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Friday, May 17
The Indiana Daily Student

arts

Production of prime-time shows paused

Hollywood Labor

LOS ANGELES – Production of the hit show “Desperate Housewives” and at least six sitcoms filmed before live audiences will be halted as a result of the writers’ strike – developments that raised the stakes Tuesday in the walkout targeting movie studios and TV networks.\nProducer Alexandra Cunningham said “Desperate Housewives” will stop production on Wednesday after running out of scripts. Shows that have already been completed won’t last until Christmas, she said.\n“It’s unfortunate. We want to get back to work,” Cunningham said.\nSitcoms that will stop the cameras include “Back to You,” starring Kelsey Grammer and Patricia Heaton, which will not return from a planned hiatus, said Chris Alexander, a spokesman for 20th Century Fox Television.\nStar Julia Louis-Dreyfus said production also stopped on her CBS show, “The New Adventures of Old Christine.”\nIn addition, “Til Death,” which airs on Fox, and “Rules of Engagement,” ‘’Two and a Half Men” and “The Big Bang Theory,” all on CBS, will also end filming, according to people familiar with production of the shows who were not authorized to be quoted and requested anonymity.\nNetwork officials referred calls to the individual companies producing each show. It was not immediately clear how many of the programs might already be finished.\nThe sitcoms are typically written the same week they are filmed, with jokes being sharpened by writers even on the day of production.\nThe disclosures came during the second day of the strike by the Writers Guild of America against the Alliance of Motion Picture and Television Producers. Pickets returned to studios in Los Angeles and New York.\nIn Toluca Lake, near Warner Bros. studio, writers converged on a house serving as a location shoot for “Desperate Housewives.”\n“We write the story-a, Eva Longoria,” about 30 strikers chanted, referring to a star of the hit ABC show.\n“It is a very serious business,” said Larry Wilmore, a writer on “The Daily Show,” explaining that protesters were marching “so we can get back to being funny.”\nShooting continued Tuesday inside the house despite the protests, said Chandler Hayes, a spokesman for ABC.\nMarc Cherry, executive producer and creator of the show, said the writers had his blessing to picket as long as they were respectful to the actors.\nThe strike began Monday after last-minute negotiations failed to produce a deal on how much writers are paid when shows are offered on the Internet. No new negotiations were scheduled.

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