Current:Home > StocksLate-night shows return after writers strike as actors resume talks that could end their standoff -InvestTomorrow
Late-night shows return after writers strike as actors resume talks that could end their standoff
View
Date:2025-04-16 03:34:04
LOS ANGELES (AP) — Late-night talk shows are returning after a five-month absence brought on by the Hollywood writers strike, while actors will begin talks that could end their own long work walk-off.
CBS’s “ The Late Show With Stephen Colbert,” ABC’s “ Jimmy Kimmel Live! ” and NBC’s “ The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon ” were the first shows to leave the air when the writers strike began on May 2, and now will be among the first to return on Monday night.
Comedian John Oliver got his first take on the strike out, exuberantly returning Sunday night to his “Last Week Tonight” show on HBO and delivering full-throated support for the strike.
Oliver cheerily delivered a recap of stories from the last five months before turnings serious, calling the strike “an immensely difficult time” for all those in the industry.
“To be clear, this strike happened for good reasons. Our industry has seen its workers severely squeezed in recent years,” Oliver said. “So, the writers guild went to strike and thankfully won. But, it took a lot of sacrifices from a lot of people to achieve that.”
“I am also furious that it took the studios 148 days to achieve a deal they could have offered on day (expletive) one,” Oliver said. He added that he hope the writers contract would give leverage to other entertainment industry guilds – as well as striking auto workers and employees in other industries – to negotiate better deals.
Warner Bros. Discovery, which owns HBO, is among the studios on the other side of the table in the writers and actors strikes.
Network late-night hosts will have their returns later Monday.
Colbert will have Astrophysicist and author Neil deGrasse Tyson on his first show back. Kimmel will host Arnold Schwarzenegger. Matthew McConaughey will be on Fallon’s couch.
All the hosts will surely address the strike in their monologues.
“I’ll see you Monday, and every day after that!” an ebullient Colbert said in an Instagram video last week from the Ed Sullivan Theater, which was full of his writers and other staffers for their first meeting since spring.
The hosts haven’t been entirely idle. They teamed up for a podcast, “ Strike Force Five,” during the strike.
The writers were allowed to return to work last week after the Writers Guild of America reached an agreement on a three-year contract with an alliance of the industry’s biggest studios, streaming services and production companies.
Union leaders touted the deal as a clear win on issues including pay, size of staffs and the use of artificial intelligence that made the months off worth it. The writers themselves will vote on the contract in a week of balloting that begins Monday.
Meanwhile, the Screen Actors Guild-American Federation of Television and Radio Artists will begin negotiations with the same group, the Alliance of Motion Picture and Television Producers, for the first time since they joined writers in a historic dual strike on July 14.
Actors walked off the job over many of the same issues as writers, and SAG-AFTRA leaders said they would look closely at the gains and compromises of the WGA’s deal, but emphasized that their demands would remain the same as they were when the strike began.
It was just five days after writers and studios resumed talks that a deal was reach and that strike ended, though an attempt to restart negotiations a month earlier broke off after a few meetings.
The late-night shows will have significant limits on their guest lists. Their bread and butter, actors appearing to promote projects, will not be allowed to appear if the movies and shows are for studios that are the subject of the strikes.
But exceptions abound. McConaughey, for example, is appearing with Fallon to promote his children’s book, “Just Because.”
And SAG-AFTRA has granted interim agreements allowing actors to work on many productions, and with that comes the right of actors to publicly promote them.
veryGood! (1985)
Related
- Juan Soto to be introduced by Mets at Citi Field after striking record $765 million, 15
- Maine's supreme court declines to hear Trump ballot eligibility case
- Claudia Schiffer's cat Chip is purr-fection at the 'Argylle' premiere in London
- Kyle Richards' Cozy Fashions Will Make You Feel Like You're in Aspen on a Real Housewives Trip
- The Super Bowl could end in a 'three
- CIA continues online campaign to recruit Russian spies, citing successes
- Police identify relationships between suspect and family members slain in Chicago suburb
- Alabama's Kalen DeBoer won't imitate LSU's Brian Kelly and adopt fake southern accent
- The company planning a successor to Concorde makes its first supersonic test
- Man sentenced to death for arson attack at Japanese anime studio that killed 36
Ranking
- Rolling Loud 2024: Lineup, how to stream the world's largest hip hop music festival
- Trump could testify as trial set to resume in his legal fight with E. Jean Carroll
- Conservative South Carolina Senate debates a gun bill with an uncertain future
- Czech lawmakers reject international women’s rights treaty
- Most popular books of the week: See what topped USA TODAY's bestselling books list
- 'Tótem' invites you to a family birthday party — but Death has RSVP'd, too
- House investigators scrutinize Rep. Matt Gaetz's defunct federal criminal sex trafficking probe
- More EV problems: This time Chrysler Pacifica under recall investigation after fires
Recommendation
Who's hosting 'Saturday Night Live' tonight? Musical guest, how to watch Dec. 14 episode
Fendi caps couture with futurism-tinged ode to Lagerfeld at Paris Fashion Week
Montana man convicted of killing eagles is sentenced to 3 years in prison for related gun violations
When and where to see the Wolf Moon, first full moon of 2024
Juan Soto to be introduced by Mets at Citi Field after striking record $765 million, 15
Harrowing helicopter rescue saves woman trapped for hours atop overturned pickup in swollen creek
Snoop Dogg’s Daughter Cori Broadus Released From Hospital After Severe Stroke
U.S. Capitol rioter tells judge you could give me 100 years and I would still do it all over again