Kevin, what SCC drama? Or is it the scheduling thing?
sumi, Polter-Cow linked to Josh Friedman's blog (he's the show runner), and I think you can get the basics from that. It looks like because he won't, for example, go and edit the show, they're saying they'll go and get other people do everything. On his show. So he's not happy.
(I believe the AMPTP offered them 0.3% for iTunes downloads, but the WGA refused).
I think that's right. But I could see the argument that iTunes downloads differ from streaming media and should be bound by the home video rate and not the airing-on-tv rate. (Or some rate in between that takes into account the negligible production and delivery costs on the downloaded product.)
All residuals are based on wholesale. The studios have no control over retail. When was the last time you bought a DVD at MSRP?
The LA Times did a breakdown of where your DVD money goes.
As for iTunes, I'll be honest that I'm not completely clear on that issue. There's this thing called the "Sideletter on Exhibition of Motion Pictures Transmitted via the Internet," which is dated 2001. My understanding is that the WGA believes that, according to that letter, iTunes residuals should be 1.2%. The AMPTP believes that iTunes residuals should be 0.3%, just like DVDs. I'm told that they're in binding arbitration on this one.
that breakdown is a trip. I love Moonves salary figures up there.
My understanding is that the WGA believes that, according to that letter, iTunes residuals should be 1.2%.
That number was quoted in the EW article I just read, except it said it was what the producers were offering, implying that the WGA wanted more (and according to Wolfram's link, yes, they want 2.5%).
The WGA wants 2.5% in the new contract. But the AMPTP has taken the position, in these current negotiations, that electronic sell through -- aka iTunes et al -- is the same as DVDs and should be paid at the same rate.
The arbitration, which pre-dates this negotiation, deals with all electronic sell through since the 2001 sideletter. I think Disney started this. They decided to lump iTunes sales in with DVD sales and pay it all at the same DVD rate.
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The Terminator has gotten involved:
But the production halts have thrown many hundreds of crew members out of work, from hairstylists and makeup artists to camera operators and carpenters, with fallout rippling through the local economy.
"That's the sad story, because the studio executives are not going to suffer, the union leaders are not going to suffer, the writers that are striking, they are not going to suffer. Those are all people that have money," Schwarzenegger said when asked about the strike.
That's like saying you're going to save on heating costs when your house has burned down.