Latest WGA strike
WGA Enters Month 4 on the Picket Lines: 'There Is Physical Fatigue,' One Writer Says, 'But Everybody Is Still Very Mad'
By Jack Reid published
We've driven by them on Melrose every day since early May, as they hold their funny signs in the 90-degree afternoon heat in front of the Paramount lot. 'It's a Marathon -- we knew what we were getting into,' a scribe told Next TV Tuesday
Writers Guild Says Meeting With Studio Execs Turned Into a ‘Lecture’
By Jon Lafayette published
AMPTP releases most recent contract proposal
The WGA Strike Thaws? Writers and Studios Set to Meet for a Fourth Consecutive Day
By Daniel Frankel published
There's no indication that a deal to end the 4 1/2-month work stoppage is imminent ... but at least, you know, they can look at each other
Writers Guild: Looming Streaming Triopoly Needs Regulatory Intervention
By John Eggerton published
Union’s West Coast branch argues current strike is linked to OTT power players Amazon, Disney and Netflix
Repeats Claim More Ad Dollars as Strikes Halt Production of Fresh Programming
By Jon Lafayette published
Guideline study: new programming got 20.9% of ad spending in June, down 10 points from May
Viewers Support Hollywood Strikers and Are Making Fall Viewing Plans
By Jon Lafayette published
Horizon Media survey finds public very aware and invested in dispute between writers, actors and the studios
Michael Winship Stepping Down as Writers Guild East President
By John Eggerton published
Says decision not to run for reelection was made two years ago, but timing of end of term during strike was ‘unfortunate’
Emmys Won’t Happen in September
By Michael Malone published
Event will be shifted with the two Hollywood strikes still going on
Settling Strike With Unions Could Cost Studios $450-$600 Million, Moody’s Estimates
By Jon Lafayette published
Long labor stoppage would hurt traditional TV before big streamers
Hollywood on Strike: Why the Video Business Could Use a Few More Tough Guys Like Ron Perlman (Frankel)
By Daniel Frankel published
Sure, we can point our fingers at the boogeymen in Sun Valley all we want. But if those underpinning film and TV want to avoid the fate of, say, us folks in the news business, they should find a way to stick together and take care of each other
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