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Eva's avatar

You clearly don’t understand the amount of work a writers’ assistant or script coordinator does. So a job that already runs 14-16 hour days and often means very late nights and weekends should have more duties and responsibilities added to it? Shows that already do this don’t pay those people more (or promote any faster). And they’re rarely “kids.” As someone who came up through this (broken) pipeline, almost all WAs and SCs I’ve worked with, met through unionization efforts or on the WGA strike picket lines (in total, a hundred or more) were 30s+. It already takes years to staff (7-10 for most drama writers) thanks to short orders, less overall pick ups, politics, and showrunners who dgaf about their support staff… Making those years more even more exploitative isn’t the answer.

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Nandini Bapat's avatar

おかいりい! (Welcome back!) The convention looks fun, glad you had a great time!

Per your suggestion about combining the script coordinator, writer's assistant, etc. jobs into one: I have heard from several assistants and former assistants that they would sometimes take on a combined job like that and it was too much work for one person. Is that true? Or is it doable to do all of that as one person?

And in your proposal, would that combined solo job combine the pay as well, so the assistant would have a livable wage? (Because that makes so much more sense and reasonable! One of the reasons I can never go the assistant route is the low pay. I can't imagine many folks who are changing careers mid-life or folks with financial responsibilities, can afford to take a full time + overtime job at barely minimum wage. If combining means 1) a reasonable wage and 2) a solid opportunity to move up to staff writer eventually... yeah I think that seems like a great idea.)

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