David Letterman is one happy guy.
“I am grateful to the WGA for granting us this agreement,”
Letterman said in a recent statement to the press.
A few weeks back Letterman’s production company, Worldwide
Pants, went public with its plan to seek a separate deal with the Writer’s
Guild of America (WGA). The comedian got what he wanted.
As a result, the Letterman show and Craig Ferguson’s “Late
Late Show,” also produced by Letterman’s company, get to go back on the air
with help from their writers pumping out jokes.
Unlike their competitors who have no similar agreements,
which includes Jay Leno and Conan O’Brien, Letterman and Ferguson are now going
to be able to get the big-name celebs on their shows.
Two important facts explain Letterman’s huge score.
The first fact has to do with history. Back in 1988 when the
writers last struck, the late-night shows affected were the “Tonight” show,
then-hosted by Johnny Carson, and “Late Night” hosted by Letterman. Both shows
were on NBC at the time.
Carson was able to cut a separate agreement with the
Writer’s Guild while Letterman had no agreement and consequently had to host
his show for weeks minus the writers. That kind of experience can leave an
indelible mark in a late-night comic’s memory bank.
The second fact has to do with business. Sometimes it really
does matter who owns the show.
Unlike his competitors, Letterman was able to negotiate
directly with the union because his company owns his program as well as
Ferguson's.
With shows like NBC's Leno and O’Brien, ABC’s Jimmy Kimmel
and Comedy Central's Jon Stewart and Stephen Colbert going back on the air
without having made deals with the union, writers intend to exert heavy
pressure.
In a joint letter to their members, the WGA East and WGA
West said, “In the case of late-night
shows, our strike pressure will be intense and essential in directing political
and SAG-member guests to Letterman and Ferguson rather than to struck talk
shows.”
Also included in the letter was the following: “At this
time, picket lines at venues such as NBC (both Burbank and Rockefeller Center),
The Daily Show, The Colbert Report, and the Golden Globes are essential.”
What does it mean?
“Struck talk shows” is a reference to those of Leno, Conan,
etc., who will obviously find it a lot more difficult to book guests. In
addition, the shows will most likely serve as targets of intensified picket activity.
All of which means the funny business doesn’t seem so funny
right now.
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