Apple TV+'s 'Loot' second season production stalls over writer's strike

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in iPod + iTunes + AppleTV
A picket for the Writers Guild of America has shut down production on the second season of Apple TV+ workplace comedy "Loot."

Loot [Apple TV+]
Loot [Apple TV+]


The Writer's Guild of America is striking in Hollywood, with approximately 12,000 members on picket lines outside of major studios. The action has halted progress on many productions, including one for Apple TV+.

The comedy "Loot" had its production in Bel-Air shut down due to picketers turning up to a mansion used for filming the show on Friday, a source close to production told The Hollywood Reporter. The picketing disrupted production, with star and executive producer Maya Rudolph reportedly retreating to her trailer while strike members were in attendance.

"Loot," which was renewed for a second season in July 2022, depicts Rudolph as billionaire Molly Novak, seeing her life spiraling out of control. After a public downfall, Novak discovers she has a charity foundation, which leads to a journey of self-discovery.

Created by Alan Yang and Matt Hubbard, Rudolph also writes for the show.

The WGA strike is a result of the writer's union and the Alliance for Motion Pictures and Television Producers failing to agree on a new contract between writers and studios. The WGA wanted the new contract to provide fairer pay to writers, as well as protections to make writing a sustainable profession, according to a notice from the WGA.

After a failure to reach an agreement by a May 1 deadline, striking began on May 2.

Read on AppleInsider

Comments

  • Reply 1 of 6
    Quite a paradox — for production of Loot to continue, the writers need more loot.
  • Reply 2 of 6
    ronnronn Posts: 653member

    From Robert Reich: 

    “We can’t afford to pay our writers more.” 

    Meanwhile, media company CEO pay is through the roof: 


    Netflix CEOs: $51M & $50M [$101M total!!!]


    Nexstar CEO: $39M 


    Warner Bros. Discovery CEO: $39M 


    Comcast CEO: $32M 


    Paramount CEO: $32M

    Walt Disney CEO : $24M 


    AMC: $24M 


    Fox Corp CEO : $22M 


    Hello?

    edited May 2023
  • Reply 3 of 6
    MacProMacPro Posts: 19,727member
    How long before the scripts, of these often predictable shows, are written by LLM AIs? 
  • Reply 4 of 6
    RudeBoyRudyRudeBoyRudy Posts: 106member
    JP234 said:
    Don't really care about the writer's strike affecting Loot. My wife and I watched it a few times. I found it boring. We both found it ludicrous and stopped watching.

    Ok boomer! You found an over the top comedy show "ludicrous" LOL

    Were you expecting a documentary? I mean, it's supposed to be ludicrous and ridiculous. It's well written comedy. 




    lolliverStabitha_Christie
  • Reply 5 of 6
    Virtually all productions have been stalled over the writers strike.  Film and television productions rely on extensive planning and it's impossible to plan if you don't know whether you will be able to lock down locations or get into your normal place of work.  To their credit, the writers have been doing an excellent job of being disruptive. Those productions that have tried to forge ahead have largely failed and what work they have done has not been particularly efficient.  Inefficiency costs money.  Producers hate spending money for any reason, but especially when it appears, to them, wasteful. So this is going to remain a problem until the strike is resolved.
    Dooofus said:
    They are not helping to sustain their profession by striking. The last time they did this, a lot of writing jobs were eliminated by a switch to reality shows.
    Many facets of their profession are already unsustainable.  There's a lot of nuance to the argument, but among the biggest issues is streaming numbers.  Since the beginning of filmed entertainment, content creators have had access to some method — be it coins in the nickelodeon, box office receipts, or Neilson ratings — to gauge the popularity of their works. (And by extension, their own value to their employers, which if significant, they could then leverage into something approximating career stability.)  For the better part of a century, an entire business model was built and sustained around this premise.  But the advent of streaming has placed those metrics behind a veiled curtain and streamers have unilaterally refused to share that data.  It's a huge issue that affects everyone in the business, right down to the below-the-line crew.  The writers are correct in holding the line on this one, as a win here is a win for everyone. 

    Put another way: Imagine if Apple suddenly started refusing to share download or purchase data with App Store developers and instead offered everyone a one-time flat fee for each title. Instead of their typical 30% take, they then just keep all the profits.  Perhaps good for Apple in the short term.  But without any sustainable income, app development would become little more than a hobby, updates would stop, the talent pool would drain away, and the entire business model of the App Store would implode. That's what Apple (and their cohorts) have been proposing for content creators. 
    edited May 2023 ronn
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