Directors, Studios to Begin Talks on Monday
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Hollywood film directors and studios said Tuesday that they agreed to start early negotiations next Monday on a new contract to replace one that expires June 30, 2002.
The decision by the Directors Guild of America and the Alliance of Motion Picture and Television Producers to start talking so far in advance differs sharply from the recent negotiating philosophy of writers and actors, who pushed contract talks to the 11th hour this year in an effort to gain leverage.
But proponents of early talks, including DGA and other union officials in Hollywood, have argued that better contracts can result when deadline tensions are defused. They say early talks also can prevent the kind of production disruptions experienced this year when studios accelerated filming schedules to beat potential strike deadlines, and then suffered a slowdown after contract agreements were reached.
Gil Cates, chairman of the guild’s negotiating committee, said, “We hope to avoid the uncertainty that inevitably comes when negotiations are extended to the hour of expiration.”
The 12,000-member guild includes directors, assistant directors, stage managers, unit production managers and associate directors.
Talks will take place at the AMPTP headquarters in Encino.
Meanwhile, broadcast journalists working for ABC, CBS and NBC have ratified a new two-year American Federation of Television and Radio Artists contract covering TV and radio work by correspondents and anchors.
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