I have to say that while any campaign like this is well intentioned, in this case, it is also meaningless.
If the interviews that Jorja Fox gave are any indiction, the show didn't "fire" her, rather, she chose not to resign a new contract at the rate offered, she said something in an interview like "no, not at that price". Essentially, she was the only one that didn't resign and wanted more money to do the same work everyone else had agreed contractually to do at the offered rates.
Protesting to the network is meaningless. They aren't in a position to overpay Jorja to work compared to other actors on the set. If you want to protest, you should be sending mail to Jorja and her agent suggesting that they remember that getting paid 2.4 to 3 million a year to be an actor is a freaking good paycheck that almost any of the rest of us would about kill to have.
It takes two to tango, and I can't agree with any campaign that doesn't address the true sources of the problems.
If the interviews that Jorja Fox gave are any indiction, the show didn't "fire" her, rather, she chose not to resign a new contract at the rate offered, she said something in an interview like "no, not at that price". Essentially, she was the only one that didn't resign and wanted more money to do the same work everyone else had agreed contractually to do at the offered rates.
Protesting to the network is meaningless. They aren't in a position to overpay Jorja to work compared to other actors on the set. If you want to protest, you should be sending mail to Jorja and her agent suggesting that they remember that getting paid 2.4 to 3 million a year to be an actor is a freaking good paycheck that almost any of the rest of us would about kill to have.
It takes two to tango, and I can't agree with any campaign that doesn't address the true sources of the problems.