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2023

'"Succession" without writers is just "The Apprentice,"' and other clever signs from the writers strike

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Writers Guild of America protest signs offered a bit of a humorous balm. (Photo: Getty Images)

The Writers Guild of America (WGA) strike, which kicked off this week in Los Angeles and New York City, is evidence of a pretty grim situation: Over 11,000 unionized screenwriters are not being paid a living wage, and are currently out of work (and may be risking future work by picketing). 

But looking closely at some of the clever signs being carried by those on the picket lines may be just the thing for a little bit of comic relief (not to mention reminders of why writers are paid to write).

A clever sign held outside the Netflix headquarters in Manhattan on Wednesday, May 3. (Photo: AP Photo/Stefan Jeremiah)
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Writer Olivia Dom pickets with fellow members in Universal City, Calif. (Photo: AP Photo/Marcio Jose Sanchez)
ASSOCIATED PRESS
The industrywide strike is the first writers strike in 15 years. (Photo: AP Photo/Ashley Landis)
ASSOCIATED PRESS
On strike in Hollywood. (Photo: Xinhua via Getty Images)
Xinhua News Agency via Getty Images
Culver City, Calif. (Photo: AP Photo/Marcio Jose Sanchez)
ASSOCIATED PRESS
In Hollywood. (Photo: AP Photo/Ashley Landis)
ASSOCIATED PRESS
(Credit: Instagram/DominicColon)

But what's it all about, exactly? 

Every three years, the WGA and the AMPTP negotiate for the major Hollywood studios — including Disney, Warner Bros., Sony, Paramount and Universal, as well as streaming services like Netflix, Apple TV+ and Prime Video, and broadcast networks like ABC, CBS, Fox and NBC. 

Simply put, neither party can come up with terms on a new contract, after its latest negotiation in 2020 during the pandemic. The repercussions impact more than just favorite shows. In fact, the 2007 writers strike cost the Los Angeles economy an estimated $2.1 billion, per the Milken Institute. Before that, a 1988 strike that lasted 22 weeks reportedly cost the industry an estimated $500 million.

As Robert Thompson, the founding director of the Bleier Center for Television and Popular Culture, told Yahoo Entertainment earlier this week, streaming and AI — above all else — are the real issues. 

"Any viewer that says, 'Why are they striking? I don't get it.' My first question would be: Do you watch television the same way today as you watched television 20 years ago?'" he says. "And the answer is going to be, for the vast majority of those people, 'No, we watch it totally differently.'" 

He continued: "The fact that you watch it totally differently has upset the economic models in which all this stuff was based on. And your change from watching a TV set in a living room when the shows were on to watching whatever you feel like, whenever you feel like it, wherever you want — on your phone, laptop, Smart TV, or whatever — all of the changes that you have made in the industry by how you watch television has changed the whole economic basis on which that industry works." 

While streaming services like Netflix and Hulu have dominated television in the last decade, writers' compensation simply hasn't caught up. Many of them feel they're not being paid properly for their work, with lower paychecks and less in terms of residuals. 

That's largely due to the fact that writers' compensation was largely established when streaming first began. However, things have changed drastically since then. 

"If you are a writer, if you're a producer, if you work in Hollywood in the industry, these kinds of strikes are really bad," Thompson noted. "Obviously you don't want long shutdowns of entire industries. And they not only are bad for the immediate shutdowns, but they're bad because they tend to reorient the way people view."

Needless to say, much of that fervor was well-represented by the thousands of picketers demanding change. Will the AMPTP meet their demands? Only time will tell. Until then, writers hope their clever turns-of-phrase can help.

— Additional reporting by Suzy Byrne




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