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News + Trends

Strike in Hollywood: Authors walk off the job with immediate effect

Luca Fontana
2.5.2023
Translation: machine translated

Screenwriters in Hollywood are going on strike with immediate effect. The reason for this is failed negotiations with the major studios. The impact on the film and streaming industry is likely to be enormous; Hollywood is in danger of being paralysed.

What exactly is the strike about?

At the heart of the negotiations is the exploding growth of streaming services. According to the Writers Guild, they mean that previously functioning remuneration packages for writers are no longer effective. One example: When films or series are repeated on linear television, authors receive a so-called residual fee for this. These reruns, and therefore the residual royalties, are increasingly disappearing in the age of streaming.

In addition, the demand for series formats on streaming platforms has changed. Whereas a season used to usually consist of 20 episodes or more, Netflix and the like are tending towards seasons with ten or even fewer episodes. As writers are paid per episode rather than per season, this leads to a lower income.

What impact will the strike have?

If the strike continues for several weeks, series with annual seasons will also be affected by the work stoppage: As a rule, their scripts are written in May, produced in summer and broadcast from autumn onwards.

Cinema films are not immune to strikes either. They have a much longer lead time. Productions can be planned flexibly around the strike. And films that will be released in cinemas in 2023 will already be shooting or in post-production by then anyway. But if the writers were to strike again for more than 14 weeks, the 2024 film year could change radically.

In this case, the scripts for films due to be released in cinemas in 2024 would simply be missing at this point in time, without which filming would be almost impossible. Studios could bridge the first half of 2024 by postponing films planned for the end of 2023 until next year. Some productions could even benefit from less packed schedules.

What's next?

In the short term, the future of many authors is uncertain. After all, it's not just studios that suffer millions in losses during a strike. Writers also don't earn any money during the work stoppage. The Writers Guild knows this. However, it maintains that it is in its interest to use the authors' strike as a means of exerting the greatest possible pressure in order to obtain a fair contract for everyone. Her statement accordingly:

It is therefore not known when the strike will end.

Cover photo: Reed Saxon / AP Keystone

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I write about technology as if it were cinema, and about films as if they were real life. Between bits and blockbusters, I’m after stories that move people, not just generate clicks. And yes – sometimes I listen to film scores louder than I probably should.


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