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July 2009

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WGA strike and BSG

I haven't paid close attention to the writers' strike, but it seems to me that writers, actors, etc, should be paid for their efforts regardless of whether it's on TV, radio, internet, or whatever.

So, anyway, knowing that there are many Battlestar Galactica viewers here, you may be interested in reading this article 
(h/t to C&L and FDL)

Excerpt:

“I had a situation last year on Battlestar Galactica where we were asked by Universal to do webisodes [Note: Moore is referring to The Resistance webisodes which ran before Season 3 premiered], which at that point were very new and ‘Oooh, webisodes! What does that mean?’ It was all very new stuff. And it was very eye opening, because the studio’s position was ‘Oh, we’re not going to pay anybody to do this. You have to do this, because you work on the show. And we’re not going to pay you to write it. We’re not going to pay the director, and we’re not going to pay the actors.’ At which point we said ‘No thanks, we won’t do it.’”

“We got in this long, protracted thing and eventually they agreed to pay everybody involved. But then, as we got deeper into it, they said ‘But we’re not going to put any credits on it. You’re not going to be credited for this work. And we can use it later, in any fashion that we want.’ At which point I said ‘Well, then we’re done and I’m not going to deliver the webisodes to you.’ And they came and they took them out of the editing room anyway — which they have every right to do. They own the material — But it was that experience that really showed me that that’s what this is all about. If there’s not an agreement with the studios about the internet, that specifically says ‘This is covered material, you have to pay us a formula - whatever that formula turns out to be - for use of the material and how it’s all done,’ the studios will simply rape and pillage.”

Comments

The studios consistently treat writers as utterly disposable, and the prevailing opinion seems to be that writers should be grateful their work ever sees the light of day -- much less get fair recompense for it.

Oddly, I have little sympathy at all for BSG and everyone involved for it at this point, as they've deliberately drawn out the show for months on end in order to push their far inferior product at the audience. Putting two-minute bites of BSG inside the unwatchable "Flash Gordon" was the last straw for me.

At this point, my last bit of goodwill as a fan has been squandered, my sympathy for the writers aside.
As I said, I haven't really been following the specifics of the situation. I saw an ad for some BSG thing being on during FG, but I then promptly forgot about it because I don't watch FG. As to drawing out the series, that seems to be an ever-increasing trend, and one that I'm not particularly fond of either. I think it totally screwed up The Sopranos (the first instance of such that I remember). The main networks seem to be following suit. I honestly don't mind splitting the season into two mini-seasons as LOST is doing because I hate the whole midseason period where you don't know the sequence of new versus rerun episodes.

But, yeah, bottom line: the writers seem to be in the right on this one.
Good grief. Thanks for sharing this.

(Anonymous)

Idetrorce

very interesting, but I don't agree with you
Idetrorce

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