Hundreds of members of the Screen Actors Guild, Teamsters and other entertainment industry unions turned out to show their solidarity with the writers. SAG members are regularly participating in the writers picket lines, and many Teamsters have refused to cross.
On the eve of the strike, the AMPTP boasted of having months of episodes of their television programs in the can enough to drag out the strike and make the writers give up. But according to
Media Life magazine, Its looking like a lot of the tough talk on the part of the AMPTP was just that. The TV industry is fast shutting down.
Talk shows like
The Tonight Show with Jay Leno, dependent on staffs of writers for topical humour, went straight to reruns. Leno has visited the picket line every day, bringing doughnuts for the strikers. He told
Variety, There arent many unions left we have to stick together.
Six prime-time series, including ABCs high-rating
Desperate Housewives, shut down in the first week. NBCs comedy
The Office will air its last new episode this week, because the shows actors, including star Steve Carell, refuse to cross the writers picket lines.
Were shutting down production, WGA West President Patric Verrone told the roaring crowd at the Los Angeles rally, and were kicking corporate ass!
WGA West Executive Director David Young told the crowd, Brothers and sisters, were not going to screw this up. Were part of the broader struggle of the American middle class. Its time for us to take a stand.
Other speakers at the rally included Reverand Jesse Jackson,
Family Guy creator Seth MacFarlane and producer Norman Lear. Tom Morello and Zack de la Rocha of Rage Against the Machine performed music.
Billions of dollars are being made, but not for the middle-class writers and actors, SAG President Alan Rosenberg said at the rally. These corporations worry about profit margins. We worry about paying the bills.
Its been three decades of rollbacks and givebacks. We cant afford another 30 years of this. We have to draw the line. SAG stands with you shoulder to shoulder, as long as it takes.
Since the corporate ass that the writers are kicking belongs to massive conglomerates that also own most news outlets, its not surprising that the media have been whipping up a backlash against the WGA.
And the same production companies that regularly abuse and neglect everyone who works for them have suddenly conjured up big, wet crocodile tears to shed for everyone from production crews to office staff to caterers who will lose income during the strike.
Telepictures Productions, which produces
The Ellen DeGeneres Show, played this card in a press release defending its stars decision to continue production without her union writers by writing the show herself. We have asked Ellen to come back to work to fulfill her contractual obligation
to host the show, the company said. We also wish to preserve the 135 jobs of the staff and crew whose livelihoods depend on the show continuing. We regret the Writers [sic] Guild has chosen to strike.
As if Telepictures, a subsidiary of Time Warner, the worlds largest media empire, would think twice about dumping all 135 of those people if the show was losing money!
The hard, sad fact is that DeGeneres, like all scabs, is doing the dirty work of bosses who are trying to squeeze every penny of profits they can out of their employees.
But as long as people can see through the corporate lies and support the WGA picket lines, a victory for the writers and the labour movement is within reach.
[Reprinted from the November 16 edition of the US
Socialist Worker,
<http://socialist-worker.org>.]