Re: [TV orNotTV] Actors side with writers as latter's contract expiry nears

2023-04-24 Thread Tom Wolper
The little I’ve seen about consequences is that network TV will rely more heavily on unscripted programming which wouldn’t be a surprise and wouldn’t be that meaningful in the larger TV universe. Since streaming shows have shorter seasons I assume they have enough stocked away for a year. I wonder

Re: [TV orNotTV] Actors side with writers as latter's contract expiry nears

2023-04-24 Thread Kevin M.
On Mon, Apr 24, 2023 at 12:17 PM Tom Wolper wrote: > I’m surprised we haven’t seen more coverage of the upcoming writers’ > strike. The TV business has changed so much since the last one that it’s > hard to figure out how TV will be affected. > Many of the companies that produce the news also

Re: [TV orNotTV] Actors side with writers as latter's contract expiry nears

2023-04-24 Thread Tom Wolper
I’m surprised we haven’t seen more coverage of the upcoming writers’ strike. The TV business has changed so much since the last one that it’s hard to figure out how TV will be affected. On Sun, Apr 23, 2023 at 10:34 AM 'Bob Jersey' via TVorNotTV < tvornottv@googlegroups.com> wrote: > The

[TV orNotTV] Actors side with writers as latter's contract expiry nears

2023-04-23 Thread 'Bob Jersey' via TVorNotTV
The SAG-AFTRA board voted Saturday to approve a resolution "strongly in support" of the WGA during its negotiations... the talent group's own deal with the Alliance is up in June...