We live in an area where you must have a satellite to watch TV. We are thinking of canceling our subscription as there are so few shows to watch.
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/11/08/business/media/08strike.html?_r=1&ref=business&oref=slogin
November 8, 2007
For TV Executives, Its Time to Juggle
By BRIAN STELTER and EDWARD WYATT
Jack Bauer will return to save the world on 24 again but somewhat later than expected. And Michael Scott, the comically obtuse regional manager on The Office, will not be serving up any original cringe-inducing comments after next week.
As television and movie writers entered the third day of their strike against Hollywood producers yesterday, the walkout continued to complicate matters for the networks.
Fox, the first to announce revisions to its prime-time schedule because of the strike, said it would indefinitely postpone the start of the seventh season of 24, which had been scheduled for January, to ensure an uninterrupted 24-episode season.
Original episodes of NBCs half-hour comedy The Office will stop broadcasting after the Nov. 15 show. Other television programs, including Law & Order: Special Victims Unit on NBC, were wrapping up production yesterday as producers ran out of fresh scripts. And the cast and crew of Desperate Housewives on ABC were expected to stop filming by tomorrow, a studio spokeswoman said.
Six other comedies including Two and a Half Men and The New Adventures of Old Christine, both on CBS have already ceased production this week. But unlike The Office, they (and most other prime-time scripted shows) have several weeks or months of episodes already filmed and waiting to be shown. Production on The Office was shut down after the writers, several of whom are also actors on the show, began picketing, and Steve Carell, the lead actor who plays Michael Scott, refused to cross the lines. A publicist for Mr. Carell said he had no comment about the strike.
Several of the writers and actors from The Office expressed their complaints in a video posted on YouTube. Youre watching this on the Internet a thing that pays us zero dollars, said Mike Schur, a writer for the show, clutching a picket sign.
More than 12,000 members of the Writers Guild West and the Writers Guild East went on strike just after midnight Monday, after a late negotiating session convened by a federal mediator failed to bridge the divide between writers and producers.
The most contentious issue centers on how much writers should be paid when their programs and movies are shown on the Internet and other new-media devices like cellphones and iPods.
snip