Workers across the industry are poised to lose work as productions shut down, but they feel solidarity: ‘This struggle is our struggle’

As screenwriters across the country go on strike for the first time in 15 years, it won’t just be writer’s rooms that are empty. Without writers, studios must postpone or shut down productions, bringing shows off the air and affecting virtually every profession in the TV and film industry, from cinematographers to caterers, with effects rippling out to the broader economy.

“This struggle is our struggle,” said Cory Hunter, a Los Angeles-based camera operator. “We all have been squeezed in the change to streaming.” Without jobs, he’s planning to get through the next few months by helping a family member do real estate work.

Continue reading…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

James Dyson loses libel claim against Daily Mirror publisher

Inventor alleged article criticising his championing of Brexit and move to Singapore…

Low-paid workers tell MPs of fears over end of universal credit top-up

Work and pensions committee hears £20-a-week cut will leave people unable to…

Allotment wars! How community vegetable patches have become a battleground

With having an allotment now one of Briton’s top three life goals…

‘Almost at war’: passions run high in the search for sunken treasures

Questions of ownership – and whether shipwrecks are being explored or plundered…