Passion * Technology * Ruthless Competence

Sunday, November 25, 2007

Fans4Writers

Most of my readers get DevHawk via the RSS feed, so I wanted to explicitly call out a new addition to my flair. If you're not aware, the Writers Guild of America is on strike. When you buy a $20 DVD, the writer makes a measly 4 cents. When you watch an episode of your favorite show online, the writer makes nothing. This video explains the situation pretty well.

Even though I'm about as liberal as you can get, I'm not a big union guy. Neither of my parents were in a union. Neither Julie nor I are in a union. My only exposure to unions growing up was negative, typically when the Washington Opera (where my mother works) was negotiating with the musicians or stagehands. I vividly remember one musician's strike where one of their demands was to increase the minimum call size to be bigger than the size of the orchestra pit. Needless to say, that seemed like an unreasonable demand to me (though to be fair, I only heard the management side of the story).

In the recent hockey labor dispute, I was firmly on the side of the owners since day one. And while the teacher's union is one of the strongest bastions of democratic party support, I think the modern education system is fundamentally broken. So while I am a liberal, I've never been a big union guy.

However, I'm firmly with the writers union on this one. I spent several hours tonight reading a bunch of strike-related blogs, like United Hollywood. Obviously, they're coverage of the strike is pro-writer biased, but it's hard to argue with the idea of a fair wage for Internet delivered content. I particularly like this video which is a series of clips of media CEOs bragging about how much money their companies can make online. Yet - again, according to pro-writer blogs - they refuse to even negotiate paying the writers a percentage of the money they make for using the writer's content that way.

And to add a Media 2.0 spin to all this, there was a fascinating post wondering if Google could/would "scoop up the entire entertainment industry". I don't think substituting Google for AMPTP (which includes among others "big media" like Disney, Fox and Viacom) would be a good idea - new boss, same old problems. However, the idea of bypassing the studios with direct Internet distribution is a good one. One has to wonder how much this strike will accelerate that trend. This strike seems much more risky for the distribution companies & networks than for the writers - even direct distributed content needs to be written, right?

Posted By Harry Pierson at 11:25 PM Pacific Standard Time
Comments are closed.
Change Congress
Recent Bookmarks
Tags .NET Framework (2) __clrtype__ (9) ADO.NET (5) Agile (7) AJAX (3) Architecture (288) Guidance (6) Interop (2) Modelling (61) Patterns (7) Process (4) SOA (94) Web Services (5) ASP.NET (25) Async Messaging (2) Azure (1) Battlestar Galactica (3) BI (2) BizTalk (4) Blogging (117) dasBlog (11) Podcasting (4) BPM (1) C# (11) C++ (4) Capitals (5) CardSpace (3) CLR (2) CodePlex (1) College Football (10) Comedy Central (1) Community (81) Concurrency (6) Consumer Electronics (1) Database (13) Debugger (23) Dependency Injection (2) Development (122) C Plus Plus (1) Embedded (5) Lanugages (42) Media (2) P2P (11) Rotor (1) SharePoint (6) SOP (3) DIY (1) DLR (25) Domain Specific Languages (15) Durable Messaging (5) Dynamic Languages (12) Dynamic Silverlight (1) Education (3) Enterprise 2.0 (1) Entertainment (14) ETech (15) F# (51) Functional Programming (17) Game Development (2) Guidance Automation (3) Hardware (8) HawkCodeBox (1) HawkEye (3) Health (1) Hockey (31) Home Electronics (1) Home Network (5) Hosting API (1) Humor (5) IASA (1) Idempotence (3) infrastructure (5) Instrumentation (4) Integration (2) IronPython (112) IronRuby (16) Java (2) Job (3) Kodu (1) LangNET (2) Lightweight Debugger (5) LINQ (23) Live Framework (3) Live Mesh (2) Lost (1) Master Data Management (1) Media 2.0 (6) Microsoft (31) MIX06 (2) Mobile Phone (1) Monads (5) Morning Coffee (172) Object Oriented (4) Office (5) Open Source (8) Open Space (2) Operations (3) Other (135) Art (1) Books (1) Family (33) Games (18) General Geekery (27) Home Theater (1) Movies (23) Music (20) Politics (3) Society (1) Sports (37) Working at MSFT (19) Parallel Programming (3) Parsing Expression Grammar (16) patterns & practices (2) PDC08 (5) Politics (48) Polyglot (3) PowerPoint (2) PowerShell (39) Presentation (7) Projects (1) HawkWiki (1) Pygments (5) Python (6) Quote of the Day (4) Refactoring (1) Research (2) REST (18) Reuse (5) Robotics (2) Rock Band (4) Rome (5) Ruby (23) Ruby on Rails (1) Sci-Fi (2) Scripting (4) Security (3) Service Broker (14) SharePoint (2) Silverlight (20) Social Software (1) Software + Services (2) Software Design (2) Software Engineering (1) Software Factories (11) Software Industry (1) Space Elevator (1) Spark (1) SQL Server (2) Stephen Colbert (1) TechEd (7) TechEd06 (1) TechRec League (1) Television (6) Travel (7) Unified Client (1) Unit Testing (4) USC (1) UX (1) Virtual PC (2) Visual Basic (3) Visual Studio (20) Volta (2) Washington Capitals (37) WCF (31) Web 2.0 (67) Web Services (7) WF (21) Windows (3) Windows Live (29) Windows Live Writer (3) WPF (8) Xbox (1) Xbox 360 (54) XML (11) XNA (15) Zune (4)
Disclaimer: The information in this weblog is provided "AS IS" with no warranties, and confers no rights. This weblog does not represent the thoughts, intentions, plans or strategies of my employer. It is solely my opinion. Inappropriate comments will be deleted at the authors discretion.