Of course the studios want to drag the writer's strike on for as long as they can afford to. It is the only way they can make writer's suffer.
But, more importantly, they want to project the idea that the writers need a paycheck more than the studios need writers. It's classic fearmongering.
"We'll ruin you. Our pockets are deeper. You'll run out first."
It's disgusting, and it's frustrating that so many otherwise progressive news organizations and publications parroted it without any deeper examination.
These organizations, in attempting to scoop a story about how evil these studios are, in fact participated in that evil. They brandished studio propaganda as fact.
Now, I don't have any inside track on the studios, and I don't currently work in the media industry, beyond the work I'm doing to destroy it with the power of community media production re: #NewEllijayTelevision #netv.
I don't *know* that the studios are scared, running out of money, and so desperate for the writers to take a deal that they would do basically anything, and that they are attempting to shift the narrative to make it seem like that is not the case in order to bluff at least some of the writers in to accepting a bad deal and returning to the table.
I don't Know that, but I strongly suspect it, and I've played poker often enough to know the kinds of hunches I can trust.
Now, I don't have any inside track on the studios, and I don't currently work in the media industry, beyond the work I'm doing to destroy it with the power of community media production re: #NewEllijayTelevision #netv.
I don't *know* that the studios are scared, running out of money, and so desperate for the writers to take a deal that they would do basically anything, and that they are attempting to shift the narrative to make it seem like that is not the case in order to bluff at least some of...