Buh-Bye Woodstock 50th Anniversary Festival

Woodstock Music Festival co-producer Michael Lang at a happier occasion

Some things just aren’t meant to be. Today’s case in point – Woodstock 50, an attempt to recreate the magic of the original Woodstock Music Festival  of 1969, on which promoters claim to already have spent $30,000,000 (wtf?!) has been cancelled.

Did somebody really believe that The Killers, Dead and Co, Imagine Dragons, Jay-Z, Miley Cyrus, The Lumineers, Chance the Rapper, Sturgill Simpson, Halsey, Cage the Elephant, and other far from legendary contemporary acts would match the impact of Richie Havens, Ravi Shankar Arlo Guthrie, Joan Baez, Santana Grateful Dead, Creedence Clearwater Revival, Janis Joplin, Sly and the Family Stone, The Who, Jefferson Airplane, and on and on and on?

In the end, good sense and a desire to maintain the value of the Woodstock Brand (really? there’s a Woodstock fucking brand?) prevailed. As the organizers, Dentsu Aegis Network, put it, “We don’t believe the production of the festival can be executed as an event worthy of the Woodstock Brand name.” read article

David Milch, battling Alzheimer’s, finally finishes ‘Deadwood’

We just discovered this report on Vulture.Com. We’re glad to know that the Deadwood film is in the can, but all in all, the following is sad news for, well, everybody:

by Matt Zoller Seitz

eadwood creator David Milch says he always had faith that his HBO Western would someday get to wrap up its story, even as more than a dozen years have passed since its surprise cancellation in 2006. But he also had doubts. Only when the cameras started rolling on Deadwood: The Movie — a TV movie set ten years after the show’s last episode — could he exhale. “Let’s just say that the exigencies of the business threw up a series of roadblocks over the years,” says Milch, walking along the main thoroughfare at Melody Ranch Studios on a cold December night, his wife, Rita, by his side. “Somehow, they were all surmounted.” read article

10 Most Viewed TVWriter™ Posts of the Week – April 29, 2019

Happy Monday everybody!

Hope you’ve had a great weekend. Time now for TVWriter™’s latest look at our most popular blog posts and resource pages during the week ending yesterday. They are, in order: read article

How Private Equity Ate Hollywood

Apropos of the current WGA-ATA conflict (What? You thought we’d forgotten about it? No such luck), an analysis of what happened, how, and why, from a source that doesn’t even have a horse in this race. (Who’d a’thunk?)

Note: This pic wasn’t published with the original article. We chose the sensationalist approach because, hey, that’s us, you know?

by David Dayen

Hollywood is smoldering this week, after the 13,000 members of the Writers Guild of America (WGA) prepared to fire their agents, the upshot of the termination of a 43-year-old agreement between the union and the Association of Talent Agents trade group. On Saturday, the WGA ordered members to part ways with agents who didn’t subscribe to a revised code of conduct, which rank-and-file writers approved with 95.3 percent support. The form lettersinforming agents of their firing, which well-known writers have been posting on Twitter, will be delivered later this week.

This isn’t a strike or lockout; as much as you might like your favorite television shows to pause to catch up on your DVR, they will in all likelihood continue with minimal disruption. But the battle between writers and agents represents another example of the monopolization and financialization of our economy, and how organized, unified workers can fight back. While the lead antagonists on the stage are talent agents, the villains behind the scenes are private equity firms. read article

10 Most Viewed TVWriter™ Posts of the Week – April 22, 2019

Happy Monday everybody!

Hope you’ve had a great weekend. Time now for TVWriter™’s latest look at our most popular blog posts and resource pages during the week ending yesterday. They are, in order: read article