The mega-strike that could take down Hollywood - Actors like Lily Tomlin and Jane Fonda are poised to join the writers on the picket line

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(Credit: Regan Morris, BBC News, Los Angeles)

(Archive: https://archive.ph/senH0)

Hollywood's writers have been on strike for two months and soon the actors may join them, swapping the red carpet for the picket lines.

The Screen Actors Guild-American Federation of Television and Radio Artists (SAG-AFTRA) contract expires at midnight local time on 12 July, following a deadline extension that delayed the possibility of a mega-strike by almost two weeks.

They would join the Writers Guild of America, which went on strike on 2 May after failing to reach a deal with the Alliance of Motion Picture and Television Producers (AMPTP), an umbrella group representing studios like Disney, Netflix, Amazon and Apple.

Both SAG-AFTRA and AMPTP have said they will not comment while contract negotiations are ongoing.

It would be the first time that unions representing both writers and actors would strike at the same time since 1960, when future US President Ronald Regan was president of the actors' union.

A third union, the Directors Guild of America, has already negotiated a contract and will not join the strike.

Dozens of productions have already been halted since the writers went on strike, including Stranger Things, Billions and Marvel's Blade.

If there is an actors' strike, there could be even more delays, and some shows may be cancelled altogether.

For audiences, that likely means the next series of your favourite TV show will be delayed, and many shows may disappear forever.

While some international productions will continue, it will be limited, because SAG-AFTRA represents more than 160,000 performers around the world - like writer and actor Phoebe Waller-Bridge, who addressed the strike at the London premiere of the latest Indiana Jones movie.

"I really hope we can get this sorted. Writers are the most important people in this industry, I really believe that," she said.
Like the writers already on strike, actors say that streaming services haven't shared the wealth, even as they have led to an explosion of entertainment content. The never-ending quest for new subscribers is an unsustainable business model, they say, and studio executives are reaping huge salaries while many actors and writers can't make a decent living.

Actors and writers used to make money from re-runs on network TV. They would get a cheque in the post every time a movie or show they worked on was re-broadcast and that allowed actors to survive between projects in the business, which has always been a feast-or-famine job.

But streaming services upended Hollywood, and now actors and writers get little or nothing when someone watches their work on a streaming service, which also traditionally pays less than network TV.

The negotiations are being conducted in secret so it's not clear what might be the sticking points or if a deal is imminent. Members overwhelmingly voted in favour of a strike if a deal cannot be reached.

"If they could replace us, they would have done it many years ago," writer and actor Adam Conover said while picketing outside Netflix.

"Are they going to replace you with reality TV? Or with YouTube stars? Well, they can try," he said, adding that people around the world turn on the TV to watch shows like Stranger Things and sports.

In a surprise move, many of Hollywood's A-list actors signed a letter to their union supporting a strike if they cannot get a "transformative" new contract from studios.

The letter - which has been widely circulated in Los Angeles - was signed by the likes of Meryl Streep, Mark Ruffalo, Jennifer Lawrence and Quinta Brunson - has more than 1,000 signatures now, according to industry publication Deadline.

Both the writers and actors are striking for not only better pay, but for restrictions on using artificial intelligence (AI) in productions, which they say is an "existential" threat.

Actors say AI could create a doomsday scenario where deep fakes and dead actors could be the stars of tomorrow through computer-generated faces and voices.

For many in the business, it's a bleak thought - computer generated moviemaking without a camera crew, actor or writer involved.

Influential musician and artist Kim Gordon, the founder of Sonic Youth and a Screen Actors Guild member, said she'd never consider allowing an AI version of herself.

"It's important to be worried about it," Ms Gordon said while picketing outside Netflix. "But I feel like AI will never replace creativity."

(Link: https://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-66140336)

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Ron Perlman issues an expletive-laden threat towards the execs who plans to wait out until the hacks starve and lose their homes.
ronperlman.jpg




Liberalism is a mental illness.
 
You can't make demands from a place of weakness. This is the absolutely stupidest time to have a strike; most studios will happily use this as an excuse to not put out more content. You just know Disney is jumping for joy, since they can not only cancel the rest of their Star Wars content but also blame it on dumb actors and writers, instead of on their own mismanagement of the franchise. They'll save billions just not producing anything for a few years and investing their cash somewhere else.
 
Unpopular opinion: Hollywood actors and writers might be annoying retarded jackasses, but I would say I hate Hollywood studios and their executives even more.

I just wish the strike would be resolved in such a way that everybody here loses, and loses big.
 
Lmao, how do multi-millionaire actors "strike" against anything? They have more than enough money to set themselves, their children, and their childrens' children up for life, they don't ever have to work again, if you can call what they do "working." As always, this is the elite using the vocabulary and causes of the working class to try to blend in with them and obfuscate who the true enemy is.
 
Lmao, how do multi-millionaire actors "strike" against anything? They have more than enough money to set themselves, their children, and their childrens' children up for life, they don't ever have to work again, if you can call what they do "working." As always, this is the elite using the vocabulary and causes of the working class to try to blend in with them and obfuscate who the true enemy is.
Not doing anything would cause a disruption due to them not making anything new/marketable. Eventually the people that rely on them would bleed but, the idea they would "suffer" in any way is non existent.
 
Or worse, having to compete with Bollywood who do more cool and crazy things, lol.
https://youtube.com/watch?v=gfoaogJN_pwhttps://youtube.com/watch?v=OVcwNoZdDko
I've said it for years: Bollywood is unabashedly fun and Hollywood has no way to compete with that.
I expect some 2023 movies to get delayed to 2024 if this strike goes on for a while, just so studios have something for next year. Hell, maybe some classic re-releases to cinemas.
Rereleased movies would show moviegoers how to have actual standards which is why they never will try that.
We will find out soon
 
I just wish the strike would be resolved in such a way that everybody here loses, and loses big.
It would be nice to see the mega Hollywood conglomerate studios all fold up and take their played out "IP" with them. No more endless capeshit and no more reboots and remakes of old titles.

Let things back to the way they where in the 1970s where you had a lot of smaller studios with smaller budgets willing to roll the dice on new ideas.

Today everything is massive budgets that need massive profits.So they stick with a known working formula over and over and turn out goyslop. Cape Shit Part IIX. Star Wars 49. etc... It might as well be written by AI.
 
It would be nice to see the mega Hollywood conglomerate studios all fold up and take their played out "IP" with them. No more endless capeshit and no more reboots and remakes of old titles.

Let things back to the way they where in the 1970s where you had a lot of smaller studios with smaller budgets willing to roll the dice on new ideas.

Today everything is massive budgets that need massive profits.So they stick with a known working formula over and over and turn out goyslop. Cape Shit Part IIX. Star Wars 49. etc... It might as well be written by AI.
The world needs Boss Nigger 2: Electric Jiggaboo.
 
A strike right when AI is already replacing you its beyond retarded, they are just accelerating the process.
 
A strike right when AI is already replacing you its beyond retarded, they are just accelerating the process.
Writers have to be better than AI, which talented people can do. When they write She-Hulk or Velma or Dial of Destiny, then they should be replaced.

Vtubers and Fleshtubers are the new celebrities.
 
Lmao, how do multi-millionaire actors "strike" against anything? They have more than enough money to set themselves, their children, and their childrens' children up for life, they don't ever have to work again, if you can call what they do "working." As always, this is the elite using the vocabulary and causes of the working class to try to blend in with them and obfuscate who the true enemy is.
I was listening to NPR and they kept trying to frame as "working actors" being the ones leading the strike. They'll then cite body scanning and deepfakes--something that only affects the top 0.01% of actors--as their biggest issue of concern.
 
I was listening to NPR and they kept trying to frame as "working actors" being the ones leading the strike. They'll then cite body scanning and deepfakes--something that only affects the top 0.01% of actors--as their biggest issue of concern.
That remind me of the South Park episode "Canada on strike". Their strike might end like the South Park one.
 
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