Thousands of American television and film screenwriters went on strike on Tuesday due to the breakdown of negotiations with major studios and platforms, including a pay hike.
In Los Angeles as in New York, pickets formed in front of the studios. “The screenwriters are not paid enough”, especially given their “long hours” of work, said Louis Jones, a screenwriter on strike, interviewed by AFP in front of the Netflix studios in Los Angeles.
This social movement will result in the immediate interruption of successful programs, such as “late-night shows”, and significant delays for television series and films scheduled for release this year. The studios’ responses to the requests have been “totally insufficient, given the existential crisis that screenwriters are facing”, justified the powerful screenwriters’ union, the Writers Guild of America (WGA).
“The problem right now is that streaming has completely changed the media landscape,” screenwriter Danny Strong told AFP when interviewed in New York. “We are the foundation of the content that people love and appreciate and that our employers benefit from,” says the creator of the Dopesick series, also an Emmy winner for the TV movie Game Change.
Jimmy Fallon and Stephen Colbert, famous presenters of two popular late-night shows, showed their support at the Met Gala in New York on Monday night. “I support my team”, assured Jimmy Fallon, specifying that he “could not carry out the emission without them”. For Stephen Colbert, “the demands of the screenwriters are not unreasonable. I am a member of the union and I support collective bargaining. This country owes a lot to the trade unions”. The last major social movement in Hollywood dates back to the scriptwriters’ strike which paralyzed the American audiovisual industry in 2007-2008. A 100-day conflict that had cost the sector two billion dollars.
Major studios and platforms, including Disney and Netflix, represented by the Alliance of Motion Picture and Television Producers (AMPTP) announced on Monday evening that talks with the WGA “had concluded without an agreement”. Screenwriters are demanding higher pay, minimum guarantees for stable employment and a greater share of the profits generated by the streaming boom. Their employers, they say, make a profit and raise the salaries of their leaders.
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They believe that they have never been so numerous to work at the minimum wage set by the unions, while the television networks hire fewer people to write increasingly short series. For their part, studios say they have to cut costs due to economic pressures.
If the AMPTP claims to have offered screenwriters an increase in remuneration, it opposes several demands, in particular the revision of the remuneration of screenwriters of series broadcast in streaming, which often remain visible on platforms for years. For decades, screenwriters have collected “residual rights” for the reuse of their works, for example in television reruns or DVD sales.
It is either a percentage of the revenue earned by the studios for the film or show, or a fixed sum paid for each rerun of an episode. With streaming, authors receive a fixed amount each year, even in the event of worldwide success for their work, such as the series The Chronicle of Bridgerton or Stranger Things, seen by hundreds of millions of viewers worldwide. The WGA is calling for the revaluation of these amounts. The studios point out that the “residual rights” paid to screenwriters reached a record level of $ 494 million in 2021, against 333 million ten years earlier, largely thanks to the explosion of screenwriter jobs linked to rising demand for streaming.
Having been spendthrift in recent years, when rival broadcasters have sought to boost subscriber numbers at all costs, the bosses say they are now under heavy pressure from investors to cut spending and make a profit. And they deny pretexting economic difficulties to strengthen their position in negotiations with screenwriters.