The Daily Zeitgeist - The Amazing Invisible Hit Show, What Strikes Are Saving Us From 08.15.23
Episode Date: August 15, 2023In episode 1531, Jack and Miles are joined by producer, TV Writer, and co-host of Yo, Is This Racist?, Andrew Ti, to discuss… The Strike So Far, What’s It Actually Like for the Average Writer? His...tory of F**kery--Reagan Also to Blame For the Current Situation in Hollywood? The Current Situation is F**ked and more! Here are three of the biggest demands striking actors are asking for Shawn Ryan Opens Up About WGA Negotiations, Netflix’s ‘Night Agent’ and How ‘Terriers’ Was Ahead of Its Time Corporate greed, low unemployment, housing crisis: That’s the recipe for hot labor summer Hollywood has been in a double strike for a month. Where do things stand now? LISTEN: Spiky Boi by Surprise ChefSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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I'm Jess Casavetto, executive producer of the hit Netflix documentary series Dancing for the Devil, the 7M TikTok cult.
And I'm Clea Gray, former member of 7M Films and Shekinah Church.
And we're the host of the new podcast, Forgive Me for I Have Followed.
Together, we'll be diving even deeper into the unbelievable stories behind 7M Films and Shekinah Church.
Listen to Forgive Me for I Have Followed on the iHeartRadio app,
Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get
your podcasts.
I'm Keri Champion,
and this is season four
of Naked Sports.
Up first,
I explore the making
of a rivalry.
Kaitlyn Clark
versus Angel Reese.
Every great player
needs a foil.
I know I'll go down
in history.
People are talking
about women's basketball
just because of
one single game. Clark and Reese have
changed the way we consume women's
sports. Listen to the making of a rivalry
Caitlin Clark versus Angel Reese
on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcast
or wherever you get your podcast.
Presented by Capital One, founding
partner of iHeart Women's Sports.
Hey, I'm Gianna Pardenti
and I'm Jermaine Jackson-Gadsden.
We're the hosts of Let's Talk Offline from LinkedIn News and iHeart Podcasts.
There's a lot to figure out when you're just starting your career.
That's where we come in.
Think of us as your work besties you can turn to for advice.
And if we don't know the answer, we bring in people who do,
like negotiation expert Maury Tahiripour.
If you start thinking about negotiations as just a conversation,
then I think it sort of eases us a little bit.
Listen to Let's Talk Offline
on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts
or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hello the internet
and welcome to season 300
episode 1 of
This is Sparta!
And
this is a production of iHeartRadio
that was the first, other than
when we mentioned it last week, the first time it has crossed my mind.
But this is season 300.
This is Sparta.
Yeah.
We're going to have special stuff planned.
Jack, this should be the most.
AKA four episodes.
This should be the most significant season because 300 is like the genesis point of everything.
Yeah.
It's like our favorite movie.
We saw each other in line for the
movie 300 shirtless i remember oiling up you greased my back i remember that's how i was like
hey bro you mind getting my back a little bit and then you told me my push-up form was off and then
i went to the bathroom sobbing but then you came back and you said hey buddy i didn't mean to say
it like that you look great you look great man we should really try and hit a 90 degree angle if
you're going all the way down because Because I was doing a real shallow like.
But then I told you about negging and how, you know, how impactful that was and how you could use it to control the world.
And you looked so cool with that boa, like feather boa around your neck, like with your chest out, dude.
And then at the time, I remember you introduced me or you introduced yourself to me as Cryptic.
You're like, hey, I'm Cryptic.
And I was like, whoa, what?
Like that was your pick up line.
Cryptic O'Brien.
Cryptic is so good.
Oh, shit.
It's Tuesday, August 15th, 2023.
Yeah.
It's National Relaxation Day, National Leathercraft Day, National Lemon Meringue Pie Day and VJ Day.
Something about the war ending. Cool. There you go name is jack o'brien aka get your shit get your whole shit bit
hey hey get my shit get my whole shit bit that is courtesy of christy amaguchi main to too legit to
quit there were like four words in that aka and I forgot them for the first half.
But that's all right.
Thank you for the AKA.
Great to see you again, Chris.
I'm thrilled to be joined as always by
my co-host, Mr. Miles Gray!
Mr. Miles Gray
AKA.
Crispy wonton rolls filled
with avocado
chicken, tomato and Monterey jack applewood smoked crisp bacon
with house made ranchito i love these egg rolls i get them each time
and obviously that's rhcpk we're bringing it back, obviously, right to post under the bridge, talking about Jack Evoked CPK.
And we had to bring up RHCPK again.
So thank you.
Thank you.
It hits different.
Once you've had a long-running bit about RHCPK,
going to CPK hits a little different.
Does it?
Yeah, it's good.
It feels good to have heartburn in a place like this.
Well, Miles, we are thrilled to be joined in our third seat by one of the very faces on Mount Zeitmore.
A hilarious and brilliant producer, TV writer.
You know him from the Yo, Is This Racist podcast.
It's Andrew T.
Andrew T.
Solidarity.
Forever.
Solidarity.
Welcome, man. I've been having trouble with some of the union songs man
it's a little
the union song canon got a little white
and then briefly I was like playing
like communist party
Chinese music on my hype up
to this picket line
that got a little weird
a lot of killing motherfuckers in those songs.
Wow.
You could sing like Bella Ciao.
You know, there's like that one good old yarn from the Italians.
That anti-fascist anthem.
You know what?
Yeah.
There's a bunch of that.
You know, and there's probably a bunch of stuff in Spanish that's my fault that I went to Chinese. Hey, you go with what you know first, you know then there's probably a bunch of um stuff in spanish that is that's my fault that i went to chinese communist hey you go you go with what you know first you know
so is everybody out there singing rich men north of richmond the
yeah i it's it's not it's the that was more of a beginning of the strike thing i think that was
when we were all like try to like try to be serious try i think
what it was was we were trying to impress the teamsters like we're cool right we're down they're
like and now it's now it's just kind of now you've all thrown out your backs just not picking up the
signs and oh my god it's really it's really it's been uh it's been a good strike i haven't seen you
guys in a minute but you know strike it yeah i mean that's. I haven't seen you guys in a minute, but, you know, strike it. Yeah.
I mean, that's why we wanted to have you on because just there's it's constantly changing.
And I think also our understanding of the industry, I think, especially for like people outside of California or outside of L.A., have like a very like a perspective on what's happening.
It's not fully formed.
like a perspective on what's happening that is not fully formed. And I think,
you know,
the purpose of today is to really like roll our sleeves up,
give some perspective and talk about like what's at stake here truly,
because we definitely got a good intro when Adam Conover came on.
And now that like things are slowly developing,
we know a little bit more,
we kind of wanted to come back because this affects like 80% of our
listeners,
favorite guests, like most of y'all
realize all the comedians that we have on a lot of them spend time in writers rooms because that's
the yeah they ain't like marcella said she's like it ain't happening you're not getting it from
stand-up so i get why all the homies end up going to write because that's a way to carve out a life
for yourself so anyway yeah looking forward to talking i get it you guys have
eaten at california pizza kitchen you think you understand what this strike is all about
yeah yeah i mean you've had in and out once right you get it you got you now you got amcpk right you
could bash those amcpk yeah we should amcpk yeah yeah I don't know. We'll work on it. Are you sounding that out?
Just to make sure.
I'm not sure where the RH comes in.
Oh, oh.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
That's tough.
That's tougher.
That's a tough one.
AMRCPK.
There we go.
Yeah, it doesn't work.
It doesn't work.
We need a bigger room.
We need a bigger room to work on that.
Yeah, you know what?
If we had enough minds to do this, we could come up
with it. Give you the proper product. Sorry about that.
That's right. Yeah, exactly.
Well, Andrew,
before we get to all the strike stuff, we do
like to get to know our guests a little bit better
and ask you, what is something
from your search history?
Alright, this is
going to be...
I think this one was okay,
and it didn't really give me the results
I was looking for exactly,
but I searched earlier this week,
is Splinter a weeb in the new TMNT movie?
Because there are two ways you can go
with classical depictions of Splinter.
One is essentially
like an actual
Japanese rat, or
sometimes a Japanese person who's
been ratified.
Ratatouille'd.
And then, I believe
the newish
depictions are
he's just like a weeb, essentially.
Just a New Yorker who loves Japanese
culture so much,
he decided.
He's not Hamato Yoshi anymore?
I don't think he was named in the current one, but no.
Is he like talking?
Yeah, what's his accent like?
What's his voice like?
Well, okay, so this is where it gets even weirder.
So I did not realize what this was until I,
I didn't really get a satisfactory answer,
and I just went down that rabbit hole of sometimes he's a weeb.
But even weirder, and I guess I probably could have known this
if I paid more attention to the advertising,
he's voiced by Jackie Chan.
And, like, pretty clearly...
So they split the difference.
He's an Asian rat, but he's still a weeb they
how you do that they basically are just like he just liked ninja shit like the way american
you know well-meaning kind of racist drives a trans man like yeah like ninja shit he's just
like he's like i don't know we needed a way to learn how
to fight and ninjas are cool yeah so it's like kind of like wu-tang adjacent like the rizzo
yeah we're just watching kung fu movies like that's how it basically is exactly that
so it's the same way wu-tang got their whole shit yeah like i don't know it was on we liked it
but it's like he's he is Asian. It's definitely not Japanese.
Right.
There's no point played for Japanese.
It's very like I don't I'm choosing not to think it through too hard because I really like the movie.
Right.
Right.
Right.
I haven't seen it, but I will be taking my.
Oh, my.
Dude, so many of my my friends are like, yo, you should go see it.
It's not bad, actually.
Because a few of my friends are doing the millennial thing or like millennial parent.
We're like, hey, I'll take my kids to see some shit I fucking know about.
And they're like, I don't regret it.
Or that was the main thrust.
It wasn't like, it wasn't bad.
I don't regret it.
I'll throw this out there.
And maybe this is, I'm childless but old.
So I'm both a teenager and basically a dad.
It is maybe my favorite movie since Everything Everywhere All at Once.
It is so,
so good
to me specifically.
Wow, okay.
That's a heavy fucking
stamp of approval out here.
I genuinely, I walked out,
I was like, I watched it with a group of
fellow tv writers on strike because we were like fuck it we'll go after the picket line in the
middle of the day my friend turned to me like four minutes in i was like i think this is the
most beautiful movie i've ever seen just one tear coming down it's like it's the animation looks
really cool yeah yeah the animation yeah the animation looks amazing it's like perfectly like dudes our age new york kind of like like that kind of like
slightly backpackery vibe plus real teenage shit plus real like dad shit it's incredible
wow it's i'm not saying it is the best movie.
I'm just saying to me,
it is my favorite movie.
And I love that.
It's like designed for me,
but I suspect you fellows might find
many of the same traits.
Very appealing.
Hey, you know,
be on this Zoom call if you have daddy issues.
Okay, great.
Great, great, great, great, great.
And you liked it that much
despite the fact that Splinter
admits that his entry point to ninja culture was these six samurai swords that he has framed next
to his book but i i think on the balance that's better than the other version right like yeah
the version of japan i was sold as a child i I was like, this ain't, what the fuck is this? Yeah.
Just the shit where whatever version of him being a quote unquote actual ninja is fucking wild.
Right.
So I, yeah, I think of the lesser of two evils choices, or I do think this kind of splits the difference.
Because they're like, it's better if he's Asian, but it's better if he's not japanese right right right i don't again i'm i'm like choosing not to unpack any of this
because i did like because you like this so much yeah yeah but you know that's me being a coward
yeah but yeah he is he is both asian and a weeb the the rare is splinter the rare Is Splinter, is Shredder Oroku Saki still?
Do they have that backstory with him?
I'm gonna
no spoilers this
and say, don't worry about it
Okay, thank you
I like that. Yeah, don't worry about that part
I remember always as a kid, I was like
that's not a real Japanese name
It always bugged me as a kid. I'm like, okay
Hamato Yoshi, like, okay, that works japanese name it always bugged me as a kid i'm like okay hamato
yoshi like okay that that works yeah it's just one of those like it's really you know it's based
on a thing that is like sort of like well-meaning and it was a parody anyway but it definitely you
know it's it's this like american take on japanese-ness that yeah yeah yeah that is bad right at its heart like no matter how like
how much they they liked the idea of these turtles or these ninjas in general so
yeah there's no it's very hard to imagine a good version where they're japanese like i guess
right yeah yeah right is that true i don't know yeah that's my that's where i i'm sitting
right they're not yeah because you want it to be like because they're like an analog for people
who got like asian culture through the media or something in the early 90s ends up being these
fucking turtles bro sorry these turtles fuck with nin ninjutsu okay not ninjutsu okay yeah anyway
that'll be me being annoying to my kid as we watch don't ignore yeah yeah
just say real just lead over the ooze does not exist no matter how much you wanted to
here's a little list no it it uh yeah look uh the movies are back for now and yeah i was shocked
i had a great cinema week actually we're just i'm just gonna start we're since we're off on a tangent i watched uh no okay i'll make this my my underrated anyway
okay it's just like the the fucking like yeah the big movies are are whatever they're you know
they're good people like them this has been i watched talk to me the horror movie the australian
horror movie that uh should have been called talk the Hand, but that's not my problem.
It's about a hand, though.
Yeah, they find a cursed hand
and it's like, come on, guys.
And I also
watched a movie that
I think you guys would like a lot called
The First Slam Dunk, which was
the feature of
an anime called Slam Dunk.
Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah.
And it's a high school like basketball championship in japan and it is i'm not like a basketball head the way you guys are so maybe
this is like more prevalent in the media and i had never watched the anime tv show right however
it had like and also this should be should have been obvious, but they basically, because it's animated, they really take advantage of the fact that they don't have to use the standard camera angles that you experience basketball from.
Like, you know, the game shit.
Right, right.
So there's, and I might be mistaken by this, the specifics of this, but I'm trying to remember exactly.
There's like one shot near the, I guess it must must be there's a jump ball in the second half and the camera basically
is in the perspective of the ball and it's like fucking oh like it's going up and then yeah i'm
like trying to go up for a while yeah yeah it's so gorgeous and but there's a lot of like first
person stuff that like you know you kind of can experience but, there's a lot of it. And like the basketball,
at least to my eye is played like very real.
Like,
it looks like it's almost like rotoscoped from basketball players maybe,
or like,
I don't,
I don't even know how you make this fucking animation.
Right.
Right.
Right.
That's so cool.
Yeah.
I highly recommend.
I actually have up y'all alley.
I have no,
I have a Sakuragi Shouhoku Jersey.
Like that's because back in the, because like slam dunk was also like the like sort of injection point for sneaker culture in Japan too because that like the guy who was who like inouye the guy who started it was a huge sneaker head and like if when those early like mangas that he made of it you're like oh shit this is we're in jordan 3s he's wearing jordan 6s like he the amount of detail that went into their sneakers was like
fucking next level so i i was i was drawn in from that too as a kid too don't quote me on this
because i i don't i i think it's like one of those things where like most of the brands are like like
kind of that anime style like kind of fake like analogs there's like green mart or whatever except for the jordan's look to my eye like perfect yeah we're not fucking around with
that oh i mean everything else is like a little fake thing like there is a uh like there's a
jordan 6 like an official slam dunk jordan collab because of the you know just the how deep that
relationship was it's very good the movie is very good it's for
it is also like a lot of like teenagers to parents things so maybe that's like a little
bit of a theme actually so is talk to me that's maybe i should have had kids um but uh you saw
those three films instead it seems like yeah it really it really uh some it's a it's a very good movie i it is not it does not have a
wide theatrical run but if you're in los angeles i believe it's playing at the edwards in alhambra
which i'm unclear why that is awesome oh yeah yeah i know that one yeah okay it's right by
even though it's in it's in the heart of some of the best chinese food in southern california it's also
next to the burger place i like a lot called gorilla mall so yeah gorilla mall started off
amazing yeah yeah it's pretty good it's an aggressive burger place dude they had one
that's like the burger like the bread was grilled cheeses right yes yeah that's that's the that's
the what brought me out there the first time yeah listen it's it's a rough time out there and probably this is not the weather for that
kind of food but yeah you do what you got to what is uh what's something you think is overrated
uh that yes that's a segue to my overrated which is the thing that this strike has taught me is
being comfortable mad overrated i don't give a fuck anymore i'm just like like slightly
warm a little sweaty it's like you know because of so-called climate change at least it's humid now
uh which i genuinely that was on my list of when i moved here it's like at least it's not humid
yeah now we're humid now we're humid and we have mosquitoes,
like crazy mosquitoes.
Yeah.
Yeah.
But I think I just,
my brain,
the part of my brain that gives a fuck about being comfortable,
really got shut off somewhere around like day 20 of the strike.
So I've been very like,
fuck it.
Yeah.
I don't care anymore.
I,
I went from what are the most comfortable shoes to who cares?
Wow.
Barefoot? Wearing the pump?
I went for
a pair of Tevas.
Oh, okay.
I've been doing Tevas.
Occasionally, though, I'll just go
they're not like walk
that far on concrete comfy.
Oh, they're not? Okay.
They're walking around a cruise ship comfortable. Yeah, they're not they're not like walk that far on concrete comfy oh they're not okay they're walking around i mean comfortable yeah they're they're they're more like you know a light a light walk
in the woods and or i don't know i i just i just don't i just don't care anymore which is because
i used to be a person that was so like couldn't handle any discomfort now i'm just i think i you
know what and i'm sure i'm not that good but for me i'm right well i'm sure part of that too is like you're now motive your motivations
are different whereas before it's like fine if i gotta go out there and be out there yeah
comfortably versus like oh okay so you're trying to fucking wear me down fuck you yeah i am i am
become death i'm the yeah i'm i am the i am just like i've been ground down to the the little like
nub i'm i'm like the the seed in the middle of the plum and you know what the fuck you're gonna do to
me i don't care there you go that's why i take an ice bath every morning you know yeah that's right
that's right i do feel like i i need something like i need to do something uncomfortable early in my day or else not not a
nice bath but like or else i will just like retreat into like i don't know because i'm a very like
interior person and so like i need to like get out of my body and wait wait go on this now this
kind of resonates with me what do you mean like because i feel the same way so you you try and
push yourself to do something like what do you mean like is that when you just like like exercise
or something like that yeah i do exercise on a fucking bed of needles i'll jump in the pool when
it's cold enough like just get going do something that's uncomfortable and like that is movement
because otherwise i just yeah like otherwise i just will be comfortable inside my body in a way that then, I don't know, it fucks me up.
It just leaves me in a little cocoon.
I've actually been trying to focus on just being more comfortable with discomfort as a general rule.
Yeah.
I mean, look, I know you guys have actual human beings you're responsible for
in a more important way but
that's a little bit what having a dog
like an old dog too it's just like
I gotta get the fuck up cause like
she gotta walk and it doesn't
matter like
however uncomfortable it is
cleaning up whatever mess
she makes if I don't get her walk in time
is much worse
this thing's about to go off yeah it just like it creates whatever mess she makes if I don't get her walking time is much worse.
This thing's about to go off.
Yeah.
It creates this incentive of like,
fuck, fuck, fuck. Good. Great. Let's go.
Yeah, my baby can't even walk yet.
It's like, yeah.
I think it's probably easier than having a dog,
actually, because you don't have to walk for now.
Yeah, I guess so. For now, in my very narrow perspective.
Yeah. It's a lot easier. You easier you guys gonna have real annoying la i guess you were already a real annoying la kid
yeah yo oh hell yeah the cool the cool ones come from the valley you know like molly lambert you
know what i mean like yeah yeah we have like that cynicism of growing up here that we're not like West side kids who are like on some fucking shit.
Like everything's okay.
And I have so much money kind of thing.
We're like,
uh,
yeah,
nah,
a little bit different.
Right.
Cause from when you grew up there,
it's like,
you know,
everyone is a clown.
So you're not scared of them,
but you're also not like,
yeah,
you still got that edge to you. And also, yeah, you're not scared of them but you're also not like yeah you still got that
edge to you yeah and also yeah you're not impressed by that don't impress me much you know what i mean
yeah everybody yes yeah yes thank you saying that all the time i'm gonna don't impress on me much
yeah i feel like the when you think about like why there's so much so many canadian comedians early on like one of the
best explanations i read was that like they are have a lot of the same shit as our culture they
get like a lot of what the same culture that we view like incoming but they're like at enough of
a distance that like they view it through a reflect a refracted lens i feel like you got that with
the valley too that's what that's where we get mama lambert and paul thomas anderson that's what
we call it we call it the canada of la county that's right and they appreciate it and they love
it and i was my fit i wasn't like i feel a connection to the people of new jersey in that
yes we're like yeah We're like the people,
again, the West Side, Hollywood,
LA people thumb their noses at the people from the Valley.
We got our own shit over here.
That's why when people are like,
yeah, the bridge and tunnel,
I'm like, I see you.
I see you.
All right.
Let's take a quick break
and we'll come back
and we'll talk about the strike. We'll be right back.
I'm Jess Casavetto, executive producer of the hit Netflix documentary series Dancing for the Devil, the 7M TikTok cult.
And I'm Clea Gray, former member of 7M Films and Shekinah Church.
And we're the host of the new podcast, Forgive Me For I Have Followed.
Together, we'll be diving even deeper into the unbelievable stories behind 7M Films and LA-based Shekinah Church,
an alleged cult that has impacted members for over two decades.
Jessica and I will delve into the hidden truths between high-control groups and interview dancers,
church members, and others whose lives and careers
have been impacted, just like mine.
Through powerful, in-depth interviews with former members
and new, chilling firsthand accounts,
the series will illuminate untold
and extremely necessary perspectives.
Forgive Me For I Have Followed
will be more than an exploration.
It's a vital revelation aimed at ensuring
these types of abuses never happen again.
Listen to Forgive Me For I Have Followed on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
This summer, the nation watched as the Republican nominee for president was the target of two assassination attempts separated by two months.
separated by two months.
These events were mirrored nearly 50 years ago when President Gerald Ford faced two attempts on his life in less than three weeks.
President Gerald R. Ford came stunningly close to being the victim of an assassin today.
And these are the only two times we know of that a woman has tried to assassinate a U.S. president.
One was the protege of infamous cult leader Charles Manson.
I always felt like Lynette was kind of his right-hand woman. The other, a middle-aged housewife working undercover for the
FBI in a violent revolutionary underground. Identified by police as Sarah Jean Moore.
The story of one strange and violent summer. This is Rip Current, available now with new episodes every Thursday.
Listen on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Substance use disorder and addiction is so isolating.
And so as a black woman in recovery, hope must be loud.
It grows louder when you ask for help and you're vulnerable it is the
thread that lets you know that no matter what happens you will be okay when we learn the power
of hope recovery is possible find out how at startwithhope.com brought to you by the national And we're back.
Before we get into this, Drake, real quick,
on the subject that we were talking about.
Okay, which topic?
I just did the Wire podcast with Matt Lieb.
Yeah, yeah.
It was the episode after Stringer Bell's untimely demise and they go into
his apartment and he has samurai swords and cranes on the wall and i was like i definitely at the
time when it came out and then like uh mcnulty like takes adam smith's like you know first book whatever the fuck the like book that
it invented modern economics like off his thing and is like who the hell was I chasing and I at
the time was like damn Stringer Bell is so tight bro there's like a water feature in his apartment
and shit but it made me wonder, did the writers of The Wire,
were they like, this is tight.
People are going to recognize how tight this dude
is. Or were they like, this is kind of
funny. He
is basically like a finance
bro. Like a hustle culture
rising grind.
That's right. Yeah. Or that
he just knew what he liked.
That he was so secure. He's like, yeah, I'm a samurai sword type dude. Yeah. Or that like he just knew what he liked, you know, like that he was so secure.
He's like,
yeah,
I'm a samurai sword type dude.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I just wish there was a scene with him.
It just,
it sucks as a reveal though.
Right.
Because I would have loved to see a stringer bell maneuvering some fucking
katana or some shit,
seeing what the fuck you could do.
Just like a dark room,
like in a,
in a robe,
just like doing some shit like by himself
but he's like not that good at it
yeah
he's got blade on the big screen
and he's like just doing it along to the movie
his wall
has like cuts in it
and shit
so many times
it's just all copies of Ghost Dog
on your DVD yeah it's just all copies of ghost dog on your uh dvd
thank you yeah that's the only movie that matters yeah oh you big jim jarmusch fan who who
all right let's get into the strike all right you had a recent tweet about how this like
the thing that's different this time like like the studios, their whole stance is.
Yes.
Very predictable.
Just, oh, they're going to be assholes in this very predictable way.
Yeah.
That there seems like there's like the thing that's been surprising is the level of solidarity.
Yeah.
On the strike side.
Like, what have you seen there?
Like, what would.
So. Yeah. Yeah. on the strike side? Like, what, what have you seen there? Like what, what would, what,
what?
So yeah.
Yeah.
I,
I was not in the union in 2008,
but I actually was weirdly,
that was when some of my friends had started getting their first TV jobs.
And,
um,
I was actually working at comedy central.
So I was like occasionally having to cross a picket line in New York,
which was like fucking
horrible but so from what i remember of those days slash just like what people have been saying
oh i guess like to back up to like like my the reason i tweeted that was basically the amptp
who are the motion picture television producers the studios not really the actual actual producers are not
happy that producers in that title right actual producer are closer to the concerns of the workers
but this was off of them uh at literally like a hundred days and change asking seriously to come
back to the negotiating table which is is exactly what happened. Essentially, like, last strike went just over 100 days.
The reason that sort of, like, the conventional wisdom is because that's when they can start
canceling some overall deals.
I mean, they have canceled some or paused some, but basically, the conventional wisdom
goes that's when they can get stuff off their books like deals they want to get out of and appears that they have basically that's and the
reason that's conventional wisdom is because that's the first time the studios like get something out
of going uh forcing us to go on strike they get to recoup a little bit of money and and thus after
this it's all sort of diminishing returns for them there's no reason unless they want to just pack it up on the entertainment industry there's no reason for them to keep
the strike going any longer so that was like utterly predictable the other thing that was
utterly predictable was that dga would take a you know i know there are directors who are happy with
the deal they got but i think most people understand that they got a not that great deal and they did it in a way to lessen solidarity from the other guilds.
You know, by agreeing to a thing that one, I feel like I'm just talking, so, you know, jump in, whatever.
But, like, they took a deal where they didn't get streaming residuals, I believe, which has been one of our main points.
Essentially, we knew they would
stab everyone else in the back,
and they did.
The other thing they could have done,
which is what our leadership
appears to be asking for,
is the right for us
to stand in solidarity with SAG,
the actors,
even after our contract is ratified.
So that basically is what the Teamsters have.
And I believe IATSE have some version of this too.
IATSE are the crew people on the...
There are many things,
but as far as Hollywood goes,
they're the crew people.
So, yeah.
So, you know,
I guess what I'm saying is,
at every stage, if it could have gone one way or the other, it has been more in the case of on the side of solidarity.
We, the writers, have been more in solidarity with each other, save for a few, like, high-profile, mostly white guys talking about how they don't give a shit about the union showrunner types.
they don't give a shit about the union showrunner types but you know compared to last time when apparently there were just like deep divisions evident immediately um and this is also like sort
of i don't know if it was it was certainly pre-wide adoption of twitter i'm not going to
look up when twitter started it was 2007 2008 so there was some kind of it really hit the scene
2009 i feel like is when effectively like when we being like, hey, that's how you can follow food trucks.
Yeah, exactly.
It was when Michael Jackson passed away.
Yeah, June 2009.
Right.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So a culture where we can all communicate better. unexpected at least to me a rank and file member of the guild the teamsters announced they would
stand in solidarity with us which allowed us to shut down productions much earlier because
you know teamsters uh have negotiated into their contract a right not to cross a picket line which
is a legal right that has to be fought for so yeah they they would. I mean, I remember in the first and second week of the
strike, I was out at fucking 4am at Paramount. And it was kind of like this magical thing where
it's like, two people can constitute a picket line. And so it's just two people at each gate.
And trucks were turning around, they were not making their deliveries. And Teamsters were
very like, you know, I was gonna to say kindly, but it's not really kindness, but they were, you know, losing work to stand in solidarity with us.
Right.
And that was, you know, amazing.
And then individual IOTC members had a little more latitude.
And of course, you know, you don't begrudge anyone their need to make their day's money but
there were iotsy members who also didn't cross the line and that's how we got production shut down
as far as i understand much earlier than last strike right because people were more on our
side than we thought and then when sag came up for their contract negotiation. You know, conventional wisdom was sort of just like,
they're probably going to take a not great deal after DGA.
It did even seem like that's how things were going.
I speak with no insider information,
but just like from the outside of SAG.
You know, it seemed like they were making all the moves
to just settle for whatever.
And they, you know, they were given a,
they released their deal points
the same way the WJ board did.
And it was preposterous.
It was disgusting.
They were, there were things like
the studios were proposing scanning background actors
and simply owning their likeness forever
in a digital form.
And so for that reason, coupled with, I believe,
like, you know, there was that,
there was like an open letter signed by a bunch of a-listers to sag leadership that was like do not take a
fucking bad deal and it did appear to work because the tenor of the conversation from sag communication
changed drastically after that you know it was there's a lot of rumors about what they were
really trying to do but the fucking week after fucking fran drescher is out there being like you know fuck you right yeah after kicking
it with kim kardashian right yeah it's it's one of those things where you're like you know there
it's sort of unclear how they arrived at that position but they're indisputably there they're
they're you know doing some things that i i personally maybe quibble with strategically but
the fact is there are fucking you know 160 some thousand actors like out there they're on the
picket line there have been a little bit of growing pains with just like swelling the strike by 11
times but you know just basic logistics but it is like it's bad it literally is some like real cavalry shit like
yeah the actors are here and you know that's all actors you know i imagine want they're the heroes
so good for them they look great no but good lord but i mean yeah so you're not surprised by
anything you're seeing from them i don't think anyone who's been paying attention to corporations yes and these corporations in particular are surprised they definitely seem
surprised by yeah like the front that they're getting like the united front the like lack of
public support seems to really have them being like why does everybody think i'm the bad guy
like zaz love and eiger seem to be having a i bet they're on the
phone every night just talking to each other what is happening they genuinely thought i think because
it worked well in 2008 they they genuinely thought they could like bully bluster and like so discord
among the union members i think again social media has been a big help in like eliminating some of that but also here's my pet
theory which is like they uh you kind of forget the peer group these fuckers run in but you cut
you have to kind of remember that to them ted sarandos is like their cool hacker nephew so like
ted sarandos i'm sure in those early netflix yeah yeah sorry head of netflix
yeah you know and a tech guy i'm sure he's telling you know but it's still like a dozen decrepit
mostly white men like right like billionaires like completely out of touch so to them like
ted sarandos is the equivalent of your like zoomer showing you no this is better than
tiktok right like yeah yeah yeah this is how you watch that pay-per-view fight on twitter grandpa
yeah so he's like so so he's like they're you know and fucking reed hastings or whatever all
the netflix tech guys i'm sure i look to these old old old media billionaires are like they said
they these guys you know if there's one thing
these guys know, it's digital. They know
the internet and they say we're going
to win. They say the people are going to
be on our side and I think they just
believe them. I just don't think they have
anyone in their circle who's like,
no, you guys are villainous clowns.
Like, maybe
there's like a communications
like officer, you know're if you're the they
haven't they haven't arrived at the are we the baddies moment yet yeah yeah i think they're on
their way on they do have that one billionaire who owns the uh jewelry company who oh cartier
is cartier the cartier billionaire owner who's losing sleep and they're like what the fuck's going on with him like he
needs to dial in what a loser what's crazy is they actually need a cousin greg like they just
need someone to be like hey i don't think this is working people are not on our side uh but i think it's
also important right and especially talking about the solidarity right because the last time there
was a dual strike was in 1960 and this is the last time the wj and the writers went on strike
and it's it's really instructive to like really to learn about just what the the history of labor negotiations in Hollywood have been like, because it's been a fucking exploitative cash grab from the beginning.
And in 1960, many people you hear a lot like, actually, Ronald Reagan was played a huge part because he was SAG president.
He actually had two stints as SAG president, one in the late 40s and early fifties. And then again, he came back for this strike in 1960.
And a lot of articles have like heavily sanitized his actions as like SAG president
saying that like he had the overwhelming of SAG members when he agreed to this new deal
and without, and which is true because we want to get back to work. But the other thing was,
and that like without him, there wouldn't be a pension fund for actors. So we want to get back to work but the other thing was and that like without him there wouldn't be a pension fund for actors so we have to thank him for that but if you look closely you
see a story of a fucking guy that was just self-dealing and could give a fuck less about
his fellow workers so after world war ii right people just stopped going to the movies like they
used to and the decline was noticeable so the studios decided to
go in big on this new technology called broadcast television and decided that was because tv became
a thing they're like what the fuck the heck okay fine well what are we going to do to make money
well they decided to license their films for broadcast and sell them to all these tv stations
and that how they're that's how they're making money. But this move brought, you know, seminal films into American homes and people were engaging
with motion pictures again.
But what about that money?
A lot of people are like, hold on, man, I'm in this movie.
Where the fuck is my check?
Ah, well, you see, all of these films were only making money for the studios and none
a single cent was going to the people that wrote or starred in them at all
it was only benefiting the studios so they wanted to strike get their money that was owed to them
and reagan returned as sag president for this and he sorted out a deal in five weeks really easy
really easy here's another thing we don't realize is the writers they actually started they were on strike
before the actors and they were on strike for 21 weeks in 1960 because they were unwilling to take
these like bullshit deals that were they're like no we want a percentage we need you to articulate
five percent like we there's there's like real math involved with what the writers were fighting
for so they got you know we we come back reagan's like
yeah well i've got this deal if you want to check it out and basically the actors would receive
residuals only for films beginning production after that basically starting from 1960 onward
when they started striking like all right y'all get residuals for the shit y'all make now and
everyone's like well what about the other shit what about from 1960 to shit at least 1948 well basically since they weren't
paying residuals on that they said okay we'll cut y'all a check for 2.65 million dollars for a
pension fund yeah and people were like oh great but if again if you look at the time everyone
is saying they wanted at least four million dollars for this fund that's what they're like
all right if you want to do that like you need to meet us at this four million mark they
got away with that shit too so essentially no money right now except in the form of a pension
fund is what the the actors got then all because of ronald reagan and you're probably thinking
about the other part is what about movies before 1948 like shit shit like Gone with the Wind, Wizard of Oz, Citizen Kane.
What about those deals?
Well, here's where Reagan comes back into the story.
He was SAG president between 1947 and 1952, and he forfeited royalties on films made before 1948 in exchange for the promise of talking about negotiating over royalties for films made after
1951 yeah i was like all right fuck that we don't need to see anything before 1948 well this affects
me too but like his movies that he's like that are affected by it are like sleepover parties
with orangutans and shit yeah bedtime for for bonzo i think you're talking about yeah
exactly so he basically left all that money on the table and we're just saying all right well
let's negotiate for stuff from 51 onward that and and it was because of that move that precipitated
the fucking dual strike in 1960 because ronald reagan again was like hey whatever y'all want
okay whatever is fine yeah apart from like a few exceptions, right?
So again, a lot of many of these actors felt so betrayed by Ronald Reagan.
We're like, we created the industry for these people to be in and you've left us fucking out to dry.
And so again, the only thing that a lot of these people got after 1960 was a pension fund.
And this is where you kind of, you get to see the Reagan-ness of it all.
Like, you're like, why would Ronald Reagan do this?
It's like, well, he knew he wasn't going to make money off royalties.
He was looking at bigger shit.
So an interesting dimension is his agent was a man named Lou Wasserman,
who was the president of MCA,
which is like a multi, they do music, film, television,
whatever at the time.
After the strike, when Reagan got them to agree to that
shitty deal he left his positions at sag and got took a lucrative production deal with mca like
two months after like if if we had twitter people been like oh that's what the fuck is going on
it's crazy it's like when the plot twist in episode nine of star wars is like the bad guys
emperor palpatine again it's like oh it's always the
same motherfucker that's all you guys got wait him killed unions at the beginning of the 80s
he killed he's like fucking everybody over like yeah 50s and 60s like yeah hey maybe reagan just
was that awful dude the whole time it's so weird how like that yeah that he needs to be lionized
from time to time like even by people who really should fucking know better like yeah 100 like
tear down every single myth about ronald reagan i think there's a book called tear down this myth
was it tear off my balls? Tear off my balls.
So anyway, the other things that are wild, too, because this guy was so power hungry, he was doing he was willing to do anything.
Right.
Including being a fucking informant to the FBI.
Yeah.
And he gave testimony in 1947 when he was first like entering the SAG leadership about striking Hollywood workers being the byproduct of
subversive elements, AKA communists. And he regularly fed the FBI information on people.
He even personally just suspected of being a communist with very little evidence, if anything,
that so much of the 20th century, just the bad guys won. Yeah, exactly. And so if you think about it, it's like this was all it can all boil back to like these very early conversations where the norm was always going to be.
Yeah, take this like shit deal with the vague promises of something better down the road.
And we'll just kick the can down the road because at the end of the day, we want to Hoover up as much of this money as possible.
And just one last thing about it,
which is wild is if you think about like all of this stuff pre 1948 and shit
like that.
So like people like,
you know,
Ted Turner bought the film libraries of like RKO,
which is like pre like old school Warner brothers and MGM and Turner
classic movies was basically a free money printing
machine because he's like oh this is all IP that you don't have to pay it's free yeah it's all
fucking free and so we so a lot of the things that I think consumers were like oh wow that's on TV a
lot people are getting money from that it's further from the case and like I don't know Andrew like
how would you how would you describe
to somebody because I've heard from people
who like talk about the strike who are like
a film adjacent people
who like maybe do a lot of catering for
stuff or like you know work in other departments
there's like well the writers
like they're just they get everything
they want these people are all rich
and I and I want to
really reiterate that this is a job
where people are barely they can't even put their kids through school you know when they're trying
to so how would you how would you describe what the lifestyle is of of someone who is trying to
just be a writer in the industry and if yeah is it just all champagne parties all day and you have no bills to pay exactly it's i mean look and this is also a today of it like i i think at the there there
was a time when at least the when when network and cable was like equitable it was like you worked a
job and you had about a middle class existence was just about where i i would be or maybe even a
little nicer depending on how well your show did aka how well you did your job so yeah just i just
since i'm here it was one of those things where i'll just do the long version of this which is
like at the beginning of the strike i was like you know i'm i'm like doing okay you know, I'm like doing okay. You know, I work.
And in the last like, you know, 100 days, 104 days,
like I've really been seeing like, oh shit, I specifically was like screwed for doing kind of the same work.
And so the example that is like very stark is
the last show I worked on was That 90s Show,
which is on Netflix.
It's a,
one of those like multicam streaming reboots.
No promo,
no promo though.
No promo.
Yeah,
exactly.
No,
fuck that.
Like any promo,
just any promo.
No,
I'm like,
truly going to tell you why.
And the prior to that,
I worked on a show called mixed dish,
which was a spinoff of blackish,
which was on ABC.
So just like the kind of like hard facts example,
I mean,
mixed dish was never like a huge hit.
We got like a second season,
but you know,
it wasn't killing it ratings wise.
I'm very,
you know,
I'm very,
uh,
honored to have worked on the show and it's,
uh,
I thought we did a great job and I met so many amazing people.
However,
you know,
it wasn't like,
um,
you know,
overwhelmingly crushing it. Whereas 90s Show, apparently, because one of the other things the MPTP refused to do is divulge their streaming numbers.
But, you know, it was a huge hit, according to them.
It was the number one streaming on Netflix for like several weeks.
Yeah, just trust us.
So by their metrics, a quote unquote huge hit.
And look, I mean, I guess there's a possibility
more residuals will come through,
but sort of to date, I have made per episode
somewhere on the order of 100 times more
per episode of Mixed Dish that I have my name on
than my episode of 90s show.
100 times.
Yeah, and that is again marginal like a solid show
versus a you know by their yeah by their reckoning like i hit a humongous right so so basically
that's like what the royalty structure on streaming versus network is it's literal pennies or more than pennies on the dollar. And so
residuals is a thing that I think people, you know, feel a certain way about, right? You, most people
at their job don't get paid for the thing they make over time. However, so the reason residuals
are, to our minds, a fair thing is these, we only get paid if the studio continues to resell our creative
product continues to make money from it right so so the reason for instance like like when when my
episode of mixed issue plays overseas or plays on video on demand i get a tiny percentage of that
money that they make whereas there's no real equivalent or sorry there's
an equivalent but it's much lower on streaming yeah you know again 100th 1 100th about as far
as i know like i don't know i guess all the ins and outs but it has been really stark i'm like
making no money for this hit and you know you hear many stories people just routinely um yeah
cody ziggler who's been on the show before friend of mine, made a three-figure check for his hit episode of She-Hulk, which, again, was one of the highest rated, according to them, highest rated things on Disney+.
So, and the reason you need residuals is because that is sort of because we are not full-time employees.
Like, we're not someone who
like is hired by a studio or hired by a producer just able to work all the time so the the
compromise is sort of like in exchange for when we do stuff that does amazingly well we are
compensated and able to like like participate in that that well-performing thing so the other
thing that is like a direct way that i was like oh this is a one-to-one and how i've been
specifically screwed is i worked on that 90s show which is a reboot of that 70s show if anyone's
ever watched both shows they were created you know we have like our showrunner was like a um that 70s show writer the creators and executive
producers were writing and in the room with us like it was exactly it's the same fucking sets
like it's the exact same process of making that 90s show right as making that 70s show except for
we had approximately half the writers wow which in a show like that, makes it very difficult, because what you're
doing is pitching
jokes, and at a certain point, it's just
a volume thing. There's
only so many fresh takes, and there's only so many
resources that you can have to make
the exact same product.
So, yeah, it was just
one of those things where I was like, oh, man,
that show was very, very difficult
to make, and I think like, oh, man, you know, that show was like, very, very difficult to make. And I think like, unnecessarily so because of because of the the resources that we had writing wise, which is again, a tiny fraction, like, right, single single digit percentages of the budget. And you know, and then also just my development as a writer suffered, like I was often just like, either either in over my head like having to run the joke
room for instance which is like usually you know someone more senior than me would be doing that
because we would have twice as many people so so working with like half as many people
often without enough you know and i don't really mean to say this as like a ding on the actual
people running 90s show but it was just like you know i who the fuck knows but i i
guess it's like we were like slightly just like under-resourced the whole time in a way that was
like incredibly difficult for doing the exact same job again it was exactly the same work as making
70s show and people who wrote episodes of that 70s show you know conservatively because it was on fox
like high mid six figures probably over the lifetime in residuals maybe maybe like it was
a ton of money yeah for doing the exact same work so in multiple ways like analogous to old school
like tv writers even from like five six years ago i'm like really and i kind of didn't
realize how screwed i was until spending a bunch of time on the picket line talking to people and
i was like oh right yeah like i thought i was doing okay and then i was like oh i've really been
getting fucked for like apples to apples work like right literally the exact same thing or in my i would argue more difficult right
all right actually before uh we keep going on this let's take a quick break and we'll be right back
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Wellbeing, Shatterproof, and the Ad Council. And we're back. It sounds like there's an incentive
for not even acknowledging a hit show. And I know that's also always been a traditional
thing that people said about the entertainment industry, right?
The first Indiana Jones movie is still, according to the studio, that made it not profitable.
Sure.
It's like creative bookkeeping to keep people from participating.
But it does feel like there is...
We don't even know when a show is a hit anymore.
And, like, it's just, like, they dumped so much content.
So many, like, shows on their streaming networks without, like, even trying to promote when, like, one of them was a hit.
It was just all, like, invisible.
promote when like one of them was a hit it was just all like invisible and it's like all these things that supposedly millions and millions of people are watching and are entering like should
be entering our like cultural like bloodstream and like these are the ideas that are like affecting
the zeitgeist and they're just like completely invisible do you do you think that's connected
to the streamers just being so kind of guarded about letting their data yeah
well one is they might simply be i'll i'll say you know using creative statistics yeah
straight up bullshitting right yeah the performance of things like that's certainly a possibility but
the other thing is yeah has been like their model is like so driven by people who apparently don't like or watch TV or understand how culture works at all.
Sure.
Like down to the binging.
Yeah, it's Wall Street and Silicon Valley's influence.
Like you can see that happening because it's not like there aren't things that can happen.
Right.
because it's not like there aren't things that can happen right even like on the streamers like a squid game or like you know you know just whatever like you know jury duty yeah like
things things can break through and make a cultural impact but i i think it is because
these people essentially what their business model is and you can tell sorry this is
all my own speculation i should say is like you watch them trying to feed this like concept of
quote content like you see it in like hbo max like david zaslav just thinks of everything as content
like he's like house hunters and game of thrones is equally equally a creative endeavor yeah like like that is like very important to their worldview
it's just like minutes to eyeballs and fill in tape essentially so so that i think is also why
like like they they don't like they seem to have an interest in devaluing the business model and i will just
throw this out there it it if you look at the way silicon valley has done things to other industries
i think uber is a great example or like rideshares in general like they just go in operate at a loss
in an attempt to destroy the industry and create some kind of monopoly um which is arguably what
netflix is doing and then you know either jacking up the prices or just sort of leaving the industry
to like fucking deal with the crater pieces and society yeah right i don't know so so that it just
seems like like netflix essentially so the the other upshot of all this is that because streamers play much fewer residuals off of because-we-say-so data, Netflix and Netflix or the streamers having pioneered this practice of mini-rooms, which is, again, what I went through with 90s Show, hiring much fewer people, asking them to do much more work, and doing it for a shorter period of time.
more work and doing it for a shorter period of time we like they're essentially just begging to be able to operate at a lower cost which is like hey maybe you just don't get to if you're not
smart enough to make money like from television like america's greatest import or export like
the most powerful thing like other countries realize this like fucking
china understands that it's important to have like they obviously want to screw their workers too but
they at least understand it's important from a fucking even if you're like a complete like
you know if you really don't care about this like just from a geopolitical standpoint like great britain gets to continue to be a world power
you know decades edging on century like after the their their fucking little empire like crumbles
because people because the beatles the beatles is soft power that resonates you know this we still have like my my like dumb family who were literally
victimized by the british being like oh sad when queen elizabeth dies like that's power
that's like fucking power and the fact that we appear to be like willing to give that away
so what i should say is what i think give that away is if the studios get what they want, that will within,
you know,
five,
10 something years be the end of like working as a creative in Hollywood,
being a middle-class sustainable existence.
Like it simply will be not possible.
There will not be any staff writers like essentially
that will then become if you are um a low level television writer it's sort of the equivalent of
an internship like essentially like only rich kids will be able to do it right and like that it just
is basically then becoming a a writer in hollywood is what i know most about is a lottery
ticket you know some of you will be able to make it on merit but also luck some of you will be able
to just outlast because you could run at a deficit for five six seven eight nine years look and it
by the way is already like this but it will make it worse. And if the proposal to SAG goes through, that's essentially trying to break the union from a pension perspective.
If what they put on the table was there, that would end background acting as a profession.
And that would completely decimate—sorry, I should say all this is as I understand it.
Adam Conover probably has the actual notes version of this.
But that just fucking ends acting
as a job. It ends
acting as a job and turns it into a gig.
Which is just
that's how we start
to tell fewer interesting stories,
fewer new people will come through,
we'll start to be doing the same thing
over and over and over again.
And we will start losing to creative people, creative countries.
Like, it's just it's very weird.
No, it's not.
But it is like sort of pathetic how like short term that all these folks thinking is.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Because, yeah, I mean, like for the longest time, we were always like, how the fuck is Netflix a company?
Because I would be be like they're just
deficit spending and deficits yeah and deficit spending and i was always asking like other
people i knew who were like at the executive of like what is their like i remember 10 or maybe
like eight years ago i was like what the fuck is their plan exactly yeah and someone was like
they're probably hoping something like an apple or google will just buy them at first yeah kind
of like the thought and it won't matter how much they've they've spent or burned up because that would be the end goal but then also
once wall street started rewarding that stock to say oh well it's really not about the profits
they're showing it's about look at their their market share that they're devouring and look at
the potential it's like it's like tesla where it's like don't look at like the facts and figures of
the business because it's dog shit think of like what this it's like don't look at like the facts and figures of the business
because it's dog shit think of like what this can do for the future that's what you're buying into
and then once netflix was like oh we just had a subscriber loss wall street basically said
fuck all you guys for not being profitable and then the reaction from the studios all right well
now we got to cut shit now we got to do people got to do less we've got to do more with less
which is a theme that many people across the country are familiar with no matter what industry you're in
it's like hey do more for less and we find ourselves in this position now where we're
completely like like in a way inadvertently or very advertently you're starting to see all of
like the the gains that were made in like equitable representation from like the kinds of creators that were getting shows and the kinds of people we saw being the faces on the screen.
We're just going to we're just regressing right back to the fucking status quo where it's like, I don't know.
We don't have time to tell black stories or trans stories.
We don't have time.
Like, what's the new fucking IP?
We can just dust off and do another.
They're going to do a spinoff of Nurse Jackie.
Yeah. Like, what the fuck are we doing worse than the status quo because it's the status quo but also they don't
pay people living wages right like yeah is is the actual plan yeah they like wiley coyote themselves
off a financial cliff but the problem is they can bring all of us with them right and they're trying to do that yeah that
that is it appears to be the plan and like you know i mean it's just like this thing where i was
like again watching watching how much like the same work is not being rewarded or being devalued
oh sorry that was the other thing with the with the deficit spending thing is like they also didn't really do a good job with the money they spent no like
it's like because they just think again minutes of tape is the only metric that matters and
it's so bizarre how it like any fool could have told you that's not how culture works
except for these bozos like yeah they
misunderstand how culture works it's also this thing that so the other um sticking point in this
strike has been ai and like you know the fact that like i understand ai can do you know we'll start
to very quickly approach the old thing you know perfect replicas of whatever the fuck existed
in the past right but like i i think like these people like seem to misunderstand that culture is
novel right like right they they just do not get that like there is a need for something new. Right. And their little plagiarism machine,
it maybe can, through a dint of random remixing,
essentially, come up with something that does appeal
to a novel center of the culture's brains.
But that's also because some creative person
picked that instance out of this pile of fucking 10,000
or 10 million.
It's still required
a...
Every time anyone posts
AI art, it's like, oh, it's over for creatives.
It's like...
It sucks. Far be it for me to defend
the creativity of these AI
fucking evangelists. But
their misunderstanding that
they picked the instance that was like pleasing to some center of their brain and shared with
everyone right that that the ai doesn't know that this one's better than the other fucking
nine million versions it made right it still requires like a human sense of novelty and joy
and wonder and experience to
like have this mean something i don't know maybe i'm fucking i'm sure there's some like
ai person that disagrees with me on this but the second that it puts out the the most an actual
flawless seinfeld episode i then i think that we're still okay you know but yeah yeah the other
thing even that would be an old show like there are plenty of ratings right
write a flawless Seinfeld episode right now like that's yeah the thing that it misses is and I I
agree that like it feels like they're already shading in this direction when you look at what
they did with that spending with all the money they spent where it was like a lesser diminished like amount of production resources
per show and then you like look at all these streaming shows that are like they have these
crazy high numbers like that this one article will link off to on the footnotes talks about
the show the night agent being this huge like netflix show and they're talking to the showrunner
who's like yeah but i'm like not not being compensated like
it's a hit netflix show or a hit any show and but like that that show like doesn't really exist as
far as like p like i i just it came and went and like i wasn't aware i had it confused with
the bodyguard i think and the guy who plays it is like looks similar to the bodyguard and
but it like i watched you watched 15 minutes of it,
and it feels like it could have been generated by an AI
that had ingested every procedural for the past 30 years.
It feels like, yes, AI is actually in line
with what they think they're trying to do.
It's just what they think they're trying to do. It's just what they think they're trying to do.
Is going to not make anything good.
Like good enough to actually like propel the entertainment.
And like the art.
Yeah.
That like drives culture forward into the future.
And they're just killing something that is innately human.
About like wanting to
create and to be creative like yeah because the way these studios and executives look at the nature
of creativity is like it's the same way a senator would look at what they're going to read if they're
trying to filibuster it's like yeah man just say shit just say words that's all you gotta do doesn't
matter just read from the phone book and that And that's enough to tick the box.
It's just as good.
Right.
And think of how uninteresting what happens when you shift gears to, well, just read from the phone book.
The most entertaining thing might be when they don't know how to pronounce a certain name.
And that's like the height of like fucking entertainment or whatever.
Because more and more, it's just looked at.
Well, we just need to hear words and visuals be put out there for people to stare out creativity and like a non issue. And I think that's
really a violent part like about it is that we're taking that sort of ability for a human being to
pursue something like that, to have an imagination and to be able to sustain their life with it.
Just because it's not even, it's not even possible but like
like even in your example right like like stumbling over a word is something only a
fucking human could do right like like also it's it's like this like like they're they're the myths
that got built around like like netflix the myths that they're built on is like we had an algorithm
that told us that people like kevin spacey and political drama and therefore we greenlit house
of cards and look like the computer did that no human could do that which like ignores their like
the things that don't work the it ignores the things that haven't worked that have been algorithm
driven and also it's like this such a funny thing it's like you know what put amazon streaming on the map
fucking transparent which by the way right not one computer at any point ever was like do you
know what we need now right like you know this this story transparent so like like they're working
from just like this law of tiny numbers.
I mean, that was my other experience.
Wow, this is maybe talking out of school,
but I think this is a common enough experience, which is like, we had a moment in 90s show
where they were insistent.
Okay, I guess I just won't say exactly
what the thing they were insisting on,
but they had a note for our um opening credit sequence that was basically like
the algorithm says you have to do this or else no one will watch it and i when i tell you it was
an utterly utterly utterly inconsequential note from a creative perspective it was just like
technically going to be very difficult to do and they're like our data shows that this has to be
this way and like having worked in on the network side of entertainment before
and worked with executives
and watched our research department
routinely lie to them,
essentially, or obfuscate with statistics,
and having taken a little bit of statistics in my life,
I'm like,
you don't have enough data to know.
You simply,
this niggling tiny thing that doesn't really
make any difference like you're insistent on it because your date you're like legitimately
statistically insignificant data tells you one thing but it doesn't the reality is it doesn't
matter and the fact that you are killing multiple executives and a high-priced showrunners day arguing about this is like flushing money down the toilet because you worship
an algorithm but you also don't have the statistics knowledge to like actually say this is
inconsequential they had an inconsequential fight all because i'm like you haven't produced that many show opens before so you don't know you just
don't have a data set that tells you like whether this creative choice or this creative choice makes
the most difference in this and again cannot stress enough it did not make a difference right
like yeah i i bet that executive was like see those hits see those numbers that's yeah it's because of the
intro yeah yeah well Andrew such a pleasure having you to come on and tell us what it's actually like
working thank you for letting me talk so long no this was great we're like we want to I mean
every time I see you post from the picket lines or like whatever you're observing your tweets I'm
like we gotta have Andrew to talk about this also like and also like again i think there's just such a misconception of what it means to
work as a creative person in the industry because most people just think they're just thinking of
the exceptions and yes rather than that there is such an occupation where you just are trying to match like hone your craft
of writing and it could render you an income that you could live off of and yeah and that's it it's
not it's not yacht money it can be yacht money oh you know yeah god willing but for the most part
it's it's like anything else it's by the same thing we have people who want to think they got
to take side gigs now it's like but I thought you were writing on this show.
Well, no, now I'm doing Uber.
Now I'm doing this
because it's actually not that kind of money.
I think if it helps,
just from the actors, right?
The criticism of like,
look at these millionaires asking for more money.
And it's like,
it's actually the millionaires foregoing money
to help everyone else like far be it for
me to like you know kiss these rich people's asses but in this instance the rock right they are no
but truly it's like yeah he they are like giving they're they're leaving money on the table to help
other people like from the sag thing think I read, the minimum per year
you have to make in SAG
to qualify for health insurance
is somewhere like $25,000, $30,000,
something like that.
And around 85% of their union
do not make that from acting work.
So, this is not like rich people.
This is people, like,
trying to do a thing that they love
that makes money hollywood
is immensely profitable so like the things that we do generate money and we would just be able to
like to be able to like live off of yeah and i would like to like that's the fucking thing it's
like i don't know like going back to work is going to be hard but like we love tv and movies and whatever media is you know part part
of this you know high high budget youtube shows whatever i fucking love this shit these people
that we're negotiating against by their actions do not even seem to like or understand any of this
stuff right yeah and it is like they think that our love for this is their leverage to exploit us
and on some level it is and will be but like you know we're at the ledge and like there's a certain
point this strike is like necessary because it's like there's no version where if we accept the
deal they put on the table there would even be an industry so like they forced us to be you know in survival mode so that's it like good
fucking luck and here we are surviving yeah yeah amazing yeah when zaslav was like i think a
love of work will bring the strike to an end he was like telling on himself that he's just yeah
these people seem to like have this weird thing It's like nerds want their game back.
Yeah.
It's so pathetic.
Where can people find
you and follow you and all that good stuff?
Oh, you got to hit me up on
Threads.
Next.com!
Andrew T. everywhere.
Yeah, if you can, we're still doing the
Yo! Is This Racist podcast. We actually started on the premium
show doing my co-host
Tawny Newsome and I. If you're a
fan of Star Trek, she just had a pretty
amazing episode where
she did a live action crossover on Stranger
Worlds. She's not promoting it. I'm not.
I'm just saying I really liked it.
But
we have been doing picket line
diaries, essentially.
Most of them start with me going, fuck, fuck, fuck, I'm running late.
But yeah, just literally what the vibe is on the ground at every... We're going to try to hit all the picket lines by the time this is over.
But we started that way late, but it's been actually fun.
Yeah, so yeah, just Yoast is racist.
If you could, if you find any of this remotely interesting, that would be cool.
Is there a work of media that you've been enjoying yes besides all the movies i talked about let's see the tweet
i was looking for that i couldn't find um so i'll just have to attribute this to apocryphal and i
don't remember paraphrasing but it's basically somewhere on Strike News, basically some version of, hey, CBS, Sheldon ain't getting no younger.
It's crazy that CBS and the old network,
not like old network, but legacy TV is like,
why are you fucking tanking your fall season
just to support Netflix?
That's a different issue.
But let's see, Brian Jordan Alvarez,
but Brian Jordan Alvarez on Brian Jor Alvarez on Twitter
wrote listen we cannot kill this fucking
pig there's a spider nearby who keeps writing
things in her web and they seem to be friends
which made me laugh this
morning so that'll be my
media there you go
Miles where can people find you is there a work of media
you've been enjoying oh find me
on wherever you got them at
symbols at miles of gray
also you know you want to hear nba talk check out jack and i'm miles and jack i'm at boosties uh
check out my new true crime joint the good thief we talk about the greek robin hood uh and also
420 day fiance uh some media i'm liking i thought i saw something over the weekend that I was fucking with.
Nah.
Forgot about it already.
Don't worry about it.
Yeah.
Just learn yourself.
Learn yourself, folks.
There you go.
You can find me on Twitter at Jack underscore O'Brien and on threads at Jack underscore O underscore Brian.
I've checked it in the past week.
I swear to God.
Work media has been enjoying it.
At Internet Hippo tweeted,
every children, every American child has a Boston accent
until they're about six years old.
Science cannot explain this.
You can find us on Twitter at Daily Zeitgeist we're at the daily zeitgeist on instagram we
have a facebook fan page and our website dailyzeitgeist.com where we post our episodes
and our footnotes we link off to the information that we talked about in today's episode as well
as a song that we think you might enjoy miles what song do we think people might enjoy oh i
think you're gonna enjoy this track uh this from surprise chef uh gone out
on the track from surprise chef before uh but this is another track called spiky boy s-p-i-k-y-b-o-i
and it's just like good instrumental you know just relaxing get your week started light head nod i
will turn up the volume a little bit towards the end of the week and we'll probably go out on some wild ass drum and bass or some shit like that.
But to start spiky boy by surprise chef.
All right.
Well,
you can find that in the footnotes.
The daily is like guys,
the production of I heart radio for more podcasts from my heart radio.
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That's going to do it for us this morning.
Back this afternoon to tell you what is trending. And we'll talk to you all then.
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I'm Jess Casavetto, executive producer of the hit Netflix documentary series,
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Up first, I explore the making of a rivalry.
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Every great player needs a foil.
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People are talking about women's basketball just because of one single game.
Clark and Reese have changed the way we consume women's sports.
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There's a lot to figure out when you're just starting your career.
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