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Will Streaming Media Lead To A Massive Writer's Strike? (latimes.com)

"A decade ago, Hollywood writers brought the entertainment industry to a standstill when they walked off the job for three months in a dispute over pay for movies and TV shows distributed online," writes the Los Angeles Times. But they're reporting that it may happen again, with the Writers Guild of America now seeking a strike authorization vote from its members. Streaming services like Netflix and Amazon have transformed Hollywood and contributed to an unprecedented number of quality series being produced -- a phenomenon often described as the new Golden Age of TV. But times haven't been golden for many writers for whom more is now less. Shorter seasons are the new norm, with many series consisting of 10 or fewer episodes on cable and streaming -- less than half the length of traditional seasons on network shows. That has put writers in a financial crunch since many have exclusivity clauses that prevent them from working on multiple shows per season...

"It's getting more and more difficult to make a living as a writer," said John Bowman, a TV writer-producer, and former head of the WGA negotiating committee. Studios are equally dug in as more customers cut the cable cord in favor of streaming options. They're also grappling with a dramatic fall-off in once-lucrative DVD sales and a flattening of attendance at the multiplex. They are releasing fewer titles a year, meaning fewer opportunities for screenwriters... Complicating matters is a lack of transparency. Streaming services operate on subscription models and don't release viewer data, making it difficult to devise a formula for residuals (fees for reruns).

Amazon is a member of the studio alliance, while Netflix "is expected to sign on to an eventual contract." (Though streaming also seems to be hurting the popularity of reruns, which is also reducing the residuals writers receive.) But underscoring the impact of online media, Slashdot reader JustAnotherOldGuy asks, "with all the alternative content available, does anyone care...? Would the writer's strike have any serious impact on your life?"

5 of 316 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Contract negotiation... by sg_oneill · · Score: 5, Informative

    So, if you're a TV writer, why not negotiate a contract which takes into account the new reality of streaming and shorter seasons?

    What's the big deal? Business conditions change all the time in all sorts of industries and small businesses (which is what most writers should be if they're working via contract and for various rights) adjust to it.

    I mean, if they had some sort of big bureaucratic organization which they were forced to belong to and which controlled standard contract terms they might be screwed over while they waited and hoped for it to adjust to the new reality, but if they are free and work for themselves, then it's just business as usual.

    They are negotiating. Its called a strike.

    --
    Excuse the Unicode crap in my posts. That's an apostrophe, and slashdot is busted.
  2. Writers are not underpaid by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    Service Network Minimum Cable Minimum
    30 Minute Story $8,062 $5,432
    30 Minute Teleplay $17,343 $8,821
    30 Minute Story + Teleplay $24,183 $13,557
    60 Minute Story $14,192 $9,871
    60 Minute Teleplay $23,399 $17,096
    60 Minute Story + Teleplay $35,568 $24,768
    Staff Writer - 6 Week Guarantee $4,318/week same as network
    Staff Writer - 14 Week Guarantee $4,014/week same as network
    Staff Writer - 20 Week Guarantee $3,703/week same as network
    Any Level Above Staff Writer - up to 9 Weeks $8,055/week same as network
    Any Level Above Staff Writer - 10 to 19 Week Guarantee $6,712/week same as network
    Any Level Above Staff Writer - 20 Weeks or More Guarantee $6,036/week same as network

  3. Re:Contract negotiation... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    what a sad ignorant view of the world you have where you think a strike is the only way to negotiate. basically they are trying blackmail as an approach. This should be a last resort and is the scumbag tactics of unions. That isn't to say it can't sometimes be necessary, but a strike should be a last resort, if your talents are so irreplaceable then you have a bargaining chip and should be able to renegotiate based on your value to that organisation.

  4. Re:Contract negotiation... by drinkypoo · · Score: 4, Informative

    Really? Thats the bullshit you are going to comment with - an attempt to use a tired old phrase to somehow devalue my opinion on the matter?

    I'm not devaluing your opinion, because it had no value to begin with. It only applied to you, in your situation. It may well apply to others, but from where you're sitting, you don't know whether it applies to any given individual. For many people, there are no other options, because the company they work for is determined not to be fair. That you had other options is utterly and completely irrelevant to everyone else, and the world would have been better off if you had not bothered to share it because it adds nothing to the discussion and only confuses the issue.

    If you had told us anything about your situation, it might have helped someone. But all you did was say "I did it, so you can do it" which hey, guess what? Is a logical fallacy.

    --
    "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
  5. Re:Contract negotiation... by cwatts · · Score: 5, Informative

    Adding to guises post...

    People are asking why the writers are "striking first" They arent. The WGA has been negotiating the deal with the producers since early March.

    ALSO, It's not that the contracts are 'bad'. A decade ago, when most of the last deal was hashed out, there was no original streaming content. The studios were circling the wagons against streaming, and netflix was still doing DVDs. A big negotiating point in tat strike was in fact DVD residuals Streaming was not ignored, it;s just that no one really knew how big it would get and what the side effects of it's proliferation might be. Studios wanted to pay zero residuals on "new media" and naturally the writers werent thrilled with this. So, after protracted negotiations, they struck for 14 weeks and eventually got some concessions. Ironically, the lack of new entertainment on TV was a HUGE boon for Netflix, who got a massive surge of subscribers which wall street didn't really8 notice til the strike was long over. but i digress.

    Now that streaming is huge, the writers are pretty glad they held out, but there are fresh issues- the new guys, Amazon, Netflix, etc. don't obey the traditional season paradigm. In the old days, when a writer was hired for ' a season' they got 30 (or whatever) shows out of the deal. Now, with their giant budgets and more elaborate shows, series like "walking Dead might have 16 (but often fewer) episodes per season. Because writers are often exclusive to the show, and they are paid 'per episode', many of them are making half as much. So its back to the table to negotiiate this and similar issues.

    The AMPTP is the body that reps the studios, networks and independent producers. They negotiate not only with writers, but with the DGA, SAG-AFTRA, IATSE, the AFM, etc. Suffice to say that they are some hard nosed old bastards. They have a rep for not budging and often, a strike is the only way to make something happen.

    By the way, when the writers went on strike in 2007, it was a huge dead weight on production in CA. On a film, lines in scripts get rewritten a little every day During the strike, many directors on already-running films did n ot want to cross picket lines by doing these small rewrites themselves. With writers on strije, there was no one to do it. So a lot of productions stalled, and some stopped altogether. This affects hundreds of thousands of industry workers all over the world.

    I was in the middle of a divorce and had just come off a lucrative 18 month job, a little movie about spartans in red capes. My ex's evil lawyer convinced a judge to award payments based on my employed income. I was out of work for about 6 months due to the strike- with the extra monthly whammy to the ex, plus my lawyers (I fired the one who allowed the preceding to happen) I got murdered during the last strike. If this one happens, it wont be as bad, but I don't thing its going to come to a strike.

    just my 2 cents.

    PS the ex and I get along fine these days, and the kid who was born during the strike is now 10! Yikes!

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    chris watts íë¦ìS ì(TM)ì