Writers Guild of America and the Alliance of Motion Picture and Television Producers have inched toward a deal to end the nearly five-month strike, though no agreement has been reached. There are strong indications that the two sides are closing in on a tentative agreement. In a short message sent to members, the WGA confirmed that negotiations are scheduled to resume shortly and thanked them for responding to the call to pack out the guild’s picket lines.
Senior AMPTP executives including Disney’s Bob Iger, Warner Bros. Discovery's David Zaslav, NBCUniversal’s Donna Langley and Netflix’s Ted Sarandos left the headquarters of the organization on Friday evening. Friday’s meeting ended on a positive note. However, many contentious issues are yet to be resolved.
One of those issues is the 'success-based residual' that has been so crucial to the contract demands of WGA and SAG-AFTRA. It will be calculated at least in part by whether a given title is watched by a pre-determined percentage of a given streamer or platform’s subscriber base. It is one of the most contentious issues because it would represent a new compensation metric for the WGA’s Minimum Basic Agreement contract.
The other contentious issues include disagreements on generative AI in the creative process. Besides, issues like staff levels and minimum weeks of employment for episodic TV writers and streaming residuals are yet to be discussed.
The WGA represents more than 11,000 members, who have been on strike since May 2. It went on strike on May 2. Actors guild SAG-AFTRA joined the writers union on the picket lines on July 14. Saturday was the 145th day