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Big Payday For 'The Big Bang Theory' Stars
Topic Started: Sep 15 2010, 02:12 PM (1,178 Views)
Michael Baldwin
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EE fan

The stars of The Big Bang Theory are getting big new paychecks just as the hit CBS comedy is getting ready for its big move to Thursdays next week.

After almost 3 months of negotiations with series producer Warner Bros. TV, Big Bang leads Johnny Galecki, Kaley Cuoco and Jim Parsons have agreed to a major salary bump that would bring the trio's salaries to $200,000 an episode for the upcoming fourth season, up from about $60,000 last season. The salaries will go up to $250,000 in Season 5, $300,000 in Season 6 and 350,000 in Season 7. Additionally, they will each receive .25 point of the series' lucrative back-end and will be payed a little more than $1 million as an advance against it now and another $1 million in Season 7, effectively adding another $50,000 to their per-episode paycheck over the life of the deal.

I hear Galecki and Cuoco, who have been negotiating together, closed their deals on Monday in a face-to-face meeting between their representatives and Warner Bros. following a powwow with the two actors and their teams on Friday where the studio's final offer was presented. Meanwhile, recent Emmy winner Jim Parsons had been holding out for more money and had handled his negotiations separately despite the fact that he is represented by the same law firm as Galecki and Cuoco (Hansen, Jacobson, Teller, Hoberman, Newman, Warren & Richman). Parsons was offered the same deal as Galecki and Cuoco and was given a deadline to take the take it or leave it by today. He just accepted. I hear the studio, which had made it clear it was planning to do "favored nations"-type deals with all stars that pay them the same, was prepared to table renegotiations with Parsons until next summer if he had turned down the offer.

Sources close to the talent and studio side called this a great deal, though some noted that the trio could have gotten even bigger salary bumps if Parsons had not gone solo and they had all negotiated together. It draws comparisons to the pacts for the Friends cast who got to $100,000 an episode each in 1996 dollars during their first renegotiations with Warner Bros. after Season 2. Big Bang has the potential to become the next Friends, especially if its move to Friends' old Thursday 8 PM slot works well. The series is coming off a red-hot third season, in which it became the highest-rated comedy on TV, and a blockbuster syndication deal that netted Warner Bros. $2+M per episode.

In fact, speculations about major cast salaries renegotiations started shortly after the giant syndication deal was announced in May. Talks began in late June with an $100,000 per-episode offer by the studio, to which the actors' reps didn't respond. After Comic-Con, where the Big Bang cast was among the most popular attractions, in the week leading to the show's production start date, the two sides reengaged and continued communication with a lot of back-channel conversations and back-and-forth until an agreement was reached. "It's been arduous and hard but amicable and based on real relationships (between reps and Warner Bros. execs), one person close to the negotiations said. Added another, "It was done in a quiet, fair and respectful way." Indeed, the actors never even considered a walkout and fulfilled all their duties on the show throughout the entire renegotiation process. In the only downer, Cuoco won't be able to fully celebrate her new deal right away. She is at a hospital recuperating from a horseback accident over the weekend but is expected to make a full recovery. Coming up are capable Big Bang co-stars Simon Helberg and Kunal Nayyar, who also are expected to negotiate salary increases. Reps for Warner Bros. and the actors declined to comment for this story.
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