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	<title>Comments on: What The Writers Guild Of America Wants</title>
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		<title>By: PhoneBoy</title>
		<link>http://phoneboy.com/1896/what-the-writers-guild-of-america-wants/comment-page-1#comment-23189</link>
		<dc:creator>PhoneBoy</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Thu, 08 Nov 2007 06:41:23 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description>Speaking as an author, I can tell you that what I made on the royalties for my two books depended on how it was sold. Authors are either getting paid on contract (no royalties) or in the 10% range (royalties percentage of wholesale price). That&#039;s for technical books, fiction and other things may differ and it&#039;s generally on a sliding scale.

Music contracts are notoriously lopsided. In fact, most musicians hardly make money on their CDs as the record companies withhold those profits to payback the &quot;advance&quot; the artist was given. Most artists make money on touring. 

WGA members get zilch for producing content that goes online. That&#039;s gotta change, given where things are going. The actual percentage amount is arguable, though I think they&#039;ve used some reasonable logic to come to the price they did.</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Speaking as an author, I can tell you that what I made on the royalties for my two books depended on how it was sold. Authors are either getting paid on contract (no royalties) or in the 10% range (royalties percentage of wholesale price). That&#8217;s for technical books, fiction and other things may differ and it&#8217;s generally on a sliding scale.</p>
<p>Music contracts are notoriously lopsided. In fact, most musicians hardly make money on their CDs as the record companies withhold those profits to payback the &#8220;advance&#8221; the artist was given. Most artists make money on touring. </p>
<p>WGA members get zilch for producing content that goes online. That&#8217;s gotta change, given where things are going. The actual percentage amount is arguable, though I think they&#8217;ve used some reasonable logic to come to the price they did.</p>
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		<title>By: Irfon-Kim Ahmad</title>
		<link>http://phoneboy.com/1896/what-the-writers-guild-of-america-wants/comment-page-1#comment-23186</link>
		<dc:creator>Irfon-Kim Ahmad</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Thu, 08 Nov 2007 04:32:56 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description>The video is a little disingenuous.  It starts out by saying, &quot;Authors get paid for every book sold.  Musicians get paid for every CD sold.&quot;  Are these fair comparisons?  Authors do virtually all of the creative work of writing a novel (although editors do more than most people think).  Musicians do virtually all of the creative work of writing a song for some musicians (although lots of other people contribute).  Does what a writer do for a TV compare fairly to what an author does for a novel or what a musician does on a CD?  Are the actors, the director, the film crew and so on analogous in role to studio engineers, editors, etc., or do they do a lot more work to make the resulting product?  

Also, how much do most authors and musicians actually get per book sold?  I&#039;m going to guess it doesn&#039;t actually compare very favourably to their four cents.  I suspect that all but the biggest musicians make more or less nothing on CD sales these days, mostly making their money from touring.  Authors make a little more, but they&#039;re unlikely to be rolling in it.  Only a tiny, tiny percentage of authors can actually manage to quit their day job, even if they&#039;re quite successful.</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The video is a little disingenuous.  It starts out by saying, &#8220;Authors get paid for every book sold.  Musicians get paid for every CD sold.&#8221;  Are these fair comparisons?  Authors do virtually all of the creative work of writing a novel (although editors do more than most people think).  Musicians do virtually all of the creative work of writing a song for some musicians (although lots of other people contribute).  Does what a writer do for a TV compare fairly to what an author does for a novel or what a musician does on a CD?  Are the actors, the director, the film crew and so on analogous in role to studio engineers, editors, etc., or do they do a lot more work to make the resulting product?  </p>
<p>Also, how much do most authors and musicians actually get per book sold?  I&#8217;m going to guess it doesn&#8217;t actually compare very favourably to their four cents.  I suspect that all but the biggest musicians make more or less nothing on CD sales these days, mostly making their money from touring.  Authors make a little more, but they&#8217;re unlikely to be rolling in it.  Only a tiny, tiny percentage of authors can actually manage to quit their day job, even if they&#8217;re quite successful.</p>
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