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John

My Non-Candidate Statement

August 7, 2019 WGA

To My Fellow WGA West Members,

Two years ago, you voted me onto the Board of Directors. *Thank you.* I’ve taken the responsibility very seriously.

I co-chaired the newly-created screenwriting subcommittee. After a series of outreach lunches and an extensive survey of members, we focused on three urgent issues for screenwriters: free work, one-step deals, and late payment. Then we got to work.

We met with the heads of Paramount, Sony, Warners, Universal and Disney to explain how their practices were harming not only writers, but the creative process.

We launched the “No Writing Left Behind” campaign to remind both writers and executives that free work hurts everyone. I spearheaded the Start Button project as a way to help screenwriters get paid on time.

We organized feature writers working in animation to discuss how to get more of our work Guild-covered—or at a least approach parity at non-signatories.

Finally, we started the discussion on how to best think about credits in the 2020s, when the definitions of “theatrical” and “first writer” are increasingly murky.

I’m also a member of the negotiating committee for the agency campaign. I’ve spoken and emailed with hundreds of you. Thank you for your engagement on this crucial issue. I want to make sure we get a deal for writers that will still look good five, ten and twenty years from now.

I’m not running for re-election this cycle because I’m planning to direct a movie. But I remain committed to making sure the Guild serves all its members. In that spirit, these are the candidates I believe can best deliver on the Guild’s promise. (I’ve included links to their candidate statements where available.)

**DAVID GOODMAN (President)**
The job of president requires empathy and experience. I saw both of these firsthand with David Goodman. He listens to members and knows how to get things done.

An example: Just a week into the job, I came to David with concerns that colleagues on Twitter had raised about submission packets for late night and variety shows. It felt like free work. David convened a group of late-night/variety showrunners and writers to hammer out a set of best practices to make sure writers were protected, then coordinated with WGA East for shows based in New York.

It wasn’t flashy. It wasn’t something he campaigned on. But it was protecting writers, and that’s the job of the Guild and its president. Time and again, David Goodman has done it.

**MICHELE MULRONEY (Secretary/Treasurer)**
Michele co-chaired the screenwriting subcommittee, and deserves the lion’s share of the credit for what’s been achieved. Her experience and dedication are unmatched. And with three feature writers leaving the board (me, Andrea Berloff and Zak Penn), Michele is more essential than ever. [link](https://michelemulroney.net)

It’s been my pleasure to serve with the following incumbents, each of whom has shown remarkable insight and commitment on issues ranging from sexual harassment to the agency campaign. They’re ready for whatever the next two years bring.

**MARJORIE DAVID (VP)** [link](https://supportmarjorie.blogspot.com)
**ANGELINA BURNETT** [link](https://medium.com/@angelinaburnett/angelina-burnett-for-the-2019-wgaw-board-of-directors-65332f20c2c3)
**LUVH RAHKE** [link](https://www.luvhforwga.com/about?fbclid=IwAR1HjTaWAdmGybd2Nprm6_Q5q_cMBcU22_mf_q45qdvmBy_4a7PPxuwj3aY)
**MEREDITH STIEHM** [link](http://www.meredithforwga.com)
**NICOLE YORKIN** [link](https://electnicole.blogspot.com)

While these incumbents’ experience is crucial, it’s also important to welcome new voices. In my two years on the board, I’ve keenly felt some missing perspectives. Here are four writers I’m excited to see join the board:

**LIZ ALPER**
Recognizing a need, Liz created the #WGASolidarityChallenge Grid and the Comprehensive 2019 Staffing Grid. I can’t wait to see what she does next. [link](https://medium.com/@elizabeth.alper/liz-alper-for-the-2019-wgaw-board-of-directors-ec4fe2540878)

**ROBB CHAVIS**
A former attorney, Robb rose up through diversity writing programs and can speak to both the promise and pitfalls of these efforts. [link](https://robbchavis.squarespace.com)

**DANTE W. HARPER**
Dante is an experienced feature writer. We’ll need him on the board this coming term. [link](https://www.danteharperwga.com)

**ZOE MARSHALL**
Zoe organized a series of five staffing and development mixers for more than 750 writers, showrunners and executives. She didn’t ask for permission; she asked for results. [link](https://medium.com/@zmar0129/zoe-marshall-for-the-2019-wgaw-board-of-directors-5c71c910d91c)

No matter which candidates you support this election cycle, let’s remember that the Guild needs to represent all of us because the WGA is all of us. Unity does not mean uniformity. Lively discussion shows an engaged membership ready to face the challenges ahead. Let’s get there together.

With thanks,

John August signature

The Myth of “No Negotiation”

August 5, 2019 WGA

For the past two years, I’ve served on the WGA board of directors and the negotiating committee for the agency campaign. I’ve spoken with hundreds of members in person, on the phone and via email.

Some are strongly in favor of the Guild’s action; some are vehemently opposed. That’s fine! A union doesn’t require uniformity of opinion. But it does need a common set of facts.

In that spirit, I want to address a pernicious myth that’s being amplified by some of the candidates running for office this cycle: that **the WGA refuses to negotiate.**

I hear this idea repeated so often that some very smart friends have stopped questioning the premise. It’s become a [straw man](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Straw_man), a false argument set up just to be knocked down.

Here’s [Phyllis Nagy](https://medium.com/wga-writers-for-nagy-mazin-and-jones-jr/a-response-to-concerns-from-a-guild-member-b9027d827c50):

> In refusing to negotiate with the ATA, current leadership has effectively refused to negotiate with the Big 4. Stalemate. That benefits no one.

Here’s [Bill Schmidt](https://williamschmidtforwgawpresident.com/candidate-statement/):

> But leadership is not negotiating. They refuse to negotiate until the Big Four end packaging and eliminate affiliated production companies. They cite as our biggest weapon the lawsuit filed on behalf of eight writers.

Here’s [Jason Fuchs](https://medium.com/@jasonfuchs1/jason-fuchs-why-i-am-running-for-the-wga-board-1b4ab7089fed):

> I want to win this fight, but we cannot win a game we refuse to play.

The solution these candidates offer is so reasonable as to seem obvious: just start negotiating!

The reality is that **the WGA has never refused to negotiate.** In fact, **it never stopped negotiating.**

*But! But!* What about back in June, when David Goodman put out a statement saying that we were going to stop negotiating?

**Except he didn’t.** Here’s what he [actually said](https://www.wga.org/members/membership-information/agency-agreement/video-updates/agency-campaign-update-text):

> The truth is, the agencies in that ATA room are stuck. Agencies that have no financial interest in producing, and very little in packaging, are having their futures tied to entities like WME, which has gone into the IPO business and is currently committed to changing nothing. There is virtually no negotiation occurring, except for the concessions the Guild has made. Two months after our last meeting, they have now made us an offer that, as I indicated earlier, moved very little, and in some ways is worse.

> So, we think it is time to start negotiating individually with the nine remaining agencies who represent a significant amount of writers, rather than with the ATA. The nine agencies are UTA, CAA, ICM, WME, Gersh, Paradigm, Rothman Brecher, Kaplan-Stahler, and APA. **We are willing to meet with every agency that is willing to meet with us. We’ll reach out to each of them individually again in an attempt to hear their specific concerns with our proposals.**

Spoiler: *That’s what actually happened.*

In the past month, the first of those nine agencies (Kaplan Stahler) broke from the ATA and signed a new *negotiated* agreement. I stress *negotiated* because members of the negotiating committee — including me — spent hours discussing and debating which compromises made sense, both for this deal and going forward.

Since then, the Buchwald Agency signed a deal, as did a new agency formed by leading agents who left Abrams.

In each case, **the negotiations were quiet**. The town didn’t know they were happening until the results were announced.

A July 20th LA Times article picked the [wrong person to interview](https://www.latimes.com/entertainment-arts/business/story/2019-07-18/wgas-fight-with-agents-enters-act-two-but-theres-no-end-in-site):

> “There is no back-channeling going on,” said an agency leader who was not authorized to comment.

*Whoops!*

Not only was there back-channeling going on, there were active negotiations between agencies and the guild. The discussions were focused on specific issues. For example, in response to agency concerns, we clarified language on reporting requirements and increased the length of the deal to five years.

None of the announced agreements have been with big four agencies, nor do they offer concessions on producing or packaging fees, other than a one-year sunset clause.

In order to get the big four, Phyllis Nagy argues the WGA needs to return to the room with the ATA:

> Yes, the conflicts and abuses of both [packaging fees and producing] have to be tackled head on and greatly curtailed or eliminated. That requires focused negotiation followed by presentation of terms to the entire membership for approval. It’s worth repeating — none of this will happen without rolling up sleeves and getting back to the negotiating table.

The Nagy plan will involve sitting at the negotiating table with forearms bared and then — what exactly? As far as I can tell, the checklist is:

1. Sit down at the table with ATA
2. (TBD)
3. Present deal for membership vote

In contrast, the current Guild leadership has explained exactly what they intend to do: negotiate individually with each agency, with special emphasis on agencies 5 through 9, to hammer out specific issues. The WGA explained why: the different agencies have different needs and agendas.

Having been in the sausage-making room, I believe the process of reaching a resolution with the big four agencies is likely to be frustrating and exhausting, with multiple false starts, dashed hopes and occasional breakthroughs. It’ll take more than one shot. I think we can get there, but my hunch is it’s going to be a slog, because it’s been a slog. This is sloggy business.

That’s not the kind of statement a candidate can run on (“Vote for the Slog!”), but fortunately I’m not running for reelection. I’m only speaking as someone who’s spent hundreds of hours on this and wants my guild to come out of both this agency campaign and election season with clear eyes, compassionate differences of opinion, and a common set of facts.

Dots, Dashes and Parentheticals

July 8, 2019 Formatting, Words on the page

I recorded this video to illustrate the different ways screenwriters can indicate dialogue is being interrupted. It’s a situation that happens quite often in most screenplays. The choice of how you show it can impact the read.

There aren’t hard-and-fast rules, but there are definitely conventions, and in this video I cover most of them.

On Aladdin

May 27, 2019 Projects

So, Aladdin opened this weekend. It’s the #1 movie in the world, and audiences seem to love it. I share writing credit, which surprises many people because I barely talk about it. Here’s the deal.

In September 2015, I was meeting with producers about a different project when they mentioned they were talking with Disney about doing a live-action version of Aladdin, following upon the success of Cinderella. On the spot, I pitched my take. The next week, I went in to pitch at Disney complete with art boards that cribbed heavily from Game of Thrones. It was a charmed process through multiple drafts.

And then it wasn’t.

From 2017 on, my relationship with the movie was me giving notes on cuts. It was frustrating to have my name on something I had no control over, so I didn’t talk about it much, and didn’t do any press.

Here’s the happy news: The movie that came out this week? **I honestly like it a lot.** It’s goofy and big-hearted in ways I’d feared would be lost. I’m glad that so many people around the world are digging it.

Every screenwriter mourns the movie that existed only in their mind, but in this case I’m really happy with the finished film as well. That doesn’t always happen. So I’m glad my wish came true.

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