Writer's and Actor's Strike 2023: Aaaaand Scene...That's a Wrap!

HipHopStan

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I hope Jimmy Kimmel's fans enjoy his return while it lasts. He'll take every Friday off, go on another weeklong vacation before the month is out, and then next summer, he'll take another 3-month long break. He probably loved not working during this strike. :skip:
 

steadyrighteous

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All three writers are women too so this is definitely gonna go down as minuses in her Liberal White Woman scorecard

VY2wmdR.png
 

HipHopStan

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Had she waited another few more weeks, she would’ve been fine. Instead, she screwed over her Emmy-nominated writers, and she didn’t even have the grace to have them notified she planned to go back into production and cross the WGA picket line. This is a lesson Drew clearly needed to learn the hard way.
 

TDT

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Had she waited another few more weeks, she would’ve been fine. Instead, she screwed over her Emmy-nominated writers, and she didn’t even have the grace to have them notified she planned to go back into production and cross the WGA picket line. This is a lesson Drew clearly needed to learn the hard way.
At least Bill Maher waited..
 

bnew

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‘The Drew Barrymore Show’ Just Lost All Three of Its Writers​


KARMA

A source tells the Daily Beast that the show offered to extend all three writers’ offers post-strike and that they’ve chosen not to return.

Laura Bradley​


Senior Entertainment Reporter

Updated Oct. 04, 2023 6:31PM EDT / Published Oct. 04, 2023 6:17PM EDT

Drew Barrymore visits SiriusXM's 'The Howard Stern Show'

NOAM GALAI​

https://policies.google.com/privacy


Listen to article3 minutes

Drew Barrymore tried to contain the damage from her decision to bring her daytime talk show back before before the Writers Guild of America ended its strike, first by apologizing and then ultimately changing her mind. But apparently it was too little, too late for her three writers, all of whom have now walked away from The Drew Barrymore Show, The Daily Beast confirmed on Wednesday.

The Hollywood Reporter first broke the news that co-head writers Cristina Kinon, Liz Koe, and Chelsea White have chosen not to return to the show, and a source told to The Daily Beast that all three had seen their contracts extended but chose to walk away. The Drew Barrymore Show will now begin interviewing new writers and will remain in compliance with guild rules, the source added.

Barrymore sparked backlash last month when she confirmed her daytime talk show’s Season 4 premiere date while her WGA writers were still on strike. (The host was not in violation of SAG-AFTRA’s ongoing walkout, as daytime talk shows fall under a different contract from the one the actors union is striking.)

Speaking with The Daily Beast amid the strike, Kinon said she understood “the perspective of wanting to protect your cast, your crew, and your staff.” At the same time, she added, she and her fellow writers were standing with their union.

“And then, expanding out more, we’re standing with all of labor and all of the unions across the world, because that is how it works. Unions only work when you stick together with unions across the labor spectrum.”

Kinon and White did not immediately respond to The Daily Beast’s request for comment; The Daily Beast was unable to contact Koe.

Days after confirming her show’s return to air, Barrymore “deeply” apologized for the decision but stood fast in it.
“There’s a huge question of the ‘why,’” the actress said. “Why am I doing this? Well, I certainly couldn’t have expected this kind of attention. And we aren’t gonna break rules, and we will be in compliance. I wanted to do this because, as I said, this is bigger than me, and there are other people’s jobs on the line.”

Not long afterward, however, The Drew Barrymore Show and other series including The Talk and The Jennifer Hudson Show postponed their planned returns to screen. Now that the WGA has struck an “exceptional” deal with Hollywood’s major studios, programs have begun to announce their return to air.

The Drew Barrymore Show will debut its fourth season on Monday, October 16.
 

T-K-G

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I got a question :sas2:

When the writers went on strike, they basically told everyone else to go on strike too, showing solidarity BEFORE Sag even went on strike, actors could have easily shown up and atleast gotten paid for the day until the show ran out of scripted material.

Shouldn't they be showing that same solidarity to the actors who are still technically on strike? :sas2:


Second they got their deal done alot of them went right back to work, leaving actors to hold their own nuts :mjlol: if Iatse decides to potentially go on strike next year when it's time for negotiations, I highly doubt the other unions will form like Votron, even tho they got everyone else to do it for them
 

AStrangeName

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Netflix, Disney, Max and More Team to Form Streaming Innovation Alliance Lobbying Group​


Remote control and screen - binge watching the favorite TV show

Getty Images/iStockphoto

A new trade group — the Streaming Innovation Alliance — brings together Netflix, Disney, Warner Bros. Discovery, Paramount and other players to promote their interests to politicians and government entities. It marks the first time competing streaming-video providers have banded together in a unified lobbying front.
The launch members of the Streaming Innovation Alliance (website at this link) are: AfroLandTV, America Nu Network, BET+, Discovery+, For Us By Us Network, Max, the Motion Picture Association, MotorTrend+, Netflix, Paramount+, Peacock, PlutoTV, Telemundo, TelevisaUnivision and Vix, Vault and the Walt Disney Co. The SIA will “advocate for federal and state policies that build on the strong, competitive, and pro-consumer market for streaming video,” according to the group.


Companies notably absent from the Streaming Innovation Alliance’s initial roster include Apple, Amazon, Google/YouTube and Roku.
Streaming-Industry-Alliance.png

The Streaming Innovation Alliance has tapped two well-known DC leaders as senior advisers: Fred Upton, a Republican who is a 36-year veteran of the U.S. House of Representatives, and Mignon Clyburn, a Democrat who served as acting chair of the Federal Communications Commission.
The group said, Charles Rivkin, chairman and CEO of the Motion Picture Association, played a “leading role” in organizing the SIA. “Streaming provides great value, vast programming choices, and unprecedented options for consumers,” Rivkin said in a statement. “The MPA looks forward to working with the SIA and its members to ensure federal and state policy propels this incredible innovation forward – and doesn’t undermine the value and diversity consumers are enjoying today.”
Clyburn commented, “Streaming services have opened up a new era of progress for program diversity that is bringing relevant stories and options to historically underserved communities at a record pace while opening doors for production jobs to people of color that have been shut for decades. Any policy that drags down streaming would turn back the clock on this vital progress as well.”
Upton added, “The rise of innovative, new video streaming services is an American success story we should celebrate and encourage, not smother with obsolete and ill-fitting rules and regulations designed for completely different technology, products and business models.”
As part of the launch, the SIA released the results of a recent poll finding that 70% of registered voters view streaming services “favorably” or “very favorably,” with approval even higher among younger voters and in communities of color. In addition, by at least a 2-to-1 margin, voters “worry new regulations could require streaming services to collect more data or deter them from offering sensitive programming,” while two-thirds of those surveyed fear new rules will threaten “diverse and independent services the most,” according to the SIA.

Clyburn commented, “Streaming services have opened up a new era of progress for program diversity that is bringing relevant stories and options to historically underserved communities at a record pace while opening doors for production jobs to people of color that have been shut for decades. Any policy that drags down streaming would turn back the clock on this vital progress as well.”

Upton added, “The rise of innovative, new video streaming services is an American success story we should celebrate and encourage, not smother with obsolete and ill-fitting rules and regulations designed for completely different technology, products and business models.”

As part of the launch, the SIA released the results of a recent poll finding that 70% of registered voters view streaming services “favorably” or “very favorably,” with approval even higher among younger voters and in communities of color. In addition, by at least a 2-to-1 margin, voters “worry new regulations could require streaming services to collect more data or deter them from offering sensitive programming,” while two-thirds of those surveyed fear new rules will threaten “diverse and independent services the most,” according to the SIA.
 
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