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Is the strike over?: New WGA deal met with applause in L.A.

Feb 10, 2008, 01:08 AM | by Lynette Rice

Categories: Strike

Writers packed the Shrine Auditorium in downtown L.A. tonight, where Writers Guild of America West President Patric Verrone and chief negotiator David Young received standing ovations for drafting a tentative deal with the Alliance of Motion Picture and Television Producers. According to one veteran TV writer present, Verrone and Young "strongly recommended" the proposed deal to the crowd. The WGA leadership told members that it would reconvene on Sunday, Feb. 10, to officially sign off on the deal and call off the picketing. The 10,000-plus WGA members will vote over the next 48 hours in an expedited process, according to some who were present, which means writers won't officially back on the job Monday. Regardless, the deal puts the end of the strike within reach. "Clearly, it's going to pass," said the veteran TV writer who attended tonight's announcement. "The feeling was, 'Get this thing done.'" After hearing the specifics of the deal, many writers began to leave before Verrone, Young and other leaders fielded questions from members. As reported earlier today by EW.com, the tentative deal offers writers some share in profits for content streamed and downloaded from the Internet, so long as that content is not purely promotional. Full details of the deal can be found here. If approved by the membership, the deal should also allow the 80th Academy Awards to go on as scheduled -- stars and all -- on Feb. 24.

The only downbeat moment of the evening came when negotiating committee chairman John Bowman mentioned the so-called "cabal" of 30 writers who threatened to cross picket lines recently if the WGA and the AMPTP didn't make a deal swiftly. When Bowman declared he was not influenced by this dissident group, the crowd applauded. The room also gave a standing ovation to the Screen Actors Guild for showing solidarity during the three-month labor dispute.

J Mon, Feb 11, 2008 at 09:54 PM EST

Finally looks like we are in the clear
Jeremy lesser strikes mean newer shows~~~~~

Tom Strong Sun, Feb 10, 2008 at 01:25 PM EST

Yes the corporate stooges were greedy jerks, but they still won, unfortunately. This deal isn't very good. But everyone want to go back to work.

Office Fan Sun, Feb 10, 2008 at 12:57 PM EST

Why not look at what the companies "lost" here and ask was it worth it to them to threaten the livelihood of thousands and lose millions in their own profits? Was it worth it to them to keep people out this long just to demonstrate how powerful they are? When you think about the fact that the companies were paying zero, literally zero, for popular webisodes from TV programs, prior to the strike, it's clear that the writers won a lot here.

JohnT Sun, Feb 10, 2008 at 10:17 AM EST

When I look at the details of this deal, I have to ask, was the strike and all the financial hardship it caused for both writers and support workers worth it? Doesn't look like it to me.

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