Hollywood News


WGA Strike Ending Within a Week??

By: Jarrod Sarafin, News Editor
Date: Saturday, February 02, 2008
Source: AP Press Release

I'm not used to reporting anything on Saturday nights at 8:38 pm (as of this moment) but this report is hitting the Associated Press wires so it's getting passed along. The WGA strike may soon be over...There is a media blackout with the current discussions but some sources, who requested anonymity, have indicated that a breakthrough has finally happened at the bargaining table between the WGA and AMPTP. Nobody can verify the AP report because the media blackout but we will soon know if it's true.

Here's the official report by Lynn Elber.

LOS ANGELES - A breakthrough in contract talks has been reached between Hollywood studios and striking writers and could lead to a tentative deal as early as next week, a person close to the ongoing negotiations said Saturday.

The two sides breached the gap Friday on the thorniest issues, those concerning compensation for projects distributed via the Internet, said the person, who requested anonymity because he were not authorized to speak publicly.

A second person familiar with the talks, also speaking on condition of anonymity because he wasn't authorized to comment publicly, said that significant progress had been made and a deal might be announced within a week.

The people did not provide specific details on the possible agreement. Major points of contention include how much and when writers are paid for projects delivered online after they've been broadcast on TV.

The studios have been insisting that programs be streamed online for a certain period, deemed promotional, during which writers would forgo residuals. When payment kicked in, the companies sought to limit it to a flat $1,200 fee, while the guild wanted a percentage of a distributor's revenue.

The Writers Guild of America did not immediately reply to a request for comment. The Alliance of Motion Picture and Television Producers, the trade group representing the studios, declined comment, citing a news blackout agreed to by both sides during the talks.

Guild leaders have said they are fighting for a piece of the future, reflecting the widespread belief that Internet-delivered entertainment fare would inevitably claim an increasing and perhaps even dominant market share.

Although work remains to be done on elements of the agreement, prospects for a deal appeared solid, said those close to the situation. The tentative agreement would have to be approved by a majority of guild members.

The guild, whose 3-month-old strike has brought the entertainment industry to a standstill, began informal talks with top media company executives Jan. 23 in an attempt to reach a new deal covering governing work for film, TV and digital media.

Negotiations between the guild and alliance negotiators collapsed Dec. 7 after the alliance demanded that proposals for unionization of animation and reality shows be taken off the table. The guild refused.

During the negotiations impasse, the Directors Guild of America began its own talks with studio chiefs and swiftly reached a tentative deal that was announced Jan. 17 and covered some of the digital media issues key to the writers guild.

Major studio executives called on the writers guild to begin informal talks, which essentially are standing in for formal negotiations, according to those familiar with the situation.

The guild extended its own olive branch before the informal talks started by withdrawing the reality-animation unionization proposal and by deciding to keep pickets away from the Grammy Awards. It has since decided to allow the music ceremony to proceed with full union support.

However, the fate of the Feb. 24 Academy Awards has remained in question, with the guild so far declining to grant its blessing to the show. A union refusal to cooperate with the Golden Globes decimated the ceremony, which was boycotted by supportive actors.

Oscar organizers and producers have vowed they will stage some type of show, with or without union support — but a writers guild deal would allow this ceremony to proceed in its full, star-studded glory, providing an invaluable promotional showcase for movie studios and their films.


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Comments/Responses
1 2 3 > >>
joeybaloney • Feb 02, 2008, 07:29pm •
Oh my God... puh-leeeease!!!!! Eight episodes of Lost simply ain't enough.
What are the chances that shows like that & Battlestar would extend their seasons into summer? For my sake?

almostunbiased • Feb 02, 2008, 07:32pm •
Yeeeeeee-haaaaaaaaa!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

LOTRSUXS • Feb 02, 2008, 07:32pm •
Awesome news!! that means, Michael "Hack" Bay can go back to skull fuck the transformers, warner bros can finally anal rape the justice league... oh, and the oscars will be back on track, and we will finally get to see the coen bros get their dicks suck by the academy (undeservely)...

metalwater • Feb 02, 2008, 07:54pm •
What did I tell you in my previous posts, the studios and producers would not settle the strike until late January or February in order to do as much damage to the strikers as possible??? Well, here 'ya go.

bdd • Feb 02, 2008, 08:54pm •
Shut up metalwater you are as bad as spider.

And haven't we heard this before? I think we have. Until the other 8 episodes of Lost are made I won't believe it.

LOTRSUXS • Feb 02, 2008, 08:57pm •
actually, even if the strikes ends tomorrow, the rest of the season of lost is.. lost (bad joke?), they will have to shoot 24 episodes of season 5 instead of 16 though...

fft5305 • Feb 02, 2008, 09:26pm •
#3... umm... anger much?

metalwater • Feb 02, 2008, 09:33pm •
To: Bdd

Shut up, you say??? Go back and check my posts on the Writer's strike and you will see that I specifically was refering to a prediction that I made...again, if these reports are correct that a strike end is near, possibly within a week...that would mean I have been proven right in my prediction for a settlement in late January of February.

It wasn't a prediction made out of spiritual foresight, at least I don't think so, rather, it was based upon predictability through mathmatics...the law of averages if you will. You can predict human behaviour and the outcome of events based on such observations.

acidsquall • Feb 02, 2008, 09:55pm •
Eh, this is ok news. Doesn't help the shows that are getting killed off now, porbably due to the strike, or the fact that "24" probably won't show it's next season until next year at this point. But at least we can finally move on and simmer the talking about this whole thing. Hopefully.

jamesdalton • Feb 02, 2008, 10:12pm •
//and we will finally get to see the coen bros get their dicks suck by the academy (undeservely)... //

In spite of the spelling error, you still sound like a fucking retard.

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