Apple has become the latest entertainment company to suspend additional overall and first-look deals this month as the WGA strike is getting past the four-and-a-half-month mark.

As has been the case with the other recent suspensions at Disney, NBCUniversal, Warner Bros. TV and CBS Studios, impacted are non-writing producers who are not currently rendering services due to the ongoing WGA and SAG-AFTRA strikes. I hear the handful of pacts that are being suspended include those for Natalie Portman’s MountainA, the company she formed with producer Sophie Mas, and Adam McKay’s Hyperobject Industries. A rep for Apple declined comment.

A number of the streamer’s high-profile deals with non-writing producers are still ongoing as they are working on projects, including Tom Hanks and Gary Goetzman’s Playtone, which is behind the upcoming Apple series Masters of the Air. Martin Scorsese, who signed a film and TV deal with the streamer in 2020, also has been busy finishing and promoting his upcoming Apple feature Killers of the Flower Moon.

Disney’s suspensions, enacted earlier this week, included deals with Gina Rodriguez and ThIs Is Us alums Justin Hartley, Milo Ventimiglia and Mandy Moore at 20th Television, Yara Shahidi and Marc Webb at ABC Signature as well as Hiro Murai, Billy Porter and Stacey Sher at FX Productions. The studios will provide salaries for the impacted assistants through the end of 2023 and development executives through the first week of October.

WBTV’s list of suspensions included marquee names such as Greg Berlanti, Bill Lawrence and Mindy Kaling. The NBCUniversal studios — both film and TV — suspended the pacts for Lorne Michaels’ Broadway Video and Dwayne Johnson’s Seven Bucks Prods, among others. CBS Studios put on pause deals with such companies as Phil McGraw’s Stage 29 and DeVon Franklin’s Franklin Entertainment. The studio also will continue to pay salaries to assistants associated with the suspended term deals through the end of 2023.

TV studios initiated the first wave of suspending overall and first-look deals –- primarily with writers — in early May, just days into the WGA strike. There have been more rolling suspensions over the past couple of months as more producers wrapped work on shows amid an industry production shutdown.

The new round comes as the WGA and SAG-AFTRA strikes are stretching into the fall. In the first piece of good news in weeks, the WGA and AMPTP said yesterday that they have agreed to meet next week.

  • @Conyak@lemmy.tf
    link
    fedilink
    English
    519 months ago

    All of these studios of fucking stupid. They refuse to pay more to the writers now but come next year they won’t have shit to sell to viewers. If they think I’m going to sit and watch some bullshit AI generated drivel they are sorely mistaken.

    • matchphoenixOP
      link
      English
      279 months ago

      Not defending studios, fuck them, pay your talent

      I think they’re thinking they can patch this over with reality tv (or at least they did in the last writer’s strike), documentaries, and with international content. I’m betting Netflix is shifting a ton of money towards the Asian and European markets for next year’s content.

      • @InvertedParallax@lemm.ee
        link
        fedilink
        English
        169 months ago

        Netflix’s plan is foreign content, coupled with reality, but their long term goal is ai generated content.

        Theyre… special. They think their farts smell nice and they’re smarter than everyone else, they just want to get likeness rights locked down now or they’ll do without.

        Apparently their execs saw promising demos, they believe the engineers will have the whole problem solved in 3 years, the engineers know they’re smoking crack.

        Ai is such a massive con game to cover for the fact that we’re hitting market saturation in multiple sectors and roi will drop.

        • nevernevermore
          link
          fedilink
          49 months ago

          Apparently their execs saw promising demos, they believe the engineers will have the whole problem solved in 3 years, the engineers know they’re smoking crack.

          reminds me of uber, who were likely sold the dream of a fleet of fully self driving cars within a few years, so they only had to deal with pesky “employees” for that long.

          • @InvertedParallax@lemm.ee
            link
            fedilink
            English
            29 months ago

            Sorry, I said this and I wasn’t very fair to them.

            Their plan is to start by taking other media, particularly comics and Manga, and generating near shot for shot reproductions starting in animation then moving to “augmented live action”, basically some guys and cgi fills in the rest.

            I’m not sure they can’t do it, it’ll just take longer than they expect .

          • @InvertedParallax@lemm.ee
            link
            fedilink
            English
            19 months ago

            You’re right, but I also think they’re more realistic, it’s about having the alternative source of content as a genre and expanding out from there.

      • @Conyak@lemmy.tf
        link
        fedilink
        English
        89 months ago

        Interesting. Well, I despise all reality T.V. so maybe they can produce some good documentaries I’ll watch.

  • leaskovski
    link
    fedilink
    29 months ago

    I just want to know when Masters of the Air is going to be released.