The day after New York-based pickets were canceled for the week because of smoke, the gathering at Warner Bros. in Los Angeles was a bit smaller on Thursday, with less than 50 people gathering in support of the WGA strike.
22.05.2023 - 21:01 / deadline.com
The last time WGA picket lines formed in 2007, writers didn’t have an efficient way to communicate with fellow strikers about group meet-ups, illegal productions, and all those clever placards. The only place they could turn to for regular information was this very space, in which the late Nikki Finke would post regular missives about strike action, the broken-off negotiations and the financial impact of the 100-day work stoppage.
My, have times changed. Even with the new and so-not-improved platform under Elon Musk, Twitter has become the go-to town square for writers looking for either marching orders or just plain encouragement from their fellow strikers. When writers aren’t trying to boost morale, they are posting selfies from the picket lines and sharing locations where more reinforcements are needed to battle the AMPTP.
“Twitter has turned into an invaluable tool in getting picketers to our lines,” Strike Captain Warren Leight (Law & Order: SVU) tells Deadline. “We get hundreds of fast retweets, and the WGA East Rapid Responders respond rapidly, as do actors, students, and other allies. Just one example: Thursday night in Jersey City we had a picket line that was down to three people — four if you include one writer’s young daughter. I tweeted out an urgent request for reinforcements on Twitter. Nine people got there within half an hour. The show, which had been hoping to reopen once the small line flagged, ended up shutting down for the night.”
It’s a far cry from from the last strike, when any kind of mass communication had to occur via email only. As New Amsterdam creator David Schulner recalled to Deadline four years ago, a number of showrunners felt conflicted in the first days of the 2007-08 strike, torn
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