Labor on the march! The Writer's Guild of America strike is a month old, and Hollywood is starting to feel the effects — a number of shows are set to start showing reruns and clip shows, while 'replacement programming' is about to rear its ugly head. Greg Saunders, writing on Tom Tomorrow's blog, discovers some sneaky anti-writer reporting on CNBC and shows us how to lie with statistics; news writers for CBS — who have been working without a contract for over two years — join the strike; and Michael Eisner, who doesn’t exactly have a rich history of supporting workers, tells the New York Times that the striking writers are "stupid" and "foolish" and that "there’s not a crumb to spare" for them in the digital media. Eisner’s salary, bonuses and stock options in his final year at Disney totaled over $100 million — barely a fifth of his peak earnings! — and you didn’t see him go on strike, did you? — Leonard Pierce