StrikeStriking members of the Writers Guild of America, West rally in Hollywood, California on Wednesday. (Mario Anzuoni/Reuters)

The Writers Guild of America strike ended at the 100-day mark after a vote by guild members. Here is how the strike commenced and concluded:

INSERT DESCRIPTIONMembers of the Writers Guild of America hold signs on the first day of the strike. (Armando Arorizo/Bloomberg News)

Oct. 22: Guild members vote to authorize a strike

Oct. 31: Writers’ guild contract expires

Nov. 1: Writers meet, make plans to strike

Nov. 2: Guild announces a Nov. 5 strike start

Nov. 5: Picket lines form in New York and Los Angeles

Nov. 6: Producers alliance predicts a long strike

Nov. 6: Strikers stop writing, start blogging and video-taping

INSERT DESCRIPTIONTina Fey, the NBC star, walks the picket line in New York on Nov. 5. (Librado Romero/The New York Times)

Nov. 7: Show-runners side with the guild

Nov. 7: Fox becomes the first network to revise its schedule

Nov. 8: Networks improvise; reality will fill the scripted voids

Nov. 9: Celebrities lend support on picket lines

Nov. 14: As late-night jokes go stale, viewers switch channels

Strike on YouTubeIn this image from YouTube, the writers of “The Daily Show” present a satire strike newscast in mid-November. (YouTube)

Nov. 16: TV Guide cancels an online video awards show

Nov. 16: Producers play hardball in public

Nov. 19: Writers gain a P.R. advantage online

Nov. 21: Thousands attend Hollywood writers’ rally

Nov. 26: Writers, producers resume negotiations

Nov. 27: Carson Daly becomes first late-night host to return

Nov. 28: The strike: almost over, or just starting?

Dec. 3: NBC lays off “Tonight Show” workers; Jay Leno pays salaries

StrikePickets march beneath a billboard for the Fox TV series “Bones” outside the entrance to Twentieth Century-Fox Studios in Los Angeles on Nov. 5. (Reed Saxon/AP)

Dec. 3: Popular series begin to run out of episodes

Dec. 8: Writers’ talks collapse amid acrimony

Dec. 10: Guild leader accuses studios of lying repeatedly

Dec. 11: TV critics cancel the January press tour

Dec. 12: Networks begin to re-think May upfronts

Dec. 12: Studios say strike is causing “serious economic damage”

Dec. 13: Directors guild plans separate talks with studios

Dec. 14: Guild files labor practices complaint against studios

Dec. 17: Production on TV series virtually ceases

Jay LenoJay Leno, host of “The Tonight Show,” visited the picket lines several times in California. (AP)

Dec. 17: Jay Leno and Conan O’Brien announce returns; later, Jimmy Kimmel, Jon Stewart, and Stephen Colbert do too

Dec. 19: Question marks hover over awards shows

Dec. 26: The strike takes a holiday hiatus

Dec. 27: Guild hires two political consultants

Dec. 28: David Letterman announces Jan. 2 return, with writers

Dec. 28: The studios attempt to produce a viral video

INSERT DESCRIPTIONDavid Letterman returned to “The Late Show” on Jan. 2. (J.P. Filo/CBS)

Jan. 2: Late-night hosts return; guild complains about Leno’s writing

Jan. 4: Advertisers thankful for return of late-night TV

Jan. 5: Some production companies sign interim agreements with guild

Jan. 6: NBC wrestles with Golden Globe dilemma; the awards are later repackaged as a press conference

Jan. 11: Media companies downplay effects of the strike

Jan. 11: Signs of discontent over strike tactics emerge

Jan. 12: Studios begin severing deals with writers, producers

The Golden Globes were deflated and transformed into a press conference. (J. Emilio Flores for The New York Times)

Jan. 14: Viewers yawn at Golden Globes press conference

Jan. 17: Directors guild reaches contract deal with studios

Jan. 17: Studios offer “informal talks” to writers guild

Jan. 21: Writers hold mass picket at Paramount

Jan. 22: Guild takes reality, animation proposals off the table

Jan. 23: Reacting to strike, NBC says it will reduce pilot orders

Jan. 25: The SAG awards, with writers, go off as planned

Jan. 29: NBC’s Jeff Zucker cites strike as “opportunity for change”

Writers Guild of America East president Michael Winship explained the terms of the tentative deal at a meeting on Feb. 9. (Patrick Andrade for The New York Times)

Jan. 31: Closed-door talks are jolted by the actions of some guild leaders

Feb. 2: Informal talks eliminate most roadblocks to a new contract; deal seems near

Feb. 4: Hollywood hopes for a settlement soon

Feb. 9: Writers announce a “tentative deal”

Feb. 9: Cautious optimism permeates guild meetings

Feb. 12: Writers vote to end the strike

Related links:
Strike Fallout: A Complete Guide to How Your Favorite Shows Are Affected
TV Decoder: Strike coverage
Times Topics: Writers Guild of America
Slideshow: Writers on Strike