Street strike:
Protests could erupt near the intersection of Wilshire and Santa Monica boulevards, right where the limos fall into gridlock while trying to get into enter the Beverly Hills Hilton Hotel for the Golden Globes Awards.
(Richard Hartog / Los Angeles Times)
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If the Writers Guild of America strike against the TV networks and movie studios isn't resolved, the WGA could picket the Jan. 13 show.
Is Hollywood ready for black-tie picketing?
Guild ponders street protests at Golden Globes
By Rachel Abramowitz and Chris Lee, Los Angeles Times Staff Writers
December 19, 2007
Is Hollywood ready for black-tie picketing?
How about A-list writers such as J.J. Abrams and Judd Apatow in Armani tuxedos standing near the intersection of Wilshire and Santa Monica boulevards, where the limos enter the Beverly Hilton Hotel for the Golden Globe Awards?
That's the plan that Writers Guild President Patric M. Verrone mentioned at the membership meeting Monday night, according to people who were there.
By Tuesday morning, as the town processed the news that the guild had denied waivers to the Golden Globes and the Academy Awards, a consensus was rapidly forming that the members of the Hollywood Foreign Press Assn. would probably be handing out awards themselves at the Jan. 13 event should the strike not be settled by then.
Without a waiver, the awards show would not be able to employ WGA writers and would be open to a boycott and picketing.
"We're all waiting to see if somehow they're going to reach a compromise or a solution," said Catherine Olim of the publicity powerhouse PMK/HBH, who represents such Globe nominees as Glenn Close. "I don't mean the writers and the [Alliance of Motion Picture and Television Producers] -- I mean the writers and the Golden Globes."
A prominent talent agent predicted that no actors would show up.
"There's no way any of them will be going," the agent said. "Anybody who does go will look like they're out for the publicity and not caring about what the writers -- and the actors who are allied with them -- are trying to achieve."
Writers Guild spokesman Gregg Mitchell said that "it is not in violation of strike rules to attend a show and do a press junket. That said, we leave it up to members to make personal decisions."
The Screen Actors Guild has yet to make a recommendation to its members.
It's unclear whether stars would boycott "The Tonight Show With Jay Leno" and "Late Night With Conan O'Brien," which are scheduled to return to the air Jan. 2, without writers.
As guild members, Leno and O'Brien will be barred from writing their own monologues, though theoretically they could improvise. They could also rely more heavily on guest interviews.
CBS' David Letterman and Craig Ferguson are hoping to come back on the air the same night, but with their writers. Both shows are owned by Letterman's production company, Worldwide Pants Inc., which said Saturday that it wanted to make an interim agreement with the WGA that would cover the writing staffs of the two programs.
The guild said over the weekend that it was interested in negotiating deals with individual studios, but the two sides have not begun discussions.
A spokeswoman for WGA East said the union's negotiating committee would take up the matter today.
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