He was 69. He’d been ill for a long time, and was hospitalized several days ago, I’m told. A very controversial figure in Hollywood, Nick Counter served as President of the Alliance of Motion Picture & Television Producers (AMPTP) for 27 years, from its formation in 1982 until his retirement in March of this year. Prior to being named AMPTP President, he served as outside legal counsel for the antecedent Association of Motion Picture & Television Producers for 10 years. As AMPTP President, Counter’s primary responsibility was to lead the 80 industry-wide labor negotiations with entertainment industry guilds and unions on behalf of the studios, the broadcast networks, and certain cable networks. In his 27 years as AMPTP President, Counter negotiated more than 300 major guild and union agreements. Warner Bros chief Barry Meyer, considered the lead mogul behind the AMPTP, tonight called Counter ”a brilliant negotiator who guided this industry through historic change and never lost his desire to be fair to all involved. We will miss him very much.”
His recently named successor and longtime No. 2, AMPTP President Carol Lombardini, had this to say tonight: ”Nick’s passing is a profound loss for the entire entertainment community. We will all remember Nick for his passionate leadership, which was always guided by a resolute sense of fair play and an earnest desire that everyone come out a winner. Nick had a particular proficiency for developing consensus among diverse points of view and he used this skill to great advantage in negotiating hundreds of collective bargaining agreements that led to a sustained era of labor peace. Those of us who worked directly with him have lost a valued colleague and a dear personal friend. Our hearts go out to his family.”
The MPAA pointed out: “He always treated people with dignity and respect in the tough circumstances of these negotiations. He knew that you could be thoughtful and kind even when the issues were difficult, and for that he was respected.”
However, I would be remiss if I did not point out that Counter was not a popular figure among the majority of the Hollywood guild members who saw him as extremely polarizing. Their negotiators regularly complained about Counter’s bargaining methods to force the guilds to negotiate with themselves. Counter wouldn’t budge on the issues, and instead sat, and sat, and waited for the other side to get frustrated and start taking issues off the table. It was a successful albeit torturous and disrespectful tactic, one that did not endear him to the unions who often made accusations that he bargained in bad faith with them. Several unions even filed formal complaints about him with the National Labor Relations Board. Counter handled almost all the negotiations that led to and then settled the 2007/2008 Writers Guild strike. (WGA On Nick Counter’s Death, Briefly) On the picket lines, WGA strikers often made signs caricaturing Counter in unflattering ways. But I was told Counter appeared ill for most of the SAG negotiations and took a backseat to Lombardini. (SAG Statements On Nick Counter’s Death)
In lieu of flowers, the family would prefer donations be made to the Motion Picture & Television Fund (MPTF) or the Entertainment Industry Foundation (EIF.)
Editor-in-Chief Nikki Finke - tip her here.







He died of a broken heart after seeing Jay Leno take his title, Most Hated Man In Hollywood.
But, Counter was doing his job, putrid that it was. He was charged by the most militant branch of the studio and network heads to play hardball.
He may indeed have been “a brilliant negotiator” in the sense that he didn’t give a royal fuck about anyone on the other side of the table, which was an asset in his particular line of work. And he was probably kind to children and dogs, or at least his own children and dogs. But then we all are. In the end he was a pure hired gun who had no ethical qualms about being paid a ton of money by rich people to ensure everyone else stayed as poor as possible. I don’t know that we’re ever off better when someone is dead, but everyone under the title of CEO, Chairman, or Member of the Board was better off when he retired.
In other words, Josh, he was like every member of the bar I have ever met—including my own attorney.
what a great way to start the day
de mortuis nil nisi bonum, you assholes
Okay, I’ll only say good of him.
It’s good that he’s dead. In fact, it was great of him.
Only in this morally relativistic, spineless world we live in, would anyone praise or excuse a man because, while representing the interests of corporate predators, he treated those he sought to destroy with dignity and respect.
Just think about what you are saying!
It’s like thinking that the patriotism, bravery, and manly comportment of a general makes up for the fact that he gives orders to firebomb civilians.
It’s madness.
Nick Counter was just doing his job, yes, but it was a despicable one. He made a moral choice when he took it. We don’t disparage him because we “disagree” with him.
It’s because we find his actions corrupt and shameful.
Nick is hopefully rotting in hell for his years of brutally running the hard working back bone of our industry, the “early to rise – late to bed, sweat or freeze, union laborer”, into an everyday financial struggle. He definitely did NOT care about the little guy. He sat high and mighty on his hill, and he took great pleasure, in fact threw parties, for his conquests of the union defeats. His passion was the almighty dollar, not the care of the entire entertainment community that built our industry.
Nick was a class act alright, THIRD CLASS!
I didn’t agree with the tactics of this man, necessarily, but Jesus Christ, there’s a lot of people showing a total lack of class on this site tonight. Come on, folks. Besides, sometimes it takes a great enemy…
Rest in Peace, Mr. Counter and my condolences to his family.
It’s funny and tragic that you can say “condolences to his family” when I’ll bet you, like most of us, cackled with glee as the government stripped Bernie Madoff’s wife of all her ill-gained wealth and kicked her out of the condo she and Bernie ruled New York from. I and the rest of the posters here haven’t suggested rooting the relatives out or cutting of any inheritances but there is a huge amount of grief and pain soaked into the money this man accumulated and attention must be paid to that.
Nick Counter did the bidding of Peter Chernin, Bob Iger, Barry Meyer, Peter Roth, Jeff Zucker, Les Moonves and the rest of those 8 figure corporate execs. Ken Lay’s obit discussed the damage he caused in the lives of people all over the country and the vast amounts of money he made while he did it. Some of these comments her today are cruel but Nick Counter did this job willingly. He was not trying to make working conditions better for the little guy. He was trying to keep more money for the rich guy. That is a really weird job to choose in a moral sense.
It is possible not to candy coat his legacy AND show some respect for his family and those who loved him because I’m sure he was more to them than a characterized villain in their life stories, like he is for many WGA members who feel he never negotiated in good faith. All the burn in hell posts are ugly and over the top at this point. Those wanting to rewrite history and act like he was a saint are way off too.
To all the misguided ignoranti villifying Nick Counter:
Obviously, you have absolutely no clue that a negotiator is merely the mouthpiece of the studios. While tactically he may have partially set the agenda, he did not unilaterally make policy or set rates, etc. and had much less power to destroy life on this planet as you delusionally believe. He was the studio flak-catcher doing a job nothing more.
Oh yeah, and he was a very decent guy. So to the extent there is a studio afterlife, he’s not going to need extra sunscreen for the fires of hell.
This posting by ratbag is 100% right on. I would add one other thing, Nick Counter was not a union buster, and I would encourage people to read Ken Orsatti’s comments in the other posts. He nailed it.
Don’t worry, we’re also brewing up vast new buckets of bile to pour over the graves of the studio heads as well. We are equal-opportunity vilifiers here.
Ratbag is correct. He carried out what the studios told him to.
But who wants to do a job like that? Destroy the little guy for the bidding of a handful who have all the power and money?
He must have wanted some approval somewhere. He was a smart and talented guy who got sucked in to an ugly job for a very long period of his one and only life. Didn’t that article say he was only going to do it for a few years?
What made this job appealing to him? What did he get out of it?
Has it occurred to any of you spewing venom that for 15 years with Nick Counter on the other side of the table … from 1983 to 1998 … there was never a work stoppage with SAG?
Golly gee, guys — Maybe – just maybe – since that time the demands of the studios and management of the guilds changed to one of adversarial rather than the understanding that each side is reliant upon the other.
Look at the bigger picture. No one seems to do that anymore.
Anita… What do you call the SAG commercial strike?
So if God and the Devil are negociating Nick’s future “employment” status he now knows what it feels like.
Wow! I am blown away by some of you people. Are you proud of yourselves? Yeah, you must be pretty cool to spit and piss all over some guy who JUST died. Bravo! Very brave. And all of that “Hope you burn in hell” stuff? – OMG, SO clever, funny and appropriate. It’s easy to see that you’re a much, MUCH better person than he was.
You know what? It shouldn’t matter if he was an asshole, or if he ruined this industry for you (what with it’s rich history of fairness, job security and generous profit sharing for all), have some respect for his family at least! Show some kindness and human decency. Proudly displaying such gleeful, bitter contempt only makes you look worse than the person you’re demonizing. If you can’t bring yourself to forgive your enemy or turn the other cheek, no problem. Just keep it to yourself and show some class.
“Rot in Hell You Piece of Shit”?…I am embarrassed to be part of a profession where another human being would write such despicable sentences upon the death of a man none of you ever knew. He was a negotiator. Just like a defense lawyer, he did his job. And because he did his job in a manner you disagree with, you write sentences like, “So long asshole” and “What a great way to start the day.”
All of you should be ashamed.
By the way, I am a WGA member so don’t lecture me on how many “lives were ruined”. Nobody’s lives were ruined because of a labor negotiation.
“Nobody’s lives were ruined because of a labor negotiation.”
Are you serious?!?!?!
How is it living with your head in the sand?
Liar. You’re not WGA. And just because he was doing his job doesn’t justify despicable human behavior. Fuck him and fuck you.
Very articulate. That’s just good writing! Doin’ the WGA proud!
May God have mercy on Nicholas Counter’s soul. And grant peace to his family. And never again inflict on writers an adversary so determined to destroy their livelihoods, and a WGA management so determined to enable him.
Amen StickingWithMyUnion. The focus now needs to shift to Carol Lombardini and what kind of mischief and cheating the moguls will commit between now and 2011.
it’s appaling to see all the negative comments on Nick Counter’s death, a reminder of the maxim that you “don’t kill the messenger”. Nick Counter was sent out to do what his bosses were assigning him — which, for anybody who was observent of the action — was to hasten the demise of the unions. If you were, in fact, a fan of SAG and WGA and what they were hoping to acheive, you would instead focus your energies on seeing the early demise of Bob Iger, Peter Chernin, Barry Meyer, et al, who were determined to use the 2008-2009 negotiations to break the unions = and garnered tens of millions or dollars in profits from their corporate overseers in doing so. Credit where credit is due, and pain therein.
i’am 59 years old, i’ve known nick since i was 18. i grew up in south central l.a.,
when i was 22 ,nick defended me and five others on fake gun charges free.
i don’t care about what those who have bad things to say about him. his family,
treated me and my family like gold. that said, let see how many of you would have,
done that, ,you loud mouth punk/cowards, rip nick.
Wow. All this hate. Why not direct that in equal (if not more) measure at all your brilliant union leaders? Nick was a fabulous consensus builder from the 1980s through the 1990s, but then everybody out here started to feel entitled and leftier than tho (but god forbid you should live anywhere but in or near 90049), and the amateurs and buffoons at the unions who understand nothing about the business of the business acted childishly and way overplayed their digital hand. Anybody get any checks lately for all that interet stuff that was so important to strike over? Nick was a wonderful man; it’s a shame you haters never really knew him.
“Why not direct that in equal (if not more) measure at all your brilliant union leaders?”
We do.
Would you all say the same about the union negotiators who agreed to these deals? And those of you who chose to approve them?
Yes.
To those defending Mr. Counter here, yes, he is deceased, but it is rare any passing meets this level of vitriol.
When the negative comments outweigh the positives this blatantly, it did not happen by accident.
There are many people who can be charming or display a wry wit, while they are working to disenfranchise the many (Ken Lay, Bernie Madoff, Michael Milken — I would include various dictators, serial killers, etc…but let’s keep it in the financial realm, since Hollywood is only about profit). It does not make them worthy of defense upon their demise.
LEAVE NICK ALONE!! The poor man is dead! He is not a murderer he negotiated agreements.. No matter what your opinion is please respect the dead. I am sure you would not appreciate comments like this after you passed.. Also please don’t try to justify your disrespectful comments by mentioning things that supposedly the man has done while he was alive he is not here to defend himself so just let it GO!!
Yes, you’re right, I would not appreciate comments like this after I passed. But, I did not hurt people the way this man did. He did more bad and than good. If he was such a wonderful human being the comments would be much different. But, they’re not.
In lieu of flowers, the family requests that you punch a writer in the face.
Bon riddance.
During the writer’s strike, folks used to come on here and say just vicious, inhuman, immature things about whoever was in the way of what they personally wanted in their own lives.
Back then I thought “These people are very impassioned and concerned about their own families. They say these things in the middle of a very difficult time. It’s still regrettable, but understandable.”
Now a guy is dead after a painful sickness, leaving behind a family and others who loved him and are grieving him, and you all write this stuff. Petty, mean, small stuff. Now I know, all along, you all just a bunch of fucking selfish assholes. You should be very ashamed, and you never will be, and that’s how your life will go, and that’s how the world will always be. Too bad.
To all those of you who are making with the phony crap about what a good guy Nick Counter was, mainly because it’s the P.C. thing to do. My feeling is this: It cheapens the kind words and genuine condolences that are offered when a truly good person dies. We should all be willing to let the chips fall where they may and be remembered based on the actions of our lives. Nick Counter was clearly remembered here by the actions of his life. To diminish the pain and suffering he caused working people is as disgusting as it would be to diminish the good and decent acts of nice people who pass away. Nick Counter wrote his own legacy and his own eulogy. Don’t blame us for just reading it out loud.
to those people defending nick, it’s your actions in life that define you. even if he was a nice guy, his actions ruined a lot of lives and KO’d an industry already on the ropes.
Exactly. Death doesn’t make you good all of a sudden. He was a POS for what he did over many years. Fight for bigger margins by destroying jobs and families. Class act – yeah right.
I dare each and every one of you scumbags who spew any of this hatred and bile to say it directly to the man’s family. God bless the anonymity of the internet.