US | Hollywood writers' strike Striking Writers to Resume Talks With 2 dozen TV shows shut down, will meet with studio reps Nov. 26 By Jane Yager Posted Nov 17, 2007 5:48 AM CST Copied Picketers supporting the writers strike, including Jack Kenny, center, walk the line outside Paramount Pictures studios, Tuesday, Nov. 13, 2007, in Los Angeles.(AP Photo/Nick Ut) (Associated Press) With the Hollywood writers' strike starting to cause economic pain, writers and studios have agreed to head back to the bargaining table Nov. 26. The breakthrough came via back-channel talks between top TV writers and studio execs, the Los Angeles Times reports. The strike halted production on some two dozen TV shows; late-night talk shows are in reruns, and stockpiled episodes of others are dwindling. Pressure mounted last week, as the strike halted production on the high-profile film 'Angels & Demons' and everyone from talent agents to Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger urged the two sides to go back to the table. Writers will continue their pickets and rallies until Nov. 26, including a massive march along Hollywood Boulevard expected Tuesday. Read These Next Mexico says it killed top drug trafficker. BBC apologizes after racial slur heard at BAFTAs. The author of an acclaimed novel is being sued over its contents. Middle East nations rip Huckabee's talk of Israeli takeover. Report an error