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Saturday, November 10, 2007

Effect of the WGA Strike on Lost

By now, unless you've living under a rock, you've heard that the Writers Guilde of America has gone on strike, meaning no new scripts are being written for film or television. While I have no intention of taking sides on this blog (although the writers are right here), it's worth noting a few ripple effects that will affect Lostophiles...

Production Halt
Although Lost went into Season 4 with a long lead time before it airs, only 8 episodes (one half of the season order) were completed before the strike. Damon Lindelof and Carlton Cuse, both of whom have been very visibile on the picket lines (Cuse has been one of the most quoted writers in the press regarding the strike) report that episode 8 ends on the kind of cliff-hanger a network would be foolish to leave unresolved for a long period of time.

As a result, there is talk that Lost, despite having more available episodes to air than almost any other TV show (due to its mid-season start), may not air in 2008 at all, depending on the length of the strike. The 8 unaired episodes would be added to the 16 episodes planned for season 5, presumably leaving a 24-episode season 6 to air in 2010. Considering Damon and Carlton's earlier comments that there are 3 major story arcs left, which were to each last one 16-episode season, this could have serious effects on the remaining seasons (though, since nobody outside the writers' room really knows what the rest of the story is, it's hard to tell how serious or how difficult it would be to re-work these arcs into two rather than three sections).

Lost is, of course, not alone. This week Fox announced that it had canceled the planned start date of 24 in January, choosing not to begin to air a season with only 8 hours completed (given the one-season-equals-one-day format, this seems like a well-founded plan). Heroes, which was designed to air 2 11-episode "volumes" this season, has reshot the ending of episode 11. Now, instead of being a volume-closing springboard into the second half of the season, episode 11 may air as the finale of season 2. Also, NBC's spinoff anthology series, Heroes Origins, which would have debuted 6 new characters in one-shot stories written and directed by different hollywood bigshots like Kevin Smith, has been canceled for this season.

Good News
But there is a "good" result for Lost fans who don't own Verizon v-cast phones. Starting Monday, November 12, abc.com will launch weekly 2-3 minute digital shorts of all-new Lost content. These mini-stories are original content, ironically enough, the first of its kind to be negotiated directly with the WGA, SAG (Screen Actors Guild) and DGA (Directors Guild of America). Originally, the plan was to distribute these exclusively as video content for Verizon Wireless v-cast video-capable phones. But, perhaps acknowledging the bad will that ABC's potential delays in releasing new Lost content will engender, the network has decided to make these "mobisodes" publicly available. The first such mobisode will supposedly feature Jack and Christian Sheppard. So, again, check out abc.com starting Monday.

End on a Joke
Finally, special thanks to loyal reader Alyss Dixson, who sent me this based-on-real-life joke about the strike.

Apparently, among the many actors who have turned out to support the picketing writers is William Mapother, who plays the late Other Ethan Rom on Lost. Only, the funny thing about Mapother's joining the picket line is....

...(wait for it)...

...dude, he isn't on the manifest!!!

So with that, I take my leave of you. When next I post, I may well be a new daddy (we're due any day now). And here's hoping the strike is resolved soon so we can all look forward to a February debut for Lost season 4. Namaste.

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

Dude, that joke was shamelessly pilfered from another blog:

http://unitedhollywood.blogspot.com/2007/11/heard-on-picket-line.html

Anonymous said...

Of course it was -- that's the "real life" source.

Anyway, the Criminal Minds fans are going nuts -- this also thanks to the United Hollywood blog, which every TV-lover should favorite as their first blog of the day during this strike.

http://criminalmindsfanatic.blogspot.com/2007/11/criminal-minds-writers-strike-fan-plan.html