Here's why striking WGA writers are picketing “Dancing With the Stars”
Dancing With the Stars is set to premiere its 32nd season next week — but not if striking writers have anything to say about it.
Fresh off successfully pressuring talk shows like The Drew Barrymore Show, The Talk, The Jennifer Hudson Show, and Real Time With Bill Maher to reverse their planned returns to air this fall, the Writers Guild of America has been picketing outside rehearsals for the new season of DWTS, as reported by Deadline.
DWTS is considered a struck show by the WGA, and "the Guild has picketed and will continue to picket struck shows that are in production during the strike," a spokesperson for the guild tells EW.
Representatives for ABC, which airs DWTS, didn't immediately respond to EW's request for comment Wednesday.
ABC/Art Streiber 'Dancing With the Stars' cohosts Alfonso Ribeiro and Julianne Hough
Many of the celebrities who appear on Dancing With the Stars are members of SAG-AFTRA — this season's contestants include Matt Walsh (Veep), Alyson Hannigan (Buffy the Vampire Slayer), and Oscar winner Mira Sorvino — but the actors' union is not picketing the show like the WGA.
As Sorvino explained on social media, that's because reality shows like DWTS operate under a different contract with SAG-AFTRA than the film and TV agreement currently being renegotiated between the guilds and studios.
No we are allowed to do reality / unscripted /competition or documentary shows. It’s a different contract.
— Mira Sorvino (@MiraSorvino) September 17, 2023
However, SAG-AFTRA isn't the only Hollywood union on strike right now, and DWTS does typically employ at least one WGA writer to develop talking points for the hosts. (Season 32 is being hosted by Alfonso Ribeiro and Julianne Hough.) Doing similar writing this season would therefore involve "scab" labor as long as the strike lasts. WGA members maintain that allowing such a show to return to air uncontested will only prolong the strike, just as representatives of the Alliance of Motion Picture and Television Producers returned to the negotiating table with the WGA on Wednesday.
"By appearing on a WGA-covered show using scab writing, anyone appearing on Dancing With the Stars will be emboldening the AMPTP to refuse to make deals while they wait to see if scab writing works," picketing writer David Slack wrote on social media.
Dancing with the Stars is a WGA-covered show. Its writers are on strike, and they can’t make the show without scab writing.
Hope @alfonso_ribeiro @juliannehough @misterhough @MiraSorvino @alydenisof & @jason_mraz do the right thing and refuse to cross our picket line. #WGAStrong pic.twitter.com/F4NK2zYrQX— David Slack (@slack2thefuture) September 17, 2023
By appearing on a WGA-covered show using scab writing, anyone appearing on Dancing With the Stars will be emboldening the AMPTP to refuse to make deals while they wait to see if scab writing works.
Please don’t cross our picket lines @mrmattwalsh @tysoncbeckford @carrieanninaba— David Slack (@slack2thefuture) September 17, 2023
For now, DWTS season 32 is still set to launch Tuesday, Sept. 26, at 8 p.m. ET/PT on ABC. Though celebrity contestants won't be breaking SAG-AFTRA rules, it looks like they'll have to cross a picket line in order to appear on the show.
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