Well, there are people who work in the industry who might appreciate the acknowledgment of their work. IJS.
The Minearverse 5: Closer to the Earth, Further from the Ax
[NAFDA] "There will be an occasional happy, so that it might be crushed under the boot of the writer." From Zorro to Angel (including Wonderfalls, The Inside and Drive), this is where Buffistas come to anoint themselves in the bloodbath.
Last month, David Milch did a thing at the Writers Guild: "The Idea of the Writer, a two day discussion focused on creating a new, participatory business model for writers."
If anyone's interested, you can watch it online now.
Will be interesting to see if Lionsgate and such do similar deals. I've no idea if they're owned or part owned by the big players.
Even if they're not, the little indie studios will need to sell the finished products of anything they buy to one of the big guys for distribution. I really don't see how making these kinds of deals helps the WGA out in the long run.
(And seriously, UA? Nice name brand, but what have they done lately?)
UA have done a bunch of films lately. Well, two. That flopped.
Maybe they'll be able to hire better writers now.
Distribution dollars are nothing like what you get for an in house product. These deals make the studio execs look over their shoulders to see who is going to cave next. It creates chaos for the execs. They are competitors first.
It is all good.
Well, there are people who work in the industry who might appreciate the acknowledgment of their work. IJS.
I think the point is that we'll still get the public acknowledgement of the winners in the announcement format, but without the 20 minute montages of (e.g.) Cowboys On Film.
Do you wish they could quit them?
Heh.
Just in case anybody cares what coverage the strike is getting in the UK - I haven't been reading newspapers recently, so can't comment on that, but I've seen reports on it this week and last on the main news bulletins. Channel 4 news ran a piece with Letterman on their 7pm programme the other day, and the BBC One ran a piece at 6pm today about the Golden Globes, with picket line interviews of writers and George Clooney in support of the WGA.