Next Up:
0:00
0:00
-
Listen Listen
-
Listen Listen
Arts & Entertainment
On FilmWeek, we delve into the allusive title of "film producer" and how the credit has changed over the years with Deadline senior TV and labor reporter Katie Campione.
Sponsored message
-
There have been six WGA strikes since 1960, as the evolution of tech constantly changed the economic landscape.
-
The writers' strike that began in late 2007 and lasted into 2008 had ripple effects far beyond the entertainment industry, and may have even brought California into the Great Recession sooner.
-
Participate in the city’s first Scent Week. Dance through the weekend at the Desert Hearts Festival. Celebrate Giant Monsters/Giant Robot at First Fridays. Catch a live taping of Go Fact Yourself.
-
Businesses that cater to the city’s entertainment industry worry they’ll suffer during the strike.
-
Without writers, late-night talk shows are among the first programs leaving the airways. The same was true in the 100-day strike that took place in 2007. Here's how they handled it.
-
“He is creating from a place of lack on so many levels — lack because of color, lack because of his queerness — but he almost takes that and makes that his superpower, at a time when that superpower also got people killed."
-
View tropical butterflies at a new immersive exhibition. Listen to stories about gossip. Bid adieu to Pop-Up Magazine. Celebrate May the 4th at the Academy Museum (Lightsabers optional).
-
Pickets are being held outside at movie and TV studios across the city
-
In this week's set of television recommendations and shoutouts, we tell you what you need to know about White House Plumbers, Awkwafina Is Nora From Queens, and Fatal Attraction.
-
Each year, volunteer designers transform a large house in a matter of months to raise money for music programs such as Disney Hall concerts for fourth-graders, instrumental competitions and grants to other nonprofits.