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  • Writers Of The World, Unite!

    The WGA strike is entering its seventh dreary week, and as anyone who's been forced to sit through an episode of Make Me a Supermodel would agree, we've all suffered enough.  Still, with no end in sight, even upstanding joes like Jon Stewart are scabbing it up, and the, erm, highly prestigious Golden Globe Awards are the first major casualty, with the Oscars possibly next to fall. 

    But the thing about the Writer's Guild of America is that they're the Writer's Guild...of America.  Their beef is is with stateside producers and studios, which means that when the BAFTA Awards are held in London on February 10th, writers, actors, and directors will all be able to hobnob together just as if they aren't going to start screaming at each other once they get back across the pond. While not everyone in the UK is happy about it (the Sky One network had the bad luck to buy the rights to broadcast the Golden Globes starting this year), most industry insiders are predicting a bigger-than-usual Hollywood contingent at the BAFTAs.

    Read More...


  • Quote of the Week

    Via the Defamer, NBC entertainment head/cartoonish supervillain Ben Silverman, whose whole vacation is being ruined by those bullying kids down at the WGA camp, pouts to the ever-sympathetic industry haircut Ryan Seacrest.  Says Silverman about the cruel, heartless writers who have cancelled his beloved Golden Globes when all he wants to do is make all the nice people happy:

    Read More...


  • Non-Stories Of The Year

    With every entertainment section, film magazine, and industry website racing to fill up their top tens and year-in-review articles, Variety takes a somewhat different and altogether refreshing tack:  Timothy Gray and a number of staffers combine resources and give us an equally informative recap of what didn't happen in 2007. Among the more important non-stories of the year:  familiar movie franchises that were expected to bomb over the summer didn't; the Writer's Guild of America defied industry expectations that they would wait until after the holidays to strike; a number of predicted mergers and acquisitions (including GE divesting its entertainment division, Time Warner spinning off America OnLine, and the proposed sale of Yahoo!) didn't take place; and the high-definition DVD war never reached a satisfactory conclusion and looks to drag on for at least another year.  One Variety non-story -- the delay in releasing Grand Theft Auto IV -- seems like a bit of a stretch; while the game was expected to drop this year, delays were always possible, and other huge sellers like Halo 3, Call of Duty 4 and Rock Band more than compensated for the lost holiday revenue the latest GTA iteration was supposed to produce, and all in all, 2007 was the most profitable year for the video game industry in history, with over $10 billion in profits (outperforming movie industry growth by a staggering 44%).  Which, we suppose, makes it a non-non-story.


  • Strike Six

    By the time you read this, the Writer's Guild of America strike will be in its seventh week, with no end in sight.  Television hosts are beginning to lose their patience (or, at least, their pockets are beginning to lose their depth), and with awards season already in jeopardy, the threat of scab writers begins to rear its ugly head.  David Letterman's production company, showing its clout in defiance of AMPTP management solidarity, struck its own deal with the WGA in what may be a hopeful sign for the union, but the producers continue their offensive, posting recently on their own website that the strike has cost the union $151 million so far -- a figure, they claim, in excess of the revenue the strikers hoped to gain from their own proposed compensation package.  Of course, since the producers and studios have continually claimed that there's no way to predict the real value of internet content, how they arrived at that figure is somewhat mysterious, not to mention the source, as Dana Harris of Variety is quick to point out.  Meanwhile, Ron Galloway sides with Alec Baldwin in blaming the whole mess on the "inept" management of the WGA and predicts an end to the strike as early as mid-January as desperation sets in, while out on the picket lines, spirits seem to be pretty high despite the rock-star attitude Baldwin attributes to the WGA's Patric Verrone, even if a lot of it's attributable to the vodka-spiked Gatorade.


  • Morning Deal Report: Writers of the World Unite

    Well, the Writer's Guild is on strike. No more new Daily Shows for a while.

    It's not clear where that leaves Sylvester Stallone's planned remake of Death Wish, to be penned by the brain trust behind Terminator 3.

    Here's some news: David O. Russell will direct Nailed, a political satire/sex comedy, starring Jake Gyllenhaal and Jessica Biel and written by Al Gore's daughter Kristin. That's some kind of lineup.

    Peter Smith

  • STEE-RIKE!

    With a potential strike by the Writer’s Guild of America only days away, studios are scrambling to finish up their existing projects before they have to resort to desperate measures. As is often the case, a pro-labor standpoint isn’t easy to find in press coverage of the strike, and in the grand tradition of writers getting the shaft in Hollywood, far too many stories resort to old jokes ("TV shows have writers?"). Still, with the Da Vinci Code sequel being the first potential casualty of the strike, and NBC thinking about airing the original British version of The Office as a replacement program, it’s hard not to think of the strike as a possible blessing in disguise. . . Leonard Pierce



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