WGA Always Planned To Strike

 The head of the entertainment industry's largest union threw the WGA leaders under a bus by accusing them of  delaying negotiations to such a degree that the WGA made a strike inevitable. Thomas Short,  president of the International Alliance of Theatrical Stage Employees (IATSE),  accused WGA West President Patric Verrone of deliberately delaying talks with  the Association of Motion Picture and TV Producers (AMPTP) until the last  moment.
"When I phoned you on Nov. 28, 2006, to ask you to reconsider the  timing of negotiations, you refused," Short said in a letter to Verrone. "It  now seems that you were intending that there be a strike no matter what you  were offered, or what conditions the industry faced when your contract expired  at the end of October." The result, he said, has been the loss of jobs for  thousands of members of IATSE and other unions. "
The IATSE alone has over  50,000 members working in motion picture, television, and broadcasting and tens  of thousands more are losing jobs in related fields."
Short concluded that it  was "time to put egos aside" and return to the negotiating table and predicted  "irreversible damage" to the industry if negotiations do not resume. Verrone  issued a brief letter in response cryptically noting that IATSE members receive  five times more in contributions to their health fund from the studios than do  writers, and then added, "To put it simply, our fight should be your fight."
He  then insisted that the WGA is "willing to negotiate" and that it was the AMPTP  that walked out of the negotiations. "So please help us by doing everything you  can to get the AMPTP to come back to the table and settle this strike."  However, later yesterday, Verrone backtracked on his earlier statements and said the WGA would only return to the table  "as soon as the companies make it clear that they are willing to respond to the  issues that are important to the association, leading with new media."
 
 




see this is why strikes don't work..it turns intot a pissing contest between 2 old dudes with more money than they need.
ReplyDeletesorry writers but there are about 6-20 of you per show..but what about the other 100+ people losing money everyday not related to writing?
In my experience, union leaders tend to be almost as prickish as management. It's always the little guy that loses.
ReplyDeletethanks, jax, that's what i've been wanting to say.
ReplyDeletemr. bunny works in technology for one of the studios, and his group was threatened with violence!
i don't think the actual picketers would do that, but they have been very unpleasant. i feel really, really bad for the crews that get laid off and have no recourse, it sickens me.
Where's the mediators? They should be the ones doing all the communicating. I wish I was in charge of running the world.
ReplyDeletefrom what i understand their are none..even good ol Bill Clintion offered to help mediate.
ReplyDeleteActors, writers and producers all knew there would be a strike back in April of this year. I've been saving $$ for awhile.
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