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NBC boss insults Writers Guild

Writers Guild of America picketing signsEarlier today, Jonathan Berr noted that the Golden Globes broadcast on General Electric Company (NYSE: GE)'s NBC Network had been canceled. Yes, it's a shame we at home won't be able to comment on the fashions and root for our favorites. Yes, it's a shame for the struggling Peacock network (still often in fourth place) to miss out on the ratings and ad revenue easily procured from a red-carpet event. NBC shells out $5-6 million a year for the broadcast rights and can count on $15-20 million in ad revenue as a result. But yes, it's a testament to the power held by the Writers Guild of America.

Unfortunately, not everyone is giving the Guild its due respect. NBC Entertainment co-chief Ben Silverman aired his grievances about the Golden Globes debacle in a very public forum, speaking with EI Entertainment News anchor Ryan Seacrest. According to the cable network's website, Silverman said "It feels unfair" that United Artists and David Letterman's Worldwide Pants have brokered deals with writers, but Dick Clark Productions (the Globes' producer) is not being given the same option.

SIlverman opined that: "Sadly, it feels like the nerdiest, ugliest, meanest kids in the high school are trying to cancel the prom. But NBC wants to try to keep that prom alive."

Wow. Is it me, or did a top-ranking NBC executive call the Writers Guild ugly, mean nerds? The man's company is out a cool 10 or so million, but the decision has now been made and should be dealt with. Be careful, Ben, or you're going to get a prom like the one Carrie White attended.

Beth Gaston Moon is an analyst at Schaeffer's Investment Research.

Late night hosts are about to prove just how funny they really are

With the writers still on strike, late night hosts are gearing up to putting on shows without help from any writers [subscription required]. For the past two months, while Hollywood writers have been on strike, late night television viewers have been served up re-runs of their favorite talk shows, but that is about to change.

It has definitely been a strange time for our late night shows to be on hiatus. With the now heating up presidential race offering up loads of good material, you know that the late night hosts have just been dying to get back into the action. But, don't expect to be seeing the same sort of shows you are used to seeing when they return to the air next week. The shows should prove to be very different than business as usual.

The exception to this rule may be the two late night shows on CBS (NYSE: CBS). David Letterman's production company, Worldwide Pants Inc., is currently in talks with the Writers Guild of America and hopes that its "Late Show with David Letterman" and "Late Late Show with Craig Ferguson" will be able to reach a deal to allow its writers to be able to contribute to its shows.

Continue reading Late night hosts are about to prove just how funny they really are

NBC airing USA's re-runs to counter writers strike

Tony Shaloub of There is not much novel about it, but the idea may work. General Electric (NYSE: GE)'s NBC will begin airing re-runs from its cable operation, USA Network, in prime-time. This will let the parent network field programming at a very low cost while the industry's writers strike drags on. Some of the late-night programs like Jay Leno's show, have agreed to go back on the air without writers.

The approach may put greater strain on the writers to settle. Some of the USA shows are very popular. Monk and Psych are among the programs that will begin to air.

According to The Wall Street Journal, "Until now, the networks had been expected to soon run out of fresh episodes of their most popular prime-time shows, forcing them to revert to unscripted fare such as reality and game shows." TV executives are worried that, without popular shows, their ad rates may fall and earnings could suffer.

If the networks field line-ups of cable programming, shows produced outside the U.S., and reality shows, the writers may have run out of leverage.

Douglas A. McIntyre is an editor at 247wallst.com.

Media World: Hollywood is forgetting about the viewers

The waring sides in the Hollywood writers' strike don't give a hoot about the public.

Sure, we TV viewers haven't suffered much yet, but the future looks bleaker than Wisteria Lane on Desperate Housewives after the tornado, according to the Wall Street Journal:
Artful scheduling of remaining episodes of scripted shows will get them through January. Walt Disney (NYSE: DIS)'s ABC Television, for instance, has a couple of episodes of Desperate Housewives and Grey's Anatomy that it can stretch out with some techniques such as longer recaps of previous episodes. After that, the network has a couple of new mid-season scripted shows it is planning to debut.

Oh no, does that mean that we are going to keep hearing about the tornado? Will the slow, torturous relationship between Meredith Grey and Derrick Shepherd continue to move along at a glacial pace on Desperate Housewives? Do the networks want people to start reading?

Continue reading Media World: Hollywood is forgetting about the viewers

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Last updated: November 12, 2009: 01:24 AM

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