March 20, 2009

Ex-Reality Show Workers Sue Production Company
By EDWARD WYATT
NY Times

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/03/20/business/media/20reality.html?ref=business&pagewanted=print


LOS ANGELES — Three former employees of reality television shows, 
including “American Idol,” claim in a lawsuit filed here Thursday that 
the producer forced them to work under “sweatshop” conditions and failed 
to pay for overtime hours they worked.

The employees say they were forced by the producer, Fremantle North 
America, to work up to 20 hours a day, seven days a week, sometimes 
without meal and rest periods, and that Fremantle falsified payroll records.

The lawsuit, filed in Los Angeles Superior Court, seeks class-action 
status for all employees who worked in various job classifications — 
including field producer, segment producer, talent coordinator, music 
coordinator and others — for Fremantle and its related production companies.

A spokesman for Fremantle North America said in an e-mail message that 
the company did not comment on pending litigation.

Among the plaintiffs are Melody Murray, who worked in Los Angeles last 
year as a segment producer on “Osbournes: Reloaded,” a reality series 
scheduled to be broadcast beginning March 31 on Fox.

Ms. Murray also worked as a talent coordinator on the television series 
“Thank God You’re Here,” an improvisational sketch comedy show that 
appeared in 2007 on NBC, and as an associate producer on “Janice 
Dickenson Modeling Agency,” which was on the Oxygen cable channel 
beginning in 2006.

Another plaintiff, Aaron Silberman, who now resides in Arizona, worked 
as a music coordinator on “American Idol” from December 2006 through 
January 2008, according to the complaint. “American Idol” has for 
several years been the most-watched series on television.

The third plaintiff, Rosemarie DiSalvo, worked as a producer in 2007 on 
“Temptation,” a syndicated game show.

Reality television production companies have been the subject of similar 
complaints previously as well as efforts by television unions, including 
the Writers Guild of America, West, to organize people who work in 
various producer categories. Generally, those employees are not 
represented by a collective bargaining unit.

In January, three of the four major networks and several reality show 
production companies paid a $4 million settlement in two similar class 
actions. Those lawsuits also alleged that the companies, which produced 
shows like “The Bachelor” and “Trading Spouses,” violated wage and hour 
laws.

The new lawsuit accuses Fremantle and several related companies, 
including American Idol Productions, Blue Orbit Productions, Kickoff 
Productions and Little Pond Television, of trying to disguise violations 
of federal labor law by paying employees for a 12-hour day and a 60-hour 
week.

But the former employees claim that they worked much more than that and 
that the companies failed to keep accurate time records. The lawsuit 
also states that the employees were instructed to write “worked” on 
their time cards rather than record the actual hours worked.

-- 
================================
George Antunes, Political Science Dept
University of Houston; Houston, TX 77204 
Voice: 713-743-3923  Fax: 713-743-3927
Mail: antunes at uh dot edu

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