A looming writers’ walkout could halt scripted TV productions. Writers are demanding better pay and benefits.
Hollywood is bracing for a strike.
The Writers Guild of America and the Alliance of Motion Picture and Television Producers have yet to reach a deal on a new bargaining agreement, and insiders told TheWrap that they are pessimistic that the union and studios can reach a deal that can keep productions across Hollywood from being brought to a screeching halt before a Monday deadline at midnight.
Two individuals with knowledge of the talks said some progress had been made over the past week though they wouldn’t specify which issues were advancing to protect the confidentiality of labor talks. The individuals also said that despite an exchange of new proposals this weekend, there are other issues where the two sides are “still far apart,” as one insider put it.
In the meantime, WGA emailed surveys on Sunday to its 20,000 members asking for their preferred picket line times and locations should a strike be ordered. All guild members are required to take part in picket lines “absent a valid medical excuse, non writing employment, compelling personal circumstances [e.g., essential child or elder care] or emergency,” according to the guild’s strike rules.
Sometimes the threat of a looming deadline can lead to an agreement as time runs out, as was the case in the fall of 2021 when IATSE and AMPTP came to terms on a bargaining agreement with less than 48 hours before a strike deadline set by the below-the-line crew union. In 2017, a tentative agreement between the WGA and AMPTP was announced by both sides 15 minutes after a midnight strike deadline.
But these talks come at a time when the WGA has united behind a push for drastic change to ensure “the survival of writing as a profession,” as its leadership said in one memo. The rank and file clearly agree as more than 9,000 guild members authorized their leaders to issue a strike if a deal was not met by the deadline on Monday night.
With the possibility of a strike shutting down Hollywood not only real but quite likely, the situation is being addressed by the first line of programming that will be affected: late-night television.
“If you don’t see me here next week, know that it is something that is not done lightly,” Seth Meyers told his “Late Night” viewers this past week as he explained the WGA negotiations to them. The host noted that the last WGA strike in 2007-2008 was “miserable” when he was head writer of NBC’s “Saturday Night Live,” but also stressed that “what the writers are asking for is not unreasonable, and as a proud member of the guild, I’m proud that there is an organization that looks out for the best interests of writers.”
Currently, “SNL” has scheduled a new episode to air this coming Saturday with alum Pete Davidson hosting for the first time since leaving the sketch show, but it and other late-night shows will immediately go dark if a strike takes place, putting hundreds if not thousands of production crew members out of work.
The ripple effects of the strike will likely then extend to the fall TV season, as writers usually begin working on new seasons of network and cable shows in May and June. That working period will likely be completely erased if a strike happens, as the AMPTP and WGA likely wouldn’t return to the negotiating table until late June at the earliest.
That’s because the AMPTP has already made agreements with the Directors Guild of America and SAG-AFTRA to begin talks on their bargaining agreements, with DGA talks set to begin on May 10 and SAG-AFTRA on June 7. As the AMPTP must relay information from labor talks to the studios it represents, it only negotiates with one guild at a time, so resolving a writers’ strike wouldn’t happen until the studios complete talks with the directors’ and actors’ unions — assuming that they reach a deal with them at all.
For all three guilds, the common thread has been a demand to change how their members are paid for streaming shows and movies, with the WGA pointing to data that demonstrates that nearly half of all TV writers are being paid at minimum rates as compared to a third of writers a decade ago. The trend of shows with fewer episodes brought about by streaming has been blamed as the major factor behind this trend.
WGA has also blamed the abuse of so-called “mini-rooms” as a factor behind the drop in writer pay, as streamers have used the practice of ordering more scripts on a project before production begins. These mini-rooms, despite doing the same work as a normal writers room, pay at minimum rates and can extend for much longer than initially expected without the pressure of a production start date.
While the WGA has urged writers for years to negotiate with their agents for higher overscale pay and protections when they are asked to do mini-rooms, the guild has included in its pattern of demands proposed protections for writers such as minimum staffing requirements for writers rooms.
A studio insider who spoke to TheWrap on condition of anonymity said that there would be an impasse between the streaming studios represented by the AMPTP and the WGA on staffing requirements or any efforts to regulate mini-room usage and compensation.
“Studios hold tight onto their control over employment on productions and I don’t see that changing any time soon,” the insider said. “As for mini-rooms, streamers have used that as a way to be more selective on productions they greenlight and to have more confidence that they’re going to get a return on investment. Are they going to be willing to let go of that?”
In the meantime, strike captains and member volunteers in the WGA have spent the weekend putting together thousands of picket signs should they get the order late on Monday to put down their keyboards and gather Tuesday morning outside of Hollywood’s production offices. Some of the signs were used during the 2007 strike and have been kept in storage since then, such as one found by “M3GAN” writer Akela Cooper that was signed by fellow guild member David Slack.
“We marched and won then,” Slack tweeted with a picture of the sign. “And if we have to, we’ll march and win again.
Want more information on the reasons behind a potential strike? Read about all the issues here.
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