Analysts pointed out that many studios prior to the negotiations accelerated their production schedules in a drive to create a backlog of product in case a strike materialized. Nevertheless, studio executives and talent agents told Thursday Los Angeles Times that they expected production to return to normal soon. “Our job right now is to work with our clients and with [the] studios to put some movies together, to get them started by September or October and wrap by the beginning of next year,” Jeremy Zimmer of talent agency UTA told the Times.
- Advertisement -
