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Talks resume with aim to end strike by writers unions

2023-08-02 11:22
Hollywood studios on Tuesday asked the Writers Guild back to the negotiating table in the first known talks since the nearly 100-day strike brought production of most television shows and movies to a halt.
Talks resume with aim to end strike by writers unions

Hollywood studios on Tuesday asked the Writers Guild back to the negotiating table in the first known talks since the nearly 100-day strike brought production of most television shows and movies to a halt.

The meeting, sought by the Alliance of Motion Picture and Television Producers (AMPTP) and scheduled for Friday, is the first potential sign of a thaw between the two sides and could offer a glimmer of hope for an end to the work stoppage. The Writers Guild represents more than 11,000 writers.

It was not known if the studios had also reached out to SAG-AFTRA, which represents 160,000 actors who also went on strike last month, with a similar request. Neither SAG-AFTRA nor AMPTP immediately responded to a request for comment early Wednesday.

A settlement would need to be reached with both sides before most movie and television production. Late night television shows stopped airing new episodes with the start of the writers strike on May 2. And the traditional fall television season will be delayed at this point even if the both strikes ended immediately. But there have been concerns in the industries that the strikes could drag through to the end of the year.

This has been the best summer for movie ticket sales since the start of the pandemic. But many of the media and tech companies that make up AMPTP, including Amazon, Apple, CBS, Disney, NBC Universal, Netflix, Paramount Global, Sony and CNN parent Warner Bros. Discovery, have been engaged in cost-cutting and deep job cuts even ahead of the two strikes, as they place a new emphasis to reach profitability on streaming services that many have started in recent years, rather than simply grow subscribers.

This is the first time that both unions have been on strikes together since 1960, so long ago that Ronald Reagan was then president of SAG, a predecessor of SAG-AFTRA. Both unions are making similar demands at the negotiating table, seeking better pay, improved residual payments, especially when shows air on streaming platforms, and protections against job losses due to the use of artificial intelligence.