BEIJING, Feb. 4 -- Hollywood's striking writers and
major studios made "significant progress" in recent talks aimed at ending their
labor dispute, a source briefed on the discussions said on the weekend, raising
hopes a settlement may be near.
Word of a breakthrough came as the Writers Guild of
America strike neared its three-month mark and after 11 days of low-key contract
talks that followed a separate labor deal between the studios and Hollywood
directors.
The current writers' talks were initially conceived
as "informal discussions" designed to sketch the outlines of a potential
settlement and to lay a foundation for the resumption of full-scale bargaining
that collapsed in acrimony on December 7.
But the latest sessions proved more fruitful than
expected, evolving into substantive negotiations now expected to lead straight
to a deal that would put the 10,500 striking writers back to work, the source
said.
The person who was briefed on the talks but spoke on
condition of anonymity because the individual was not authorized to talk on the
record, told said, "I know they made significant progress" on Friday. The source
declined to give further details.
Any deal would have to be endorsed by the governing
boards of the WGA's East and West Coast branches and ratified by the union's
rank and file.
The chief sticking point in the labor dispute has
been the question of how much writers should be compensated for work distributed
over the Internet and other digital media.
The New York Times, citing unnamed sources, reported
on Saturday the last major roadblocks to a deal had been eliminated and that a
tentative accord could come as early as next week.
According to the Times, Friday's breakthrough was an
agreement on payment of "residual" fees for the advertising-supported online
streaming of television shows.
Hollywood's leading trade magazine, Daily Variety, reported that talks since Friday had been productive enough to generate cautious optimism a settlement may soon be at hand.
A representative for the studio's bargaining agent, the Alliance of Motion Picture and Television Producers, declined to comment on the talks.
(Source:
China Daily/Agencies)