Showing posts with label Writer's Strike. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Writer's Strike. Show all posts

Saturday, December 08, 2007

Support the Writer's Guild Strike. Here's why



The American middle class has received no real average wage increase after the Republican war on Unions, set into high gear when Reagan fired the Air Traffic Controllers, started rolling. While the war on unions goes on, the small number of millionaires and the extremely wealthy (almost all of whom inherited their wealth and have had their jobs handed to them, like Bush) have grown and found themselves paying less in taxes so that they could pay for the scissors they need to clip coupons.

Support the middle class. Support unions. And bring back the inheritance tax.

Thursday, November 22, 2007

Hillary, Obama, Edwards refuse to cross CBS writer's picket lines

The CBS writers have not had a contract with CBS for 2 1/2 years now, so they went on strike. CBS had planned to hold a debate for the Democratic nominees for President on December 10, 2007. It looks like the CBS negotiators better get it in gear and finally negotiate with the Writer's Guild in good faith. According to Sam Stein at Huffington Post the top four Democratic candidates have acted to support the writers and will not cross the picket lines.

Hillary Clinton:
Sen. Hillary Clinton, D-NY, declared that: "The workers at CBS News have been without a contract for close to two and a half years. It is my hope that both sides will reach an agreement that results in a secure contract for the workers at CBS News but let me be clear: I will honor the picket line if the workers at CBS News decide to strike."
Barack Obama
Sen. Barack Obama, D-IL, weighed in as well, issuing the following statement through his campaign: "If CBS News is unable to reach an agreement with its workers and they decide to strike, Barack Obama will not cross the picket line to attend the debate."
John Edwards
former Sen. John Edwards, D-NC, offered his support for the strikers, declaring that he and his wife Elizabeth "will also honor any picket lines at CBS News, up to and including the CBS presidential debate on December 10th... I hope that in these disputes, management and the union are able to agree on a just settlement. But until those settlements are reached, I will stand firmly with these workers in their fight for a better life."
Bill Richardson
Gov. Bill Richardson of New Mexico has offered his support for the strikers as well, saying in a statement, "Supporting workers' rights is more important than anything I will say at the debate."
I have to wonder what the CBS management is thinking when they fail to bargain in good faith with their writers. Without their writers they have no product to put on the air. No contract for 2 1/2 years is simply stupidity on the part of CBS.

Sunday, November 18, 2007

Who needs the writers?



[ h/t to Atrios. ]

I've noticed that there is an arc to most of the TV series that I have enjoyed. A few start off good, but most are mixed. There has to be both good acting, with chemistry among the actors as well as good writing for me to enjoy the show. Acting and actor chemistry is really important, but if they have no story to tel, forget it. Those don't always come together at first, and frequently never do.

For the shows in which they do come together, there has to be a consistency over time. I've noticed that a failure of consistency when it occurs often follows a Summer hiatus. The show ends well, and for some reason simply doesn't come back with all burners burning. It's good when they do come back.

After the ability to survive a summer hiatus, the next thing that seems to kill shows is a drop off in the quality of the writing. I think CSI has reached this plateau. They built CSI around weird ways to die and the investigations that reveal them, and they simply have run out of weird and interesting new ways to die in Las Vegas. CSI: Miami has surmounted this with more character-driven shows set in the cross-cultural beehive of Miami. I'm a little amazed, since David Caruso mugs for the camera rather than acting, but his writers and photographers have saved the show. I find CSI: New York to have always been a merely journeyman level crime show. It has always been reliable, like a McDonald's burger, but also like a McDonald's burger, it has never been outstanding.)

There are two ways writing can kill the show. Sometimes there is a change in the writers over time, and the new crew simply doesn't understand what it was about the writing that made the show what it was. Then, after time, there seems to come a time when the writers simply can't find new stories to use the old characters in. MASH ended because the actors and writers simply ran out of stories and wanted to go out on a high note. Law & Order seems to have avoided this (so far) by changing actors and characters every so often, but that is quite risky. My point is that all the really good shows are based at least in part on a good writing team that can reliably come up with new and interesting stories to carry the series.

Which brings me to the most disappointing new show of this season - Women's Murder Club. I have enjoyed the James Patterson novels it came from and I liked Angie Harmon in Law & Order. But this show simply hasn't come together. The actors seem to be talking past each other rather than to each other, and the stories themselves are frankly not interesting enough to grab my attention. The core failure seems to be in the writing, but following that is the lack of chemistry among the actors.

I have been a bit surprised by "Chuck." The premise is a stretch, to say the least, but the stories have been reasonably good and the actors are moving towards a solid chemistry. It is an interesting comedy with no laugh track, and it is trying to do something different, so it is as yet a bit uneven. NBC was desperate to try it, and if they stay desperate long enough, it could turn out pretty good. The key is going to be in the writing, I think.

All of this is to point out that writing is key to the really good shows, and the lack of it will kill them. Of the critical elements in a successful show, the writers are the most poorly paid and certainly get the least recognition. So I strongly support the writer's strike. More power to them.