Top news
Could AI pen 'Casablanca'? Screenwriters take aim at ChatGPT
By Jake Coyle
TV writers explain why they're walking out
By Brandon Drenon
‘Saturday Night Live’ and late night shows to air repeats due to writers’ strike
By Alli Rosenbloom
The best signs of the WGA picket line
By Mandalit del Barco
All coverage
Hollywood writers are on strike — here's what it means for TV and movie production
By Sarah Whitten & Natasha Pinon
What shows are affected by the TV writers' strike?
By Irina Ivanova
How the Writers Strike Will Affect Your Favorite TV Shows
By Moises Mendez II
Week 1 of WGA Strike — ‘Jeopardy!’ Writers Answer Questions: ‘Without Us It’s Just an Empty Blue Screen’
By William Earl
As Writers Strike, Will Viewers Notice?
By James Hibberd
Writers' strike: Hollywood scribes picket studios for better pay. 'It's not sustainable'
By Josh Rottenberg & Anousha Sakoui
How WGA Strike Could Impact Movies Gearing Up For Production
By Anthony D'alessandro & Justin Kroll
Hollywood studios push back against striking writers' claim of 'gig' workforce
By Lisa Richwine & Danielle Broadway
TV executives says A.I. will soon handle 'absolutely' everything
By Christopher Palmeri
AI can’t replace human writers
By Amanda Silberling
How to support the writers' and SAG strikes online and off
By Chase DiBenedetto
Writers Like Me Have Shut Down Hollywood. Here’s Why.
By Josh Gondelman
Inside the Hollywood writers strike against Netflix, Disney, and more
By Alison Brower & Reed Alexander
WGA strike 2023: Why are the Hollywood writers striking and what happened last time in 2007?
By Louis Chilton
The 2023 WGA Writers Strike: An Updated Timeline Of How It's Affecting Hollywood TV Shows And Streaming
By Sarah El-Mahmoud
TV and film writers are fighting to save their jobs from AI. They won’t be the last
By Samantha Murphy Kelly
'Plagiarism machines': Hollywood writers and studios battle over the future of AI
By Lisa Richwine & Dawn Chmielewski
How the 2023 WGA writers strike is different than past ones
By Bill Chappell
Hollywood Writers Go on Strike, Halting TV and Film Production
By John Koblin & Brooks Barnes