored nations.