Producers,FWICE and GEC

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Posted: 16 years ago
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I dont think we would be able to see new episode pretty soon...coz the situation is getting worst.........I think it might take another week...
Mumbai, Nov 13 (IANS) The dispute between Bollywood's cine workers association and producers is taking its toll on studios - the owners are facing losses as the shooting of all serials has been stalled.

'The shooting of serials has come to a complete halt. Since the beginning of this month, we hardly had any bookings for serials. It is a hundred percent loss for us as we have to pay our maintenance and other liabilities,' Imtiaz Hamid, manager Essel Studios, a prime shooting location for serials, told IANS.

Hemal Trivedi of Sankraman studio said: 'It is a huge loss for us because there has been no shooting of serials from last eight to 10 days because of the dispute.'

'However, bookings for ad films and feature films have saved us,' he added.

Filmistan Studios, which normally rents out to filmmakers, is also affected by the strike.

'The strike has affected 20 percent of our business. There has been a significant decrease in bookings for serials. The last serial shot here was Ekta Kapoor's 'Mahabharat', which was six days ago. After that not a single serial has been shot here,' Murari Seksaria, the studio manager, said.

'Bookings for Fox Telefilms were also cancelled recently,' he added.

Rajesh Raman of Kamal Amrohi studios said there have been no bookings in their studio for TV serials for past one month.

'The dispute has affected our business by more than 60 percent. Major production houses have cancelled their bookings and it is having a deep impact on us,' Raman said.

'If it is affecting us so badly, think about the broadcasters, producers and the workers - they must be having a tough time now,' Raman pointed out.

Referring to the loss suffered by the industry, Mukesh Bhatt, Producers Guild president, said: 'It's a huge loss to the industry which is more than Rs.1 billion per day.'

The cine workers association Federation of Western India Cine Employees (FWICE) went on strike after the producers failed to pay the revised wages to the workers.

About resolving the issue, Bhatt said: 'It's in a stalemate situation where both the parties have taken a rigid stand. No party is ready to listen and they have become really arrogant and we can't do anything.'

The workers' body is, however, adamant about their demands and in no mood to compromise.

Dharmesh Tiwari, president FWICE, said: 'Enough of producers! Now we will not listen to them.'

He said after signing the MOU for the second time last month, the producers' body has again faltered.

'Our workers are suffering looses, but we are fighting for their better future. We had tried our best to co-operate with them, but now the situation has really worsened. We won't compromise this time. If actors, producers and others are paid huge money why can't these people, who work so hard, toil?'

However, T.P. Agarwal, president Indian Motion Pictures Association (IMPA), said the producers' body will hold a meeting soon and try to resolve the issue. The producers argue that they can hike the workers's wages only if the channels will pay them more.

On meeting producer's demand for a hike, STAR TV CEO Uday Shankar said: 'I think we have been paying them well, which also includes the worker's fees and, therefore, see no reason for a hike which will again put an additional burden on our advertisers.

'We are not in a position to give a hike to the producers at this moment. Economic meltdown is not the sole cause for it, but it is one of the reasons.'

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Posted: 16 years ago
#2
TV producers may offer better wages to workers
14 Nov 2008, 1339 hrs IST, Bharati Dubey, TNN
Television producers are likely to issue a fresh set of proposals to the Federation of Western India Cine Employees (FWICE) on the vexed
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wage issue that has resulted in a stand-off between the two sides. Producers decided to take the first step in this direction on Thursday evening, industry insiders told TOI.

The members of the core committee of the television producers' organisation will be meeting individual producers to arrive at a final decision on the new proposal that is likely to be issued to workers.

"The proposal is likely to be in favour of the workers as producers do understand the workers' problem,'' an industry insider said. "With no shooting for almost 20 days, the daily wage workers have started feeling the heat,'' he added. But the workers' agency was in a belligerent mood. Federation of Western India Cine Employeespresident Dharmesh Tiwari said: "Producers have lost the trust of workers. They went back on the wage hike they agreed to give to workers after an MoU was signed on 3 October. We are not willing to compromise.''

But Tiwari agreed that the daily wage worker had started to suffer. "Everyone, worker or producer or channel, is losing in this fight. Let's see where it ends,'' he said.

The hardened attitudes, industry insiders said, indicated that no early solution might be in sight and audiences might have to go on watching reruns till the end of the month. "Whatever is reasonable will be given to workers, especially the daily wage earners, but those with higher pay scales may not be able to get the hike they have demanded,'' one of them said. var zz=0;var sldsh=0; var bellyaddiv = ' '; var stindex=100; var stp=150; var taglen=0; var tmp; var tagcheck = new Array("div","span","br","font","a"); var storycontent = document.getElementById("storydiv").innerHTML; var firstpara = storycontent.substring(0,storycontent.toLowerCase().indexOf("

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anushe khan thumbnail
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Posted: 16 years ago
#3
TV producers send mixed signals, no solution yet
15 Nov 2008, 0327 hrs IST, Bharati Dubey, TNN
Text:
MUMBAI: Mixed signals are coming from television serial producers in the continuing stand-off between them and the workers.
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Even as some producers indicated on Friday that they were ready to smoke the peace pipe, there were others who threatened the striking workers that they would be replaced with fresh recruits if they did not return to the sets immediately.

Federation of Western India Cine Employees general secretary Dinesh Chaturvedi said: "Some people from Dheeraj Kumars Creative have threatened our workers. They have been asked

to return to work, failing which they will be replaced by outsiders.''

Members of J D Majithias production house , too, have said the same thing apparently. But, at the same time, Chaturvedi has been getting feelers from the core committee of the television producers organisation, asking him to discuss revised rates.

The state government on Friday also indicated that it was keeping a watch on the unfolding drama; an inspector from the state labour department met FWICE members. "An inspector from the state labour department met us and told us that the labour commissioner would soon be calling a meeting of workers and producers at its office in Mumbai Central,'' Chaturvedi said. The meeting is likely to happen in three days.
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Producers, TV workers fail to break deadlock
16 Nov 2008, 0106 hrs IST, Bharati Dubey, TNN
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MUMBAI: Closed-door meetings to resolve the blackout of daily soaps on television channels continued on the fifth day. The conflict between workers
and producers has resulted in TV channels airing only reruns of soap operas.

According to industry sources, a meeting was held between Mukesh Bhatt, convenor of the core committee of the television producers body, and Federation of Western India Cine Eployees (FWICE) general secretary Dinesh Chaturvedi on Saturday afternoon.

Bhatt has reportedly offered to revise some of the rates as demanded by the FWICE.
However, the meeting had no outcome as the offer was only verbal. A source from the federation said, Chaturvedi has asked Bhatt to either accept or reject the offer, subject to clearance from all committee members of the FWICE.

In all probability, members of the Allied Mazdoor Union, who are daily wage workers, are likely to benefit, but members of other unions will have to accept contractual rates. However, a senior member from the federation said, I dont think it will be accepted easily, the producers will need to do a lot of convincing if the issue has to be resolved.

Broadcasters have already begun pressurising the producers to resolve the issue at the earliest as advertisers have allegedly threatened to cut the advertisement rates to half after November 21.

While producers are hassled due to pressures from broadcasters, about 75% of workers are busy shooting for films and music albums. Chaturvedi said, Our workers are at ease as most of them are busy working on albums, movies and ad films. Besides, our workers had been preparing for such a time and are ready to fight for their bread.
Incidentally, it was only after an MoU was signed between workers and producers on October 3 that most producers began paying workers their revised rates.

Prem Singh Thakur of the Allied Mazdoor Union said, All producers, including Dheeraj Kumar, Ekta Kapoor and others, have begun paying our workers according to the revised rates. However, the payments were stopped after broadcasters asked them to cancel shooting on October 23.
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Posted: 16 years ago
#5

Friday talks may resolve crisis of TV serials

November 17th, 2008 - 8:00 pm ICT by IANS -

Mumbai, Nov 17 (IANS) It seems tele-serial viewers will have to wait a while for their favourite soap operas to resume as the next round of talks between programme producers and the striking cine workers is slated for Friday.Federation of Western India Cine Employees (FWICE) general secretary Dinesh Chaturvedi told IANS Monday that the next talks are scheduled for Friday.

Friday is also the deadline the broadcasters, under pressure from the advertisers, have served to the producers to settle their dispute with the cine workers.

Keen to resolve the crisis, some producers conducted a series of informal meetings with FWICE office-bearers and other stakeholders the whole of last week.

The attempt was to make the FWICE aware of the serious problems the producers and broadcasters are facing because of the cancellation of shootings of the tele-serials.

"We listened to them, but we have asked them to put their suggestions in writing before we make any final commitment," Dinesh Chaturvedi of the FWICE said.

He said a core committee of producers, headed by filmmaker Mukesh Bhatt, had offered to give a meagre wage hike to the non-contractual cine workers but declined to meet their demands in toto.

"They have promised to revert to us for official negotiations over the issue by Friday. I don't see any other way out for them," Chaturvedi pointed out.

He blamed the producers for giving in to the pressure exerted on them by the broadcasters to suspend the shootings of their shows.

"By doing so, they only exacerbated the problem. Apparently, it was meant to browbeat the cine workers into submission. Now that they are feeling the pinch as the cine workers have stood their ground, suddenly their approach to the problem has changed," Chaturvedi added.

The producers' core committee is now desperately seeking an honourable escape route, he said.

Producer Ratan Jain, president of the Association of Motion Picture and Television Programme Producers (AMPTPP) and a key member of the core committee, said that without further delay all the three stakeholders - the broadcasters, producers and cine workers - should approach the issue with a positive mindframe in order to find out a long-term solution.

"First, the FWICE must realise that the economics of the film and television industries are not the same. When it drew up its bye-laws, those were framed keeping only the film industry in mind. So, it should not apply the same to the television industry strictly," Jain said.

Secondly, he said, the broadcasters on their part also must try to understand the constraints of the producers.

Thirdly, he said, in view of the current economic slowdown, it has become imperative for the producers to cut production costs to relieve the channels of their financial burden in these trying times.

"In sum, it is only if all these three stakeholders try to understand each other's problems with a give-and-take attitude can a solution to the stalemate be found before it is too late," Jain said.

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