Talks between the Writers Guild of America and the Alliance of Motion Picture & Television Producers resumed Monday, November 26. It is the first time the two sides formally sat at the bargaining table since the strike began on Nov. 4. Due to a mutually agreed upon media blackout, no details were released about the first day of talks. Picketing resumed on Monday at most major lots in Hollywood. Senior Editor Paul Jay visited the picket lines and spoke with some of the striking writers.
Story Transcript
Writers Guild of America strike
Paul Jay speaks with striking workers
Allan Katz. And I started out on Laugh-In. And wrote and produced M*A*S*H and Rhoda, and worked on All in the Family and Sanford and Son and Mary Tyler Moore and all the good stuff. I donโt say any of the bad stuff.
Dan Pine. Iโm a screenwriter.
Matt Weiner, and Iโm the creator and executive producer of Mad Men.
Lance Gentile is my name and I was developing a show at CW.
Matt McGuinness. Iโm working on Journeyman.
Dennis Rinsler, one of the executive producers of Cory in the House.
Nicole Yorkin. Iโm an executive producer of The Riches.
Scott Shepherd. I was running The Dead Zone.
Writerโs assistant for a show called Burn Notice.
Julie Fageaux, and I work for Marc Warren and Dennis Rinsler.
Iโm a script coordinator for a show called Factory on Spike TV.
Hi. My nameโs [รฏยฟยฝ]. Iโm an assistant on Gossip Girl.
PAUL JAY: So this is about staking out ground for the next ten, twenty years about Internet revenue.
RINSLER: Yeah. Once the TV set in the living room and the computer combined, everything is Internet, everything has become the Web.
SCRIPT COORDINATOR: Weโre not asking for very much. I mean, they want four extra cents a DVD and they want 2.5% of whatever they make for profits for Internet.
KATZ: Theyโre getting paid. Theyโre getting advertising dollars for putting stuff on the Internet. So if theyโre getting paid, why canโt they give a percentage, if not four cents, eight centsรฏยฟยฝIโm not negotiating for the Guildรฏยฟยฝbut something in there that says, when we make a profit, you make a profit.
RINSLER: Right now, I get a third of a penny on every DVD. I have forty episodes Iโve written of television that are out on DVDs. I havenโt gotten a penny. I havenโt even gotten my third. And itโs been years. So I donโt know where the moneyโs going, but itโs not going to the people who created the stuff.
KATZ: I think that studios and networks would prefer to do some sort of formula where they have all the controls, and the formula being that they donโt really have to pay that money out.
JAY: Do you know how many people are in unions in America?
SCRIPT COORDINATOR: I donโt know that, actually.
JAY: What percentage of working people?
SCRIPT COORDINATOR: I donโt know.
WRITERรฏยฟยฝS ASSISTANT: I donโt know.
FAGEAUX: I donโt know. I know my brother is the president of a union. So I should know that, but I donโt know.
MCGUINNESS: I donโt know.
SHEPHERD: No, I donโt.
PINE: Smaller than it used to be.
ASSISTANT ON รฏยฟยฝGOSSIP GIRLรฏยฟยฝ: [laughs] I donโt know.
JAY: Nobody else here did either, so donโt worry about it.
JAY: Less than 8% of American workers in the private sector are unionized.
JAY: If you include the government sector, itโs only about 11, maybe 12.
RINSLER: Well, I guess with all the outsourcing and companies moving to Mexico, it kind of destroyed the union system in America.
MCGUINNESS: Labor is in a distinctly kind of weak place, or it has been weakening, and itโs wrong.
WEINER: Basically, since 1960, when a lot of strikes were made in labor, labor has been vilified. America hates labor.
RINSLER: The world is run by giant conglomerates. Whoโ, itโs in their interest to make the individual feel so powerless that you say, oh, what could we do? Theyโre such a big company. How could we fight a big company like that?
JAY: Do you think this experience will changeโ,will writers think about introducing these kinds of story lines because of an experience like this? Or when itโs over itโs over?
WEINER: Iโm not into social issues; Iโm an entertainer.
MAN: I donโt know how this changes your writing one way or another.
YORKIN: I do think that this strike has galvanized a lot of people, a lot of young people whoโve never, you know, been on a picket line before.
SCRIPT COORDINATOR: I think Iโll definitely be more appreciative of getting a writing job in the future.
RINSLER: No. Political, labour, religionรฏยฟยฝitโs unsafe territory.
JAY: The assistants donโt have a union.
ASSISTANT ON รฏยฟยฝGOSSIP GIRLรฏยฟยฝ: No, they do not.
JAY: Do you think they should?
ASSISTANT ON รฏยฟยฝGOSSIP GIRLรฏยฟยฝ: It would be nice.
JAY: So Iโve talked to a lot of assistants. Why donโt the assistants do something about it?
FAGEAUX: Thatโs a good question. I think that thereโs a certain level of fear when it comes to below-the-line people that, you know, you can hit twenty people with one rock that want to be in your position.
JAY: Youโre most affected by the strike.
WRITERโS ASSISTANT: Absolutely. I mean, most assistants live paycheck to paycheck.
JAY: And you guys are the least protected.
ASSISTANT ON รฏยฟยฝGOSSIP GIRLรฏยฟยฝ: Weโre the least protected, and thatโs a really good point. So maybe Iโll call some of my assistant friends and start a union.
MAN: We write these things. The content of whatโs on the air is written by these guys on this line. And we deserve better than this.
MCGUINNESS: And, honestly, I donโt know that weโre striking to benefit ourselves, but five years down the line, seven years down the line, this is going to be where the business lives. And if we give everything up, which is what they want, absolutely everything, weโll never ever get it back.
WEINER: Iโve seen the commitment of the people who are involved here. For me itโs been incredibly edifying. Itโs been a very inspiring experience. Iโve never been prouder to be a writer, and Iโve never thought of myself as labour before, and I really do. I really identify with this whole concept. Itโs been very, very empowering, satisfying. And hopefully, without, you know, sounding revolutionary, hopefully, people will start to feel better about the value of their work. Weโve had a hard time convincing people of the value of their work and of the leverage they have as an individual.
JAY: You mean your own people.
WEINER: All people.
YORKIN: Yeah.
WEINER: Theyโre literally like, รฏยฟยฝYouโre rich. Youโre getting paid. You made a chair. They paid you for the chair. Sit down.รฏยฟยฝ




