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The Directors Guild of America’s president Michael Apted is
expected to announce today the date when the talks for early contract will
start.
Talks won’t start before January 1, most likely, but Apted
and negotiating committee chair Gil Cates will team up for talks with lead
staff negotiator and DGA exec director Jay Roth. They’ve received permission
from the DGA board to pick a date for the talks with the Alliance of Motion Picture & Television
Producers, Hollywood Reporter informs.
The negotiations due to take place between AMPTP-DGA are the
consequence of the breakdown on Friday of the talks between the studio group
and the Writers Guild of America.
DGA is known for starting new deals six month before the
existing contract expires.
The central matter in the DGA’s negotiations will probably
be new-media compensation and jurisdiction.
The DGA's negotiating team held meetings for months and
Wednesday night was one of those meetings that lead to speculations that guild
leaders will contact AMPTP today.
WGA said that they won’t take into account what the DGA will
propose and that they will stick to their contract demands.
Some are saying that cracks in the WGA are starting to
appear.
A top show runner said Wednesday: "They tried to split
the membership from the leadership (and) it worked to a degree. But once you
talk to members, or once show runners talk to show runners, it's pretty easy to
see it for what it was -- a decent tactic. I don't think the AMPTP had any
intention of negotiating in good faith last week. I think they want everyone to
sit out over Christmas and make the town think twice about the cost of taking a
strike, so that no one else will do it for a good long while."
The AMPTP gave an ultimatum to the WGA saying to drop the
demands about reality TV and animation jurisdiction from their negotiations.
Meanwhile the guild continued to picket in Los
Angeles, and in New York
meetings took place between guild leaders.
One of the rallies on the West Coast took place outside Paramount, where black,
Asian and Latino writers and actors where invited by the WGA West’s committee
of diversity to join the rally.
Among supporters where Frances Fisher, Katherine Heigl, Kimberly
Elise, Orlando Jones, Rex Lee, T.R. Knight, Sara Ramirez, Tracee Ellis Ross and
Isaiah Washington, Variety reports.
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