This post was written by regular UH contributor John Jabaley, Location Manager and member of Teamsters Local 399.
This is the first awards season in my career where a film I helped make is getting consideration for any of the major awards.
I worked 7 months on the road and sank my heart into a film, and it was nice to see it win an award last night, even it�s one I can safely say I helped earn in no way whatsoever.
When I say �see it win an award� I don�t really mean that at all. What I really mean is �read about it on deadlinehollywooddaily.com,� and that�s of course because there was no Golden Globes Ceremony last night, or at least one I�d care to watch.
The SAG awards will go on as planned, as will the DGA awards. The WGA, in a move I understand but disagree with, will make announcements along the lines of the Golden Globe Presentation unless the strike is settled before the ceremony.
I understand the reluctance to appear to be celebrating when so much of the town is suffering. But I also understand that the WGA has been waiting at the bargaining table. I understand that the WGA has made deals with four different companies, and is in the process of making more.
I understand that this strike could have been over a long time ago if the AMPTP wasn�t dead-set on keeping the internet for themselves.
Much has been made of the suffering of us �below the line workers� and while it is true that I haven�t worked since Thanksgiving as a direct result of the strike, it is also true that I�ve been unemployed before, and I will be unemployed again. It�s show business. Work comes and goes, just like it did when I started off and like it will when I finish. There are assistance funds. There are ways for people to get help.
What doesn't exist are ways for us to individually stand up and say: excuse me, General Electric, AOL/Time Warner, Sony, NewsCorp, CBS, Viacom, I�d like a share of the internet revenue when you make money off something I made for you. Something I wrote, something I directed or was in. I�d like you to make a contribution toward my retirement because I worked 16 hours a day hauling cable, dealing with the neighbors, loading the camera, running background, building 20X frames or feeding the people who did.
I can�t do that. My neighbor the propmaster can�t. My neighbor the actor can�t. Even my neighbor the Production Designer can�t. None of us can do it alone. To do that, it takes all of us to stand up.
I understand that people at every level of this business pour their lives onto pages and into moving pictures. And I believe that's worth rewarding.
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