Sides talking but writers still walking
By Carl DiOrio and Diana Britton
LOS ANGELES/NEW YORK (Hollywood Reporter) - Day Two of a planned three-day stretch of double-secret contract talks between the WGA and studio reps seemed to go well enough Tuesday, with parties yakking all day and agreeing to do it again in the morning.
But Wednesday will be the real test of whether the parties are determined to find a way to end the 3 1/2-week writers' strike. For one thing, industryites will watching to see if the guild and the Alliance of Motion Picture & Television Producers schedule any further negotiating sessions.
Wednesday's session is expected to start at 10 a.m. PST, again at an undisclosed location. The parties' recently instituted media blackout has prevented many details of the week's progress from getting out, but it appeared there was no major bombshell among any of the contract proposals discussed Tuesday.
The latest session marked the 19th day of talks since the Writers Guild of America and AMPTP launched their film and TV contract negotiations on July 16. The writers went on strike November 5, five days after the expiration of their three-year pact and one day after the last bargaining session before this week.
MANHATTAN RALLY
Picketing continued at sites throughout Los Angeles on Tuesday. In New York, Democratic presidential candidate John Edwards was among politicians and others showing up to support a "solidarity rally" that the WGA East staged in Washington Square Park.
Guild organizers estimated the rally crowd at almost 1,000, with U.S. Reps. Anthony Weiner and Jerry Nadler and Manhattan borough president Scott Stringer among those on hand. Screen Actors Guild members Tim Robbins, Edie Falco, Danny Glover, Joe Pantoliano and other union actors also voiced support for the WGA.
Edwards, who previously appeared at a WGA picket line in Los Angeles, expressed his support for the WGA's strike efforts. "We're in this thing together," he told the rally crowd. "The truth is, it's crucial for the future of America."
Edwards is among political figures recently bowing out of scheduled talk show appearances in support of the strike. Like the other Democratic presidential front-runners, Edwards has vowed to boycott a candidates debate on December 10 if a potential strike by CBS newswriters goes forward.
"I'm proud of all your brothers and sisters being with you in this absolutely important cause, because what we have to do together is ... show strength," Edwards said. "We have to show that working people in this country actually deserve a chance. We have to show that we're going to have economic fairness and economic justice in America again."
Robbins told the rally crowd the WGA's fight is essentially a middle-class struggle.
"This is not a strike of millionaire writers," Robbins said. "This is a strike of middle-class writers trying to make this month's rent."
NATIONAL SCOPE
WGAE spokeswoman Sherry Goldman said the rally turnout showed that the strike is a national issue that brings together people bonded by labor. "It's not our fight," she said. "It's everybody's fight."
Dan Hughes, a student specializing in labor law at nearby New York University Law School, said he saw the WGA's public fight with Hollywood studios as a rallying cry for the labor movement in general. Continued...





