Current:Home > MarketsNBC's late night talk show staff get pay and benefits during writers strike -Mastery Money Tools
NBC's late night talk show staff get pay and benefits during writers strike
View
Date:2025-04-15 10:33:41
NBC's late night talk show hosts Jimmy Fallon and Seth Meyers are covering a week of pay for their non-writing staff during the Writers Guild of America strike, which has disrupted production for many shows and movies as Hollywood's writers hit the picket lines this week.
Staff and crew for Fallon's The Tonight Show and Meyers' Late Night are getting three weeks of pay — with the nightly show hosts covering the third week themselves — and health care coverage through September, according to Sarah Kobos, a staff member at The Tonight Show, and a source close to the show.
Kobos told NPR that after the WGA strike was announced, there was a period of confusion and concern among non-writing staff over their livelihoods for the duration.
She took to Twitter and called out her boss in a tweet: "He wasn't even at the meeting this morning to tell us we won't get paid after this week. @jimmyfallon please support your staff."
A representative for Fallon didn't respond to a request for comment.
Kobos told NPR, "It was just nerve-wracking to not have much of a sense of anything and then to be told we might not get paid past Friday. We weren't able to be told if that means we would then be furloughed. But we were told, you know, if the strike's still going on into Monday, we could apply for unemployment."
They were also told their health insurance would last only through the month.
But on Wednesday, Kobos and other staff members received the good news. She shared again on Twitter that Fallon got NBC to cover wages for a bit longer.
Kobos called the news "a great relief." But as her experience shows, some serious uncertainty remains for many staff and crew working on Hollywood productions.
"It's very clear these are difficult and uncertain times," she said.
Kobos, who is a senior photo research coordinator, is part of a crucial cadre of staff members on the show who are directly impacted by their colleagues' picket lines.
It's unclear how long this strike could go on.
"It could end at any time, it could go on for a long time," Kobos said. Experts in the entertainment industry have previously told NPR that this year's strike could be a "big one." The last WGA strike in 2007 and 2008 lasted for 100 days.
So far, this strike by Hollywood writers is in its third day after contract negotiations with studios fell apart Monday.
The Alliance of Motion Picture and Television Producers maintains that the studios have made generous offers to the union.
While Kobos waits for news on the strike, she says she is fully in support of the writers and called it a "crucial fight."
"When people fight to raise their standards in the workplace, it helps set the bar higher for everyone else as well," she said. "So a win for the writers here is a win for the rest of the industry and more broadly, the working class in general."
Fernando Alfonso III contributed to this story.
veryGood! (78)
Related
- As Trump Enters Office, a Ripe Oil and Gas Target Appears: An Alabama National Forest
- Some urban lit authors see fiction in the Oscar-nominated ‘American Fiction’
- Why Kate Winslet Says Ozempic Craze “Sounds Terrible”
- As threat to IVF looms in Alabama, patients over 35 or with serious diseases worry for their futures
- Trump invites nearly all federal workers to quit now, get paid through September
- Horoscopes Today, March 4, 2024
- Ammo supplier says he provided no live rounds in fatal shooting of cinematographer by Alec Baldwin
- Do you know these famous Aries signs? 30 celebrities with birthdays under the Zodiac sign
- A White House order claims to end 'censorship.' What does that mean?
- Alabama man jailed in 'the freezer' died of homicide due to hypothermia, records show
Ranking
- SFO's new sensory room helps neurodivergent travelers fight flying jitters
- Luann de Lesseps and Mary-Kate Olsen's Ex Olivier Sarkozy Grab Lunch in NYC
- A woman wins $3.8 million verdict after SWAT team searches wrong home based on Find My iPhone app
- Kansas continues sliding in latest Bracketology predicting the men's NCAA Tournament field
- 'We're reborn!' Gazans express joy at returning home to north
- Dallas Cowboys Quarterback Dak Prescott and Sarah Jane Ramos Welcome First Baby
- A record on the high seas: Cole Brauer to be first US woman to sail solo around the world
- Alabama Republicans to vote on nominee for chief justice, weeks after court’s frozen embryo ruling
Recommendation
Costco membership growth 'robust,' even amid fee increase: What to know about earnings release
Of the Subway bread choices, which is the healthiest? Ranking the different types
What is debt? Get to know the common types of loans, credit
New Broadway musical Suffs shines a spotlight on the women's suffrage movement
Selena Gomez's "Weird Uncles" Steve Martin and Martin Short React to Her Engagement
A woman wins $3.8 million verdict after SWAT team searches wrong home based on Find My iPhone app
What time do Super Tuesday polls open and close? Key voting hours to know for 2024
How to Care for Bleached & Color-Treated Hair, According to a Professional Hair Colorist