Negotiators for the dueling sides in Hollywood yesterday resumed contract
talks, which for the first time were described by representatives of the
striking writers in moderately upbeat tones.
Yesterday's negotiating session between the writers union
and the studios was the seventh since the current round in the start-and-stop
bargaining began last week, in an effort to end the month-old strike by
screenwriters.
"For the last two days, we have had substantive discussions of the issues
important to writers, the first time this has occurred in this negotiation," the
Writers Guild of America (WGA) Negotiating Committee said in a statement earlier
on Wednesday.
"However, we are still waiting for the AMPTP to respond to all our proposals,
including Internet streaming of theatrical and television product and digital
downloads," it added.
A statement from the Alliance of Motion Picture and Television Producers,
which represents the movie studios and television networks, said it remained
"committed to making a fair and reasonable deal."
Sources said the two sides had discussed contract enforcement and
jurisdiction over original content for the Internet, so-called reality
television, animation and basic cable, according to the negotiating committee
statement.
The studios contend their latest offer provides for a "new economic
partnership" that would add around US$130 million a year to what the writers
already earn. The WGA dismisses that projection as wildly inaccurate and says
its proposal would cost the studios and networks less -- only US$151 million
over three years.
The ongoing strike began on Nov. 5, with the dispute focusing on residual
payments to writers for work distributed via the Internet, video iPods,
cellphones and other new media.
Most scripted primetime TV series have suspended production due to the
strike, while almost all the late-night talk shows on major broadcast networks
have been forced into reruns.
Before the start of the strike, Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa cited
forecasts that a lengthy work stoppage could cost the area's economy US$1
billion. But a quarterly economic forecast released yesterday by the UCLA
Anderson School of Management said that even a lengthy strike would have an
impact of only about a third of that 1-billion-dollar estimate.