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Voices from the picket lines: Three writers on why they’re striking

Across Hollywood, the picket line for writers looks quite similar. Wearing blue Writers Guild of America T-shirts and carrying signs affixed to stakes, the strikers walk a circuit past the gates of each studio. Then they loop back in the opposite direction. At Fox Studios, one writer carries a sign that says, “I’m getting my 10,000 steps in.” 

To get to this point in their careers, these writers have also had to put in their 10,000 hours. It’s a profession that often entails late nights and forgoing weekends. The scribes say that studios and streaming services often nickel and dime them to cut costs. On the picket line, as in their jobs, they are accustomed to perseverance.

Why We Wrote This

Should a picture be worth a thousand times more than the words? We interviewed three striking Hollywood writers – a newcomer, a mid-career writer, and a veteran – about their tribulations and triumphs.

The strike isn’t a case of rich people fighting rich people, says veteran Wallace Wolodarsky, outside Amazon’s studios.

Asked about the financial pressure that studios and streaming services are under – last month Amazon Studios and Amazon Prime Video laid off 100 of its 7,000 employees – Mr. Wolodarsky responds, “For the most part, middle-class workers have to pay for bad business decisions of huge corporations.”

Across Hollywood, the picket line for writers looks quite similar. Wearing blue Writers Guild of America T-shirts and carrying signs affixed to stakes, the strikers walk a circuit past the gates of each studio. Then they loop back in the opposite direction. At Fox Studios, one writer carries a sign that says, “I’m getting my 10,000 steps in.” 

To get to this point in their careers, these writers have also had to put in their 10,000 hours. It’s a profession that often entails late nights and forgoing weekends. The scribes say that studios and streaming services (dubbed “streamers”) often nickel and dime them to cut costs. On the picket line, as in their jobs, they are accustomed to perseverance.

The Monitor interviewed three of the people on strike – a newcomer, a mid-career writer, and a veteran – about their tribulations and triumphs in the industry.

Why We Wrote This

Should a picture be worth a thousand times more than the words? We interviewed three striking Hollywood writers – a newcomer, a mid-career writer, and a veteran – about their tribulations and triumphs.

The newcomer

Screenwriting is career 2.0 for Mitali Jahagirdar. The young millennial, a first-generation American, graduated from New York University with majors in economics and broadcast journalism. Her first job was as a paralegal. 

Stephen Humphries/The Christian Science Monitor

Writer Mitali Jahagirdar demonstrates outside Sony Studios in Culver City, on May 2, 2023. Ms. Jahagirdar says she teaches part time because 16-week writing jobs don’t offer stability.

“It took me a while but, like, I knew that my heart was in Hollywood,” says Ms. Jahagirdar, who is marching outside Sony Studios while carrying a sign that reads, “We’re gonna need a bigger offer!”

She enrolled in an MFA screenwriting program at University of California, Los Angeles. After a stint in the script and continuity department on the reboot of “Dynasty,” she was hired for the Disney sci-fi show “Just Beyond,” for which she was nominated for a WGA Award. Then she was hired as the story editor in a “mini room” – which consists of a showrunner plus two or three writers – to develop an adaptation of Alka Joshi’s novel “The Henna Artist.” But Netflix decided against putting the series into production. 

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