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Media The Internet

Writers Guild Members Look to Internet Distribution 156

stevedcc writes "The Guardian is running an article about members of the Writer's Guild, still on strike, creating their own ventures to deliver content over the internet. The intention is to get their work to consumers while bypassing the movie studios. Their effort will include actors and directors, and it is not the first step they have taken to expand their interests during the strike. One particular project is said to include A-list talent, and will be released in roughly 50 daily segments before going to DVD. This is also relevant to the strike because, as the article states, 'at the core of the current dispute is the question of how to reimburse writers for work that is distributed on the internet.'"
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Writers Guild Members Look to Internet Distribution

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  • by stevedcc ( 1000313 ) * on Saturday December 29, 2007 @01:26PM (#21849526)

    "The internet is a place where they can't maintain control," he said. "They are trying to introduce an old-school control-orientated way of thinking into a system that rejects and repels that tradition of control."

    Thank god this writer understands - the studios really donät seem to

    • by lgw ( 121541 ) on Saturday December 29, 2007 @05:39PM (#21851416) Journal
      Can't the Writers Guild and the Producers Guild just settle this on the PvP server like gentlemen? Nothing worse than guild drama ...
  • by jorghis ( 1000092 ) on Saturday December 29, 2007 @01:42PM (#21849646)
    Hmm, so all the writers need is actors, stagehands, a set, and all the other stuff required to produce a movie and they can make it and distribute it online. Maybe they could organize all these things together and call it a "production company". Thatll show those studios!

    This isnt the end of studios, those amatuerish videos on YouTube may be entertaining but you will still need large organizations to produce anything complex. The only thing that will change is that some of the marketing and sales may be different.
    • by UbuntuDupe ( 970646 ) * on Saturday December 29, 2007 @01:52PM (#21849698) Journal
      Well, writers could feasibly bypass the studios by doing Red-vs-Blue type movies (forget the name for that type of animation). Presumably there's a software package more specifically tailored for this kind of movie-making so you don't have to use all kinds of workarounds?
    • by bahwi ( 43111 ) on Saturday December 29, 2007 @01:54PM (#21849710)
      You are 100% correct. But the new studios will not have the ownership, perception of power, and complacency of the old studios. Or at least not as great.

      Lots of small indie films that have hit it big have been from small studios or even just groups of people coming together to do it(still takes 10-50 people) but it's doable and has been done before.
      • by SW6 ( 140530 )
        You are 100% correct. But the new studios will not have the ownership, perception of power, and complacency of the old studios. Or at least not as great.

        You appear to have misspelt "Or at least not yet" there. Power corrupts.

    • by Rie Beam ( 632299 ) on Saturday December 29, 2007 @01:57PM (#21849738) Journal
      The thing is, though, is that while all of those people are necessary for the production of a high-quality product, they are all offshots of the kernel that is the writer's idea. A producer crafts it, the crew helps create it, and distributors help get it out to others, but without that original idea to bloom off of, you're essentially churning out a fake product.

      Mind you, this hasn't stopped studios from producing this crap, but still, writers are the heart of the industry. The whole point of this strike is reimbursement for what it is they actually do, whereas the studios apparently seem to feel that, despite being little more than the shiny wrapping for the actual product, the writer's cut isn't as significant.

      This is a battle over content versus packaging. I'm not saying that a writer alone can produce something we'd change the channel or file into the theater to see, but that without their help, there's really no chance we'd end up there, anyway.
      • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

        by jorghis ( 1000092 )
        Yes, and if you ask the actors guild they will give a line about how their contribution is the most important to a film. If you ask the special effects guys they will say the same thing about how important theirs is. And so on and so forth. At the end of the day if you have X number of dollars to produce a movie you have to divide it up somehow between the different parties. If the writers come along and say they think their effort is worth several times what they are currently paid you either have to g
        • by Rie Beam ( 632299 ) on Saturday December 29, 2007 @02:16PM (#21849870) Journal
          You honestly expect me to believe that the issue here is that the studios aren't make enough money?
          • That isnt what I said at all. I said that it costs X number of dollars to produce a movie. You cannot substantially increase everyone's pay without going above X. Therefore you either have to reduce someone else's compensation in order to give someone (the writers) a raise or pass the cost onto consumers. (raise ticket prices) Believe it or not studios do not enjoy massive profit margins that they could use to double everyone's compensation if they wanted to. (as an example viacom enjoys a 13% profit
            • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

              by chromatic ( 9471 )

              You cannot substantially increase everyone's pay without going above X. Therefore you either have to reduce someone else's compensation in order to give someone (the writers) a raise or pass the cost onto consumers.

              ... or find new markets or sources of income, such as DVD sales and Internet distribution.

              This raises three questions. First, if (as the argument goes) a DVD boxed set with commentary from the writers and producers and showrunner is worth more than a DVD boxed set without that commentary,

            • "You cannot substantially increase everyone's pay without going above X. Therefore you either have to reduce someone else's compensation in order to give someone (the writers) a raise or pass the cost onto consumers. (raise ticket prices)"

              You completely ignore my primary point, though -- that writers are inherently more important to the process than anyone else. 13% profit of hundreds of millions is still a nice chunk of change, regardless of how its measured. I would gladly sack compensation in lesser fiel
      • I write. Not screen plays, but stories. There is a butt-load more writing to do in a story that is to be delivered in print form than in a screen-play, which is really no more than a guideline for the director. The dialogue, scenes and action can and will change before it's committed. Even event sequences change. Given all that, the screen play writer is no more important than anyone else for a movie.

        If you doubt me, pull one up online. There are plenty out there. Read it and then compare to the m
        • Again, though, everything is coming -out- of the original script. No matter how much it may change, or who sparked the original idea, working without a script is still a laughable thought -- you can't change the script if it isn't there, and obviously there's something going on if the "fleshing out" process is something the producer cannot handle himself.

          Not every script is a masterpiece, or even readable stand-alone. But unless you're shooting guerrilla footage, improv or the like, a script is still going
      • by elrous0 ( 869638 ) *
        If you think for a SECOND that the writers, director's, actors, production designers, wardrobe designers, etc, don't have a HUGE hand in creating a film too, you're nuts. On a major production, a screenwriter may be important, but he is hardly the "be all, end all" of the film. In fact, the script itself is just a guideline or starting point for many, particularly artistic, filmmakers (think Kubrick, David Lynch, Tim Burton, et. al.).

        Let's not overinflate the value of a screenwriter. Their heads are alrea

    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      but you will still need large organizations to produce anything complex.

      nonsense. the only thing big companies are capable of doing is creating a movie that costs 200 million to produce, that doesn't mean it's any more "complex" or even "good" all it means is that it is "expensive." granted most of the videos on you tube are crude to say the least but there are also a good number that are at or better than a lot of what hollywood and big studios produce [which as of late isnt all that hard]

      • You cant produce something like Lord of the Rings with a webcam and a youtube account. As long as people are willing to pay 7 bucks for a ticket to see movies like Lord of the Rings there will be a reason for large production companies to exist.
        • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

          You cant produce something like Lord of the Rings with a webcam and a youtube account

          I dont care how much money they throw at the problem, if their storyline/plot are bad the movie is BAD. no amount of eye candy and pretty shots are going to fix it. LOTR did well because of the plot not so much because of the effects. take the plot away and you've got a mediocre movie that really isnt worth watching. that being said, money can improve a plot but it can not in its self make a good movie. then there's t

          • If you did LotR without the graphics, painted scenery, costumes, epic music and special effects you'd have theatre. There's a reason cinema is way more popular than theatre - these things matter and can really take a story to the next level.

            Oh, also I don't agree that if the story is bad a film can't be successful. Look at the first Star Wars movie. The plot was derivative, predictable crap. It was an amazing success because it just had that magical something to it, and awesome special effects.

            • Wait, by "first" do you mean episode I or IV?
            • if you did LOTR without a plot it would be fscking awful and you know this. I would rather have a good plot and few effects than a fscking awful plot that was scribbled on a napkin 5 mins prior to shooting the film with awsesome effects and I bet a lot of people would agree. enough in fact that ignoring them is a huge mistake.

              Oh, also I don't agree that if the story is bad a film can't be successful. Look at the first Star Wars movie. The plot was derivative, predictable crap. It was an amazing success b

          • I dont care how much money they throw at the problem, if their storyline/plot are bad the movie is BAD. no amount of eye candy and pretty shots are going to fix it. LOTR did well
            Except that Transformer is nothing but eye candy, and Transformer did well, too.
            There's no business like show business. And they know the formula: Throw in pretty people with car chases and explosions, and the teenagers will come and give you money.
    • by TheMCP ( 121589 )

      This isnt the end of studios, those amatuerish videos on YouTube may be entertaining but you will still need large organizations to produce anything complex. The only thing that will change is that some of the marketing and sales may be different.

      I agree, but I think some additional considerations need to be made.

      The barrier to entry is much lower today. It used to be that just the cost of a couple cameras and a darkroom and film and chemicals was prohibitive. Now you can get all you need to film a pro qual

    • The Studios (TM), meaning those who control production and distribution are becoming obsolete. Production studios (What you mean) aren't. However, there are facilities that you can rent out for several thousand dollars per day/month that have all the equipment. All you have to provide are the actors. Hell, "The Studios(TM)" even rent out spaces from such facilities anymore.

      I think Sin City only had most of the actors on stage for 1 or 2 days. I forget the total amount of time they actual shot princip

      • Hiring a good PR/Advertising firm and going to digital downloads may be the future.
        The distant future. As of 2008, there is still a digital divide [wikipedia.org], and the major studios control the distribution and promotion to the have-nots.
    • by elrous0 ( 869638 ) *
      Whatever it takes to get the "According to Jim" writers working again is just fine by me. A day without their genius wit is like a day in Hell.
  • good (Score:4, Insightful)

    by superwiz ( 655733 ) on Saturday December 29, 2007 @01:58PM (#21849742) Journal
    This is how it's supposed to work. If they don't like the business terms offered to them, they should work on their own terms.
  • If you can't get an agreement with the bosses, just take over the damn factory and run it yourself! http://www.thetake.org/index.cfm?page_name=synopsis [thetake.org] It looks like the strike will be settled one deal at a time, like they just did with David Letterman. ( http://gothamist.com/2007/12/29/wga_update_real.php [gothamist.com] ). The power of the AMPTP has been seriously underminded. The writers will get deals eventually. After all, without writers, how will they make reality TV shows?
  • I have no problem with the WGA sticking it to the studios - If the "rights"-holders have no one to write Rocky LVXII, perhaps they won't subject us to it.

    I don't care about A-list actors - In most cases, I prefer second-string actors, for whom "hunger" still keeps "ego" in check.

    I love the idea of distribution outside MPAA control, for reasons obvious to any Slashdotter.

    But... Going back to my Rocky LVXII, I also have little sympathy for the hacks who keep trying to feed us the same trite watered-down
    • Well, except for the vulgarities.

      I'm glad to know I'm not alone in the "The writers have legitimate grievances, which the production companies should address, but they should probably hire scabs to replace most of the writers, anyway." camp.
    • by andphi ( 899406 )
      As with anything else, according to Sturgeon's Law, most of what is written for TV, Movies, and internet-direct distribution is crap. We mostly notice the 90%, and wonder why writers deserve more money. However, the current deal seems to give the short end of the stick to the 10% of writers who do their jobs well. Note also, that your 10% of quality and my 10% of quality may be entirely different.

      The best way to make sure the good stay in the market is for the Studioes to give them their fair share of the p
  • You know, the writers could always go back to doing what writers did before the advent of movie studios, TV networks, and the like. There are these things called "Books" and "Plays" which are considerably easier and less costly to form into a finished product than movies and TV shows are.
  • http://xkcd.com/360/ [xkcd.com] - insightful and funny as usual.
  • by EdIII ( 1114411 )
    Maybe I have just got so cynical over the years.. but the first thing I thought of when I heard this was the book by Orwell, Animal Farm. The writers are going to BECOME what they hate. They now have the impetus to form their own distribution channels. They are not bypassing the Movie Studios. They are BECOMING the Movie Studios. If they do actually pull it off, maybe they will have better compensation packages for the writers in the long term. I am still reminded though, that power corrupts and that
  • by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Saturday December 29, 2007 @07:04PM (#21852010)
    Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • by markjhood2003 ( 779923 ) on Saturday December 29, 2007 @07:49PM (#21852300)
    It's my understanding that these writers are on staff, earning regular salaries. How are they in principal different from professional software developers working for Silicon Valley companies? If their pay is miserably low, sure, striking for better pay is reasonable, but why should they get paid residuals every time the product of their work brings in income for their employers?
    • Maybe salary, maybe for tv series. And then only if it is a particularly long running tv series. For movie writers, much like authors, there's one decent check every 1-4 years. The residuals are what keep them afloat while writing their next piece and trying to get someone to produce it.
    • [...] why should they get paid residuals every time the product of their work brings in income for their employers?

      As an engineer I typically get a salary and stock options, in some companies I get a bonus, too. I guess it would be just as reasonable to get a higher salary and no bonus or stock options. But that's merely a contractual detail - it's open to negotiation, just as anything else. So why should the writers not get paid residuals in addition to a salary? If that's the way they want to get paid,

  • You know... when you get right down to it, maybe this strike isn't so bad. For a lot of us, we're finally being driven to use the "off" button on our tv remotes and start looking at other aspects of our lives that have long since become neglected. Whether it's socializing, exercising or picking up on our old hobbies, it's all a damned site better than the mindless drek we've been staring at aimlessly all these years.

    It's almost like waking up after a night of binge drinking, only to find that your one-night

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