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Blog the Line
So our WGA Source checked in one more time, with this report about last night’s big meet — lots of interested stuff in here, fallout/implication wise, especially the lead off consideration about time to make up the health coverage minimum. Question: Will members in other idled guilds and locals get the same chance?:
I left after David Young went over the contract summary point by point and the strike settlement agreement, where he answered the one and only question I was going to ask, which was “Since we didn’t work for an entire quarter, do we get another quarter to make our health coverage minimum?” and the answer to that was ‘probably’, so I skipped out before the endless Q & A (which is mostly about people loving the sound of their own voice) and it was already after 9PM.
So, in general, I felt the mood was positive - a couple of grumblers, but mostly positive. I think the majority of the Guild feels this is the best deal we can get at the moment.
Many standing ovations - the longest of which was for the other unions that supported us during the strike, and another in support of SAG, who are soon to begin their long slog with the AMPTP.
What the guild leadership had to say about the deal overall is, I think, what most members feel - We got most of what we wanted and then we got what we got - partially because it’s what the DGA got, and then there are a few things we’re going to need to re-address three years from now.
As for the three things the LA Times reported we didn’t get at all:
While most guild members would have liked to have seen an increase on DVDs, like I’ve said before, that cat is out of the bag - the percentage on that has been what it is for years, same as the VHS formula - and there was no way we were going to get the AMPTP to squeeze out an increase, so that was a bargaining chip & we went after the delivery system of the future - the internet.
Also many guild members felt we should have held out for animation writers, but I believe that was dropped in the interest of keeping the peace with IATSE, since the Animation Guild falls under their auspices.
And the membership as a whole has always been divided as to whether or not to try to unionize reality writers. Many feel reality writers are really editors and not writers, others feel that as long as they write ANYTHING and construct story, they should be members. The truth is, it makes really good business sense for the WGA to have them in the fold, and it’s likely something that will be readdressed, but right now, in the interest of settling this thing, saving the fall TV season, pilot season and new features, it was bargained away.
I think more than anything everyone’s relieved this appears to be over. Everyone was hurting - even the richest showrunners, who really were between a rock and a hard place, abdicating their producing responsibilites and putting their crews out of work.
Now comes the long process of healing the rift in town over this thing. It’ll take a while, but everyone suffered and again, I just have to say, that monetarily, the AMPTP could have settled this ages ago and not felt a pinch in the pocketbook. They had an agenda, dropping overall deals with force majeure and tanking the fall television season. Mission accomplished, and only when it got to the point where they WOULD feel the sting - the entire fall season a write off — even the cash cows –no pilot season at all, film production in jeopardy, and no Oscars, which they need to promote a lackluster box office - only then did they do what they could have done months ago, and settle.

8 Responses
pat cracks
February 10th, 2008 at 5:00 pm
1WOOOOOOOOOTTTTTTTTTT THANK THE LORD THE STRIKES OVER!!!! LOL
I think it will be all good between writers and everyone else, whats done is done noone should hold a grudge.
dan
February 10th, 2008 at 5:24 pm
2pat, you really think it’s all ‘water under the bridge?’
Do you work in the industry?
Do you really think the ‘lord’ had anything to do with settling the strike? if the ‘lord’ did, why didn’t the ‘lord’ settle it sooner?
pat cracks
February 10th, 2008 at 5:32 pm
3yeah im a 52 grip, whats the point of me going to work angry? I have to be around these people 10-16 hours a day, I enjoy my job alot and I’d hate to see people angry all day.
no the lord had nothing to do with it, its more of an expression of rejoice!
Stationguy
February 11th, 2008 at 5:41 am
4Don’t put that pen away yet - please keep your watchful eye on SAG.
Mark L. Williams
February 11th, 2008 at 9:24 am
5The entire community will be watching SAG, indeed. In some ways, now that the Writers have gone out, it will be much harder for them to contemplate a shut down — on the other hand, both the directors and writers have given the actors (and owners) a “template” to work with, that wasn’t there before…
Anonymous
February 12th, 2008 at 5:10 pm
6And who will replace the thousands of dollars the BTL crew lost due this “labor” dispute. Which in actuality wasn’t a labor dispute but a bunch of rich wanting more from the richer. You think we can forget that easily as we lost our homes, health benefits, pensions, and savings accounts? Not to mention the thousands who were adversly affected by the trickle down losses.
When the writers/producers start sharing the wealth with the BTL crew who lost so much in this then I will be impressed. Until then don’t ask me to forgive a bunch of self serving ridiculously overpaid whiners. I loved my job until the true Hollywood spirit reared it’s ugly head. Let’s ruin 40,000 lives so we can get a bigger share, they’ll understand.
And this is something you are proud of?
Do what you need to do but do no harm to others doing it.
Lost our hours
February 13th, 2008 at 7:20 pm
7I will keep a close watch on restored or freezing lost benefits. I hope the parties involved in us losing our hours will support freezing or restoring those hours if they get there’s back. Until that happens there will be no fence mending period, this is the second time in my 30 years the writers have made an negative impact in my life, strike two.
Joe
February 14th, 2008 at 10:18 am
8Im glad to see the strike over, and Im glad that there were some gains on the part of the writers. But at the same time, I am glad that my union currently remained in control of the animation aspect. I feel that if the WGA were interested in taking control of that aspect they should do it by the proper inroads of getting the Animation writers to choose to decert the IATSE and Cert the WGA, rather than force the issue via contract negotiations outside the animation writers. I will say I think that the length of this strike will have positive benefits for other unions going into negotiations in the near future, because the industry has really been hit hard by the lack of work, and will benefit the other unions, because the producers etc dont want to risk further income loss.
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