Tag Writer’s Guild of America

Singer, Actor, Writer, Businessman

I’ve been following the developments in the labor negotiations between the Association of Motion Picture and Television Producers (AMPTP) and the two main actors’ unions (SAG and AFTRA) for a couple of months now, and what began as quiet negotiation has turned into a very public squabble. Not between AMPTP and the unions, but between SAG and AFTRA and the various factions within. You have probably read or heard mainstream media stories now that big name actors are publicly involved. The media are playing up the George Clooney vs. Tom Hanks confrontation big time.

If you’ve been reading my posts, you know that AFTRA accepted what is generally considered to be a weak offering from AMPTP. The battle in these negotiations is over payments for re-use of material in digital deliverables, the same issue that the Writers’ Guild went to strike over during the winter. It’s felt that the deal AFTRA accepted is not as good as the deal the WGA got, but because AFTRA is a smaller subset of performers they just didn’t have the clout to push for a similar deal. AFTRA’s acceptance gave AMPTP a lot more leverage in negotiating with SAG, which actually walked away from negotiations a couple of months ago. So now the fight is whether or not to take the same deal as AFTRA or hold out for more and make the threat of an actor’s strike even more likely. Hollywood veteran Mark Evanier offers his assessment on the recent developments.

Meanwhile, having won their battle, the Writers’ Guild has moved on to new battles. Last week, Advertising Age reported that the WGA had petitioned the FCC to begin formal inquiries into the practice of in-show product placements on television. (It happens in film, too, but the FCC doesn’t have regulatory oversight there) Now the FCC officially announces that it will do just that, launching a formal Notice of Inquiry and Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (NOTE: link goes to a PDF). A similar effort was made last year, but the FCC abruptly dropped the proceedings.

The complaints come in two forms: first, media reform watchdog groups are opposed to the practice in its entirety. It’s one thing when brand-name products are used as props or background items on a set in the name of verisimilitude, and another when the action of a scene or even the entire production features specific products as part of the dramatic continuity. Some groups want the practice abolished, and others would settle for some sort of “sponsored by” notification in the credits of the show to acknowledge the presence of the advertisement. Second, the WGA and other industry groups aren’t bothered by product placements at all, they just want their cut of the action. Because product placements aren’t formally part of the production deal between a television network and a producer, writers and actors and so on don’t see any of the money the producer gets. Forcing the producers and networks to fess up to product placement would give the WGA et. al. something esle to bargain for with AMPTP down the road.

The music industry (which, let’s face it, is really the same thing as the movie industry and the television industry, since all media in the U.S. is controlled by five corporations) continues to die its slow, painful, desperate death. Last week the RIAA lost an argument they made in one of their ongoing cases against file sharing; they claimed that merely having files on your computer that were visible to other people constituted the same thing as actively uploading files for sharing. It puts them at a distinct disadvantage at prosecuting any more cases. Meanwhile, it looks like sme musical artists are beginning to see that there is life without the traditional record companies. According to this Ars Technica story from a couple of weeks ago, a clearinghouse label called “Merlin” that was formed by a handful of independent artists now licenses music for 12,000 artists, making it the fifth largest record label. Major artists as well as up-and-coming acts are offered, and Merlin may go after the thousands of artists who promote their own music on MySpace, giving them a chance at much wider promotions and sales.

EmailStumbleUponRedditFacebookTwitterGoogle+Share

Related Posts:

Strike Two?

You know how Hollywood is crazy for sequels these days…well, with the Writers’ Guild strike only a few weeks in the past, now it’s time for the actors to go up against the studios for similar issues.

On Tuesday, AMPTP (the group that represents the producers) abruptly broke off talks with the Screen Actors’ Guild. SAG hasn’t made any rumblings about a strike just yet, and the conventional wisdom says that this is just a negotiating tactic on the part of AMPTP. On Wednesday, AMPTP began identical contract discussions with AFTRA, the union for television and radio performers. No walk-out there as of yet, but since the sticking points and demands are so similar, I wouldn’t be surprised to hear it.

Mark Evanier, who is a long-time Hollywood insider, opined that AFTRA would probably agree to a lesser deal, leaving AMPTP in the catbird’s seat to tell SAG to take it or leave it. Nobody in Hollywood wants a second strike so soon after the WGA strike. Ratings for network television series have declined precipitously this spring, even for top-rated shows. AdAge talks about “series fatigue” in this article as one explanation for the drop in viewers for long-running shows, but has to admit that the strike gave fence-sitting viewers the excuse they needed to give up on watching their favorite shows. New audience research indicates that adults (the 25-54 demographic) still spend a little more than half of the time they spend consuming media watching television, but that’s a decline from past surveys and is only likely to continue to decrease. A second strike shutting down production of television shows and movies would be devastating.

EmailStumbleUponRedditFacebookTwitterGoogle+Share

Related Posts:

Must See TV?

NBC got a jump on some of the other broadcast networks this week by rolling out their fall schedule earlier than usual. Not that there was all that much to roll out. They’re only premiering four new series in the traditional September slot, and only have a few more slated for later debuts throughout the season.

While the Writer’s Guild strike undoubtedly played a significant part in weakening new offerings from all the networks, the AdAge article linked above points out that it’s not the only factor in reshaping the networks’ approach to programming. Over at NewTeeVee.com, Chris Albrecht points out that NBC also announced a handful of original online series as well as supplementary online content to go along with shows like “Heroes”, “The Office” and “30 Rock”. The significant drop off in television viewership is reducing the value of new television series, and so the networks are beginning to pay attention to using online distribution as a lower-risk method for attracting audiences, though they’ve yet to demonstrate that you can successfully port an online show to primetime (witness the embarrassment NBC suffered with the utter failure of “Quarterlife”).

Even though the television networks have been trying to adapt to the changes wrought by the arrival of the Internet since practically Day One, they have floundered year after year after year without really understanding the nature of the change. The writer’s strike was really just the catalyst that seemed to finally compel the networks to revisit their tired models of programming. It will be interesting to see what the other networks bring to the table in terms of reimagining the relationship between themselves and the viewers.

EmailStumbleUponRedditFacebookTwitterGoogle+Share

Related Posts:

This Battle Is OVAH!

Word that the Writers’ Guild strike is nearing its conclusion has been floating around since last weekend, but last night on CNBC, forrmer Disney CEO Michael Eisner stated publicly that the two sides had reached a deal and it would go to the union membership for approval over the weekend.  In this morning’s Hollywood Reporter, a story with a dateline of last night goes into much more detail about what has to happen for the strike to actually conclude, without going into any real detail about the deal itself.  One of the remaining sticking points will be how well the deal compares to the agreement reached with the Director’s Guild of America a couple of weeks ago.  According to this article, it’s unlikely that the writers would vote much before late Sunday, and then only if there are no hangups in drafting the final contract.  Also hinging on this is whether or not the two actors’ unions, SAG and AFTRA, will negotiate a similar deal when their contract with AMPTP runs out in June, or if they might consider a strike of their own.

Every ancillary business related to film and television production has take an enormous hit from this three-month strike.  People in the post-production field say that the damage to companies in that business may be long-term, if not completely irreparable.  Earlier fears that the strike would cause "pilot season" to go un-developed now seem to be easing, but the producers could still lose money in the process.  That also has ripples in the networks’ ability to sell time to advertisers, and from there the ability of media buying firms to meet their own revenue goals, and so on.

Viewers, in the meanwhile, have found that the best part about the strike has been that they can finally catch up on all those Netflix rentals, Xbox games, and YouTube videos they have been missing.

EmailStumbleUponRedditFacebookTwitterGoogle+Share

Related Posts:

Look For The Union Label

So the late-night talk shows all decided to scab go back to work without writers last week, to mixed results. I wouldn’t know personally, since I haven’t watched Leno or Letterman on purpose in at least 15 years. I did see pictures of David Letterman with his “strike beard” and gaw-DAMN that man is scary old. He looks like he just spent the month of December playing Santa at the mall (after all, he hasn’t been working much lately).

I’m more than a little surprised that the writers are still on strike, to tell you the truth. Their grievance is completely legit, and they timed the strike for maximum damage to the TV networks, which will be unable to offer much of any new programming for the 2008 fall season now as well as the rest of this season. Pretty soon the big networks are going to start having to take a page from the cable network playbook and run the same repeats three times a night just to have programming. Or maybe one of them will just buy YouTube from Google and run non-stop homemade teenage music videos, “Lord of the Rings” fanfilms, and kitties.

You’d think that writing those daily talk shows required a heightened sense of comedic material, depth of understanding of current events, and razor-sharp intellect. But this New York magazine story comes from a former Letterman writer who says that it consists of being chained to your desk banging out whatever you can shit out of your brain, while an overseer comes and collects your output once an hour. And this blogger’s interview with a Daily Show writer from 2006 doesn’t make working for Jon Stewart sound any better.

EmailStumbleUponRedditFacebookTwitterGoogle+Share

Related Posts:

Workers Of The World, Unite!

“tongodeon” is a blogger whom I know as “mrneutron” through our mutual association with Andre Torrez. He writes about all sorts of things, but last week he had a post about the Writer’s Guild strike where he suggested that the writers and other creative people in the TV and movie industries take a lesson that musical artists are beginning to learn: screw the studios and do it yourself. The reason we have movie studios, recording companies, and television production companies in the first place is that when those media first arose, the only way to get your film/song/series made was to go through big companies who could afford all the production facilities and who eventually used their positions to solidify their dominance into the distribution of said products. The combination of cheap professional-grade production and post-production tools available to anyone with a computer, and the arrival of the huge new distribution system called “The Internet” has already empowered plenty of amateurs to try their hands at making their own movies and TV programs, so surely these professionals could end-run their corporate masters to some degree.

There are some weaknesses to this argument, namely that those same media industries are beginning to exert their control over Internet distrbution as well (hence the reason for the strike in the first place), and that there is no shortage of people who want to be screenwriters and producers to take their place. But the idea’s definitely in the right direction. A number of other online acquaintances appear in the comments on this post, some of whom are in fact the very people presently affected by the strike, and they bring some much-needed insider knowledge to the discussion.

I, for one, am astonished that the writers’ strike has gone on for even this short amount of time, because everyone surely knows that the jig is up for the studios and television networks on this. There can’t be anyone who doesn’t seriously believe the industry line that “digital is an unknown quantity”…the only unknown quantity is how many freaking boatloads of cash they’re going to make, not whether they’ll make any at all. The writers deserve their cut just like everybody else. But I think I would love to see some TV folks try the same thing Radiohead tried with their latest album.

EmailStumbleUponRedditFacebookTwitterGoogle+Share

Related Posts:

All Original Content Copyright © BrianKaneOnline
All Other Content Copyright © Its Original Authors

Built on Notes Blog Core
Powered by WordPress

Switch to our mobile site