Current:Home > StocksContract talks between Hollywood studios and actors break down again-InfoLens
Contract talks between Hollywood studios and actors break down again
View Date:2024-12-23 14:22:26
Contract negotiations between Hollywood studios and streaming companies and the performers' union SAG-AFTRA have broken down once again. So for now, the nearly three-month-long strike continues.
The Alliance of Motion Picture and Television Producers, which represents the major studios, announced in a statement that the gap between their proposals and the union's was "too great" and that conversations "are no longer moving us in a productive direction."
Just two weeks ago, the studio heads of Disney, Netflix, NBC Universal and Warner Brothers Discovery had resumed negotiating with SAG-AFTRA, which represents 160,000 actors, dancers, voiceover artists and stunt performers. The first round of their contract negotiations stalled in mid-July, and union members began to strike, joining striking screenwriters who had walked off their jobs in May.
[Note: Many NPR News employees are members of SAG-AFTRA, but are under a different contract and are not on strike.]
The AMPTP said in particular, demands for cast members to get a "viewership bonus" — a cut of streaming platform revenues — would be "an untenable burden" that would cost more than $800 million a year. The AMPTP also said it did agree to require consent for the use of artificial intelligence, both for principal and background actors. The alliance also said the union presented "few, if any, moves on the numerous remaining open items."
In response, SAG-AFTRA's negotiating committee sent out a release expressing "profound sadness" that the industry CEOs have walked away from the bargaining table. The union said the alliance overestimated the guild's streaming residuals proposal by 60 percent, and that it only cost the streaming platforms 57 cents per subscriber per year.
The union accused the studios of using "bully tactics" to reject and intentionally misrepresent their proposals, and said it had made a "big, meaningful" counter offers.
"These companies refuse to protect performers from being replaced by AI, they refuse to increase your wages to keep up with inflation, and they refuse to share a tiny portion of the immense revenue YOUR work generates for them," the statement read. "The companies are using the same failed strategy they tried to inflict on the WGA – putting out misleading information in an attempt to fool our members into abandoning our solidarity and putting pressure on our negotiators. But, just like the writers, our members are smarter than that and will not be fooled."
The union called on its members to continue to picket outside studios. They have been joined in solidarity by other Hollywood workers, including screenwriters in the Writers Guild of America. On Monday, the WGA members voted to approve the contract their leaders made with the AMPTP, ending their nearly five month strike.
veryGood! (41)
Related
- Special counsel Smith asks court to pause appeal seeking to revive Trump’s classified documents case
- Rosalynn Carter tributes will highlight her reach as first lady, humanitarian and small-town Baptist
- Stock market today: Asian shares mostly decline, as investors watch spending, inflation
- A new Pentagon program aims to speed up decisions on what AI tech is trustworthy enough to deploy
- When do new 'Yellowstone' episodes come out? Here's the Season 5, Part 2 episode schedule
- Still looking for deals on holiday gifts? Retailers are offering discounts on Cyber Monday
- Why we love Wild Book Company: A daughter's quest to continue her mother's legacy
- Missing dog rescued by hikers in Colorado mountains reunited with owner after 2 months
- 'We suffered great damage': Fierce California wildfire burns homes, businesses
- Jim Harbaugh, even suspended, earns $500,000 bonus for Michigan's defeat of Ohio State
Ranking
- Target will be closed on Thanksgiving: Here’s when stores open on Black Friday
- Russia says it downed dozens of Ukrainian drones headed for Moscow, following a mass strike on Kyiv
- Missing dog rescued by hikers in Colorado mountains reunited with owner after 2 months
- College football Week 13 winners and losers: Michigan again gets best of Ohio State
- 2 dead in explosion at Kentucky factory that also damaged surrounding neighborhood
- Here's how much shoppers plan to spend between Black Friday and Cyber Monday
- Why do they give? Donors speak about what moves them and how they plan end-of-year donations
- Criminals are using AI tools like ChatGPT to con shoppers. Here's how to spot scams.
Recommendation
-
Man gets a life sentence in the shotgun death of a New Mexico police officer
-
U.S. talks to India about reported link to assassination plot against Sikh separatist Gurpatwant Singh Pannun
-
An alliance of Myanmar ethnic groups claim capture of another big trade crossing at Chinese border
-
Why we love Wild Book Company: A daughter's quest to continue her mother's legacy
-
Army veteran reunites with his K9 companion, who served with him in Afghanistan
-
Archaeologists discover mummies of children that may be at least 1,000 years old – and their skulls still had hair on them
-
This week on Sunday Morning (November 26)
-
A stampede during a music festival at a southern India university has killed at least 4 students