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Union rebukes DeGeneres over writers strike
Steve Gorman
LOS ANGELES—Comedian and daytime TV host Ellen DeGeneres drew a scathing
rebuke on Friday from a union representing striking screenwriters for
resuming work on her show after honoring picket lines the first day of
the walkout.
The New York wing of the Writers Guild of America, actually a separate
union called the WGA East, issued a statement saying DeGeneres was “not
welcome” in New York and threatening to picket her show if she went
ahead with plans to tape there on November 19 and 20.
But DeGeneres, a member of both the Writers Guild and its sister union
for TV performers, the American Federation of Television and Radio
Artists, drew immediate support from AFTRA and producers of her show.
Both denied WGA East claims the popular TV star was breaking strike
rules. The flap came weeks after DeGeneres sparked a national uproar
with a tearful on-air account of how an animal rescue group had taken
back a puppy she had adopted but then given to a friend’s family without
the animal agency’s permission. “We find it sad that Ellen spent an
entire week crying and fighting for a dog that she gave away, yet she
couldn’t even stand by writers for more than one day,” the WGA East
said.
The WGA West, generally considered less militant than its East Coast
counterpart, had no comment on the issue. “Ellen” show producers
Telepictures Productions fired back with a statement saying WGA strike
rules exempt any writing by entertainers who perform the material
themselves. Telepictures also said the union’s comparison between
DeGeneres, whose daytime talk show is nationally syndicated to
individual TV stations and other comedians hosting late-night programs
on the major networks, was unfair. NBC’s “The Tonight Show with Jay
Leno” and CBS’ “Late Show with David Letterman, for example, have been
on production hiatus since the first day of the writers’ strike while
their networks air reruns of the programs.
Telepictures “has contractual obligations to continue to deliver
original programming to the 220 stations that carry the (“Ellen”)
program,” her producers said.
It was not clear why the WGA East singled out DeGeneres rather than her
syndicated TV peers, including Oprah Winfrey, kitchen guru Rachael Ray
or psychologist Dr. Phil McGraw.
AFTRA director Kim Roberts Hedgpeth weighed in with an angry letter of
her own to the WGA East, saying DeGeneres was legally bound under the
no-strike cause of her AFTRA contract to report to work on her show.
Appearing on Friday, the first episode she taped after taking Monday off
to support the strike, DeGeneres said, “This is a strange show for me to
do. It’s weird.” |