From the YouTube site:
A musical tale of two rival gangs, the Scribes and the Nets, who battled over the young and beautiful New Media during the Strike War of 2007.
Made for the fairdeal4writers contest.
I'm Tanja Barnes, the creator of the Writers’ Strike Chronicles podcast that was recorded and uploaded from November 2007 to February 2008.A musical tale of two rival gangs, the Scribes and the Nets, who battled over the young and beautiful New Media during the Strike War of 2007.
Made for the fairdeal4writers contest.
For information about the efforts to raise money for the Writers' Guild Foundation Industry Support fund here is an episode that aired last month on the American Public Media show Marketplace in which Jeff Tyler reported how the writers were raising money for people who work behind the scenes.

PROCEEDS WILL GO
Retooling HarperCollins for the 21st Century
[runtime: 00:28:13, 12.9 mb, recorded 2007-06-19]
As one of the world's leading English-language publishers, HarperCollins Publishers, with over $1 billion in annual revenues, is right in the middle of the challenge to build the future of the publishing industry. Their call to action came in 2004 when they found their company facing little understood but massive change. This massive change was identified in the form of powerful search engine growth, exploding social communities, and rapidly growing online advertising.
In this keynote presentation from the conference, Brian Murray, Group President for HarperCollins Publishers, describes the process his company used to face these changes and prepare HarperCollins for the future. In his educational presentation, Murray provides a textbook strategic analysis of HarperCollins as it embarked on a six step process to meet this new challenge.

...and like all hell breaks loose.
It's worth noting that the hugely successful comedy video website "FunnyOrDie.com" that's spearheaded by Will Ferrell, Adam McKay and Chris Henchy and funded to the tune of $15,000,000 by Sequoia Capital is not a union shop. This, despite the fact that the Screen Actor's Guild (of which Ferrell is a member in good standing) has done outreach to his production offices.
The writers strike (and the music industry before that) has revealed how the entertainment industry is in the midst of radical change unlike anything seen since Thomas Edison invented motion pictures or Philo T. Farnsworth invented the television. I suppose we now have Nikola Tesla to thank as media convergence redefines how we stay connected with friends and family, how we get our news, and how we watch entertainment (and even for some folks, how they have sex).
As mentioned in this episode: Nokia predicts 25% of entertainment by 2012 will be created and consumed within peer communities

PROCEEDS WILL GOThe Shows Go On
February 15, 2008
The Writers Guild of America voted this week to end a 100-day strike that left many television shows in limbo. So did they get what they bargained for? NPR’s Kim Masters says the Guild has successfully spun the deal as a victory.
Transcripts available here.
The WSC podcast was recorded on a Sony Hi-MD Recorder MZ-100 with a Sony ECM-MS957 microphone and a Sennheiser HD 280 Pro head set. It was then transferred to my MacBookPro running OSX 10.5.1. The initial cut is done in PeakPro 5.21, then run through Levelator. Occasionally I use SoundSoap 2 to clean up the noise but more often then not, I just go to the final mix down which is done in GarageBand 4.1. If I can do it, so can you.

The Writers' Strike Chronicles by Tanja Barnes • Banner photo by Eric Appel
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