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Thursday, November 8th, 2007 11:45 am
Flist, for some reason it is making me insanely happy that Steve Carell refused to cross the picket line.




Also, speaking as someone from a place where $20,000 a year was generally considered good living well into the 1990s, okay, so the $200,000 a year screenwriters claim they make seems like a giant pile of cash. Basically. But thinking about the cost of living where screenwriting jobs are makes me wonder if they are, in fact, living in bunk beds in studio warehouses and eating a pack of ramen every other day. Is there anyone out there who's lived in a screenwriting location and can give me some perspective on this?

Last note (I have schoolwork to do right now, as my extended digression into current events makes clear): it is cool to actually see the people that make the shows happen. We see the actors, but they're not really responsible for the content, and seeing the people who actually make their living making the media is pretty neat.

ETA: unitedhollywood.com, and I know there's fannish stuff going on in support, someone please link me up?
Thursday, November 8th, 2007 09:58 pm (UTC)

[livejournal.com profile] wga_supporters has tons and tons and tons and toons of links.
Friday, November 9th, 2007 12:33 am (UTC)
Also, [livejournal.com profile] boji has made a bunch of posts full of useful info
Friday, November 9th, 2007 09:49 am (UTC)
200K doesn't go that far in the screenwriting biz (not my gig; I have friends.) Yes, the cost-of-living is hella high on the Left Coast for one. For two, like schoolteachers, they aren't employed 52-weeks out of the year: in TV, they're employed (and paid) during the season, and when the show is on hiatus, so is their paycheck. They have WGA dues (which are worth it, but aren't low), pay their own medical (usually), and have to pay a number of willing consorts: the minimum is a lawyer, an agent, and an accountant (or all the money goes *away*, and they're dealing with a shitload of legal liability in the first place.) All these expenses precede food, shelter, and transportation.

They don't work eight-hour days. They don't get weekends off. Because of this, the next expense (and not everybody I know can afford one) is usually a PA, who is not as much a luxury as a case of: 'if somebody can't do the grocery shopping I'm going to starve.'

The job, while glamorous, is high-pressure and involves lots of emotional abuse, which, yeah, they kicked and clawed to *get* it, no lie, but it takes its toll, and everything you do to compensate for pressure, from go to the doctor to play video games, costs money. And the more pressure, the more compensation.

So maybe not quite at the poverty level, but 200K has a lot of calls on its time for WGA members...