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June 18, 2013

Battlestar Galactica final season in jeopardy?

by Jason Hughes, posted Nov 19th 2007 4:41PM

Is the final season of Battlestar Galactica in danger now because of the ongoing WGA (Writer's Guild of America) strike? According to Deadline Hollywood Daily, NBC Universal is utilizing the force majeure clause in SAG (Screen Actors Guild) agreements to suspend actors' and actresses' working contracts. The clause indicates studios and networks can do this if production is halted on their shows.

It looks like letters have been sent to the casts of such shows as The Office, 30 Rock, Bionic Woman and Battlestar Galactica. Sony Pictures has sent similar letters to the casts of Til Death and Rules of Engagement, indicating that more letters could be forthcoming from other studios if the strike lingers.

In the piece, one of the actors from Galactica stated that "we are on suspension without pay. We are not terminated. We are on hold to BSG with no pay in perpetuity until the strike is over. When the strike does end Universal/SciFi will then decide whether they want to bring the show back or let us go. Until that time we are in first position with BSG and will have to clear any other project with SciFi/Uni. They are not following article 61 of the SAG agreement and are about to get a lot of calls from SAG lawyers. They say that since we have shot the minimum 13 episodes of this season, as per our contracts, that they are under no obligation to pay us or let us go. We are essentially on hiatus."

This power play move essentially forbids the actors from finding work elsewhere while the show's production remains shut down. SAG says that since the terms of Article 61 are breached, actors can terminate their deals and try to find work elsewhere. All of this means that in a prolonged strike situation, actors hungry for work may try to exercise this right, terminate their contracts on their current shows and find work elsewhere.

Then, when the strike ends, the studio gets to decide if it wants to go back and finish the series, and for any actors who've opted out of their contracts, they'd have to be resigned to new contracts. To fans of the show, like myself, this is a no-brainer. Rehire everyone and finish it up, right? But to network bigwigs, it comes down to the bottom line. BSG ratings have slipped since its premiere, and a prolonged break between halves of its final season could impact those numbers even more. And what if a shiny new show comes along in the meantime with big ratings? On the other side, if a principal actor sings a conflicting contract on another project, they might not even be available to return. Depending on how it shakes out, will it be worth it to the network to bother finishing the series?

While this scenario could impact any shows in which these letters have been sent, with BSG filming its final seasons, you'd have to figure that a secondary actor on that show would be much more likely to jump on another job opportunity than someone on a show that has a future beyond a few more episodes, like The Office. Ron Moore, on his blog, says "I refuse to believe that we won't finish, that we won't be back to film our final stories, but I know and accept there is that possibility. The strike will be a seminal event for many of us in this business as it's put literally everything we care about in the balance (if only for a short time so far) for something we all believe is important. ... Galactica's coming back, I frakking promise you that. But I am ready to put the rest of the story on the table and take the risk that I'll never be able to tell it, in support of this strike. Like Adama says, you make your choices and then you live with them."

Of course, in the worst possible scenario, he could always continue the series in comics the way Joss Whedon is doing with both Buffy and Angel. He's already got BSG comics coming out, so the deal is in place. Or go straight to film a la Whedon's Firefly. Wow, come to think of it, Whedon really doesn't know when to let go. His series end and he has to find a way to keep them going. That's either perseverance or stubbornness. But the man finds a way to make it happen. Maybe we need to get him into the negotiating room after Thanksgiving?

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Chispi69

The tragic irony here is that network television as a whole has been taking its dramatic cues from the Battlestar writing team for two years now. BSG gains critical acclaim and suddenly the "major" networks go clamoring for a Scifi story that can keep up - and no they haven't found one yet. Heroes just plain s*cks. It's like 90210 meets the X-Men. Poor writing, bad acting and everything is shot like a soap opera. The visual effects are weak and everyone is "beautiful" - typical, safe, glossed over, prime time, garbage. If NBC gave Battlestar the respect it deserved and moved it into prime time on their primary network, they would have been able to gather the intelligent fan base the show was intended for from the start and see some serious numbers. The entire landscape of prime-time SCI-FI would be leveled and the networks would be forced to be more selective about their contracts instead of force feeding us all these psychic, vampire, CSI, SVU with a SciFi twist, regurgitations they are now. And maybe, just maybe, they would protect BSG for the blessing it was to contemporary drama and film making. Hang in there Ron - We believe in you!

So Say We All!

November 24 2007 at 12:51 PM Report abuse rate up rate down Reply
Eugene

the studios pulling crap like this, just makes me support the writers more.

November 20 2007 at 12:29 PM Report abuse rate up rate down Reply
nattyff

WHAT THE FRAK!!!!! these can't be happening, they can't deny us the final of BSG!!!! please, please, please let all be work out!! so say we all!!!
PS: maybe these is a stund of the writters to add presure to the strike, the network can't be stupid enough to REALLY pissed of so many fans, if something like these happens we woud probably boicot the network forever!!!

November 20 2007 at 9:36 AM Report abuse rate up rate down Reply
theConundrumm

a very scary thought indeed.

interesting article, except for the asshat final paragraph.

November 20 2007 at 2:58 AM Report abuse rate up rate down Reply
Jason Lloren

Well, you as consumers (the TV audience, in this case) have a choice. Support the writers and urge the entertainment corporations to come to reasonable settlement with the guild -- or go on with your lives, yes, possibly without any new BSG episodes (and a crapload of other shows obviously). Ron Moorse put it best by quoting Adama: You make your choices and you live with them. Er, so say we all...

November 20 2007 at 12:15 AM Report abuse rate up rate down Reply
Ari

this has gone too far.

November 20 2007 at 12:06 AM Report abuse rate up rate down Reply
Oreo

Jon is right, someone else owns the movie rights for the show. That way Razor is a TV movie and is released on TV first and not DVD.

And a two miniseries would work but Universal might be so pissed off at the writers (Moore) that they say "screw it" and just let it end.

November 19 2007 at 11:13 PM Report abuse rate up rate down Reply
bsgfan2003

Thanks Jon Eric.

November 19 2007 at 10:21 PM Report abuse rate up rate down Reply
Jon Eric

I think Glen Larson, the creator of the original series, holds the movie rights to BSG.

November 19 2007 at 8:57 PM Report abuse rate up rate down Reply
purpleslog

. Lorne Greene died in 1987."

I would pay bucks to see a zombie made version of BSG.

November 19 2007 at 8:52 PM Report abuse rate up rate down Reply

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