The Indianapolis Star

Actors, studios to resume talks

Late-night shows return after writers strike ends

- Mark Kennedy and Andrew Dalton

NEW YORK – With the Hollywood writers strike over, actors will now get a shot at cutting their own deal with studios and streaming services.

The Screen Actors Guild-American Federation of Radio and Television Artists announced Wednesday night that strike negotiatio­ns with studios would resume Monday. The guild said several studio executives will attend, much as they did during marathon sessions last week that helped bring the nearly fivemonth writers strike to an end.

Monday is the same day that network late-night hosts will return to the air.

Bill Maher led the charge back to work by announcing early Wednesday – hours after writers became free to work again – that his HBO show “Real Time with Bill Maher” would be back on the air Friday. By mid-morning, the hosts of NBC’s “The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon” and “Late Night with Seth Meyers,” ABC’s “Jimmy Kimmel Live,” and “The Late Show With Stephen Colbert” on CBS had announced they’d also return, all by Monday. “Last Week Tonight” with John Oliver was slated to return to the air Sunday.

Comedy Central’s “The Daily Show,” which had been using guest hosts when the strike hit, announced Wednesday that it would return Oct. 16 “with an allstar roster of guest hosts for the remainder of 2023.” The plans for “Saturday Night Live” were not immediatel­y clear.

The strikes have had a “catastroph­ic” impact on late-night television viewing, according to the research firm Samba TV. Without Colbert, Fallon and Kimmel providing fresh, topical material, the broadcast networks have seen latenight viewership declines of between 40% and 50%, said Ashwin Navin, Samba TV co-founder.

Fallon, Meyers, Kimmel, Colbert and Oliver spent the latter part of the strike teaming up for a popular podcast called “Strike Force Five” – named after their personal text chain and with all proceeds benefiting their out-of-work writers. On Instagram on Wednesday, they announced “their mission complete.”

Scripted shows will take longer to return due to the actors strike, which showed its first signs of a solution with the renewed plans to talk. There had previously been no official contact between SAG-AFTRA and the alliance of studios that negotiates contracts since their strike began July 14.

The first resumption of talks in the writers strike last month went poorly, and it was another month before the two sides tried again. But when the talks resumed last week it was just five days before a deal was reached.

Board members from the writers union approved that contract agreement with studios on Tuesday night, bringing the industry at least partly back from a historic halt in production that stretched nearly five months.

Maher had delayed returning to his talk show during the ongoing strike by writers and actors, a decision that followed similar pauses by “The Drew Barrymore Show,” “The Talk” and “The Jennifer Hudson Show.”

The three-year agreement with studios, producers and streaming services includes significan­t wins in the main areas writers fought for – compensati­on, length of employment, size of staffs and control of artificial intelligen­ce – matching or nearly equaling what they sought at the outset of the strike. The union had sought minimum increases in pay and future residual earnings from shows and will get a raise of between 3.5% and 5% in those areas – more than the studios initially offered.

The guild also negotiated new residual payments based on the popularity of streaming shows, where writers will get bonuses for being a part of the most popular shows on Netflix, Max and other services, a proposal studios initially rejected. Many writers on picket lines had complained that they weren’t properly paid for helping create heavily watched properties.

On artificial intelligen­ce, the writers got the regulation and control of the emerging technology they had sought. Under the contract, raw, AI-generated storylines will not be regarded as “literary material” – a term in their contracts for scripts and other story forms a screenwrit­er produces. This means they won’t be competing with computers for screen credits. Nor will AI-generated stories be considered “source” material, their contractua­l language for the novels, video games or other works that writers may adapt into scripts.

 ?? CHRIS PIZZELLO/INVISION/AP ?? The Screen Actors Guild-American Federation of Radio and Television Artists announced Wednesday night that strike negotiatio­ns with studios would resume Monday.
CHRIS PIZZELLO/INVISION/AP The Screen Actors Guild-American Federation of Radio and Television Artists announced Wednesday night that strike negotiatio­ns with studios would resume Monday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States