Some More News - The WGA Strike, Streaming Villains, and Bad AI Scripts w/ Jen D'Angelo
Episode Date: May 26, 2023Hi. On today's episode, film and television writer Jen D'Angelo joins Katy and Cody to talk about the WGA strike, why pay for writers has declined, how giant corporations are kill...ing creativity, and why AI will never replace human writers. Support us on our PATREON: http://patreon.com/somemorenews Check out our MERCH STORE: https://www.teepublic.com/stores/somemorenews?ref_id=9949 SUBSCRIBE to SOME MORE NEWS: https://tinyurl.com/ybfx89rh Subscribe to the Even More News and SMN audio podcasts here: Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/some-more-news/id1364825229 Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/6ebqegozpFt9hY2WJ7TDiA?si=5keGjCe5SxejFN1XkQlZ3w&dl_branch=1 Stitcher: https://www.stitcher.com/show/even-more-news Follow us on social media: Twitter: https://twitter.com/SomeMoreNews Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/SomeMoreNews/ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/SomeMoreNews/ TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@somemorenews So protect yourself with the VPN that I use and trust. Use my link EXPRESSVPN.com/MORENEWS today and get an extra three months free on a one-year package. That's EXPRESSVPN.com/MORENEWS. Visit EXPRESSVPN.com/MORENEWS to learn more. If you want to take ownership of your health, today is a good time to start. Athletic Greens is giving you a FREE 1-year supply of Vitamin D AND 5 free travel packs with your first purchase. Go to https://athleticgreens.com/MORENEWS.
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Hello and welcome back to Even More News, the first and only news podcast.
My name is Katie Stoll.
I have nothing to add.
Wait, my name is Cody Johnston.
Hi.
Hi, Cody Johnston. Joining us today for the first time, writer, producer, and comedian whose credits include Hocus Pocus 2,
Young Rock, and Workaholics. That's right, it's Jen D'Angelo. Hi. Hello. Everyone's freaking out
right now, I know it. Thank you guys so much for having me.
We're thrilled to have you.
I have been really, we're going to get to this.
We'll talk more about this very soon, but I have been following your posts about the
writer's strike and everything.
So we're very thrilled to have you here today.
You've been very eloquent in how you discuss this.
And so, yeah, we appreciate you taking the time
because i know there's a lot going on right now no i am so thrilled i all i want to do is talk
about the strike because i feel so strongly about it and every time i try to write about it i'm like
oh wait i'm trying so hard to distill this into digestible it's really hard it's really complicated
it's complicated and taking the time
distilling it into shareable bits is important coming on these shows is important because i
know everybody has lots of questions and most we all work in the entertainment industry so we have
access to more information but i think a lot of people at home don't necessarily have that
there's a lot going on in the world so we'll unpack that but first we must celebrate some
holidays oh good favorite part of the show good holidays oh yeah these are worth celebrating good
holidays worth celebrating today may 25th thursday may 25th national tap dance day
i quit tap dancing when i was i was a I don't want to say overweight child because I have lots of issues with how we classify weight and whatnot. But, you know, I also don't want to call a child curvy, but you know, I was, my first role was Mr. Beaver in Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe. And my second one was the understudy for Augustus Gloop.
in language in the wardrobe and my second one was the understudy for augustus gloop anyway i got i used to do tap dance but i quit because i felt really uncomfortable in my little
outfits oh no oh no i made it sad it's national tap dance day to all who celebrate to all who
not you apparently i wanted to learn how to tap dance as a child so badly and never did.
So that's its own tragedy.
You know, it's like, why did I pursue my dreams from a young age?
I know, but I think a lot of I mean, I was very taken with Shirley Temple.
And I was like, I want to be on the good ship lollipop.
I want to tap dance around.
It just then I I became a more of an indoor kid. And I tap dance around it just then i i became a more of an indoor kid
and i tap dance every day so we have the whole spectrum of tap dance experience do you
no i don't but i've known you for so long and i've never did yeah at one point for some show
i don't know i'll still sometimes shuffle around like pretending but it's that counts
can i share one sentence from the wikipedia page for national
tap dance day yes please do this is a direct quote tap dance day is celebrated online with
27,518,521 mentions on social media in 2016 citation needed citation needed so someone just made that up that's so many mentions it's a big specific
number that's also what happened in 2016 specifically that was just like a boom
may 25th donald trump was running for office yeah he hadn't yet won so is hillary tapping
his way to the white house yeah uh apparently george hw bush
signed this holiday into law that's correct oh so in 1989 a little piece of taylor swift was born
oh so coming full circle connected yeah yeah she's famous tap dance or taylor swift Taylor Swift. Okay. May 26th, Friday, May 26th,
National Title Track Day,
a day to celebrate songs that share a title with the album they come from.
Notable examples include the Beatles' Let It Be,
the Velvet Underground's White Light,
White Heat,
and Bob Dylan's The Times They Are a-Changin'.
I would also throw out Dark Side of the moon not to fact check
immediately but there's no song on that album called dark side of the moon oh title lyrics
does that i think it's just a song on the album that shares the title with the
album okay so take that back. Harvest Moon.
Yeah.
Gotcha.
Longest pause in the world.
I had to go through.
No, no, no.
Oh, there it is.
Old King. Yeah, why not?
Why did he?
American Idiot.
Harvest Moon and Harvest, which I think is too similar.
The Benz.
Neil Young, if you're listening. if you're listening to mess with you
i know it's me specifically heroes heroes that's one of them thriller come on we can fill out an
hour podcast with this yeah uh yeah i'm gonna continue reading this uh list that somebody else
made of this is specific category there are 50 items so
strap in everybody born in the usa jolene all right oh yeah oh jolene that's i mean
this is like we do talk about the news and we're gonna get to that oh yeah but we also talk about
purple rain and london calling this is like either i nobody's asked me this recently but i was thinking about
the answer to what are your you know if you're stranded on a desert island you think it's an
impossible question to answer and if you only have one answer then i don't know so you're not
gonna answer you're just gonna say that you don't want to answer. But I would say that Graceland, the White Album, you know, maybe like something else.
I can't choose one.
I would cheat and take like a, now that's what I call music compilation.
Oh wait, that's a really good answer.
Yeah.
That's a really good answer.
Different moods, different vibes.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I just kind of think that the key is to yes a box something big so there's lots of options
yeah lots of b-sides to explore do the now this is now that's what they call music
compilations have b-sides like deep cuts from those oh i mean probably at a certain point
they're like i'll put this on it i guess running out of songs right that would be a good album or
like playlist for them to release now it's just like songs that they were like you know what
but we maybe missed it on this one this is the second marcy playground single i don't think we
needed to include that yeah these songs exist too yeah this music i don't know we'll work on
the title but this is i think a really good idea for us to pursue. They're up to number 114, apparently.
Wow.
Allegedly coming out April of earlier this year.
Wikipedia is not great, folks.
We're not.
Citation needed, please.
Now I'm wondering, hey, gosh, there must be people that still buy those albums.
Gotta be.
What, on iTunes or whatever iTunes is called now?
Well, I mean.
If they're coming out with
another one i feel like streaming music is uh well didn't you just say so cody yeah i mean
but april of this year allegedly oh well we've passed we blew right through that deadline
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cool stuff of health okay jen now we get to know you a little bit what's going on how are you doing
what's up um you know i'm on strike uh that's sort of like the main headline is uh yeah I've just been picketing a
lot have you been out there every day I have been out there most days I have skipped a couple days
I think a better way for me to phrase that is how often are you going because anyway yeah I know I
am like I'm so sorry no no, no. Silly me.
Yeah.
Because I say that because I imagine and pretty soon SAG is going to hopefully be joining officially.
And I just think that it's an unbelievable amount of pressure.
And to know like I should go and do this.
And it's a sustained effort.
This isn't something that's just a couple weeks, people are gearing up, and we'll get into this very short soon. But you know, for the long
haul, and you have to protect yourself, you have to, to live your life, you have to run your errands,
you have to take care of your body and your mind. Totally. I know, it's, it's really inspiring to be
out there. And so like going out there
does feel really nice. And it feels good to sort of like have that sense of community and you feel
like you're doing something. Although sometimes you feel like you're not doing anything, but
it's important to push through those moments. But yeah, it's definitely everyone has been gearing
up for like a long haul. people have been talking about the strike
for months like it was it seemed like a foregone conclusion um you know definitely at the beginning
of this year uh and people have also been talking about how it's probably going to go at least
through the summer and so everyone was sort of prepared for like okay we're we're gearing up uh
and this is the beginning of a marathon so yeah yeah, it's... But it's also cool
because I think a lot of people have been going
if not every day, most
days of the week and just taking
maybe a day off.
So yeah. Summer of protesting.
It's going to get hot soon. I know.
But there is something...
Yes, community building.
Not networking, but yeah,
getting a chance to interact with other riders
you know because it can be not isolating but some rooms are in person some are over zoom
the last few years have been very intense totally and i imagine that there is if there's a silver
lining it's this opportunity to connect and talk to people and i'm sure that is a benefit
um totally i mean there have been so many people that i've talked to like out on the lines that's
yeah honestly been such a weird development is to be like oh now it's just in my vocabulary like oh
i was on the line yesterday yeah where's our union bosses and yeah but yeah like so many people have been saying like that it's so nice to
real have that moment of realizing like oh you know I've been really struggling and having a
really hard time these past few years and it's really nice to sort of realize that that's not
just my personal battle it's not just like oh, I'm not good enough or whatever. That is just like,
oh, everyone has been feeling the same problem just in different ways. And so that's, you know,
a silver lining ish of just being like, yeah, we're all in this together.
You are a writer and a performer. Yeah. How long have you been in the wga and have you seen this coming the writing kind of on the wall and in what ways how how am i phrasing this everybody's become more
political over the last few years and uh which is a good thing but seeing that but like a lot of
people we're in arts and entertainment and you don't enter this thinking like I'm going to need to just be fighting for, you know, a big picture cause like this is an existential threat to your career.
And I don't know just how long has this been brewing?
How long have you got?
Do you get what I'm saying?
I totally get what you're asking.
I need writers to write things for me.
No, I totally understand.
So, OK, bear with me because this might be a long answer. Because I've been thinking so much about sort of my relationship to the strike and like why I feel so strongly and why it's brought up such strong emotions in me. And I've been in the WGA for 10 years.
Good job.
for 10 years. Good job. Thanks. I know. I like any career in entertainment is always going to involve a combination of hard work, talent and luck. Yep. And I feel like I definitely have had
quite a bit of luck because I got my first writing job when I was 24. I was a staff writer on
Cougar Town. And then I worked in TV until now or until the strike. And I then in the past few
years, like in 2019, was when I started working in features also. So the past, you know, three
ish years, like I, I have had both. And so I've gotten to see a really wide array of things in this industry and sort of many different facets of how it works.
And it really has been just realizing that over the past few years, everyone has been feeling the same problem just in their own different way.
Like IATSE, which is the largest entertainment union, and they represent like the crew, like stagehands and live theater and, you know, like camera people, editors, like they represent a wide array of people.
And in 2021, for the first time in that union's history in 128 years, they voted to authorize the strike, which was a really big deal.
And I was on set a lot that fall and hearing all of their
stories was really inspiring and eyeopening because, you know, they would say the struggles
that they're having and they would oftentimes be blaming, not blaming, but they would, they would
be framing it as like the writers and producers and directors are making us do this and work this way. And I was listening to it,
just thinking like, well, yeah, but that's like a trickle down of how the writers, directors,
producers are being forced to work by the studios, which is the trickle down of how the studios are
being forced to work by their corporations, which are now completely focused on stock prices and subscriber numbers and no longer traditional
profits and creating good movies and creating good shows. Their goal completely changed.
And then that has just fundamentally altered everything and just made everyone work harder
and faster for less and less. And that's been a noticeable shift in the last few years. And I think part of why this
strike is so, you know, it's gained a lot of momentum where we're getting a lot of support
is because everyone can see that it's the same problem and it's a systemic problem.
Yeah. It's a solidarity issue, sort of hearing like, oh, me too. But even though it feels like
you're in different worlds, you're all in the same world and having the same sort of pressures and uh demands on you even though you're doing different things
totally like the jobs are so so different that it's really hard to kind of recognize the parallels
of them but then when you actually talk to people you're like oh we're all just being told to work
as hard as humanly possible as fast as humanly possible for as little money as possible like as cheap as you can it does not just feel but is the reality
that the whole industry has shifted uh not just i mean we'll get into streaming and we'll get into
what the issues at hand here but all industries capitalism all of it is built on growth and you have to keep growing.
And if you're not growing, then you're failing somehow, even though you're still it's not
about like maintaining a reasonable level of profits so that you're taking care of the
people that work for you so they can continue to work for you.
That doesn't matter.
that work for you so they can continue to work for you. That doesn't matter. And the people who are in charge of studios and the heads of it are only focused on, yes, you know, share prices,
stockholders, their own personal profits, and their profits are skyrocketing.
And they're also sorry to interrupt.
No, no, you go. I was gonna meander my way to a stopping point. Please go.
It's also like, it's not even just, because I think the thing that gets, that I get really
self-conscious about when I talk about the strike is like, when you talk about writers
and actors wanting to have, you know, some semblance of stability or wanting to have,
you know, fair wages, it gets caught up in this idea of like the entertainment industry is an inherently
very risky industry. Like, you know, when I was in college and telling people, you know,
I was studying screenwriting and telling people I wanted to be a writer, everyone that I talked to
that worked in entertainment, I would ask them for advice and they would be like,
my best advice is if you can do literally anything else with your life, do that because this industry is so hard.
It's so unpredictable.
The work is inconsistent.
The hours are long.
The pay is really low for a really long time.
You know, sometimes you're up, sometimes you're down.
You can go years without working, blah, blah, blah.
So there's always that element of it.
And so, you know, I think it's easy if you don't know a writer and you don't, you know,
know an actor, you're not hearing their personal struggles. I think it's easy to dismiss
our concerns as like, well, that's just inherent in the business. But the business has changed so
much where it's like, it's not just, okay, yes, we are a capitalist society. This is a business.
They need to make money. They need to make profits. Of course, that's what they're doing. Now it's just like they're trying to win
and they're trying to beat Netflix. And so that's why all of these places poured billions of dollars
into their streaming platforms without any clear sense of how they were going to make that money
back. Like, oh, they could only really make that money back, I guess,
like if they remain the sole streamer, I guess,
and the other ones fold
and they become the only producer of entertainment.
So it's not even like, it's not even capitalism.
It's just like this, you know, crazy competition
among these handful of multimillionairesaires billionaires or whatever at the
very very top and nobody wins in it not even them like they're all you know these companies are
struggling i think is what we can yeah assume based on uh what we're seeing like the layoffs
and uh the cost, the belt tightening.
The constant changes of names of streaming platforms.
Totally.
The constant rebrands.
Yeah.
So it's just like, it's not even like this business is warping into something that I
don't recognize where like the, just everything feels like it's all out of whack.
just everything feels like it's all out of whack well and we're so far away from the goal which is to create art which is so fundamentally important to culture to our society um to blue collar
workers at the end of the day from everybody affects everybody everybody uh consumes entertainment
and media and there is you, again, existential questions that
are arising here is like, what is the future of this industry? What is, and if we allow
the studios to get their way, what does that mean for what we're consuming 10 years down the line,
20 years down the line? I want to circle back to what you were saying about how, you know,
there's this idea that this,
we all understand that it's a risky business to get into. However,
that has always been true. You know,
it's not a guarantee that you're going to find work or employment, but
once you're in LA and in entertainment,
and if you are able to stick it out and, you know,
find your path, it used to be sustainable.
It used to actually be a viable career.
But now, even if you are one of the lucky people that have a job that gets staffed,
it's not a realistic profession, especially if you need to be living close to Los Angeles
or New York City, where the
cost of living is so high, you need to make an astronomical amount of money in order to
actually feel secure. And, and it's, it's a huge problem.
Yeah, it's crazy. I mean, it's, it really is. You know, so when I first started out,
one of my first jobs, I was a production assistant, which is the lowest, you know, so when I first started out, one of my first jobs, I was a production
assistant, which is the lowest, you know, it's like an entry level job on a TV show.
I was a production assistant on the Big Bang Theory for season five, which was the season
that they hit 100 episodes.
So I was there for the 100th episode party.
That was like a huge milestone because that means your show is going to go into syndication.
It's going to be rerun.
You get paid every time people,
it's like, we're making a lot of money.
And I got to see, you know,
all the people that worked on that show,
like the crew,
I got to see what it's like for them
to have some semblance of stability
to be on this long running show that did 22 episodes.
They, you know, it was a job that they could count on and that
was so rare but it existed now that doesn't exist at all no one is doing seasons that long uh you
know syndication who even knows what that's going to be like who even knows what television is going
to look like as the like these studios keep reinventing their streamers or whatever and funneling stuff onto that.
Like you just watched, I've just watched all of the extremely rare life rafts that we had just sink.
And now everyone is just kind of treading water, just like furiously trying to stay afloat as best they can.
of treading water, just like furiously trying to stay afloat as best they can. And then, you know,
maybe you'll luck out. And for whatever reason, you'll find some way to support yourself, but it's becoming so rare. And now, you know, it used to be that, yes, it's absolutely impossible
to get your first writing job, but then it's at least a little bit easier to get your second,
and then a little bit easier to get your third.
And now you have people with good credits
and good reputations
who are going years in between writing jobs
just because the jobs aren't there anymore
because these streamers are saying,
we're actually not going to give you
a full writing budget for your television show.
And the job that used to be done by 10 people,
we want you to do entirely yourself or else we will not pick up your show. And the job that used to be done by 10 people, we want you to do entirely yourself
or else we will not pick up your show.
Right, despite the fact that there's more content
out there than ever before,
yet fewer opportunities exist.
And that's just a wild,
such a weird way to run things.
Yeah.
We were talking about how streaming changed the landscape so much in terms of the jobs
that are available.
There are these mini rooms, which I want to ask about at some point, but I really am interested
in how the residuals have changed because clearly people aren't getting residuals the
way they used to from syndication on streaming.
And a lot of that is in terms of the transparency
in that we don't know how many people are watching a specific thing.
And you wrote a major streaming sequel.
And I'm wondering if you have any idea
how many people watched Hocus Pocus 2 on Disney Plus.
No. Okay.
So every time I talk about Hocus Pocus 2,
I will jokingly be like the allegedly successful movie.
I have a sense of how well it did based on sort of just talking to people. And, you know, I know that people saw it
and people liked it, but I have no idea how many people actually saw it. And no residuals for streaming for the WGA are based currently are based on viewership.
They don't take viewership into account at all.
It's wild.
It's crazy.
And so I got I got my first residual, my first and only so far residual check for Hocus Pocus 2.
And I was just sort of like, I have no idea of knowing if this
is the correct amount or not. I have no idea what this is even based on. And then I, you know,
I talked to a friend who had a movie released on streaming that, you know, definitely was not
talked about as much as Hocus Pocus was. And their residual check was
more than double what I got. And I was just sort of like, again, I have no idea of knowing if
that's correct, what this is based on. And, you know, there's been the residuals system in
Hollywood has always been, you know, it's, it's an open secret that when you have
some part of profit share, you are probably going to have to force the studio to open their books
for you either by like suing them or threatening to sue them to actually see that you are getting
the appropriate profit share because it's very easy. I mean, think of what a budget for
a movie entails. It entails like an explosions budget. Like it entails like catering. Like,
you know, there's, it's such a massive, you know, mountain of accounting. And so it's very easy to
kind of be like, to hide your profits and be like, oh, well, this actually wasn't profitable. So the
profit share that you got is actually correct. Like like it's that's been open secret for so long that
it's just like you really have to force the studios to be honest with you and now we don't
even have the ability to do that there's no transparency yeah there's zero because even
back then yeah like they don't they wouldn't necessarily expect anybody to make a stink
about it because like oh i got a check finally. Like, you know,
I'm so grateful for this money.
Put people in these sort of situations
of like desperation in some sense.
And then you get a little bit and you're like,
fine, whatever you say.
And now there's not even that.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I should correct myself.
Sorry.
I did just say something incorrect.
We do have the ability to sort of force the streamers
to be honest with us.
Like you can, like for Hocus Pocus, I contacted the ability to sort of force the streamers to be honest with us like you can
like for hocus pocus i contacted the guild to be like what is this number that i just got and is
it correct like it feels low and uh they got back to me and they were like we looked into it and
that is the appropriate amount based on the formula that we have viewership is not considered
in that formula at all so you know you don't get compensated for the success of it at all
what is but the deal does have the ability to look how is viewership not in the formula like what
other numbers are there that's it's like it's some formula that's based on i think like the number of
of i was gonna guess like subscribers within that period yeah like that's so i don't even know if it's within
that period i honestly don't know what it is i mean look we're talking around something that
it is incredibly complicated to wrap our minds anybody's mind around how you parse this out
it's a completely different technology than traditional you know and it's
also like talking to people on the line um you know you get to talk to people who were here for
like the strike in 1984 and the strike in 2007 and you know the strike in 1984 was over vhs
tapes and like home video and wanting to make sure that we were involved
in the in the success of our work in this new medium of home video and VHS. 2007, it was a lot
about DVDs. And it was also about getting jurisdiction over things released on the
internet. And so if we hadn't gone on strike in 2007, the WGA would not have any jurisdiction over these streaming platforms whereas we now have kind of
like some jurisdiction but they can skate through by claiming their new media and so then they can
get these like low budget rates and undercut all of our protections because they're quote new media
even though they're now even though the bulk of the business yeah and also like i would not
obviously like streaming happens via the internet but i would not obviously like streaming happens via the internet
but i would not categorize streaming services as like oh that like internet content like internet
totally no i mean it's a new difference crazy is like i hocus pocus in terms of what the writer
sorry this is like really nitty gritty so uh no this is great so the writers guild you know has very clear
delineations between like how something is released so you know there's all these rules for
like is this a television show that's released on network tv here's how you get paid here's what the
profit share structure is like is this a cable television show is this going to be released in
movie theaters whatever blah blah blah for streaming it's this weird thing where hocus pocus 2 in the eyes of the wga was considered a
tv movie and so that got into like weird stuff with like crediting the writers because you know
it's different in tv versus movies and meanwhile it's the same of pages. You have to put in the same amount of effort.
There's no difference between making a movie for streaming and making a movie for theatrical.
You just get paid less.
That's the only difference is that you get paid less and you don't participate in the success of it at all.
Like the day to day of making it is the exact same. So there's so many stories being shared right now of people, you know, Emmy winning writers and literally are on food stamps or have negative account bank accounts.
And it's just I just want our listeners at home to be able to wrap their minds around it, because it's still I know that there are some people that say it's Hollywood elites or yeah but what you know you get yeah you'll get a paycheck for that might look impressive
to somebody but then you have to make that last and like understanding some of the nature of this
it's just I guess we've already covered it but yeah it's just impossible no I mean I think about
that a lot when talking about residuals because, you know, residuals
on the surface, you know, residuals for anyone that doesn't know, it's essentially just a
royalty.
So it's as if like you invented a product and then sold it to a larger company and you
kept a piece of the profits.
That's all it is.
Like it's, you know, books, like authors get a percentage of the sales of their books because
they created that.
Authors get a percentage of the sales of their books because they created that.
And when we're talking about the residuals being taken away and that we want to participate in the success of our work, I think sometimes people can view that as us asking for just a bonus.
We want the money. But residuals are truly a very important part of the economy of this industry because the work is so sporadic and there's so much stuff that's out of your control.
You're not a full-time employee.
You're an independent contractor. So there are times where you will just not be working through no fault of your own.
your own. And residuals allow for people to sustain those times that they are not working,
which means that you can keep skilled people in the workforce. Like there are so many people who are leaving the entertainment industry. And this is happening in every industry. I mean,
every industry is feeling this squeeze of like, what am I doing this for? The pay is getting
lower. The work is getting harder. I don't want to stay in this. And so they're leaving.
the pay is getting lower, the work is getting harder. I don't want to stay in this. And so they're leaving. And you're losing all of these talented, passionate people, your workforce is
getting worse. And then, you know, you have these weird situations where you're like, why can't I
find a good person for this job? And it's like, well, there's only five of them now, like the
rest of them have left this business because it was too hard and that's why
residuals are an important part of this like they allow you to not have to be scrambling constantly
if you have something that's successful you get to stay in the business and work on new things
that eventually work on new things that become a job creator yeah and like to anybody who's still
saying well still but that's extra bonus money no no no no we haven't even talked about the amount
of unpaid labor which is 90 percent of i mean i'm not a wga writer i'm not pursuing the same exact
career but even with acting there is a lot of work that goes into each and every audition you're going to.
You have to treat that like that's already your role, that that's already your job.
But for a writer, you're writing stuff on spec.
They're saying we generally want some we want to hire somebody to write this property.
Give me your pitch.
So you spend months developing a pitch and then maybe you're you know like you
write it you don't know even if you sell a show or like you get it optioned and there's just so
much unpaid work to with so many things that can explode you just have to do it because you want
to keep doing it yeah so that's also part of what this is. And like you want these skilled, but the people up top
do not care coming back around
about the quality of the product at this point.
And this seems like a good time to bring up AI.
This is another issue.
Sorry, can I say one more thing on residuals?
Because you're totally right.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Yes. Thank you for bringing that up.
The free work element of it
is the most important part.
I can't believe I left that out.
Because yeah, like writers and actors and directors and producers like the people that
do get residuals like they have to do constant free work for you know they're looking for the
next thing they're looking for the next idea they're you know yeah putting a lot of time and
effort into every single audition that an actor goes on,
regardless of whether or not they book it, and they're just doing free work. And, you know,
that the residuals cover that lean time. And there's been, you know, some talk in the union
and just in the industry about paying writers for development work to try to cut down on the amount of free
work that they're doing. And I actually am sort of like, I understand how that could actually be
bad. For example, Hocus Pocus 2, that was an open writing assignment, which means that Disney,
the studio put out the word like, hey, we're interested in looking at Hocus Pocus 2. Like,
you know, they contacted agents of some writers that they liked.
They had read a script that I had written for free in my own time while I was a TV writer,
you know, in between seasons.
I wrote a feature sample that got passed around.
That's how they knew of me.
They reached out to my agent being like, does she want to be one of the people to come in
and pitch?
I was thrilled.
I was so excited.
I spent weeks working on this take.
And I went in and I pitched it and I won the job.
And I do know that there are other people that spent the same amount of time and effort developing their take.
They went in and pitched it and they did not get the job.
And that is horrible.
I've also been in that situation before where I haven't gotten the job and it's just been a waste.
is horrible. I've also been in that situation before where I haven't gotten the job and it's just been a waste. But at the same time, I'm like, I at the time was a TV writer with no feature
credits. If Disney had to convince people to pay me to develop an idea, I don't know that they
necessarily would have hired me. They would have been hiring people with more experience. And so that might wind up,
wind up like shutting people out unintentionally and sort of taking opportunities away from people,
which, you know, it's a difficult situation because you don't want people doing tons and
tons of free work. And that's why, you know, you typically are relying on your agent to kind of get
like a good sense of, okay, how many people are actually going in and pitching on this? Is it a hundred people or is it five? Because if it's a
hundred people, it's not worth my time. How much do I really care about it? Blah, blah, blah. But
you know, you're always doing that math, but I think residuals are a part of that. Residuals
cover that downtime. And if you have an ability to continue making money off of something, if it is successful, then, you know, it takes the burden off of like the pre-work needing to be the thing that it's related to.
I'm sorry.
I'm reminded of a lot of these, like a lot of like Twitter blue, like old architecture, old painting accounts on Twitter that are like, why don't we, why does nobody make these like amazing sculptures anymore why does nobody make these like amazing things anymore well they were
commissioned and like like they were paid like people paid you to like just do that live your
life appropriately yeah right um because you have all this time and you can't you can't spend all
of your free time focusing on that you also used to have a job so you can like.
No, that's what I mean.
Exactly.
I don't mean but get commissioned, but they also I don't mean Patreon, but just the whole concept of like the wealthy person is like my my patron, my sponsor to say like I get to go out and make art.
OK, yeah.
Live here and just make this.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I mean, it gets back to this thing of like, you know, we watched what happened to the music industry where all of a sudden it just became the idea of like, we don't pay for music.
We don't want to and we won't. And that led to this situation in the music industry where artists don't make any money off of streaming.
And that has decimated their industry and sort of made it a lot worse for indie bands and mid-tier bands.
and sort of made it a lot worse for indie bands and mid-tier bands.
And it's a nightmare.
And, you know, they've taken away like the concept of paying for entertainment,
which, you know, that is a cultural thing. Like that's a cultural seismic shift that you can't blame on any one individual.
But I will say that like the studios, you know, the past few years,
like there's just been this constant refrain among everyone of just like, oh, well, the industry has changed. Like
the business has changed. People don't watch things the way they used to. And it's just like,
well, yeah, but you like that argument is just like, who would have ever thought that if we
put all of your stuff on our platform and charge people $4 a month for everything,
that we would make less money. Like,
I don't know. Like, and now they're unwilling to pay more. Like, that's crazy.
Yes. It's like, how did this happen? And what do we do about it?
Yeah.
Well, think about it.
What are they going to do about it? They're going to put ads and raise the price.
Exactly. The people who made those decisions are the ones for whom there's not a complicated
formula to figure out how many pennies they make they're the ones making tens of millions of dollars for their mistake running warner brothers
into the ground totally yeah i just keep coming back to a real lack of respect for art and art
forms and artistry to the same with the music i mean spotify is making a bank you know the ceos that
have come in to streamline it and like you're trying to say that this is cheaper for the user
which i guess in the music sense instead of going out and buying all those albums but then you don't
have those albums anymore like on your shelf which is like having art in your home but in terms of streaming i pay more now than i've
ever paid in my life you know every year i'm spending more money on it and they keep removing
things and they're also adding i think i'm paying for a service but i refuse to pay for the top tier
one so i'm still getting commercials and personally i enjoy commercials because i like doing commercials
so i
don't have a problem with that but they're making i've actually been enjoying commercials too i have
commercials on peacock and i'm like you know what i kind of like seeing them again i love seeing my
friend in the commercial i like to see how people are a little pause yeah and personally i love when
i get to work on a commercial set i think it's the most fun I mean obviously you
prefer to have something juicy part that you get but a commercial set no one is being you know
no one's the star no one is like and everyone's excited to be at camp for a couple days anyway
I digress not taking it too seriously yeah like coming back around to what you were saying earlier, the patrons and like have people commissioned for art that.
At its core was a reverence for arts and the arts and artists, because that would make the donor look good.
That wasn't just he's not been charging people to see his sculpture.
This is a reflection of me and my taste and sensibility in the world.
I see this as an important part of the social fabric.
I want this to be Mike.
I know that I can't make it, but my contribution is,
it's just a fundamental shift in how people appreciate it.
You know what I mean?
Totally.
It's also just a fundamental shift in like, you know,
the very simple idea of movies and television is like, the studios pay for us to make it and then they sell it. And that's where their money comes from. But now, the studios pay us to make it so that they can put it on their platform and then just like hope people stay on it. like there's no one is selling anything to anyone
yeah it's this sort of reversal to like way way back in the day where it's like yeah you're you're
the studio is the distributor yeah and it's reaching the point dangerously so especially
with like ai where it's like the studio is like right quote unquote writing it and making it and
like they're just gonna be crapping things out.
And it's the same people doing it.
It's the studio heads who are also the distribution heads
who are also the creative heads.
And it's just this weird monopolization,
like blob of not anything worth watching.
Yeah.
And it's just like they're making decisions
based only on how it affects their bottom line like they have no
they're not accountable to anybody else like they are the yeah they're making it they're
distributing it they're you know solely in charge of it um and so that means that they get to take
these hard lines of just like no we don't want it unless you do it this way and if you don't want to
do it this way you can walk because there's a hundred people out there
who will create a show for us and we don't care.
Yeah, we don't care if it's good.
I'm reminded of the funniest thing
maybe somebody like running a studio has said recently,
which is like the Marvel of it all.
Obviously that's also doing a lot of stuff
to sort of suffocate a lot of creativity,
I think in a lot of ways but um they made disney
plus was like we're gonna make as many things we can for marvel we're gonna do as many marvel
things we can and then they had to come out and say like actually so we we've heard your complaints
and i think the exact quote is like we're going to focus less on quantity and more on quality
like if you have to go out and say that you're going to try to make good things,
that's a problem.
That should be the thing you're starting at.
Well, it's also like, you know,
I can't speak too much on this
because I only know a little bit,
but you know, the VFX industry is in shambles
because they are so overworked.
There's so much very VFX heavy stuff
that needs their talent and their labor and
they are being forced in these situations where it's just like you need to work as hard and as
fast as you possibly can and you know it doesn't matter how good it looks or not like just keep
working on it and make it look as good as you possibly can and don't stop working until right it's gotta be like really demoralizing too because then those
things come out and like they're not as good as they could have been and so people like look at
this shit and then like well it's not my fault i wanted more time totally i was literally the money
the resources to it yeah i was watching my husband and I put on The Mask yesterday.
We were just like, haven't seen it in a while.
What's this about?
And I kept saying to him, I was like, honestly, the effects in this look great.
And that is kind of sad because it's just like that movie came out in, I don't know,
96, 94.
Yeah.
And it's just sort of like, yeah, we haven't necessarily gotten better.
Like in some ways we really have.
But in some ways people are being held back from innovating and from doing their best work because they're just under such a gun to get things out as fast as they possibly can.
It's just all about the churn.
And the churn hurts everybody.
Yeah.
it's just all about the churn and the churn hurts everybody yeah because also so many of these things are sort of like you know a lot of projects uh are kind of written before and after and during
and like by committee in a weird way we're like well we we have this sequence we want to do that
we've been working on so it has to be in this or ah this doesn't work we're just gonna we're just
gonna force this
other like actor into this scene that wasn't there in the original script and things like that
and then so you overwork everybody and then it's this mishmash of ideas to make it work but then
it doesn't because totally art needs a perspective and like a focus and um this is like okay so this is why i feel like i get so angry about the strike
is that everyone that works in entertainment literally everyone from people at the studio
all the way down to like the pas like they came to work in entertainment because they love TV and movies. They love these things. They want to create them. And, you know, we're all
out here doing our best and trying so hard. And we take so much pride and care in our craft and
our skill, and we want to put the best foot forward. And I think what's so frustrating is
that, you know, these venture capitalists, tech guys, whatever, whoever they
are that came in the top and changed everything. I think they kind of saw from the outside how the
industry was working and they were like, okay, great. We get it. And we're just going to make
everything a lot worse. And they don't understand that like, we're doing all of these jobs. We're
doing all of these things in spite of the naturally difficult conditions of
the entertainment industry like it is a hard job to be on set like that that's never going to change
like sometimes you're you know shooting a movie that takes place in the winter and you have to be
outside all night in the snow you know like there's so much stuff that you and the hours are
going to be long like and erratic too yeah and erratic yeah the hours are going to be long, like. And erratic too.
Yeah.
And erratic.
Yeah.
And there's going to be scrambling as well.
Like, you know, you're you might be on set and all of a sudden like a location falls through.
And so it's like, OK, now you need to rewrite it so that scene can take place here instead
of there or whatever.
Or like, oh, we lost this actor, like make it so the scene doesn't include that person.
You know, there's always elements of that. And instead of
having a situation where it's like, okay, we have this script that we feel really good about,
that we have budgeted, that we have planned for, that's what we're shooting. Here we go. And we're
going to have the writer on set in case something goes wrong or in case something comes up that we
need to pivot.
Now it's just like, okay, we have this script that we feel like kind of okay about. We're going to keep working on it, but we need to just get the train moving anyway. So why don't the train start
moving? And then there's going to be constant scrambling and rewriting and blah, blah, blah,
blah, blah. And so again, it's like they saw an industry that had, you know, a lot of risk and
that had a lot of sort of instability, and a lot of last minute
changes and long hours and hard working conditions. And they were like, Okay, great, we're gonna make
all of that worse. And we're going to remove all positive incentives. Yeah, that's really true.
Like, it's something that you see, because like the stuff you're describing like the onset sort of
stressors that also if you start with we want to make this story we want to make this here's the
thing it's going to be that other stuff kind of drives the project in a way like you get like
kind of an adrenaline high from it you like oh i'm going to solve this problem it sort of creates
parameters within the project but if you take that and you're like, what if the whole thing was that? What if like, it's just a constant like process for years of figuring out
what you're doing instead of having something and then trying to make that and having to solve
problems. Totally. It's also like, I have had jobs where not all of my jobs are on my IMDB,
by the way. So if you think you know what I'm talking about, you might not.
But I've had jobs where, you know, you're just constantly being asked to solve problems.
And you do.
You're like, hey, that massive problem that we have, I actually was able to solve it.
And everyone is like, oh, my God, thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Now you actually need to solve this massive problem.
And if you push back at all, it's kind of just like, well, like, that's the problem.
You need to solve it.
You know, like you have there's just not a lot of like agency that you have and you're not rewarded for solving problems.
You're just given more shit to do at on a tighter timeline i want
to i do want to talk about ai stuff but i think it relates to all of this because there's a a death
of creativity is at the core of all this there's so many different people inputting when you talk
about all these changes we just got to get started and but there's studios and people that are not creatives
that are having a final say and like but i actually want explosions so can we make this
romantic explosion comedy i don't know like it's whatever it is and it it just it kills the actual
yeah it's like because it's a the death of creativity and sort of like all it's like a
lack of reverence for it but also like kind of a jealousy of it like, it's like a lack of reverence for it, but also like kind of a jealousy of it.
Like I see that with a lot of people trying to do the AI stuff where it's like, well, I don't need creative people.
I can do it.
I'm creative.
I can just tell the robot to do it.
And it's just kind of this soulless mash of stuff.
I would also love to hear an explanation of mini rooms before we go.
Yeah, we do.
We want to know mini rooms.
And I want to hear about what's at stake with we go yeah we do we want to know mini rooms and i want
to hear about what's at stake with the ai totally of it all um so yes so mini rooms i will caveat
by saying i have not been in a mini room uh so my experience is coming only from hearing about it
but basically what happens is what used to happen what normally happens with writing a television show is that someone would work for free forever to develop an idea for a show, which is a tremendous amount of work, just to be clear.
And they would then sell that show.
The network that bought it would pay that person, the creator, to write a pilot episode, the first episode of that show.
Then they would decide, OK, do we actually want to make this show?
Then they would shoot it.
And then once they had the full pilot, they would watch it and say,
okay, now do we want to make more episodes of this show?
And then if they did, they would pick up that show
and then tell the creator, now you get to hire a writing staff
and they are going to help you write season one of that show, however many episodes they order.
Now what's happening is they're saying, okay, we bought this pilot from you.
We have this pilot script.
We don't know if we want to spend more money on this.
So we want you to hire, we're going to give you a development budget to hire a few writers for, you know, two weeks, three weeks, one week, whatever, to work with you to come up with the entire season so that you can tell us what the season will be.
And a lot of times it involves actually writing scripts and they're not paid for it.
Like normally when you are a writer on a TV staff, you are paid a weekly fee. And then
for all of the work that you are doing throughout the season. And then if you write an episode,
you are also paid a script fee on top of that, which is also a good thing because it used to
mean that if you wanted to give a writer's assistant a script, you know, to like someone
who was not on the writing staff, if you gave them a script, they would get that script fee.
That was another source of income for them. And also a really good incentive for people to
take those jobs. And then they get to move on. It's experience. So all of that has been removed,
essentially, or it's vanishing. And a mini room is basically just a way for them to get an entire
season of television written without having to actually pay the writers because
the other thing with mini rooms is that they're like oh well you know it's just a development
thing like we're just sort of trying this out we just want to see like what the show can be like
we don't really know so we're just throwing a little bit of money at it so everybody is coming
in at the same rate and so that means that people with you know 20 years of writing experience who have made shows before who have been on set, they're coming in and just getting paid the same exact flat rate as someone who maybe it's their first job.
And it's, you know, significantly lower than what they would work for spending significantly less money and then also making it uh way harder for writers to
qualify for health insurance because they're not making yeah enough money also seems like maybe a
way to make a lower quality season of television like in that situation like are you gonna be like doing
your best stuff because you know you're not getting paid enough you're not gonna get this
you're not gonna get this and you're just gonna be disposed of in a week are you gonna do your
best stuff there and you're not gonna participate in the success of it at all so it's like who cares
yeah like you're not even gonna be credited on it a lot of times and like that's what that's also
what i get so mad about sorry i will get's also what I get so mad about. Sorry,
I will get to AI, but I get so mad about it because if, you know, I was listening to Betsy
Thomas, who's a WGA member. I think she might even be on the negotiating committee, but she was on a
podcast and she said it best where she was like, they prey on our pride and our work because they
are basically just saying like we know that you
care very deeply about the quality of the work that you do and so don't you want to work as
hard as you possibly can to make this good in spite of everything that we're putting on you
and more often than not the answer is yes like i do want my thing to be as good as possible i want
it to be a reflection of my taste and you know my sensibility i want it to be
uh meaningful and so you know we work so so so hard and they're just like great you take on all
the onus of making it good and then we get all the benefit i uh somebody some studio exec said
literally that i think about the strike recently where
oh love of working yeah yeah david zaslav said that yeah exactly yeah it'll end soon
they love it piece of shit yeah i don't think he knew he was making himself like the villain
of like he definitely does not know they don't get it did you see did he not get it now the
commencement speech the commencement speech and then today there's a New York Times article that's all about like his like wonderful time at the Cannes Film Festival.
And his party and the yachts.
The yachts, yeah.
Buddy, like you want to be around him so bad that you're just like, look at me.
I'm a hobnobbing Hollywood cool guy.
Like it's just like you literally read the room and like save all that stuff for when the strike is over.
Yeah.
He stole $300 million so he could insulate himself from all the people he stole the money from.
It's so bad.
It is wild.
It is.
It blows my mind to see it.
They don't care?
How do they not notice?
They just don't care.
They think they can get away with it, right?
They think it doesn't.
Is it trolling us?
Yeah.
That's what like I again, like I was not here for the previous strikes.
And so maybe this is an off base read.
But I think that is what feels so different about this one, at least from what I've heard, is that the audacity, like they don't even feel the need to lie anymore. Like they're just like Carol Lombardini, who's the chief negotiator for the AMPTP, which is the bargaining collective for all these corporations.
She literally said to the WGA negotiating committee that writers are lucky to have term employment.
Like they are literally just like, we don't need you.
We don't care about you.
And stop asking for a living wage.
We don't want to pay it to you like they
don't feel the need to lie anymore which is kind of crazy but also i guess a good thing so that we
can yeah i was gonna say it's like it's alarming that they think they can get away with it but i
do have hope that they won't i think like totally they won't they won't and even since like the
previous strike i feel like there's not not just like within the entertainment industry but like just a general like sense that like
things are bad situations are bad this relationship this like boss relationship is bad across many
many all industries and i think especially in hollywood probably with like you know the
director's guild might be joining sag all these being like, yeah, this kind of sucks, actually.
And we're supposed to be artists.
Yeah.
And I think that the sense even like just amongst the general population is like, yeah, people deserve more than they're getting.
It's also, and here's where I'll get to AI.
Transitions, we love it.
It's also like we can all now see the writing on the wall.
Like we've watched this happen to every single industry.
And, you know, we see, everyone is just seeing like, we know where this ends and it ends with everyone losing except for whoever gets out at the right time up top.
And with AI, we can see that new technology knocking on the door.
And it's not a matter of, I don't think AI is ever going to fully replace creative writing,
like creative writing done by humans.
Human, yeah.
But it absolutely could very easily and probably pretty quickly become something that the studios can use to pay us less.
So basically, you know, when you're a feature writer, you know, you get paid to, you know, either you write a script for free and then you sell it and then you're paid for that script or you get paid to write a script.
for that script or you get paid to write a script. But that initial script fee or getting paid to write that script is usually the most amount of money that you're making. And then you have,
you know, you might get paid to rewrite it, which is a lesser fee because it's less work than
writing a script from scratch. And then there's something called a polish, which is less than a
rewrite and you're paid even less than a rewrite. And so there's, you know, these steps that have corresponding numbers usually, or number
ranges. And it's, it's not hard to imagine that the studios would essentially like tell chat GBT,
like, Hey, write to kill a monkey bird as a movie. And then they're like, Hey, we've got this
horrible script that makes no sense
but it is a script and we want you to just rewrite it so we're gonna pay you even less to just
rewrite this script as opposed to write something new exactly and yeah do a quick polish yeah yeah
and like or just being like oh like hey chat gpt like give me an outline for a movie about like a
mermaid who goes to space or whatever and they're like here it is and it's like okay great we've got this outline like so now you don't need to
do that step and you can just write this thing even though it's yeah and this one is wolverine
and yeah well so much of ai is that at least especially now but like just this sense of like
you need humans to watch it make sure that it's doing an okay job um totally like human supervisors for
the robots we talked about this in the movie in the movie in a meeting recently it's like
people don't stop and think about that there are actually people maintaining the
running chat gbt there are people it's not like this is just some program i don't know
it doesn't matter it's like yeah and it's learning from work that people have done.
Like, that's the big thing with WGA, where, you know, that was part of their proposal was like, you can't use AI.
You can't use our literary material to train AI to replace us.
Right, because then you're going to have AI write a script that's like, well, these lines are from another movie.
And like, it doesn't know that it's doing that.
It's just sort of predicting like, well, this is the next sentence, but it's pulling from this other stuff.
Also, and this obviously shouldn't have to be said, but when things like chat GPT are scraping from the internet and all this sort of language and now it makes stuff chat gpt isn't going out and like living
a life it's not experiencing things it's not having unique experiences which so much of what
goes into actual creative work is your like a unique experience and like a lived life and it's
really depressing to see people dismiss that aspect of it and think that it's just like oh
the words are there that That's how it happens.
Totally.
And I think like the thing that I think is so upsetting about it too, is that, you know,
all of these corporations like in the past few years have put, you know, a very strong
emphasis on wanting to make the industry more inclusive and more diverse,
which is amazing because it is a very white industry and it's really hard to break into
if you don't have access to some kind of financial safety net, whether that's generational wealth or
whatever. And so they're trying, you know, there, there's a lot of efforts and initiatives.
And I know that individual people at the studios care very deeply about making sure that we're not just hearing stories from like one type of person.
But at the same time, they are completely eliminating all of our entry level, lower level, mid-level jobs that make it possible for people to break into the industry and climb their way through.
As difficult as it is, it's still theoretically possible or it was and then with this idea of
like you know ai kind of like around the corner and their unwillingness to say that they are not
going to use it to replace writers actors and directors like that feels so gross because you can just easily imagine them being like hey chat gbt like give us a story
about like uh you know like an african-american girl growing up in whatever time period and then
it's just like the ai writes it and you're not actually getting the real experience you're not
getting any story yeah like you don't actually care about kind of what we're actually trying to do here
like enriching culture and yeah i could see how easy it would be for stereotypes and misconceptions
totally get looped in to completely cannibalize an actual event or story and make it into something else, which is very grotesque to think about.
And just coming back around to what you were saying, yeah, the writer that gets hired for a fraction of what they should to clean up the AI's mess still is going to care.
to clean up the ai's mess still is gonna care still is gonna want to make it as good as possible and they are going to be in a position where they have to accept pennies to not just write it but
like fix it which is a whole other it's like honestly that could be more work than i've had
friends come in get hired to come in and fix a movie and it becomes a whole can of worms
instead of like just being able to start it better from the beginning you know like if adjusting a
chat gpt like an ai script will in a lot of cases probably be like way more time than it would take
to just write the script yourself yeah and the and the ai is pulling from the existing material so if they're trying to do you know a story that's
more diverse than hollywood has typically been it's scraping from stuff that was written by
white people yeah yeah 10 exactly 20 years ago 30 years ago so it's going to be even less
representative than it has been yeah it's a quote robot it feels very dystopian to think about how the way that it
could go we should wrap this up because we've recorded longer than we normally do only because
i really went on do not be sorry i was gonna say i just loved it i love talking to you i could talk
another hour um we're not going to but i can't. Let our listeners know where they can find you, follow your work.
I mean, obviously there's Hocus Pocus too.
Yeah, I'm on Instagram at Jen underscore D'Angelo.
And yeah, that's my only social media.
I deleted Twitter years ago and I don't look back.
It's great.
No, but you're using your Instagram very well
right now. So I do encourage people to follow and, you know, and lots of writers follow writers that
you respect and their work. And I'm sure that they will also be posting about what's going on.
But I highly recommend Jen, because I started off some very eloquent posts that are shareable and
good. Thank you. Yeah, there's a lot of really great
strike content out there uh so yeah i definitely recommend just like following whatever writer
you like or find for the little red avatar is there something that you all want on the picket
line more than pizza and water because i feel like you're probably overloaded with pizza and water
there's a lot of pizza and water which is really like you're probably overloaded with pizza and water. There's a lot of pizza and water, which is really honestly incredible.
Thank you so much to people who've been donating.
I've also seen people are starting to bring popsicles out, which is really nice.
And that's going to be clutch as it gets hotter and hotter.
We should buy you all sun hats, like the big brimmed kind.
I have a sun hat and I'm just like everybody get sun hat and
good shoes because
you're gonna hurt your back walking around on this pavement
okay that does it
for us this week
we'll be back
next week and what else
is it that I'm supposed to say there's
something else that I always
end the show with what
oh that's right we love you very much