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Screen Actors, Producers Still Have No Agreement

Screen Actors, Producers Still Have No Agreement

Image details: Screen Actors Guild Holds Labor Rally In Los Angeles served by picapp.com
While Hollywood still believes that the Screen Actors Guild will not strike, the situation is bogged in ambiguity. There is so much confusion on where the lack-of-agreement stands, that Variety even reports that SAG and the Alliance of Motion Picture & Television Producers can’t even agree on a description of the situation. The AMPTP insists that its now-rejected offer was final, and there will be no negotiations. SAG states that its counterproposals amount to negotiations. Huh?
What does this mean for Supernatural, and the rest of television? Nobody …read more

Supernatural’s Eric Kripke to Get Two Year Contract with Warner Bros. TV

Supernatural’s Eric Kripke to Get Two Year Contract with Warner Bros. TV

Eric Kripke, Supernatural’s creator. Photo: Newscom.
This sounds like the dream deal that Supernatural fans have waited for all their… well for the past three years. Head man Eric Kripke is looking at a two-year exclusive deal with Warner Brothers TV, that will ensure that he will continue to executive produce and run Supernatural. This would seem to mean that he’s ensured of having the fifth season that he’s always envisioned.
Kripke will also begin new projects under the deal. There doesn’t seem to be any mention of the Old West origins series that he has talked about. That would take squeeing …read more

Supernatural Spoiler: 3.16 – No Quarter (Season Finale)

Supernatural Spoiler: 3.16 – No Quarter (Season Finale)

Episode 3.16 – No Quarter [Season Finale]
Airdate: May 15, 2008
This one is big for you squeamish about spoilers, so I’ll put the meat of the spoilage after the break…

Writers’ Strike is Over

Writers’ Strike is Over

Michael Eisner. AP
Former Disney exec, Michael Eisner revealed in a CNBC interview, the other day. that the major studio execs and the WGA shook hands, last Friday, on a deal to end the strike. Saturday, 9 February, The contract will go before the WGA general assembly for final acceptance. When asked about the possibility that the assembly won’t accept the deal Eisner stated that acceptance was “inevitable.”
This, of course, is bittersweet news for fans of scripted television. Many shows will likely not have any more episodes written and produced, until Autumn 2008.
Go to CNBC to read more from Eisner on …read more


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