WGA Doctrine for the 21st Century
Posted on November 1, 2006
Variety reports on a boisterous "unity rally" attended by 900 writers this morning. Organized by the Writers Guild of America, the rally was the kickoff for its campaign leading up to next year's contract negotiations.
"The purpose of this morning's rally is to unite writers of various disciplines -- TV with features, fiction with nonfiction, live action with animation, daytime with latenight, new media with traditional markets," Verrone said. "And it is in that regard that I announce today the WGA doctrine for the 21st century -- that every piece of media with a moving image on the screen or a recorded human voice must have a writer. And every writer must have a WGA contract. For our friends in the press, that was the sound bite.""[E]very piece of media with a moving image on the screen or a recorded human voice must have a writer. And every writer must have a WGA contract."Loudest cheers during Verrone's speech came when he asked the crowd to recognize the striking writers from "America's Next Top Model." And he cited guild unity as the key factor in WGA advances -- from pension and health benefits and residuals to recent deals for "The Daily Show," "Lost," the vidgame version of "The Family Guy" and the Fox feature "Everybody's Hero."
"When we win a contract for the writers of 'America's Next Top Model,' and for all the reality writers and editors who stand with us today, it will be because we are united," he added.
Now that's aggressive. As for the studios and producers who will whine over the WGA's 21st century manifest: hey, it's just the inevitable blowback for all those reality shows where you refused to pay the writers.