Co-signed.Solidarity and good fortune to the talented creatives as they fight for basic dignity and fair treatment.
Return of the ring spin on Conan??
First thing I thought of. With Whedon doing batgirl I figured it would never happen...but maybe, just maybe it could if this happens.Does this mean I finally get Dr. Horrible 2?
Any chance this helps end the Voice Actor strike, too?
this line bugs me because it comes off as a lil self important. writers help make the product, they don't make it alone. that said i'm all for creatives getting better compensation.$51 billion in profits and barely a penny for those of us who make the product that makes the companies rich.
this line bugs me because it comes off as a lil self important. writers help make the product, they don't make it alone. that said i'm all for creatives getting better compensation.
this line bugs me because it comes off as a lil self important. writers help make the product, they don't make it alone. that said i'm all for creatives getting better compensation.
it's still ongoing isn't it? I don't think game companies are buckling, as well.
(What are the VA Guild rules for working outside the country?)
naw i understand writers are important, but it takes many different disciplines to produce these things, not just the one. The wording makes it seems like it's not a team effort. Don't know if it was intentional or not tho.Writers have as much stake shaping a product as a Director or Actor. They're more of a hidden hand, however.
Yes, it's still ongoing. The 11 struck companies are still sticking to their guns, but many other videogame publishers have got on board with the new contract terms. According to this announcement, some Casting Directors appear to be in a bit of a bind - now asking some SAG-AFTRA members to do struck work on the sly. Can't be fun, being in the middle like that.
SAG-AFTRA members abide by Global Rule One : a SAG-AFTRA member must always work under a union contract around the globe.
That means no hopping over to Canada, for a week, to record something there.
naw i understand writers are important, but it takes many different disciplines to produce these things, not just the one. The wording makes it seems like it's not a team effort. Don't know if it was intentional or not tho.
naw i understand writers are important, but it takes many different disciplines to produce these things, not just the one. The wording makes it seems like it's not a team effort. Don't know if it was intentional or not tho.
I see, alright. If it's SAG-AFTRA, how does that apply to say...Japanese companies? LIke Keifer is in SAG, but I'm pretty sure that MGSV wasn't a SAG union game?
It depends on how you define "good." Salary minimums from the current contract are higher than what most engineers in Silicon Valley (the typical example of "overpaid gentrifiers") get paid each week. Any role above the minimum is going to get paid more.
That doesn't count residuals or bonus payments.
Source:
http://defamer.gawker.com/heres-what-your-favorite-television-writers-make-1485130956
http://www.wga.org/contracts/contracts/mba
The primary reason individual writers are seeing salaries fall is the combination of shorter seasons (so if you're staff, a 10 episode show is only guaranteeing 14 weeks of pay, versus older shows where a 24-26 episode season was a lock) and competition for those positions.
Shorter seasons means at any given time there are more writers competing for the next contract.
That's not to say that TV writers shouldn't be trying to negotiate a better deal for themselves. Everyone wants to get the biggest paycheck they can get, but it's not like TV writers are working for minimum wage. They're already paid better than the vast majority of writers in the US.
Wow, it's that time again already, huh?
Hope yall like more reality TV....
No, it's not.Thank you for posting this...
Unions exist for those who need protection in their jobs because they make money on the low end of the scale (miners, blue collar, even teachers)
This is like computer engineers starting unions
Has nothing to do with the Guild.Sooo how will this affect youtube content? The smaller skit shows and stuff?
You must be picking the wrong shows.Been disappointed in the latest batch of TV coming down the pipe so hopefully this helps kick things in the ass a bit as it did last time.
You must be picking the wrong shows.
The high-end of shows are as good as television has been, and there's a wider breadth of quality shows.
It depends on how you define "good." Salary minimums from the current contract are higher than what most engineers in Silicon Valley (the typical example of "overpaid gentrifiers") get paid each week. Any role above the minimum is going to get paid more.
That doesn't count residuals or bonus payments.
Source:
http://defamer.gawker.com/heres-what-your-favorite-television-writers-make-1485130956
http://www.wga.org/contracts/contracts/mba
The primary reason individual writers are seeing salaries fall is the combination of shorter seasons (so if you're staff, a 10 episode show is only guaranteeing 14 weeks of pay, versus older shows where a 24-26 episode season was a lock) and competition for those positions.
Shorter seasons means at any given time there are more writers competing for the next contract.
That's not to say that TV writers shouldn't be trying to negotiate a better deal for themselves. Everyone wants to get the biggest paycheck they can get, but it's not like TV writers are working for minimum wage. They're already paid better than the vast majority of writers in the US.
You're expected to live in Hollywood or New York, or your expected to travel because your show films in Vancouver or Atlanta or Charleston.This is terrible pay if you're expected to live in the Hollywood area. Like basement pay. Because none of these guys have guaranteed work so the pay should reflect that.
Good writers should be paid on a similar level as good actors. Bad writing kills everything no matter who touches it. And great writing lifts mediocre actors. A perfect example of that is game of thrones. It's filled with mediocre actors being more bc of direction and writing.
TV is going to suck, but they have the right and should strike. Good for them.
Thank you for posting this...
Unions exist for those who need protection in their jobs because they make money on the low end of the scale (miners, blue collar, even teachers)
This is like computer engineers starting unions
1. The number of episodes, and therefore, episode fees are half the traditional number on many series.
2. These fewer episode fees are being amortized across more than two weeks per episode.
3. Writers are held exclusive and under option even when not working on these short season series.
4. Residuals are too low in the emerging rerun markets.
5. Script fees remain unequal to the network rates for the growing areas of the industry.
It's not that the writers think they alone make these things.naw i understand writers are important, but it takes many different disciplines to produce these things, not just the one. The wording makes it seems like it's not a team effort. Don't know if it was intentional or not tho.
Writers feel entitled?The idea that writers are supremely important actually comes from the film industry's business practices. The overwhelming majority of movies will not go into production unless its backers see a script. That's why writers feel so entitled. They're shown that projects do not get made without their efforts.
I look forward to old scripts that are sitting around being suddenly green lit.