Friday, January 25, 2008

A horrible way to solve a problem

Have you been deeply impacted by the Hollywood writers’ strike? I haven’t. In fact, I’ve scarcely noticed. My TV viewing consists largely of rerun viewings of L&O, CSI, the Simpsons, PBS offerings (when they’re not on one of their interminable fundraising drives,) and TCM. If not, there’s always DVDs, or a good book. So, really I have noticed no change in my life. In other words, I don't really care if it's never resolved.

Yet, I guess, as a person who earns a living of a sort as a creative compiler of words, I should be deeply sympathetic. Indeed, with the writers' cause, I am deeply sympathetic. For decades the film-biz’s scribes have been treated like something a braindead glamourpuss stepped in on the sidewalk, and all cameras will be on the braindead glamourpuss with little thought going in the direction of the underpaid and unheralded guy or girl who put the script together – trying to hold back on words of two syllables or more so that peabrained multimillion dollar pay glamourpuss GP can actually learn the script.

As I say, I have great sympathy with their cause. I have very little sympathy with their technique. That’s because strikes, of any kind, are dreadful things and never hurt the people the strikers are hoping to hurt. Mainly it’s those on the picket-lines who get to hang onto the dirty end of the stick. That’s combined with the fact that strikers rarely gain back what they’ve lost during the dispute. Needless to say, their union bosses never tell them that when they are exhorting them to go out.

I have lived through one strike. I never, ever would want to repeat the experience. It indeed was probably the worst experience of my life. I have told people, not entirely waggishly, that my divorces were easy compared to the big strike.

It was in the late summer of 1994.My newspaper, of which I was assistant/city editor at the time, had just celebrated its 103rd anniversary. Thanks to union behavior and a huge conflict between the union boss, and the newspaper’s publisher, it wouldn’t see 104. The boys and girls of the newspaper guild hit the bricks in August.

It was ugly. Former friends became enemies, or at least adversaries. Because I was management I was deemed by union colleagues to be a bad guy. This was a joke, since I made considerably less than printers and compositors (union members) and didn’t have a union to argue for me. My domestic partner of the day had an even harder time. She was a very unhappy union member, and she was one of a group deemed to be “sleeping with the enemy.” She finally quit the union and any hope in future to not be deemed 'hot' (in the union, not pulchritude sense) in disgust, and I will also suggest this dispute was the beginning of our domestic downfall.

Anyway, the end result was sad and stupid. Other than the ugliness of of my having to cross a picket line every day and be jeered at by former workmates, and pathetic attempts to try to get the paper out with management at the helm, eventually it unfolded that everybody lost. The multinational publishing company shut down the paper without so much as a by-your-leave; something the union told its lackeys would never happen, and we were all out of work. This was a job I planned to do right until retirement, because frankly, I loved the work.

Journeymen ultimately had to go out of town to get employment; the impact on the business community locally was big since the paper employed 150 people, which is a lot in a smaller community, and bitter resentments had been formed, and they took a very long time to heal. Even union members developed animosities to each other, the militants against the moderates. Solidarity forever, my ass. Some people have never really healed and remain bitter and adversarial until this day.


The local paper that was formed after the strike was immediately deemed a “scab rag” (which it wasn’t) and there are still those who will have nothing to do with it. It’s the local paper to which I contribute, by the way, and I served on its staff for four years, part of the time as assistant editor, with a salary that didn’t resemble the one I got at my former paper. The bucks just weren’t there.

So, I cannot fathom why, in this day and age, strikes are still considered to be viable alternatives to decent and respectful collective bargaining. Then again, that would be like asking people to seek intelligent solutions to disputes. That doesn’t seem to happen much.

So, will network television ever fully recover from this dispute? I’d be prepared to suggest that the impact will carry on for years, even after settlement. It seems to work that way.

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10 Comments:

Blogger geewits said...

I was raised to be anti-union by my Dad. His thinking was, "Unions served a great purpose in early history to end abuses, but are no longer needed in modern times and merely line the pockets of the big greedy (and often corrupt) union leaders." I was convinced and his argument became my argument. That sounds like a terrible thing you had to endure. And I will probably add your argument to my Dad's argument if the need arises. But I'm hoping it won't.

12:19 PM  
Blogger meggie said...

Never been a fan of unions, or had to be part of one. Gom's not a fan either, but his family were died in the wool unionists, because of the great Waterfront strike in New Zealand. His father & uncles were involved in that.
It was never part of my family, which was pure luck I suppose.
The writer's strike does not seem to be affecting us here in Australia.
I watched some small item about the Jay Leno & that other, ugly unfunny man who has a show similar, & how they now have nothing to say! That can only be a good thing?

1:51 PM  
Blogger Ellee Seymour said...

When I joined the Cambridge Evening News the journalists were on strike, I left one picket line on my previous paper to join another as it had not been resolved. Although I couldn't cross a picket line, the printers had no problem, and earned twice as much as us at the time.

2:01 PM  
Blogger Echomouse said...

I'm sorry you had that experience. It sounds like hell on earth.

Agree with you about this writer's strike. Too many crew people are losing their homes and careers. The writers who make the big bucks are the only ones who can afford for this to still be ongoing. Everyone under them is suffering severely.

Never liked unions. Geewits summed up my opinion exactly. My parents taught me that and they were right. I've never worked anywhere that had a union and that was by design.

11:35 PM  
Blogger jmb said...

Strikes are indeed ugly and I've been through two of them. Almost all hospital employees in BC are unionized, or were until Gordon Campbell did some creative giggery pokery and contracted out lots of services to the detriment of the hospitals. Nurses, technicians, even the residents (specialist doctors in training) are unionized.
I am watching my DVD of the Rome series which I bought myself. Cancelled after two seasons as most really good stuff is.

12:33 AM  
Blogger Casdok said...

I am also sympathetic with the writers cause. But one would have thought in this day and age someone would dream up something other than a strike.

1:35 AM  
Blogger Synchronicity said...

i dunno what i think of the strike. i guess it has been a long time since this has happened with the writers. yes they are due their share but come on...this thing is dragging on forever.

i guess we will be forced to watch more reality tv. oh wait...i hear they have writers for those shows too!

11:32 AM  
Blogger laughingwolf said...

i agree, little is gained by striking, the 'powers that be' will recoup quickly, the common joe, rarely, as you say

merelyme, the only thing 'real' about 'reality tv' is the top dogs wheelbarrowing millions to the bank... it's ALL choreographed, in advance, including american idol and its ilk....

2:13 PM  
Blogger CS said...

Is the writer's strike still going on? I just don't watch enough TV, apparently.

I have a lot of sympathy with unions, just becaus eof the way big corporations can really screw over their workers. I don't always like their methods, but I don't know what the answer is. I an in favor of a law which mandates that the tp apid person in a company can earn no more than ten times the lowest paid worker. That would eliminate a fair amount of abuse.

2:17 PM  
Blogger Jazz said...

I have sympathy for the writers, but as you say, they're the ones with the dirty end of the shit stick. Although, what other way is there to fix things?

As an aside..

You wrote DVDs!!! yes, Yes, YES!!!!! finally someone who doesn't use and apostrophe (DVD's, CD's) as a plural!!!

11:52 AM  

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