
Writers Guild of America member Greg Fields has his son
Caelan drop his ballot in the box at the WGA theater in Beverly Hills, Calif.,
yesterday.- China Daily/Agencies
The power to put the entertainment industry back to work was in the hands of
writers yesterday as guild members voted on whether to end their 3-month
strike by accepting the terms of a tentative contract.
Michael Winship, president of the Writers Guild of America, East, said he was
confident the vote would end the walkout as soon as today. Writers were lined up
when the doors of the Writers Guild Theater in Beverly Hills opened for voting.
Michael R. Perry, a writer for "Persons Unknown" and other crime dramas, said
the proposed deal made him hopeful the guild and studios could be "partners in a
growing pie" of Internet revenue.
"I want them to be fabulously, filthy rich. I just want my piece," Perry
said.
Not all writers were ready to call off the walkout that halted television
production, idled thousands of workers and devastated the Golden Globe Awards.
"If this deal passes, it wasn't worth it," said Alfredo Barrios, co-executive
producer and a writer on the TV series "Burn Notice." "If I had known three
months ago, I wouldn't have voted to authorize the strike."
In New York, Warren Leight, a guild member and executive producer on "Law
& Order: Criminal Intent," said the hard-fought deal deserves approval
because it provides more money than studios initially offered for shows streamed
on the Internet, among other gains.
Under the agreement, writers would get a maximum flat fee of about $1,200 for
streamed programs in the deal's first two years and then get 2 percent of a
distributor's gross in year three.
Voting started in New York before West Coast guild members began casting
ballots later in the day. Results were expected late yesterday.
Winship said members were well-informed about the tentative contract
agreement with studios that was approved Sunday by the guild's board of
directors.
A number of writers voiced support for the agreement during informational
meetings over the weekend.
"I think it's a very informed vote. They've had a few days to think about
this," Winship said before the New York voting started at a Times Square hotel.
"And they've had 14 weeks on the picket line."
Member approval would restart TV production immediately and remove a boycott
threat from this month's Oscars.