[quote name=\'Unrealtor\' post=\'151184\' date=\'Apr 29 2007, 06:26 PM\']
[quote name=\'SRIV94\' post=\'150995\' date=\'Apr 25 2007, 10:36 PM\']
Obviously the 1980 actor's strike didn't affect game show production, as P+, MG and the Vegas version of HSq (among others) continued taping. But why were game shows exempt from the strike?
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I seem to recall, back in the Usenet days, that AFTRA came close to striking, and that would have shut down production on Bergeron's Squares, so I'm guessing it could be a SAG/AFTRA distinction. Randy or someone else with more showbiz knowledge than myself can probably explain better than myself.[/quote]
Ok...since I can't recall all of the game shows in '80, could there have been a possibility that if the right group would have been on strike, that all celebrity-based (aka MG, HS) game shows would have been..well...SOL?
[quote name=\'Adam Nedeff\' post=\'150996\' date=\'Apr 25 2007, 09:52 PM\']
Total guess: Game shows use freelance writers, so a union didn't affect them.
I think it may not so much be freelance as a matter of titles. See "Production Assistant" Dick DeBartolo on Match Game, or the "Producers" who sued the producers of America's Next Top Model, for example.
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IIRC, in this very forum, wasn't there a discussion that Goodson hired DeBartolo as a "Production Assistant" for "old" MG because he was too young for his writer's card? If that was the case, he (Goodson) probably just kept the title across to the "new" MG.