| A devastating, three-month walkout that brought
the entertainment industry to a standstill ended Tuesday when
Hollywood writers voted to lift their union's strike order and
return to work Wednesday.
The move allows some TV series to return this spring with a handful
of new episodes. It also clears the way for the Academy Awards
to be staged on Feb. 24 without the threat of pickets or a boycott
by actors that would have dulled the glamour of Hollywood's signature
celebration.
''At the end of the day, everybody won. It was a fair deal and
one that the companies can live with, and it recognizes the large
contribution that writers have made to the industry,'' Leslie
Moonves, chief executive officer of CBS Corp., told The Associated
Press.
Moonves was among the media executives who helped broker a deal
after negotiations between the guild and the Alliance of Motion
Picture and Television Producers, which represents studios, collapsed
in acrimony in December.
Residuals for TV shows and movies distributed online was the
most contentious issue in the bitter dispute involving the 12,000-member
union and the world's largest media companies and other producers.
Under a tentative contract approved Sunday by the union's board
of directors, writers would get a maximum flat fee of about $1,200
for streamed programs in the deal's first two years and then get
2 percent of a distributor's gross in year three _ a key union
demand.
Other provisions include increased residual payments for downloaded
movies and TV programs.
''These advances now give us a foothold in the digital age,''
said Patric Verrone, president of the guild's West Coast chapter.
''Rather than being shut out of the future of content creation
and delivery, writers will lead the way as television migrates
to the Internet.''
Writers who voted in New York and Beverly Hills were overwhelmingly
in favor of ending the strike: 3,492 voted yes, with only 283
voting to stay off the job.
Most writers were happy about the outcome and eager to return
to work.
''It will be all hands on deck for the writing staff,'' said
Chris Mundy, co-executive producer of CBS' drama ''Criminal Minds.''
He hopes to get a couple of scripts in the pipeline right away,
with about seven episodes airing by the end of May.
Not all shows will get back on the air. Networks might not resume
production of low-rated programs that have a questionable future.
Writers did not vote on whether to formally accept the tentative
deal, which was reached after a Feb. 1 breakthrough between union
negotiators and studio executives.
The guild will mail contract ratification ballots to members
over the next few days. Writers can also vote at meetings. All
ballots must be cast by Feb. 25.
The walkout stopped work on dozens of TV shows, disrupted movie
production and turned the usually star-studded Golden Globes show
into a news conference. It also dealt a severe financial blow
to a wide range of businesses dependent on work from studios.
The strike took a $3.2 billion toll in direct and indirect costs
on the economy of Los Angeles County, the home of most of the
nation's TV and film production, according to a new estimate from
Jack Kyser, chief economist for the Los Angeles Economic Development
Corp.
The last writers strike, a 153-day walkout in 1988, caused an
estimated $500 million in lost wages.
The latest strike began Nov. 5, and formal negotiations broke
off Dec. 7 after the guild pushed to unionize writers on reality
and animated productions.
Informal talks began Jan. 23 between studio heads and the union,
which extended an olive branch by withdrawing its proposal to
organize reality and animated shows. It also decided against picketing
the Grammy Awards.
Pressure to reach an agreement mounted after the studio alliance
reached a tentative contract Jan. 17 with the Directors Guild
of America. That deal also brought improved payment for content
offered on the Internet.
Among the executives who took the lead in breaking the impasse
were Peter Chernin, chief operating officer of News Corp., and
Robert Iger, CEO of The Walt Disney Co.
Michael R. Perry, a writer for ''Persons Unknown'' and other
TV dramas, said the deal made him hopeful the guild and studios
could be ''partners in a growing pie'' of Internet revenue.
''I want them to be fabulously, filthy rich. I just want my piece,''
Perry said.
Hollywood's labor pains may not be over, said Jonathan Handel,
an entertainment attorney with the Los Angeles firm of TroyGould
and a former associate counsel for the writers guild.
He pointed out that the contract between studios and the Screen
Actors Guild is due to expire in June.
''The signs are mixed whether this is going to be another difficult
negotiation,'' Handel said. ''The actors face all of the new-media
issues that the writers and directors faced.''
Source: Associated Press
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