
The Writers Guild of America's strike against networks and studios is marching through its second week. "Late Night with Conan O'Brien" is in reruns; the further adventures of Captain Jack Sparrow are on hold; Ben Affleck has put aside his Saugus-set sequel to "Gone Baby Gone." But what's important about this strike is not the impact it will have on America's entertainment options, it's the impact it will have on countless working families in the industry.
The way that the big media companies treat writers would be hilarious if it weren't so frightening. For instance, NBC streams full episodes of shows like "The Office" online - with ads - and avoids paying the writers by calling it a promotion. Yet when a 15-year-old posts an episode of a show online without compensating writers, the studios call it piracy.
A very good point that I hadn't thought of before. As I've stated previously, I'm all for the WGA strike, and I hope the writers get what they're asking for. If the networks and studios are seeing increased profits from the work of the writers and are distributing the content through new [and advertising-supported] means, the writers are entitled to the residuals from those new broadcasts.
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