It has been harder for picketers to keep the energy up at more sprawling corporate campuses like Warner Bros.
"It's been 364 days since I had a big roast beef and we're doing it today," Wareheim said. "There's an Arby's here and Eric hasn't eaten Arby's in a year," Heidecker said. "We're going to have to be out here until we get what we need to get."īut they were confident about finding sustenance to get them through it. "I think it's going to be a long struggle, a long fight," Heidecker said. His fellow comedians and comic actors abounded on the picket line, including "Saturday Night Live" and "Portlandia" alum Fred Armisen, "Hacks" star Hannah Einbinder, "Brooklyn Nine-Nine" actor Chelsea Peretti, "What We Do in the Shadows" vampire Mark Proksch, and longtime comedy team Eric Wareheim and Tim Heidecker, who said they were not optimistic about a quick end to the strike. Maron starred on the series "GLOW" for Netflix, whose headquarters in an increasingly hip section of Hollywood has been a bustling hub during the strike, with music blasting and food trucks serving ice cream, shaved ice and churros.
"The momentum is still building," said stand-up comic, writer and actor Marc Maron outside Netflix headquarters. The combined strike by Hollywood actors and screenwriters entered its second week with no swift end in sight, and union leaders and star strikers, including a bevy of comedians attempted to boost morale Friday as the novelty of picket lines wears off.