strike (10 posts)
Russell Crowe's Robin Hood Redo Washed Out by Rain, Strike Fears, Lousy Script
Russell Crowe and Ridley Scott's Robin Hood remake is unwelcome in Sherwood—at least based on the way things are going.
Production on the upcoming Nottingham, directed by Scott and starring Crowe as the Sheriff of Nottingham and Sienna Miller as Maid Marian, has been delayed indefinitely, according to distributor Universal Pictures.
Strike Deadline Looms for Hollywood Actors
To strike or not to strike? That is the question dogging Hollywood.
But while filmmakers, TV producers, casts and crews are holding their collective breaths with the Screen Actors Guild contract due to expire at midnight, union president Alan Rosenberg says there is no immediate work stoppage in the, um, works.
House, Bones Checking Back In
Fox's doctors are back in the house.
House, Bones and two of the network's sitcoms have resumed production and will close out the strike-afflicted season with new episodes, Fox announced Tuesday.
House, Fox's third biggest show behind American Idol and upstart The Moment of Truth, is to return with fresh medical drama starting Apr. 28.
Bones, Fox's sturdy forensic study, is due back Apr. 14.
The comedies Back to You and 'Til Death are scheduled to begin their spring runs Apr. 16.
There was no word on how many new episodes each of the four shows will crank out.
Fox said 24 and three of its Sunday-night animated comedies, The Simpsons, Family Guy and American Dad, were also back in production following last week's end to the protracted Hollywood writers' strike.
But it said 24, as earlier reported, wouldn't clock in for its seventh season until next January. And it referred to the animated shows' new wares as "future episodes," making it sound as if those, too, won't be viewed until the dawn of the 2008-09 season. (Cartoon series require months more lead time to produce.)
There was no mention in the network release of King of the Hill, Fox's other Sunday night 'toon. But the network said all four animated series will air a mix of repeats and pre-strike completed new episodes through the end of the season, save Family Guy.
As for King of the Hill, the network said it's finishing out its season, and that no new episodes have yet been ordered.
Also absent from Fox's back-to-work decree: the low-rated freshman cop show K-Ville; the sputtering Terminator spinoff, The Sarah Connor Chronicles; and the long-running Prison Break, which wrapped its strike-shortened season Monday night. Although networks never officially cancel anything, K-Ville has been considered pretty much canceled for months.
With Monday's announcement, Fox becomes the third of the big four networks to unveil its initial poststrike plans. ABC, which last week gave a glimpse at its fall schedule, has yet to announce spring return dates for the likes of Grey's Anatomy, Desperate Housewives and more.
For fans of Bones, Fox's news is likely most welcome. That drama aired its last original prestrike episode all the way back in November.
Back to You and 'Til Death ran out of stock, too, but Fox held some episodes to air this month and next. The network, likewise, hoarded House, saving one of its new hours for Super Bowl Sunday.
Jay, Conan Strike Down Reruns
The lights are coming back on for late-night talk shows.
Jay Leno and Conan O'Brien on Monday became the first lords of late-night TV to announce plans to return to the airwaves despite the ongoing writers' strike, with both funnymen set to reclaim their late-night thrones Jan. 2.
Leno and O'Brien received the blessing of the Writers Guild of America with one caveat: The shows' card-carrying union scribes will not be penning jokes. That means the NBC shows won't feature the usual pretaped bits, sketches or monologues when they return, leaving Leno and O'Brien to bring the funny themselves. (Both are members of the Writers Guild and are prolific joke writers.)
CBS' David Letterman and Craig Ferguson are expected to follow with a similar announcement later today. Letterman's Worldwide Pants confirmed over the weekend it was working on an exemption with the WGA that would trump his late-night rivals by allowing the full writing staffs of Late Show and Late Late Show also to return.
Both Leno and O'Brien hashed out individual deals with the WGA to proceed with skeleton staffs, without fear of disruption via picketers or industry alienation, as befell picket line-crossing network mate Carson Daly late last month.
The Tonight Show and Late Night have been airing repeats since the strike kicked off Nov. 5. Both hosts have been footing the salaries of their staffs during the work stoppage.
"This has been a very difficult six weeks for everybody affected by the writers' strike," Leno said in a statement. "I was, like most people, hoping for a quick resolution when this began. I remained positive during the talks, and while they were still at the table discussing a solution The Tonight Show remained dark in support of our writing staff.
"Now that the talks have broken down and there are no further negotiations scheduled, I feel it's my responsibility to get my 100 nonwriting staff, which were laid off, back to work. We fully support our writers, and I think they understand my decision."
O'Brien, too, expressed his solidarity with the Writers Guild, despite his resuming work schedule, saying he has been "and continues to be an ardent supporter of the WGA and their cause."
"Since the strike began, I have stayed off the air in support of the striking writers while, at the same time, doing everything I could to take care of the 80 nonwriting staff members on Late Night.
"Unfortunately, now with the New Year upon us, I am left with a difficult decision," O'Brien said, adding that the decision would have been a no-brainer should such a large contingent of loyal staffers not be faced with the prospect of an ever-lengthening unemployment line.
"If my show were entirely scripted, I would have no choice. But the truth is that shows like mine are hybrids, with both written and non-written content."
Not that he doesn't think his show will suffer for the lack of writers.
"An unwritten version of Late Night, though not desirable, is possible—and no one has to be fired...I will make clear, on the program, my support for the writers, and I'll do the best version of Late Night I can under the circumstances. Of course, my hope is that all of my writers are back soon, working under a contract that provides them everything they deserve."
NBC has not yet announced any guests for the hosts' returns.
The WGA released a statement suggesting the Leno and O'Brien comebacks were only a stopgap solution.
"NBC forcing Jay Leno and Conan O’Brien back on the air without writers is not going to provide the quality entertainment that the public deserves," the union said.
Meanwhile, while no official announcement has been made, Letterman and Ferguson are expected to return to CBS' airwaves in early January with their full writing staffs on board.
The coup is possible because both Late Show and Late Late Show are produced by Worldwide Pants, which is an independent production company. An interim agreement between Letterman's crew and the WGA—an agreement not involving CBS—allowed the return to airwaves to take place.
For much of the past six weeks, Worldwide Pants has been laboring for a WGA waiver to continue production on The Late Show. Letterman himself has been a member of the guild for 30 years.
"Worldwide Pants has always been a writer-friendly company," Worldwide Pants CEO and Late Show exec producer Rob Burnett said in a statement Saturday. "Since the beginning of the strike, we have expressed our willingness to sign an interim agreement with the Guild consistent with its positions in this dispute.
"We're happy that the Guild has now adopted an approach that might make this possible. It is our strong desire to be back on the air with our writers, and we hope that will happen as soon as possible."
CBS, meanwhile, has already distanced itself from the announcement, saying the network respects Worldwide Pants' efforts to get their shows back on air, but that it still is backing the Alliance of Motion Picture and Television Producers in this horse race.
"This development should not confuse the fact that CBS remains unified with the AMPTP, and committed to working with the member companies to reach a fair and reasonable agreement with the WGA that positions everyone in our industry for success in a rapidly changing marketplace."
The deals for Letterman and his NBC late-night rivals were fast-tracked after negotiations in the strike came to a standstill Dec. 7. Their comeback announcements could also pave the way for ABC's Jimmy Kimmel and Comedy Central's Jon Stewart and Stephen Colbert to return to the fray soon.









