Current:Home > StocksAs writers and studios resume negotiations, here are the key players in the Hollywood strikes -FundGuru
As writers and studios resume negotiations, here are the key players in the Hollywood strikes
Algosensey Quantitative Think Tank Center View
Date:2025-04-10 20:50:28
LOS ANGELES (AP) — Negotiations between striking screenwriters and Hollywood studios are set to resume Wednesday, the latest attempt to bring an end to pickets that have brought film and television productions to a halt.
The two sides have been divided on issues of pay, the size of writing staffs on shows and the use of artificial intelligence in how scripts are created. Actors, who joined the writers on strike in July, have their own issues but there have been no discussions about resuming negotiations with their union yet.
The key players in the two strikes that have brought Hollywood to a halt include little-known leaders, labor lawyers, entertainment tycoons and the actor who played “The Nanny.”
Here’s a look at the figures who brought on the walk-off of actors and screenwriters, and who have the power to send them back to work:
CAROL LOMBARDINI
Her name is little known outside the industry, and she nearly never speaks to the media, but as head of the opposition in both the writers and actors strikes, Carol Lombardini is arguably the most important single figure in Hollywood’s labor stoppage.
For 14 years, she has led negotiations for studios in contract talks with all of Hollywood’s unions and guilds. Many of the negotiations she’s headed have come to the brink or run past deadlines, but none ever led to a strike, much less two, before now.
Since 2009, Lombardini, a lawyer has been president and chief negotiator of the Alliance of Motion Picture and Television Producers, the conglomeration of studios, streaming services and production companies that creates contracts with unions.
She grew up in a working class suburb of Boston, got a degree in Renaissance history from the University of Chicago, and earned a law degree from Stanford. She worked for a pair of private firms before joining the AMPTP as an attorney when the group was first formed in 1982.
A respected if adversarial figure in years past, she has become the target of much of strikers’ vitriol. She appears often on picket signs and is the subject of many parody social media accounts.
ELLEN STUTZMAN
Ellen Stutzman in May 2023. (AP Photo/Damian Dovarganes, File)
Ellen Stutzman was the one sitting across the table from Lombardini in the failed negotiations that led to the writers strike. It is not a seat she expected to occupy when the year began.
Stutzman, also an attorney, took over as chief negotiator for the Writers Guild on Feb. 28, just two weeks before contract talks began. She entered the role after longtime lead negotiator David Young, who led the guild through the 2007-2008 strike, stepped down for health reasons.
She still has the title from her previous role: assistant executive director for the Writers Guild of America West. Stutzman joined the union as a researcher in 2006. Researching the union’s issues and educating union members, government officials and the public on them are a specialty.
“We would tell the viewers and the public that writers are fighting to have a career, and to have a viable profession, and to continue to create the shows and movies that people in this country and around the world love,” Stutzman told The AP on the first day of the writers strike in May. “We hope that they’ll support them in that fight.”
Generally regarded as more low key and less combative than Young, Stutzman played a key role in writers’ 2019 fight with agents, in which WGA members fired their representatives en masse over plans by Hollywood’s major talent agencies to expand into production. The union also sued the agencies, calling the potential move a conflict of interest and a violation of antitrust law. That battle — which the writers won — in some ways served as a dress rehearsal for the current strike.
Stutzman graduated from the School of Industrial and Labor Relations at Cornell University in 2004 and worked for the Service Employees International Union-United Healthcare Workers before joining the Writers Guild.
THREE KEY CEOS
Iger, Sarandos and Zaslav (AP Photo)
Lombardini and the AMPTP represent a coalition of more than 350 companies, but as in the entertainment industry itself, a few giants dominate. Three leaders have come to embody the group: Disney CEO Bob Iger, Warner Bros. Discovery chief executive David Zaslav and Netflix co-CEO Ted Sarandos.
As chief executive of entertainment’s biggest behemoth, Disney’s Bob Iger would always have been a target for strikers. But a new contract reportedly worth more than $30 million annually, the day before the actors strike was called, and his comments the following day, made him the first name on the lips and signs of many strikers. Iger said that it was “the worst time in the world” to add to the disruptions the industry’s already facing.
The industry’s shift to a streaming model is behind most of the issues that led to the strike. Netflix pioneered that model, and its leader Ted Sarandos has come to signify it for strikers. Sarandos joined Netflix in 2000, shortly after its founding, and initiated its move into original programming with “Lilyhammer,” “House of Cards” and “Orange is the New Black.”
As CEO of Warner-Discovery, David Zaslav, for strikers, embodies the entertainment executive who shifts away from elite creative programming toward reality TV and other less vaunted programming, most manifest on Max, the streaming service that under his watch dropped “HBO” from its name.
Before the strikes began he was already scorned by many on the creative side for shelving nearly finished projects like “Batgirl” and turning them into tax write-offs.
The three executives have attempted to take a more direct role in the standoff, meeting in person with Writers Guild negotiators last month in an effort to restart talks. But the WGA said in a statement afterward that they were “met with a lecture about how good their single and only counteroffer was.”
FRAN DRESCHER
Fran Drescher is the strikes’ most famous face, both for her starring role in the 1990s sitcom “The Nanny” and for the speech she made that gave a spark to actors as their strike was announced.
Drescher was re-elected last week as president of the Screen Actors Guild-American Federation of Television, a job she’s had since 2021.
(AP Photo/Chris Pizzello, File)
She shook the leadership reins of SAG-AFTRA with her fiery speech at the news conference announcing the strike on July 14. Drescher told The Associated Press in an interview that she had scrapped a written statement moments before, and improvised.
“When you speak from the heart, people are so responsive,” Drescher told The AP in an interview. “Because I guess they see a lot of people that don’t. And so it kind of cuts through the noise when it does.”
Drescher was born, raised and went to community college in Queens, New York. She had a series of increasingly memorable small roles, usually playing brash New Yorkers, starting with “Saturday Night Fever” in 1976.
She became a household name when she co-created and starred in “The Nanny.” The series ran on CBS from 1993 to 1999 and took much of its inspiration from her life.
WRITING PRESIDENTS
Winship in 2014; Stiehm in May 2023 (AP Photo)
As always, writers toil in (relative) anonymity compared to the famous actors they write scripts for. Drescher’s less-known counterparts on the writers’ side — technically two unions that unite for negotiations and strikes — are Michael Winship and Meredith Stiehm. Winship is president of the Writers Guild of America East and Stiehm president of its counterpart in the West.
Both have long careers as Emmy-winning television writers. Stiehm was creator of the early 2000s CBS crime procedural “Cold Case” and co-creator of “The Bridge” on FX. Winship has worked more in news and educational programming, writing shows for PBS, the Discovery and Learning Channels and the Sesame Workshop. He’s soon stepping down and will be replaced by Lisa Takeuchi Cullen, who has developed drama series for several networks and streamers.
Stiehm overwhelmingly won reelection to another two-year term Tuesday.
All three have put down their pens and picked up picket signs.
DUNCAN CRABTREE-IRELAND
Crabtree-Ireland (Photo by Jordan Strauss/Invision/AP, File)
Hollywood’s guilds operate like cities that have an elected mayor who sets the agenda, and a city manager who oversees operations more directly. If Drescher is SAG-AFTRA’s mayor, Duncan Crabtree-Ireland is its city manager.
Crabtree-Ireland, who has worked for the guild for more than 20 years, became its national executive director and chief negotiator shortly after Drescher took office.
He took an unlikely path to get there. Born in Memphis and raised in London and Dallas, Crabtree-Ireland went to college at Georgetown and law school at the University of California, Davis. He worked for several years as a criminal prosecutor in Los Angeles before taking a left turn and becoming a staff attorney for SAG-AFTRA in 2000.
“I get asked to talk to law students about careers from time to time, and I always preface the story by saying I can’t, I don’t encourage you to try to replicate this because I’ve no idea how it happened,” Crabtree-Ireland told the AP in an interview. “I never thought I’d be here.”
He would be tested quickly after getting the job. The first contract talks for film and TV actors under his role as chief negotiator resulted in their first strike in more than 40 years.
___
Associated Press Writers Krysta Fauria and Damian Dovarganes contributed.
veryGood! (44)
Related
- Tom Holland's New Venture Revealed
- Local Advocates Say Gulf Disaster Is Part of a Longstanding Pattern of Cultural Destruction
- Ever wanted to stay in the Barbie DreamHouse? Now you can, but there's a catch
- Earn less than $100,000 in San Francisco? Then you are considered low income.
- Arkansas State Police probe death of woman found after officer
- Five Years After Speaking Out on Climate Change, Pope Francis Sounds an Urgent Alarm
- Arctic Drilling Ruling Brings Hope to Native Villages, Subsistence Hunters
- How Fossil Fuel Allies Are Tearing Apart Ohio’s Embrace of Clean Energy
- Who's hosting 'Saturday Night Live' tonight? Musical guest, how to watch Dec. 14 episode
- 50% Rise in Renewable Energy Needed to Meet Ambitious State Standards
Ranking
- Tree trimmer dead after getting caught in wood chipper at Florida town hall
- To Close Climate Goals Gap: Drop Coal, Ramp Up Renewables — Fast, UN Says
- Lawmaker pushes bill to shed light on wrongfully detained designation for Americans held abroad
- Q&A: Oceanographers Tell How the Pandemic Crimps Global Ocean and Climate Monitoring
- US wholesale inflation accelerated in November in sign that some price pressures remain elevated
- Coal Mines Likely Drove China’s Recent Methane Emissions Rise, Study Says
- Airline passengers are using hacker fares to get cheap tickets
- Earn less than $100,000 in San Francisco? Then you are considered low income.
Recommendation
Behind on your annual reading goal? Books under 200 pages to read before 2024 ends
Amanda Seyfried Shares How Tom Holland Bonded With Her Kids on Set of The Crowded Room
Vintners and Farmers Are Breathing Easier After the Demise of Proposition 15, a ‘Headache’ at Best
Richard Allen confessed to killing Indiana girls as investigators say sharp object used in murders, documents reveal
Justice Department, Louisville reach deal after probe prompted by Breonna Taylor killing
Suniva, Seeking Tariffs on Foreign Solar Panels, Faces Tough Questions from ITC
Zendaya Reacts to Tom Holland’s “Sexiest” Picture Ever After Sharing Sweet Birthday Tribute
Gender-affirming care for trans youth: Separating medical facts from misinformation