The Writers Guild of America West’s own staff union is officially on strike. According to a release, the staff union called for an unfair labor practice strike on Tuesday afternoon, alleging management has shown no intention to come to an agreement on the pending contract. Among its accusations, the labor group also said that guild management has “surveilled workers for union activity, terminated union supporters, and engaged in bad faith surface bargaining.” Last month, the union first authorized a strike, with 82% of its members in favor. The staff union, made up of over 100 workers across legal, communications, residuals and other departments, was formed last spring and contract negotiations began in September. The bargaining has focused on concerns about the growth and use of artificial intelligence, pay raises and “basic protections” like grievance procedures. In a statement to The Times, WGA said it “respects the staff union’s right to strike, and will continue to bargain in good faith,” but said the union’s “allegations of unfair labor practices are without merit.” “During the course of 19 negotiating sessions since September, the Guild has offered the staff union comprehensive proposals with numerous union protections and improvements to compensation and working conditions,” wrote a WGA spokesperson. “We look forward to a resolution of a first contract with the staff union.” The Writers Guild made headlines in 2023 for the second-longest strike in the union’s history. At the time, film and TV writers were boycotting major studios and fighting for fair compensation. WGA West staffers also played a key role in the strike as they, too, joined the picket lines. A contract was settled after a 148-day work stoppage, but it’s set to expire on May 1. The strike comes as the WGA’s East and West Coast groups get ready to once again sit down with major movie studios and streaming companies. SAG-AFTRA, the actors’ union, began its negotiations last week, with WGA’s set to begin in mid-March. But for now, WGA’s staff union will be picketing outside of its Fairfax offices.
https://www.latimes.com/entertainment-arts/business/story/2026-02-17/writers-guild-of-americas-staff-union-calls-for-strike
Month: February 2026
Ramadan ushers in month of fasting, worship and charity for Muslims: Photos
Muslims worldwide will begin daily fasting from dawn to sunset as Ramadan starts, marking a period of worship, reflection and charity. The holy month, the ninth in the Islamic lunar calendar, brings families together for meals to break the fast. Ramadan begins Wednesday or Thursday, varying by country due to differing moon sighting practices. This is a photo gallery curated by AP photo editors.
https://abcnews.com/US/wireStory/ramadan-ushers-month-fasting-worship-charity-muslims-photos-130250651
Frederick Wiseman, who captured the weirdness and wonder of everyday life, dies at 96
Filmmaker Frederick Wiseman has died. The celebrated documentarian started making documentaries that captured the weirdness and wonder of everyday life in the mid 1960s and did not stop until 2023. Wiseman died Monday. His family issued a joint statement with Zipporah Films. He was 96. Making movies was always an adventure, Wiseman said in 2016, during a speech at the Academy Awards when he won an honorary Oscar. “I usually know nothing about the subject before I start,” he said at the black-tie ceremony. “And I know there are those that feel I know nothing about it when it’s finished!” Wiseman was extremely prolific. He made roughly 50 documentaries, many of which chronicled the inner workings of institutions as diverse as the Idaho state legislature (State Legislature, 2007), the New York Public Library (Ex Libris, 2017), and a high school in Philadelphia (High School, 1968). “I wish I could be more like him,” said Oscar-winning documentarian Errol Morris in an interview with NPR about Wiseman before the elder filmmaker died. Morris said Wiseman’s super-charged yet subtle way of interpreting everyday life had more in common with the Theater of the Absurd than documentary filmmaking. (Indeed, Wiseman also had a career as a theater director in the U. S. and Europe, helming plays by the likes of Samuel Beckett and Luigi Pirandello.) “He has a way of finding in reality some of the most surreal, absurd moments that I’ve ever seen anywhere,” Morris said. By way of example, Morris points to a scene in Wiseman’s 1993 documentary Zoo, in which an all-women surgical team at Miami zoo castrates a wolf. “And it seems like the entire scene is populated by women except for the janitor standing by the exit door, looking nervously on with his hands folded over his crotch,” Morris said. “To me, this is really almost as good as it gets.” Morris added Wiseman was a mentor to him and a close friend. After Morris lost both his father and brother to heart disease, and was worried about his own fate, the filmmaker said Wiseman organized medical help for him. “I can even credit Fred with saving my life,” Morris said. Frederick Wiseman was born in Boston in 1930. After serving in the U. S. Army during the Korean War and living in Paris during the 1950s, he taught law at Boston University. It was taking his students on field trips to Bridgewater State Hospital, a Massachusetts prison facility for the criminally insane, that compelled the then law professor to direct his first, and most famous, film. Made in 1967, Titicut Follies gets its title from a stage show put on by the inmates at the institution. After its seemingly benign opening, the movie captures the appalling conditions under which the inmates are kept, with unblinking scenes of bullying, force feeding, strip searches and squalor. Titicut Follies was so shocking, the state of Massachusetts managed to get it banned from public screenings for more than two decades. “In order for anyone to see that film, for years you had to sign a declaration saying that you were a professional in one of the following fields, like criminology, law or film studies,” said film scholar Barry Keith Grant, author of Voyages of Discovery: The Cinema of Frederick Wiseman. Still, Grant said the movie sealed Wiseman’s future. “It gave him a lot of notoriety and it helped establish his career,” Grant said. Over the years, Wiseman became known for his meticulous, hands-on process. He directed, produced and edited his movies. In a 2014 interview with NPR, the filmmaker described making National Gallery, his documentary about the famed London art museum. “I was there for three months, every day for twelve weeks, probably twelve, fourteen hours a day,” Wiseman said of the shoot, adding he amassed 170 hours of footage. “So the ratio between film shot and film used is about 60 to one.” Wiseman’s films were also known for their prodigious length, running for as long as six hours. “I don’t tailor the length to meet any commercial needs,” Wiseman said. “I assume if people are interested, they’ll watch it, whether it’s 75 minutes or three hours.”.
https://www.npr.org/2026/02/16/1184170407/frederick-wiseman-obituary
What we know about deadly hockey game shooting in Rhode Island
Two people were killed and three others critically injured in a shooting at a high school boys’ hockey game in Pawtucket, Rhode Island, according to police. CBS Boston reporter Luisa Moller reports.
https://www.cbsnews.com/video/what-we-know-about-deadly-hockey-game-shooting-in-rhode-island/
Life Kit’s advice to repair your relationship
Audio will be available later today. We cannot avoid fights and disagreements in relationships. So, how do we move forward? NPR’s Life Kit offers advice on repairing relationships in the midst of conflict.
https://www.npr.org/2026/02/15/nx-s1-5707464/life-kits-advice-to-repair-your-relationship
Documenting the horrors of Mauthausen concentration camp
At 22, Army medic LeRoy “Pete” Petersohn helped liberate the Nazi concentration camp Mauthausen and documented its horrors in a letter home, testimony his son says Petersohn felt compelled to record for history.
https://www.cbsnews.com/video/documenting-the-horrors-of-mauthausen-concentration-camp-60-minutes/
Sprawling network of brothels in Ventura and L.A. counties busted by authorities
A massive Southern California brothel ring was busted by authorities, leading to two arrests, officials said. Detectives from the Ventura County Sheriff’s Office Special Crimes Unit conducted a yearlong investigation into a brothel ring, according to a Ventura County Sheriff’s Office news release. Kebin Dong and Wei Nie, both Los Angeles residents, were identified as the owners and operators of a sex services website, according to the release. Detectives found more than 30 residential and hotel brothels throughout California. More than 60 female sex workers were also found on the website. Dong and Nie allegedly helped schedule appointments at the brothels. On Wednesday and Thursday, detectives with help from the Ventura Police Department and the Los Angeles Regional Human Trafficking Task Force executed search warrants at brothels throughout L. A. and Ventura counties. Potential human trafficking victims were also found at the locations and provided with victim services. On Thursday, Dong and Nie were arrested at their home in Hacienda Heights and booked on suspicion of pimping, pandering and conspiracy. They are being held on $200,000 bail.
https://www.latimes.com/california/story/2026-02-14/sprawling-network-of-brothels-in-ventura-la-counties-busted-by-authorities
Bangladesh’s first fair vote in years comes with a daunting to-do list
Listen · 3: 51 3: 51 A landmark election in Bangladesh ended years of disputed polls, and now the winners face pressure to tackle corruption and a battered economy.
https://www.npr.org/2026/02/14/nx-s1-5712759/bangladeshs-first-fair-vote-in-years-comes-with-a-daunting-to-do-list
Zelenskyy signals openness to elections if ceasefire reached
German Chancellor Friedrich Merz opened this year’s Munich Security Conference with a message to the U. S., saying Americans are “not powerful enough to go at it alone.” CBS News national security contributor Samantha Vinograd joins with analysis.
https://www.cbsnews.com/video/zelenskyy-signals-openness-elections-if-ceasefire-reached/
Shocking upset as Ilia “Quad God” Malinin falls twice during free skate
In a shocking twist at the 2026 Winter Olympics, American figure skater Ilia Malinin didn’t make it to the podium, failing to medal after falling twice during the free skate. Kelly O’Grady has details.
https://www.cbsnews.com/video/shocking-upset-as-ilia-quad-god-malinin-falls-twice-during-free-skate/
