EXCLUSIVE…
UPDATED WRITETHRU: I’ve just been told that the 14 WGA writers and writer/producers on Sony’s newly ordered TV animated series Sit Down, Shut Up! have walked off the show scheduled to air in primetime on Fox. It’s a dispute over who has jurisdiction over the writing staff: the WGA or IATSE. The problem is that all the Fox TV animated shows now being broadcast on that network are covered under the WGA contract, so the writers assumed their new show would be as well. (Plus, Fox co-owns the show, one of the writers just told me.) But also Sony kept assuring the writers that the series would be WGA-covered — even though the show’s maker is Sony Adelaide which is steadfastly IATSE. (“This was always an IA show,” a Sony exec just told me.) Then, only recently, Sony finally revealed to the writers that the TV toon was to be covered by IATSE. So the studio was lying to everyone – even Sit Down, Shut Up!‘s showrunner Mitch Hurwitz (of Arrested Development fame), as well as The Simpsons writers-producers Bill Oakley and Josh Weinstein — all of whom, I’m told, are ”upset and sick about this”. Now Sony Pictures Entertainment co-chairman Michael Lynton has involved himself since he oversees the TV division.
On Friday AM, SPE gave this statement to me: “The producer, Adelaide Productions, has been a signatory to the IATSE bargaining agreement for at least ten years, and has been producing animated programming under that agreement. All of the deals made with the writers were specifically negotiated with their agents specifying that this program would be covered by the IATSE bargaining agreement.”
But insiders inform me that all the scribes on Sit Down, Shut Up!, a reworking of an Australian series, are pissed that they struck for four months and now Sony is taking away their right to be repped by the WGA’s new contract. This is exactly what WGA leadership was afraid would happen to toon writers as more Big Media companies turn animation over to IATSE’s jurisdiction because of the weaker terms of that union’s contract. I can’t wait to see what Sony’s next move will be. But its mendacity is shameful in this matter.
By all accounts, the studio played fast and loose with the facts from the start. “Bill, Josh and Hurwitz all took Sony’s statements in good faith that the show would be guild-covered,” one of the writers told me tonight. “Because Sony was saying up and down the line that they were waiting for the pickup before signing with the WGA.” Nor did the writers/producers have any reason to disbelieve the studio since a previous Sony animated TV show, Dilbert, had been under the WGA’s jurisdiction.
And then IATSE’s Local 839 — the so-called Animation Guild Local (formerly Motion Picture Screen Cartoonists) – arrived to everyone’s shock and dismay. “We naively thought it would be resolved, and we were all taken advantage of. We’re saddened we’ve been played like this,” one of the scribes explained to me. “Because for two whole months through last week, Sony was still saying ‘Don’t worry about it. Don’t worry about it. The show will be guild-covered.’ And then this week Sony said, ‘Sorry, the guild is off the table. You guys are going to be IATSE.’ ”
None of the writers have signed contracts so none of them have been paid so far. So today, they walked out. “We can’t afford to keep going in to work on good faith.”
The WGA writers/producers went into the WGA to formally ask for the guild’s help in their fight. “We said, ‘We don’t want to be IATSE members. We want you to be our collective bargaining agent,’ ” one of them told me. “Sony has offered to pay the IATSE dues and initiation for us and even said ‘we have internal mechanisms that will give you guys residuals’. But IATSE is not going to kick in our pension and health so we’re not going to vest as soon.”
The scribes stressed to me about their feelings of responsibility as WGA members, especially after going through a strike that was long and bitter and hard-fought. ”All the writers are unanimous on this: none of us want to be the writers who roll back WGA coverage of animation. And Mitch was very firm that his show isn’t going to be the one that rolls back guild coverage of animation. It’s really come down to a battle over jurisdiction. It’s not about the money. It’s about the right to be represented by the Writers Guild.”
Editor-in-Chief Nikki Finke - tip her here.


The bad guys in this are the Sony execs who deliberately deceived the writers and producers of the show. But the worse guys are the ass munchers that are IATSE, a corrupt, self-serving anti-union that provides virtually no benefits or protections to its writers, none of whom want to be members and all of whom are forced to be. Those of you who are trying to blame Verrone and the WGA have no understanding of the facts — of either this show or the recent strike.
Barney-
You’re obviously not a writer. If you were, you would know that you could do a lot of movie work for the big studios and still not make a middle class living. On top of that, you only get about one assignment for every ten pitches, and each pitch is a few weeks of work. Try doing that on top of another job, and it’s a killer. And this is just to get health insurance because your multi-national conglomerate employer won’t provide it, despite the fact that your work makes them filthy rich. So yeah, boo- freakin- hoo. The behavior of these conglomerates is obscene.
I am one of the walking writers. Funny, I don’t think of this as that “controversial.”
Sony has tried to hire a group of WGA writers, and then say it is an IATSE show.
All of us have said, “no, we’ll only work on a WGA show.”
All Sony has to do is find a group of writers willing to work on this. They could easily do this by staffing the show with writers who are already IATSE writers… yet they are trying to hire all WGA people.
Ask yourself why it is that Sony needs 14 WGA writers… but wants it to be an IATSE show.
Seriously, it’s really simple when you think of it that way.
None of us are trying to force this show to be anything. Just none of us are willing to work on it if it’s not WGA.
I don’t entirely understand why there are a number of commenters here who seem angry at the writers. All we are doing is choosing not to accept a job that isn’t covered by our union. The unfortunate side thing is that many of us have worked long hours for many weeks in good faith (ane largely because we are excited to get to work with such a fantastic group) because we were told it would be our union… oh well.
Man, I sure do love being Below the Line, where we don’t constantly need to grab for the spotlight, complain about not making ends meet with my meager paychecks and blame anyone and everyone who doesn’t succumb to my constant whines.
Hurwitz and Co. hold a very special place in my heart, as AD stands as my definition of the apex of intellectual comedy, but please remember that something like 93% of WGA members voted to ratify the new MBA. Solidarity, yo! They weren’t apologetic to the tens of thousands of BTL’ers that they kicked out of jobs, why should we be sobbing that the deal their milestone strike settled on left them out in the cold? Hurwitz and Co. should be looking more to Verrone than to Sony to protect their asses.
Furthermore, why should anyone be surprised at Sony’s actions? Once again, they’re just protecting the bottom line. Since when did we, as workers, start expecting the Congloms to take care of us? They’re already giving us jobs by betting on their ludicrous and often bizarre project choices (What is this industry beyond ridiculous bet-making on the parts of the studios?). You expect them to ‘look out for the little guy’ beyond that? Especially when our Unions are so adamant about fighting tooth and nail for their members, even when most of their members seem fairly happy, wanting only to work?
And lest we forget Fair Market Value? An animated show from a producer with a sketchy ratings past. Or am I mistaken in believing that ‘The Ellen Show’ was anything less than an enormous hit? I love Hurwitz, and I adore AD. And while it would be a great thing to think that Hollywood should be embracing Hurwitz’s unique brand of high comedy, they could just as easily make an easy return producing dick and fart jokes.
Oh, and I think it’s just adorable that the person posting as ‘WGA All the Way’ just misses his precious picket line. What I’d give to meet that guy in a dark alley.
And for whatever it’s worth, I worked for years as a production assistant, making less than ten bucks an hour, and while it’s not always mimosa and omelette brunches, I assure you, no one ever starves around here. Quit fanning that tired bullshit around. It’s wearing thin. If it’s really so rough, find a new line of work.
If, as Sony claims, that the writers and producers knew the terms of their deals from the very beginning, then why haven’t they been paid for two months? Sony’s argument doesn’t make sense. I’m starting to think these studios can’t be trusted…
>>>The government — particularly if Obama wins — should take a look at the anti-union tactics of Big Media.
Keep smoking that weed and inhaling that JFK vibe.
Wake up.
There’s only ONE candidate who would actually DO anything.
http://mikecane2008.wordpress.com/2008/06/13/hes-not-spoiled-our-political-system-is/
You want that 60s vibe back? There it is. For REAL.
Good luck to the writers. Don’t let them steamroller you.
And damn the WGA leadership for caving in — AGAIN!
I watched this show, and have a hard time believing there are writers on the stuff. Trash.