Predawn picket lines help writers disrupt studio productions

The First Art Newspaper on the Net    Established in 1996 Friday, May 17, 2024


Predawn picket lines help writers disrupt studio productions
Peter Chiarelli, a screenwriter and member of the Writers Guild of America, takes a picture of a truck entering Fox Studios, in Los Angeles, May 11, 2023. Workers from other unions have shown solidarity with the strikers, catching entertainment companies off guard. (J. Emilio Flores/The New York Times)

by Nicole Sperling and John Koblin



LOS ANGELES, CA.- At 5 a.m. on a recent weekday, a lone figure paced back and forth outside the main entrance to the Fox Studios lot in Los Angeles. Peter Chiarelli, a screenwriter, was walking the picket line.

He held a sign reading “Thank You 399,” a message to the local branch of the Teamsters union, whose members he hoped would turn their trucks around instead of crossing his personal picket line to enter the lot, where Hulu was filming the series “Interior Chinatown.”

“It’s passive-aggressive,” Chiarelli, who wrote the films “Crazy Rich Asians” and “The Proposal,” said of his sentiment — sincere if the Teamsters turned back and sarcastic if they entered.

Since the Hollywood writers’ strike began May 2, Chiarelli and others like him have been waking before dawn to try to disrupt productions whose scripts had already been finished.

“We need to shut down the pipeline,” he said of the shows in production.

The practice, which was not used to any real effect when the writers last went on strike in 2007, initially caught some studio executives off guard. And many of them — as well as plenty of people in the Writers Guild of America, the union that represents the writers — have been surprised that it has had some success.

Showtime paused production on the sixth season of “The Chi” after writers gathered for two straight days outside the gates of the Chicago studio where it was filming. Apple TV’s “Loot” shut down after writers picketed a Los Angeles mansion where filming was taking place. The show’s star, Maya Rudolph, retreated to her trailer and was unwilling to return to set.

Over 20 writers trekked from Los Angeles to Santa Clarita, California, to picket the FX drama “The Old Man,” starring Jeff Bridges. The overnight action kept Teamsters trucks inside the Blue Cloud Movie Ranch, Chiarelli said, and crews had difficulty working. The show soon suspended production.

A Lionsgate comedy starring Keanu Reeves and Seth Rogen, with Aziz Ansari making his debut as a movie director, shut down last week after just 2 1/2 days of filming in locations around Los Angeles after loud, shouting writers picketed all three of its sets.

“While we won’t discuss the specifics of our strategy, we’re applying pressure on the companies by disrupting production wherever it takes place,” a Writers Guild of America spokesperson said in a statement.

Eric Haywood, a veteran writer who is on the union’s negotiating committee, put it more plainly. “If your movie or TV show is still shooting and we haven’t shut it down yet, sit tight,” he wrote on social media last weekend. “We’ll get around to you.”

A representative for the Alliance of Motion Picture and Television Producers, which bargains on behalf of the studios, declined to comment.

Both sides have privately said a much greater sense of solidarity among unions than during the last writers’ strike has made it harder for workers from other unions to cross picket lines. Productions are also more geographically widespread than they were 15 years ago. In addition to fortified Los Angeles soundstages, writers have picketed locations in the New Jersey suburbs, New York’s Westchester County and Chicago. And social media has provided a way to alert writers to quickly get to specific picket lines.

Each day, the writers send out calls for “rapid response teams” when they learn about a production’s call time and location.

“Breaking: they’re shooting on Sunday … we’re picketing on Sunday,” a writer posted on Twitter, asking people to get together immediately in the Greenpoint neighborhood of Brooklyn in New York City to disrupt a production. “Please amplify.”




“I think everybody is getting behind us because they see that if we all stick together, we can make some real achievements,” said Mike Royce (“One Day at a Time”), who has joined Chiarelli in his some of his predawn pickets.

The writers have disrupted other events as well. Netflix canceled a major in-person presentation for advertisers in New York amid concerns about demonstrations. The streaming company also canceled an appearance by Ted Sarandos, one of its co-CEOs, who was to be honored at the prestigious PEN America Literary Gala. A Boston University commencement address by David Zaslav, the CEO of Warner Bros. Discovery, was interrupted by boos and chants of “Pay your writers!” from demonstrators and students.

While the makeshift picket lines have disrupted individual productions, it’s not clear that they’ve had much effect on the strike itself. Negotiations haven’t resumed since they broke down May 1, and the industry is bracing for the possibility that the strike could last for months.

The writers contend that their wages have stagnated even though the major Hollywood studios have invested billions of dollars in recent years to build out their streaming services. The guild has described the dispute in stark terms, saying the “survival of writing as a profession is at stake.”

But production shutdowns are affecting not only the studios. Crews and other workers — like drivers, set designers, caterers — lose paychecks. And if the shutdowns accumulate and more people are unable to work, some wonder whether the writers will begin to erode the current goodwill from other workers.

Lindsay Dougherty is the lead organizer of Local 399, the Teamsters’ Los Angeles division, which represents more than 6,000 movie workers, from the truck drivers the writers are trying to turn away to casting directors, location managers and animal trainers. A second-generation Teamster, Dougherty is one of the union’s few female leaders. Her copious tattoos, including one of the former Teamster leader Jimmy Hoffa, and her frequently profane speech have made her a bit of a celebrity to the writers during the strike.

And she said the solidarity with the writers remained strong.

“I think collectively, we’re all on the same page in that streaming has dramatically changed the industry,” Dougherty said in an interview. “And these tech companies that we’re bargaining with, during the last writers’ strike — Amazon, Apple, Netflix — they weren’t even part of the conversation.”

Asked if the Teamsters were tipping off the writers about the timing and location of productions, she demurred.

“The Writers Guild is getting tips from all sorts of different places — whether it’s members that are working on the crew, or from film permits, they obviously have social media groups and emails set up to send tips and information,” she said.

In the meantime, Chiarelli keeps pacing outside Fox Studios each day, hoping he can turn some trucks around. Some days he gets results. On a recent morning he was joined by several other writers, and five trucks turned away, he said. During an overnight picket at Fox, a trailer carrying fake police cars destined for the shoot turned tail at 2 a.m.

Other days, the picket line is much more sparse, especially if a tip takes a group to a different location.

He and Royce talked fondly about their second day out in the darkness. It was pouring rain when two large trucks pulled into the turn lane, blinkers on, ready to enter the lot. Then they saw the writers. The trucks pulled to the side of the road, waited about 10 minutes, then turned around.

They “blew past the entrance, honked their horns and waved at us,” Royce said. “It was thrilling.”

Added Chiarelli, “I’ve been chasing that high ever since.”

This article originally appeared in The New York Times.










Today's News

May 27, 2023

A sanctuary for psychedelic art opens in the Hudson Valley

Kenneth Anger, filmmaker who left a pop culture legacy, dies at 96

Avedon at 100: Photos of seduction

After the Warhol decision, another major copyright case looms

Canada's first public art commission by Mexican Artist, Pedro Reyes, arrives in Vancouver

Church of San Carlo, Cremona offers site-specific presentation by artist Oliver Mosset

Baroque: Out of Darkness, The effervescent story of the European Baroque at the National Gallery of Denmark

"Fondazione La Raia - art culture territory" presents "Inventory" a new site-specific work

Heritage presents stunning collection of Art Deco gems

Mystic Seaport Museum presents Alexis Rockman: Oceanus

Halima Cassell now presenting her works of art at Watts Gallery

Hurvin Anderson's 'Barbershop' exhibition is now on view at the Hepworth Wakefield

Emin Mete Erdoğan's solo exhibition 'Over the Under' now open at Anna Laudel Bodrum

Payne, Laurence, and Gamble lead Moran's California & American Fine Art auction results

Harrowdown Hill: A photographic investigation of how places remember events

Young Hong Kong painter with surreal and vivid landscapes Hilarie HON: Sunlight Murmur at EXIT

In this Swiss town, Tina Turner was a neighbor, not a star

Living the golden life: DanceAfrica welcomes Ghana to Brooklyn

Tyler Joseph Krasowski elevates the sketch in new solo exhibition at Missoula Art Museum

Predawn picket lines help writers disrupt studio productions

'Primary Trust' Review: Sipping Mai Tais, until bitter reality knocks

An opera composer of intimate spareness returns to myth

Tornado. Treasure. There was nobody like Tina Turner.

A pianist's rare visit to New York reveals his personality

Jewellery Store in Brisbane: A Guide to Finding the Perfect Piece

Unveiling the Hidden Secrets: How to Unearth a Car's History with VIN Number



Components of Supply Chain - A Detailed Guide

Pay By Phone Bill Casino: The Ultimate Guide To Convenient And Secure Deposits




Museums, Exhibits, Artists, Milestones, Digital Art, Architecture, Photography,
Photographers, Special Photos, Special Reports, Featured Stories, Auctions, Art Fairs,
Anecdotes, Art Quiz, Education, Mythology, 3D Images, Last Week, .

 



Founder:
Ignacio Villarreal
(1941 - 2019)
Editor & Publisher: Jose Villarreal
Art Director: Juan José Sepúlveda Ramírez

sa gaming free credit
Attorneys
Truck Accident Attorneys
Accident Attorneys

Royalville Communications, Inc
produces:

ignaciovillarreal.org juncodelavega.com facundocabral-elfinal.org
Founder's Site. Hommage
to a Mexican poet.
Hommage
       

The First Art Newspaper on the Net. The Best Versions Of Ave Maria Song Junco de la Vega Site Ignacio Villarreal Site Parroquia Natividad del Señor
Tell a Friend
Dear User, please complete the form below in order to recommend the Artdaily newsletter to someone you know.
Please complete all fields marked *.
Sending Mail
Sending Successful