We have an update on
Supernatural's production status.
According to
The Vancouver Sun and
Playback Magazine,
Supernatural will shut
down on December 5th. That date is tentative, as per Don Cott, vice
president of the Canadian affiliate of the Alliance of Motion Picture and
Television Producers. Playback Magazine also referenced the cinematographer's
union as a source.
Like a number of other shows, The CW's cult hit is filmed in
Vancouver, and employs several hundred Canadians. The series follows two
brothers, Sam (Jared Padalecki) and Dean Winchester (Jensen Ackles), as they
hunt demons, ghosts and scary urban legends. The website
Digital Spy says that
ten episodes of
Supernatural are in the can and they are finishing off
production on two more, so viewers should get to see twelve episodes at least.
Episode 3x07 just aired, and epguides.com lists the next episode on December
13. Those five additional scripts the series reportedly has stockpiled may be
filmed soon or not, depending on what develops with the strike.
As the WGA strike continues, more and more series have been
closing down. The main issue here is fair compensation for use of the writers' work
on the internet. TV writers are getting no residuals on itunes and other
internet downloads, or on streaming video. The AMPTP claims that episodes
streaming on network websites are advertising, but ads are embedded into the
episodes. Writer residuals on DVD's are also very low -- the rate was set back
in the 1980's to allow the DVD revolution room to grow. Writers were promised a
raise, but it never happened.
Supernatural is a show with a dedicated viewership, and hopefully has a good chance of surviving a longer then usual strike-induced hiatus.
Sources:
VarietyThe Chicago TribunePlayback MagazineVancouver SunDigital Spy