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Freelance writer Jonathan Kesselman passes out flyers in front of the New York Stock Exchange as the Writers Guild of America strikes for better wages, in New York, November 13, 2007.(Xinhua/Reuters Photo) Photo Gallery>>> |
LOS ANGELES, Nov. 13 (Xinhua) -- TV stars joined
Hollywood writers on the picket lines on Tuesday as the strike by the writers
enters its eighth day, the Writers Guild of America (WGA) said.
Dubbed "Picketing with the Stars," some 100 actors
from about 30 shows picketed at Universal Studios beginning at noon, according
to the WGA.
They include Bill Paxon ("Big Love"), Nicollette
Sheridan ("Desperate Housewives"), Ray Romano ("Everybody Loves Raymond") and
George Lopez("George Lopez Show").
The WGA is on strike in a dispute over future revenue
from shows distributed over the Internet and other new media.
The strike started last Monday after the WGA contract
expired and negotiations stalled. No new talks are scheduled.
The Alliance of Motion Picture and Television
Producers (AMPTP) on Monday took out ads in Daily Variety and the Hollywood
Reporter headlined "Setting the Record Straight..."
The ads asserted that the WGA knows, and its own
records prove, that writers are already paid residuals on permanent digital
downloads and pay-per-view digital downloads, and that "this additional
compensation was part of more than 260 million dollars in record-breaking
residuals paid to WGAW members in 2006.
The ad went on to state that, "when the WGA went on
strike, an offer to pay writers for Internet streaming was on the table."
The WGA responded with a statement claiming the
producers are trying to roll back benefits to writers regarding new media.
"The AMPTP told us in negotiations that new media was
going to cannibalize traditional media," Neal Sacharow, WGA West director of
communications, said in the statement. "Therefore, writers need a fair residual
formula just to keep up. The proposals the companies brought to the table would
decimate writers' incomes."
Daily TV talk shows have been hit hard by the strike,
and many other programs have also stopped production without writers to provide
dialogue. Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger has urged both sides to settle their
differences quickly. He said the strike was already having a major impact on the
state's economy.
A WGA strike in 1988 was the last to cause a major
disruption in the entertainment industry. It lasted 22 weeks and cost the
industry an estimated 500 million dollars.
The WGA claims about 12,000 members, about 4,000 of
whom are in New York.