We checked in with Hollywood writers a year after the strike. They’re not OK

For 14 straight years, Ted Sullivan was consistently paid to pen stories for the screen. The Hollywood-based, 53-year-old TV writer and producer’s résumé boasts credits on hit shows such as “Riverdale” and “Star Trek: Discovery.”

Now, he spends seven to eight hours a day writing without pay, preparing for the unforeseeable moment that Hollywood studios start greenlighting projects and hiring writers again. He misses the picket lines of the WGA strike, which, to him, were the next best thing to working in a writers’ room, surrounded and supported by colleagues.

He hasn’t worked in a real writers’ room since the strike began.

Read on

Sharing is caring!

Scroll to Top
ShowNews Logo
Processing...
Thank you! Your subscription has been confirmed. You'll hear from us soon.
Subscribe To Our Newsletter
ErrorHere