- Home
- Television
- Writer's Strike
- Breaking News: DGA Reaches Agreement With AMPTP
Breaking News: DGA Reaches Agreement With AMPTP
- By Melissa Wilson
- Published 01/17/2008
- Writer's Strike
-
Rating:




Melissa Wilson
View all articles by Melissa Wilson
With the members of the Writers Guild of America on strike these past few months, the entertainment industry has been creaking to a halt. Forseeing a possible strike in their own future, and with the same items on the line as the writers, the Screen Actors Guild (SAG) and the Directors Guild of America (DGA) have been looking to make their own deals with the Association of Motion Piction and Television Producers (AMPTP). Today, we've gotten the good news that the DGA has come to a tentative agreement with the AMPTP, and the terms are everything the writers have been asking for since before the strike began.
The new three-year contract, from the press release:
* Increases both wages and residual bases for each year of the contract.
* Establishes DGA jurisdiction over programs produced for distribution on the Internet.
* Establishes new residuals formula for paid Internet downloads (electronic sell-through) that essentially doubles the rate currently paid by employers.
* Establishes residual rates for ad-supported streaming and use of clips on the Internet.
Gil Cares, chairman of the DGA negotiations committee, said, "Our fundamental goal in these negotiations was to protect our interests in the present while laying the groundwork for a future whose outlines are not yet clear. We knew that gaining jurisdiction over new-media production and winning fair compensation for the reuse of our work on the Internet were the key issues for setting a framework for the future, but we also had to secure real gains for our members in today's world."
These gains are the same demands the WGA has been making for months. Let us hope for the sake of the rest of this television season, not to mention the Academy Awards and any number of film projects teetering on the edge, that the two parties can sit back down at the table and use these terms to write a fair contract for the writers, and a good basis for the actors when it's their turn to talk.
(Source: PrimeNewswire)
The new three-year contract, from the press release:
* Increases both wages and residual bases for each year of the contract.
* Establishes DGA jurisdiction over programs produced for distribution on the Internet.
* Establishes new residuals formula for paid Internet downloads (electronic sell-through) that essentially doubles the rate currently paid by employers.
* Establishes residual rates for ad-supported streaming and use of clips on the Internet.
Gil Cares, chairman of the DGA negotiations committee, said, "Our fundamental goal in these negotiations was to protect our interests in the present while laying the groundwork for a future whose outlines are not yet clear. We knew that gaining jurisdiction over new-media production and winning fair compensation for the reuse of our work on the Internet were the key issues for setting a framework for the future, but we also had to secure real gains for our members in today's world."
These gains are the same demands the WGA has been making for months. Let us hope for the sake of the rest of this television season, not to mention the Academy Awards and any number of film projects teetering on the edge, that the two parties can sit back down at the table and use these terms to write a fair contract for the writers, and a good basis for the actors when it's their turn to talk.
(Source: PrimeNewswire)
Spread The Word
Related Articles
- Graphic Novel/Manga Review--In Odd We Trust
- Editorial: Calling All Orphans: The So-Called "Orphan Works" Bill and You
- Staring To Wrap Things Up - WGA Links Through Feb. 18
- The Strike Is Over - WGA Strike Links Through Feb. 12
- Almost There: WGA Strike Links Through Feb. 10
- We're Almost There: WGA Strike Links Through Feb. 6
- A Creative Union: WGA Strike Links Through Feb. 2
- It Has To Be The Right Deal: WGA Strike Links Through Jan. 30
- We're All In This Together: WGA Strike Links Through Jan. 27
- Pencils Down Means Pencils Down: WGA Strike Links Through Jan. 24
- One Day Stronger: WGA Strike Links Through Jan. 21
- Interview With Stephanie Tuszynski, Director of Buffy Fan Documentary "IRL"
- Quiet On Set: WGA Strike Links Through Jan. 18
- Netflix, Downloading, and the WGA Strike
- Can't Act A Blank Page: WGA Strike Links Through Jan. 15
- Golden Globe Winners Announced --- No One Cares
- Viacom: "Our fans are already there (But We Can't Admit It Before the Oscars Are Cancelled)"
- All Fired Up: WGA Strike Links Through Jan. 10
- Strike Makes More Waves: Golden Globes Go Under
Related Links
Comments
Comment #1 (Posted by Maia Cowan)
Rating:








I saw a snooze media report about the DGA strike that said the agreement would "put pressure on the WGA", as if it were the WGA being unreasonable and intransigent, and the quick settlement of the DGA strike meant the WGA would have to just give up all its demands now and go back to work. Which tells us more about the pro-corporate bias of the news media than it does about the likely effects of the DGA agreement.
