Warner Bros. Discovery's streaming service Max may only be hours into its rollout, but it quickly came under fire by top Hollywood guilds for the way it credits writers and directors.
Early Wednesday, some started noticing a change to the credits on films. Instead of individually listing writers, directors and producers, the new Max format had lumped them all together. By Wednesday afternoon, the presidents of the Directors Guild of America and the Writers Guild of America West had issued a strongly worded joint statement condemning the 鈥渃reator鈥 credit.
Warner Bros. Discovery responded with a statement saying it was an oversight in the technical transition from HBO Max to Max and that it will be corrected. No timeline for restoring the writer and director credits was given.
鈥淲e agree that the talent behind the content on Max deserve their work to be properly recognized,鈥 a Max spokesperson said. 鈥淲e apologize for this mistake.鈥
But it hit a nerve for the guilds at a tense moment in the industry. The writers are on day 22 of a strike and the directors are in negotiations for a new contract.
It 鈥渋t, 鈥淓choes the message we heard in our negotiations .... that writers are marginal, inessential, and should simply accept being paid less and less, while our employers鈥 profits go higher and higher,鈥 said Writers Guild of America West President Meredith Stiehm. "This tone-deaf disregard for writers鈥 importance is what brought us to where we are today.鈥
DGA President Lesli Linka Glatter added that it was 鈥渁 grave insult to our members and our union鈥 and that the 鈥渄evaluation of the individual contributions of artists is a disturbing trend and the DGA will not stand for it.鈥