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November 7, 2007

TV Writer-Producers Show Solidarity

By EDWARD WYATT

BURBANK, Calif., Nov. 7 — They face off against each other each week in prime time: “Desperate Housewives” vs. “Family Guy,” “Ugly Betty vs. “My Name is Earl” and “Private Practice” vs. “Bionic Woman.”

But the creators of those programs, and of dozens of other hits like “Lost,” “Two and a Half Men” and “Brothers & Sisters,” joined forces today to picket the headquarters of the Walt Disney Company as the strike by television and film writers entered its third day.

These show runners, as they are known, from at least 30 scripted television series walked the picket line this morning outside Disney headquarters, joined by members of the Screen Actors Guild and other striking writers.

As the writers who also serve as executive producers of their shows, the show runners have the responsibility for hundreds of crew members — electricians, costume designers, set decorators and make-up artists, among others — who work on the programs that the show runners created.

Those other crew members are not on strike. But in a few weeks, many of them will be out of work as well as shows begin to shut down production for a lack of scripts.

Josh Schwartz, the creator of “The O.C.” and the current series “Gossip Girl” and “Chuck,” said the show runners are walking a fine line between not performing writing duties while they are on strike and the demands by television producers that they perform their contractual duties — editing episodes that are already filmed, casting episodes that have not been run yet, and the like.

“We’re very concerned that there be shows for our crews to come back to after the strike is over,” Mr. Schwartz said. “We feel a great solidarity with the Writers Guild, but at the same time I have a real obligation to my shows.”

Some show runners, like Shawn Ryan of “The Shield,” have been adamant that they believe they cannot perform any of their editing duties while on strike as a writer.

But even leaders among the striking writers are uncertain that the lines are so bright. Carlton Cuse, an executive producer and writer of “Lost” and a member of the Writers Guild negotiating committee, said he believed the question of whether to perform some duties during the strike “is a decision that should be left up to the conscience of the individual show runner.”



November 8, 2007

For TV Executives, It’s Time to Juggle

By BRIAN STELTER and EDWARD WYATT


Jack Bauer will return to save the world on “24” — again — but somewhat later than expected. And Michael Scott, the comically obtuse regional manager on “The Office,” will not be serving up any original cringe-inducing comments after next week.

As television and movie writers entered the third day of their strike against Hollywood producers yesterday, the walkout continued to complicate matters for the networks.

Fox, the first to announce revisions to its prime-time schedule because of the strike, said it would indefinitely postpone the start of the seventh season of “24,” which had been scheduled for January, to ensure an uninterrupted 24-episode season.

Original episodes of NBC’s half-hour comedy “The Office” will stop broadcasting after the Nov. 15 show. Other television programs, including “Law & Order: Special Victims Unit” on NBC, were wrapping up production yesterday as producers ran out of fresh scripts. And the cast and crew of “Desperate Housewives” on ABC were expected to stop filming by tomorrow, a studio spokeswoman said.

Six other comedies — including “Two and a Half Men” and “The New Adventures of Old Christine,” both on CBS — have already ceased production this week. But unlike “The Office,” they (and most other prime-time scripted shows) have several weeks or months of episodes already filmed and waiting to be shown. Production on “The Office” was shut down after the writers, several of whom are also actors on the show, began picketing, and Steve Carell, the lead actor who plays Michael Scott, refused to cross the lines. A publicist for Mr. Carell said he had no comment about the strike.

Several of the writers and actors from “The Office” expressed their complaints in a video posted on YouTube. “You’re watching this on the Internet — a thing that pays us zero dollars,” said Mike Schur, a writer for the show, clutching a picket sign.

More than 12,000 members of the Writers Guild West and the Writers Guild East went on strike just after midnight Monday, after a late negotiating session convened by a federal mediator failed to bridge the divide between writers and producers.

The most contentious issue centers on how much writers should be paid when their programs and movies are shown on the Internet and other new-media devices like cellphones and iPods.

On the picket line yesterday morning, outside the headquarters of the Walt Disney Company in Burbank, Calif., show runners from at least 30 scripted television series (including “Lost,” “Desperate Housewives” and “My Name is Earl”) joined members of the Screen Actors Guild and other striking writers.

As the writers (and often creators) who also serve as executive producers of their shows, these so-called show runners must contend with their own sharply divided loyalties. Members of the Writers Guild, they have marched off their shows. But as producers, they are still expected by the networks and studios to perform their contractual duties, like editing episodes that are already filmed and casting episodes that have not been filmed yet.

They also have responsibility for hundreds of crew members — electricians, costume designers, set decorators and makeup artists, among others — who work on the programs.

Those crew members are not on strike. But in a few weeks, many will be out of work as shows start to shut down production for a lack of scripts.

“We’re very concerned that there be shows for our crews to come back to after the strike is over,” said Josh Schwartz, the creator of “The O.C.” and the current series “Gossip Girl” on CW and “Chuck” on NBC. “We feel a great solidarity with the Writers Guild, but at the same time I have a real obligation to my shows.”

Some show runners, like Shawn Ryan of “The Shield” on FX and “The Unit” on CBS, have insisted that they cannot perform any of their editing duties while on strike as a writer.

But even leaders among the striking writers are uncertain that the lines are so clear. Carlton Cuse, a show runner and writer on “Lost,” and a member of the Writers Guild negotiating committee, said he thought that the question of whether to perform some duties during the strike “is a decision that should be left up to the conscience of the individual show runner.”

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Put the picket line to good use, folks

By Mary McNamara

Los Angeles Times Staff Writer

November 9, 2007


To: Members of the Writers Guild of America, West

From: A Concerned Citizen


We are all very worried about the events of the last week. A writers strike is inevitably traumatic for everyone -- the writers, the networks, the viewers. Already we have lost late night, and it is only scant weeks before many of our favorite shows are replaced by reruns or reality TV.

But where a pessimist sees a strike, an optimist sees opportunity. Really, how else should one react to the news that "Big Shots" will cease after the 10th episode, except with exquisite relief? It can only be hoped that those of you writing for these shows will use your time on the picket line to rethink the obnoxious nature of some of your characters and the sexist, and nonsexy, tenor of your plots.

In fact, given the disappointing ratings of many of this season's new shows, a strike isn't necessarily a bad thing. All of us can benefit from a break now and then -- look at "The Sopranos," perpetually hopped up on hiatus. Consider those hours in front of the studio gates as much-deserved, if ill-paid, Me Time.

You writers have put down your pencils, not turned off your brains. So much of the creative process takes place in the mysterious recesses of the central nervous system; there's no reason you can't use this raft of new free time to solve the many problems facing your shows. Why, this strike could turn out to be the best thing that could happen for some shows, including:

The Bionic Woman

Clearly the biggest disappointment of the season. Promising pilot, stunningly lame follow-through. I know there have been staffing issues, and no doubt studio issues, but honestly, you all have to get things moving. Literally. To make a show about a superhuman warrior girl boring takes some doing. Perhaps you could figure out what the show is actually about. Is Jaime (Michelle Ryan) going to stop kidnappings and diffuse bombs or is she going to continue to have an existential crisis? The "Matrix" grays and shiny blacks are great visual top-notes, but you need way more super-cool CG-enhanced fights and fewer sister scenes. You also need to acknowledge the fact that most bad guys prefer guns to hand-to-hand combat. And who is the star here? Jaime or Sarah? Requiring Ryan to watch some "Lara Croft" movies might help, but in the end the actors can do only so much soulful staring and tae kwon do sweating to make up for lack of plot.

Journeyman

There's so much going on here that every week is essentially a new show, and not in a good way. Is this a procedural with Dan the time-traveling reporter unraveling mysteries? A sci-fi love story in which the dead fiancé turns out to have been an astrally challenged alien all along? An exploration of marriage in which we are all haunted by past loves, or perhaps a metaphor for modern life -- multitasking has become so entrenched that time no longer has meaning? I'd watch any or all of these shows, only what I've seen so far looks more like "Starsky and Hutch in Space" with more cryptic dialogue than the law should allow on network television. In the Thank Heaven for Small Mercies Department, no one is named Chuck or Darling or both, which they seem to be in every other new show.

Carpoolers

What should have been a show about the strange and accidental intimacy between strangers turned out to be about a bunch of middle-aged guys poorly channeling Lucy and Ethel. How can a show written in L.A. not have better jokes about driving? Silly people can be funny, but they must be grounded in pathos, not whining. It may be too late, but try downloading "The Bob Newhart Show" onto your iPhones and court the muse as you walk the line.

Private Practice

The numbers are good, but you have to think of the long haul. Enough with the semi-insulting single-gal frustration motif -- the cake bingeing, the dream obsession, the whole shower head thing. (The shower head thing! Writers have been shot for less!) If you insist on making Addison a romance-addled Everywoman (instead of the experience-tempered brilliant doctor she was on "Grey's Anatomy"), then pattern yourself on the master. You had the temerity to make the hat-in-the-air reference in the pilot, so when you hit a narrative roadblock, ask yourself: What would Mary Tyler Moore do in a situation like this? Make up little "WWMTMD?" wristbands as you picket, because I guarantee you it would not involve shower heads.

Moonlight

I keep getting e-mails telling me that this is a good show, though all evidence remains to the contrary. A vampire detective is a fine idea, but I at least hope for something more along the lines of "House" or "Monk" and less along the lines of Count Chocula. The show works when Mick is able to use his "special skills" to sense things others would miss -- why not do more with the ageless immortality bit? He's pretty old, so wouldn't he have a greater understanding of human nature than most people, in addition to the ability to move fast and smell vampires? The brilliance of "Interview With the Vampire," which kicked off the modern wave of pop bloodsuckers, was not just the humanity of the main character but the richness of his experience and the wisdom that it brought him.

Cavemen

Just thank your lucky stars your little stinker premiered pre-strike; otherwise you would be off the air permanently by now.

Life

Don't despair. Don't panic, and please, please, don't lose the groove. Keep doing what you're doing and pray the strike ends before we miss a week of Charlie Crewes. Because that's what I'll be doing.

[email protected]

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Will producers turn to U.K. writers?

London grapevine is abuzz with gossip

By ADAM DAWTREY

Far from the WGA picket lines, there's a place where top-tier screenwriters are, in theory, still free to work on movies backed by the U.S. studios.

It's called the United Kingdom.

The WGA has no jurisdiction here. But the question worrying producers, agents and studio execs in London is whether local writers can (or should) work on projects involving U.S. partners.

The subject is so delicate that no one will discuss it on the record. Indeed, some would prefer that the subject not be raised publicly at all for fear of drawing the WGA's attention to the gray area in which the U.K. biz operates.

The Writers Guild of Great Britain has pitched in with its own opinion. "We are contacting the major U.K. broadcasters and producers, and the U.K. Film Council, asking them not to dump U.K. material into the U.S. market and not to dress up American projects to look as though they are British," said general secretary Bernie Corbett. "Strike-breaking would at best be a short-term payday but would have a devastating long-term effect on a writer's U.S. career."

That depends, of course, on the attitude of WGA. As one London-based studio exec said, "It's still legitimate for us to be working on non-WGA contracts if the writer is rendering services in the U.K. But some people are freaking out that if you cross a picket line, and you are not WGA already, it may affect your ability to join the union in future."

Brit-based productions are almost always non-WGA -- even the biggest ones developed by the U.K. arms of the studios or produced by companies with studio relationships such as Working Title (Universal), DNA Films (Fox), Marv Films (Sony) and Heyday Films (Warner). None is a WGA signatory, and some have their own independent local financing, so technically they shouldn't be directly affected by the strike, even if they are working on projects written by British members of the WGA.

The London grapevine is abuzz with gossip that marquee American producers have been scouting for non-WGA writers for film or TV projects they would funnel through British production companies. Hollywood's majors have lodged discreet inquiries with agents and lawyers about the availability of their clients.

"It could be an extraordinary opportunity for British writers to get a shot at big studio projects that they otherwise would never get a shot at," confided one U.K.-based studio exec.

British agents, however, are counseling caution. "To do nothing, and to be seen to do nothing, is the thing to do," declared one agent to some of the highest-profile British screenwriters.

In the U.S., it's clear that WGA members shouldn't take non-union work. In the U.K., it's far from clear where to draw the line. A British writer, whether a WGA member or not, is surely free to write a local TV drama for the BBC or Channel 4. But what if that drama is sold to a U.S. network to fill a gap left by strike action? Or what if it's co-produced by HBO?

Most would think it's OK to write a British movie for BBC Films or Film4 -- but what if the movie is co-financed by Focus or Paramount Vantage, or pre-sold to Buena Vista for U.K. distribution?

Writers currently contracted to a non-union project from a local producer affiliated to a U.S. studio would be in breach if they put their pencils down. But agents are advising clients to be wary about entering any deal, or even taking a meeting, with such companies, even though the projects are legitimately British and non-union.

According to one British agent, the rules are clear that "any non-U.S. citizen can render services on non-WGA projects, as long as those services are provided outside the U.S., even if they are provided to a WGA signatory company."

But another agent from the same company added, "If it seems that supporting a strike means you have integrity, I don't know that any writer would want to be seen as a scab."

It's unclear how much power the WGA has to punish non-American writers. The guild can refuse to grant full membership with voting rights but can't deny "financial core" membership status to anyone. Do British writers care if they can't attend union meetings, so long as they get the financial benefit?

In the end, it's a matter of conscience for each individual.

As one British agent said, "Maybe English writers haven't quite got hold of how important this is in Los Angeles. I don't know if anyone here has quite woken up to what it all means."

Read the full article at:
" target="_blank">http://www.variety.com/article/VR111797562...t;

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The last strike in 1988 resulted in 22 weeks and a remake of Mission Impossible - this strike is predicted that it could go on even longer! It'll be interesting to see how this affects the tv landscape come spring...

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MISS FIRECRACKER  Preacher Mann   1989    SHOCKER      Talk Show Guest   1989 CRAZY FROM THE HEART    1991      (Made for T. V.) CORRINA, CORRINA     Brent Witherspoon   1994 STAR TREK: GENERATIONS      Data   1994 JOURNEY'S END: THE SAGA OF STAR TREK: THE NEXT GENERATION   1994   (Made for T. V.) STAR TREK: RETURN OF THE NEXT GENERATION   1994 KINGFISH: A STORY OF HUEY P. LONG       1995    (Made for T. V.) PIE IN THE SKY    Upscale Guy    1995 PHENOMENON     Dr. Bob        1996 INDEPENDENCE DAY    Dr. Brakish Okun     1996    STAR TREK: FIRST CONTACT     Data      1996 TREKKIES     1997 OUT TO SEA    Gil Godwyn    1997 STAR TREK: INSURRECTION    Data   1998 SOUTH PARK: BIGGER, LONGER AND UNCUT    Conan O'Brien   (V) 1995 INTRODUCING DOROTHY DANDRIDGE    Earl Mills    1999    (Made for T. V.) GEPPETTO     Stromboli     2000     (Made for T. V.) DUDE, WHERE'S MY CAR?   Pierre     2000 HOLLYWOOD REMEMBERS WALTER MATTHAU    2001    (Made for T. V.) A GIRL THING   Bob    2001      (Made for T. V.) ASK ME NO QUESTIONS      2001     (Made for T. V.) THE PONDER HEART    Dorris Grabney  2001    (Made for T. V.) I AM SAM   Shoe Salesman    2001 THE MASTER OF DISGUISE   Devlin Bowman    2002 STAR TREK: NEMESIS    Data; B-4      2002 IDENTITY CRISIS: THE MAKING OF A MASTER    2003 AN UNEXPECTED LOVE    Brad     2003     (Made for T. V.) JACK        Vernon    2004    (Made for T. V.) THE AVIATOR   Robert Gross     2004 MATERIAL GIRLS    Tommy Katzenbach   2006 CAST OF CHARACTERS: THE MAKING OF MATERIAL GIRLS      2006 SUPERHERO MOVIE   Dr. Strom   2008 QUANTUM QUEST: A CASSINI SPACE ODYSSEY    Coach Mackey (V) 2010 STARDATE REVISITED: THE ORIGINS OF STAR TREK: THE NEXT GENERATION    2012 REUNIFICATION: 25 YEARS AFTER STAR TREK: THE NEXT GENERATION    2012 RESISTANCE IS FUTILE: ASSIMILATING STAR TREK: THE NEXT GENERATION    2013 STAR TREK: THE NEXT GENERATION: REGENERATION -- ENGAGING THE BORG    2013 RELATIVITY: THE FAMILY SAGA OF STAR TREK: THE NEXT GENERATION   2013 REQUIEM: A REMEMBRANCE OF STAR TREK: THE NEXT GENERATION     2013 STAR TREK: FROM ONE GENERATION TO THE NEXT     2013 BEYOND THE FIVE YEAR MISSION: THE EVOLUTION OF STAR TREK: THE NEXT GENERATION 2014 STAR TREK: THE NEXT GENERATION -- THE SKY'S THE LIMIT  THE ECLIPSE OF STAR TREK: THE NEXT GENERATION   2014 STAR TREK: THE NEXT GENERATION -- THE UNKNOWN POSSIBILITIES OF EXISTENCE: MAKING ALL GOOD THINGS...      2014 THE MIDNIGHT MAN     Ezekiel   2016 INDEPENDENCE DAY: RESURGENCE   Dr. Brakish Okun     2016 INDEPENDENCE DAY: A LEGACY SURGING FORWARD     Self; Dr. Brakish Okun    2016 ANOTHER DAY: THE MAKING OF INDEPENDENCE DAY: RESURGENCE    Self; Dr. Brakish Okun  2016 BRENTWOOD    Brent     2018 NEVER SURRENDER: A GALAXY QUEST DOCUMENTARY    Data   2019 STAR TREK: PICARD: THE IMAX LIVE SERIES FINALE EVENT    2023 Video Games STAR TREK: THE NEXT GENERATION -- A FINAL UNITY       Data     1995 CHRONOMASTER      Milo     1995 STAR TREK: GENERATIONS   Data     1997 STAR TREK: HIDDEN EVIL      Data    1999 STAR TREK: AWAY TEAM      Data   2001 STAR TREK: BRIDGE COMMANDER     Data   2002 FAMILY GUY: THE QUEST FOR STUFF     Data    2014 ELITE: DANGEROUS       Vega    2014 HCS   HOMEPACKS      2014 BROADWAY A HISTORY OF THE AMERICAN FILM    3/30/1978 - 4/16/1978      Hank SUNDAY IN THE PARK WITH GEORGE     5/2/1984 - 10/13/1985      Franz; Dennis THE THREE MUSKETEERS   11/11/1984 - 11/18/1984     Aramis BIG RIVER      4/25/1985 - 9/20/1987     Replacement -- The Duke  10/8/1985 - ??? 1776     8/19/1997 - 6/14/1998       John Adams     **** DRAMA DESK AWARD NOMINEE -- OUTSTANDING ACTOR IN A MUSICAL LIFE    (X)3      3/31/2003 - 6/29/2003      Hubert THEATER THE FAMILY PLAY 1 AND II    1975        Kil   Westside Theatre  Downstairs MARCO POLO       1976     Counselor 2     Marymount Manhattan Theatre LEAVE IT TO BEAVER IS DEAD   1979      Luke   New York Shakespeare Festival EMIGRES   1979     AA      Brooklyn Academy of Music THE SEAGULL  (World Premiere)    1980    Konstantin Treplev      Joseph Papp Public Theatre -- Newman Theater TABLE SETTINGS     1980      Older Son       Playwrights Horizons -- Judy Theater NO END OF BLAME    1981   Mr. Mik; Art Student; 2nd Male Nurse; 2nd Hungarian Soldier; 3rd Airman       Stage 73    MARVELOUS GRAY      1982     Electrician    Judith Anderson Theatre THE CHERRY ORCHARD    1983       Long Wharf Theater     New Haven, CTTHE PHILANTHROPIST      1983     John      Stage 73 SUNDAY IN THE PARK WITH GEORGE     1983   Jed; Franz  Playwrights Horizons -- Judy Theater LITTLE SHOP OF HORRORS   1983       Replacement -- Seymour Krelborn EVERY GOOD BOY DESERVES FAVOR      1992; 1993   Ivanov MAN OF LA MANCHA       2009      Don Quixote/ Miguel de Cervantes    Freud Playhouse at UCLA     Los Angeles, CA BOOK --    FAN-FICTION: A MEM-NOIR, INSPIRED BY TRUE EVENTS     October 2021 Family Ties Parents --     Sylvia Schwartz  and Jack Spiner    Step-father -- Sol Mintz Marriage --   Loree McBride      ???? - Present    1 Child -- Jackson Spiner   Before Brent Spiner was Famous There are many similarities between forensicators and Lt. Commander Data from Star Trek: The Next Generation. Both are highly intelligent, but rarely understood by the outside world. Both aim only to evolve, to be better than what they are. And both belong to the NFL. Data, who is actually Brent Spiner, was born February 2, 1949 in Houston, TX. He was the son of Sylvia, a corporate VP and Jack, a furniture store owner. When Jack suddenly died, Sylvia was left to raise infant Brent and his brother alone. She eventually remarried a man named Sol Mintz. Although Mintz adopted Brent, Brent changed his last name back to Spiner when he became a professional actor. Spiner attended Bellaire High School in Houston and was heavily involved in baseball and the drama club, in addition to being a member of the NFL. While on the speech team, he gained 143 points and even earned the title of Dramatic Interpretation Champion in at the 1967 National Tournament (the same year actress Shelley Long won Oratory). After his success in high school, Spiner moved on to the University of Houston and began performing in local theatre in Houston. Eventually he dropped out of college to move to New York City and try his acting luck there. While in New York, Spiner gained more stage acting experience, performing in several Broadway and Off-Broadway plays, including The Three Musketeers and Stephen Sondheim’s Sunday in the Park with George. In 1984, Spiner decided to try film acting and moved again, this time to LA, where he appeared in several pilots and made-for-TV movies. He then auditioned for the up-and-coming show Star Trek: The Next Generation. Spiner himself was never a fan of science fiction or of the original Star Trek, but figured the show would soon be cancelled and he desperately needed the money. Starting in 1987, Spiner played Data for 15 years, during the show’s 7 seasons and the four feature films that followed. Even when the show was cancelled in 1994, Spiner’s career as a performer barely paused. He is most remembered for his role in Independence Day as Dr. Okun, the somewhat awkward chief scientist of Area 51 who is attacked and killed by his alien subjects. He has also made appearances on Law & Order, Friends, Dude, Where’s My Car?, I Am Sam, and The Aviator. Spiner returned to the theatre and appeared in the Broadway revival 1776 as John Adams. Unlike most of his co-stars, Spiner is not very active in the Star Trek convention scene. He has made a few appearances, but overall his lack of interest in science fiction gets the best of him. However, he still regards Patrick Stewart and LeVar Burton as two of his best friends. One of the challenges forensicators face is finding the human element in their events; to not be robotic and detached, but simply themselves. It is this crucial element that separates the good from the great. As the character Data, Spiner sums up the NFL experience the best: “If being human is not simply a matter of being born flesh and blood – if it is instead a way of thinking, acting, and feeling, then I am hopeful that one day I will discover my own humanity. Until then…I will continue learning, changing, growing, and trying to become more than what I am.”   https://www.ign.com/articles/2002/12/09/an-interview-with-brent-spiner https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-1992-02-17-ca-1835-story.html https://www.discogs.com/artist/1224629-Brent-Spiner?srsltid=AfmBOorfw9Nl3EZ4fc-plhbgU3ng2bSQTruygkdJxZgsPquzQ6sBhCbj     Leslie Charleson    pg. 435   PILOTS/PROPOSALS ANOTHER APRIL      April Weston Moss   1974    (Made for T. V.)   Article including James Rebhorn, Catherine Cox and Peter Kluge -- all former daytime actors .https://www.wittenberg.edu/administration/universitycommunications/magazine/spring1999/curtaincalling
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