USALife.info / NEWS / 2023 / 08 / 15 / HOLLYWOOD STUDIOS OFFER COUNTERPROPOSAL TO END WGA STRIKE
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Hollywood studios offer counterproposal to end WGA strike

15:26 15.08.2023

After more than 100 days of the writers' strike, Hollywood studios have offered a new deal to screenwriters on the picket lines. The deal, proposed by the Alliance of Motion Picture and Television Producers (AMPTP), includes concessions on the use of artificial intelligence (AI) and access to viewer data. According to sources familiar with the discussions, the AMPTP has agreed to credit humans rather than AI bots as writers of screenplays. However, writers with the Writers Guild of America (WGA) are still working to ensure that AI will not undercut their compensation and credit. Additionally, the studios have offered to share data on the number of hours viewed on streaming services, allowing writers to see the popularity of the programs they worked on. However, this transparency in viewership data will not correlate with compensation. The deal also addresses TV staff minimums, giving showrunners significant authority to set the size of the staff. The specifics of the discussions regarding budget size were kept confidential. The WGA is currently evaluating the offer and will respond next week.

Netflix Co-CEO Ted Sarandos and Disney boss Bob Iger have expressed their hopes for a swift end to the strike. Sarandos stated during an earnings call that they are committed to reaching an equitable agreement, while Iger shifted his stance from previously calling the strike disruptive to expressing his commitment to finding solutions.

If the WGA accepts the AMPTP's offer, it would align more with the demands made by the union earlier this year. The strike has kept over 11,500 writers on the picket lines since May 2. More than 160,000 Hollywood workers represented by the Screen Actors Guild-American Federation of Television and Radio Artists joined the strike in July. If a new deal is reached soon, the strike could end earlier than expected. Previously, an executive close to AMPTP leadership had mentioned that the studios would allow the strike to drag on until union members faced financial difficulties. However, experts estimate that by October, most writers will be running out of money after five months without work.

The strike initially began due to an impasse over compensation, minimum staffing of writers' rooms, and residual payments in the streaming era. The financial losses for the industry have reached an estimated $3 billion, impacting California's economy. The AMPTP's counterproposal addresses these major sticking points and offers concessions related to AI, viewer data access, and residual payments. The proposal ensures that humans will not be replaced by AI in screenplay production and offers a more than 20% increase in residual payments when shows re-air on new networks. The preservation of writers' rooms, which have become smaller in the streaming era, is also addressed, with the proposal including salary increases and a minimum duration of work for writers in "mini-rooms."

The WGA is currently evaluating the proposal, and the studios have not yet responded to requests for comment.

/ Tuesday, August 15, 2023, 3:26 PM /

themes:  California  Hollywood

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