On Saturday night, the Alliance of Motion Picture and Television Producers gave the Writers Guild of America its “best and final” offer following four days of negotiations between the two parties.
However, the WGA’s 11,000-plus members would still need to vote to approve the deal.
If ratified, the deal would end the WGA’s five-month long strike, the union’s second-largest strike in its history.
Likewise, a new deal with the WGA could put pressure on the AMPTP to strike a deal with members of the Screen Actors Guild-American Federation of Television and Radio Artists.