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Prolonged writers strike a nightmare for TV biz
Paul J. Gough
NEW YORK—Television executives’ nightmare scenarios for 2008 are coming
closer to reality as the Hollywood writers strike enters its sixth week
Monday. Renewed contract talks between the Writers Guild of America (WGA)
and the Alliance of Motion Picture & Television Producers (AMPTP) broke
off abruptly Friday, and industry executives see no end in sight to the
worst Hollywood labour dispute in almost two decades.
The full effect of the strike will start to play across primetime in
January. CBS, NBC and Fox have already outlined their first-quarter
plans: midseason scripted shows, reality shows and judicious repeats.
(ABC is expected to announce its strike-afflicted schedule early this
week). If the strike lasts another four to six weeks, it could spell the
end for 2008 pilot production. The most-circulated scenario in that case
involves the networks renewing all their existing series for next fall,
producing their pilots in the summer and launching their new crop of
shows in midseason 2009.
Such a disruption could imperil the annual “upfront” market in May, when
the networks sell the bulk of their advertising slots for the next
season. Uneasy ad buyers already are concerned about the expected
audience erosion in the first and especially the second quarter.
“There’s been a lag in primetime with the strike. No one has felt the
impact of it for the first weeks,” said Brad Adgate, senior vp research
at New York-based ad buyer Horizon Media. “But (the networks) aren’t
putting their best foot forward (anymore). And the longer this thing is
dragged out, the worse it’s going to be in terms of scheduling.”
One network executive said that it’s tough to plan for something when
you don’t know how long you’re going to be planning for. “We have all
kinds of programming we can reach for,” the executive said. “I think the
toughest part of planning for this is just the unknown. We don’t know.
Is this going to end in a week? Two weeks? A month? Two months? That’s
the toughest part.” The networks are starting to look at what to do
about March and April and even later than that, depending on how long
the strike lasts. |