Hollywood writers set strike for Monday

Film writer Benjamin St. Gremais, a member of the Writers Guild of America East, hands out informational leaflets outside Rockefeller Plaza Friday in New York. Movie and television writers are poised to go on strike Monday morning.

? Film and TV writers prepared to go on strike Monday for the first time in two decades to break what has become a high-stakes stalemate with the world’s largest media companies over profits from DVDs and programming on the Internet.

Writers Guild of America board members voted unanimously Friday to begin the strike at 2:01 a.m. CDT unless studios offered a more lucrative deal with a bigger cut from video sales and shows sold or streamed over the Web.

“The studios made it clear that they would rather shut down this town than reach a fair and reasonable deal,” Patric Verrone, president of the western chapter of the guild, said at a news conference.

The union said it will stage its first pickets in New York and Los Angeles after strike captains meet today to finalize details.

J. Nicholas Counter, president of the Alliance of Motion Picture and Television Producers, called the strike “precipitous and irresponsible” in a prepared statement.

Producers believe progress can be made on other issues but “it makes absolutely no sense to increase the burden of this additional compensation” involving DVDs and the Internet, he said.

Last year alone, members of the western chapter of the guild were paid $56 million in additional compensation from DVD residuals, he said.

Counter declined a request by The Associated Press for further comment.

Among other media giants, the alliance represents CBS Corp.; NBC Universal, a unit of General Electric Co.; and The Walt Disney Co., owner of the ABC network.

The negotiations began in July and were joined this week by a federal mediator. Verrone said the union was open to negotiating over the weekend.

“We are committed to seeing this through and are willing to engage in any further discussions if the studios so desire,” Verrone said.

The statement from the producers alliance did not say if it would agree to weekend negotiations.

The first casualty of the strike would be late-night talk shows, which are dependent on current events to fuel monologues and other entertainment.

“The Tonight Show” on NBC will go into reruns starting Monday if last-ditch negotiations fail and a strike begins, according to a network official who spoke on condition of anonymity because the person lacked authorization to comment publicly.

Garth Brooks and Tommy Lee Jones were the scheduled guests.

Comedy Central has said “The Daily Show with Jon Stewart” and “The Colbert Report” would likely go into repeats as well.

A message left seeking CBS comment on plans for “The Late Show with David Letterman” in New York was not immediately returned Friday evening.

During the 1988 writers strike, Letterman, then host of NBC’s “Late Night,” and longtime “Tonight Show” host Johnny Carson initially went off the air but later returned as the walkout dragged on for 22 weeks and cost the industry about $500 million.