Welcome to American business practices vs. consumers and unions in 
2008, which can be summed up in two words:
INTIMIDATION
RETALIATION

George
http://ivebeenmugged.typepad.com

--- In scifinoir2@yahoogroups.com, "Tracey de Morsella (formerly 
Tracey L. Minor)" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> It's not surprising -- as has become clear in the giddy 
productivity and oceanic email volume of these post-strike days -- 
that many writers turn out to have written scripts on spec over the 
past few months. Who can blame a harried artist for seizing the rare 
opportunity of 100 days in a row to put pen to paper and finger to 
keyboard without the threat of interruption by pedantic studio notes 
calls, shrill showrunner assignments or agent-mandated meetings? It 
comes as something of a shock, however, to discover that while the 
creative half of our business was quietly typing their way ahead of 
the game, the executive half turns out to have been doing the same 
thing. Brazenly defying the mandate of "pencils down," executives 
have apparently written on spec hundreds of emails, letters and faxes 
that are now being proudly submitted to writers across Hollywood. 
Apparently these documents are pre-prepared rejections of the scripts 
and screenplays that writers have sent, are preparing to send -- and 
in some cases, are vaguely considering sending sometime in the future.
> 
>   "I was pretty shocked to get the email [from Paramount]," says a 
prominent screenwriter who asked to remain anonymous. "At first I was 
impressed that the studio was reaching out to me so quickly after the 
WGA vote. But then I read the email, and it was all about how he 
didn't see a way to take on my screenplay, but thanks for sending it -
- 'great hook, good dialogue' -- and how he hopes to work together in 
the future. The thing is: I didn't have a script yet. I was working 
on one, sure; but I would come home every day from all that marching 
and -- I don't know -- my back hurt, and my legs were kind of 
exhausted, and my wife would get on me about some playdate for our 
daughter and before you know it the afternoon was shot. I meant to; I 
just didn't get it done. And now, frankly, there doesn't seem to be 
much of a point."
> 
> A prominent television comedy showrunner reports receipt of a 
similar message, this one a letter from ABC Studios after her Disney-
based email account had been disabled with the suspension of her 
overall deal. "I have to say: it was pretty convincing," the scribe 
admits. "Apparently they liked my spec pilot, but didn't see a way to 
get it on ABC's air, given the amount of reality programming 
occupying primetime slots and given the general 'uphill battle' that 
comedy faces. And apparently my concept and characters were 
not 'female-friendly' enough for their demo. I only wish I knew the 
story or the characters they were referring to," she considers. "I 
could have made them, I don't know, sisters." Then -- against all 
odds -- hope enters her voice: "Maybe I will."
> 
> http://www.huffingtonpost.com/nicholas-weinstock/spec-and-spam-
hollywood-_b_86949.html
>


Reply via email to