Hollywood is on Strike

Steevy Maximus

Well known pompous pontificator
Citizen
Following the lead of the Writers Guild of America (WGA), who began their strike back in May, the SAG-AFTRA (Screen Actors Guild-American Federation of Television and Radio Artists) has joined them this evening. The core cast of Oppenheimer walked out during the film’s premiere due to the call to strike.
Fundamentally, the demands from the Actors’ Guild are not dissimilar as the Writers: An increased and more equal pay structure. Due compensation and credit on projects, regardless of release. More transparency on streaming and how that would impacts residuals. Regulation regarding the use of AI in media projects.

As it stands: All filming projects are now on hold. Projects in post production will likely not be effected, albeit, losing the ability of reshoots or other late stage alterations (The Directors Guild made a new agreement earlier). Animated films (like the upcoming Transformers One) are unlikely to be impacted due to lead time. Presumably, most voice work is complete for the slate of animated films on deck for next year (including another Spiderverse, Transformers, Despicable Me 4, Inside Out 2, and even a Lord of the Rings film!). SOME independent films will go forward featuring SAG-AFTRA talent on a case by case basis. Anime dubbing will likely lose several major actors as Crunchyroll has, notoriously, refused to work with the SAG-AFTRA union in prior years. It remains to be seen how much the strike will impact that segment.

So..in the immediate future, TV is going full garbage with game shows and reality TV dominating the airwaves. Theatres will probably be okay going into early next year, maybe longer if studios opt to spread out the finished films they do have. Anything else is up to however long the strike(s) end up lasting.

The last time both guilds striked at the same time was in 1960, when that pro-union crazy Ronald Reagan was in charge of the SAG.
 
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Steevy Maximus

Well known pompous pontificator
Citizen
A major quote being spread around is from Disney CEO Bob Iger, calling guilds’ demands as “adding new challenges in addition to those faced” by the industry. That the guilds must “be realistic on the business environment and what it can deliver”.

As Iger stands to get a base compensation package of more than $25 MILLION, before bonuses.
 

ZacWilliam1

Well-known member
Citizen
Everybody should be with the Guilds/Unions.

What they're asking for is only fairness and protection and the Studios are being unmitigated greedy villains.


-ZacWilliam, I'll lament the temporary quality and quantity drop of media as much as anyone but it's absolutely worth it and I support them fully.
 

Lobjob

Well-known member
Citizen
Imagine waging war against the creators and performers who allow you to make an astronomical amount of money. Imagine pushing them to the point where your entire business is on hold.

Greed is relentless.
 

Dekafox

Fabulously Foxy Dragon
Citizen

The article referred to in case the link doesn't embed: https://www.newyorker.com/culture/n...ignalled-the-rot-inside-the-streaming-economy

There's also talk about paying actors for 1 day's work to scan and record them and then apply AI recreation to that.
 

Axaday

Well-known member
Citizen
It is sort of a shame that their contract dates are so close. Both being on strike at the same time does not double the impact. They mitigate each other to some extent.
 

Dake

Well-known member
Citizen
Yeah - that AI proposal is absolutely dystopian in its utter disregard for the individual. Hollywood management deserves to lose on that alone, nevermind the more prosaic issues at hand.

That being said, it's likely a tactic. Put something so outrageous out there (knowing no one in their right mind would agree to it), so you can walk it back and "settle" for the other stuff you wanted. I hope the union holds their collective feet to the fire.

It is sort of a shame that their contract dates are so close. Both being on strike at the same time does not double the impact. They mitigate each other to some extent.

I disagree. With the writers out, Hollywood could keep working on stuff that was already settled (as demonstrated by Deadpool 3 filming for example). This provided the short-sighted management the illusion of safety. With actors out now, nothing can happen.
 

Cybersnark

Well-known member
Citizen

Dekafox

Fabulously Foxy Dragon
Citizen

Tree Law is blood in the water for lawyers. It's something you do NOT mess with, typically. Like jsut the twelve trees in that first pic is a $250k fine alone, at least. If it gives you any idea, they had to ban the use of the term on Reddit from all the lawyers that would dogpile onto Tree Law threads, and Law Twitter(or what used to be it) is like:

FzmP0DfXsAAAds8
 

wonko the sane?

You may test that assumption at your convinience.
Citizen
The studios are worth literally billions of dollars: they'll pay the fines, offer to sponsor a couple of city councilor re-election campaigns, and the problem will very quickly, very quietly go away. This horror show is probably just the start of what the studios will do and what they will get away with.

In the long run, it works against them though. Eventually, one way or another, the strike will come to an end. Doesn't really matter what the outcome is (for our purposes.) but it will end. When they start putting out tenders for... carpenters, writers, electricians, painters, mechanics, hair dressers, cooks, janitors, animators, artists... literally every position of labour you could conceive of: they'll be scrapping the absolute bottom of the barrel; because it will be known that not only will the studios nickel and dime you into poverty: they will outright try to kill you if you cross them. They are openly and very very loudly screaming from the top of the WB water tower: WORKING FOR US IS A DEAD END PROPOSITION.

There is a labour revolution happening in the US right now, akin to the first major labour revolution way back when. These next few years are going to absolutely suck, and I don't think there's enough workers in the world to make the kinds of long term changes to the economy and wealth in general in the US to do anything other than simply pushing back the collapse of the economy a few more years.
 

Steevy Maximus

Well known pompous pontificator
Citizen
Sony is the first to blink. They just announced a significant reorganization of their 2024 film slate. Among the more notable date shifts is Kraven (due this October) got pushed all the way to next August (nearly a year delay), and the removal of Spiderverse 3 from the slate completely. Sony says they are reviewing numerous dates depending on the length of the strike. Summer 2024 dates for Venom 3 and a new Bad Boys remain unchanged.
 

Echowarrior

Well-known member
Citizen
Sony is the first to blink. They just announced a significant reorganization of their 2024 film slate. Among the more notable date shifts is Kraven (due this October) got pushed all the way to next August (nearly a year delay), and the removal of Spiderverse 3 from the slate completely. Sony says they are reviewing numerous dates depending on the length of the strike. Summer 2024 dates for Venom 3 and a new Bad Boys remain unchanged.

The Ghostbusters release date change doesn't surprise me in the slightest. The rest, however, is another matter, though less so with Spiderverse 3 - even if the script was finished, they still need to get dialogue recorded, and that's before things like ADR.

In any case, I hope the studios just come to their senses and give the writers and actors what they want. Their profit margins will survive the demands of writers and actors easier than they'll survive the strike if it lasts too long.
 

Axaday

Well-known member
Citizen
What is the point in even making up new release dates when you don't know when you can get back to work?
 

Steevy Maximus

Well known pompous pontificator
Citizen
The Ghostbusters release date change doesn't surprise me in the slightest. The rest, however, is another matter, though less so with Spiderverse 3 - even if the script was finished, they still need to get dialogue recorded, and that's before things like ADR.

In any case, I hope the studios just come to their senses and give the writers and actors what they want. Their profit margins will survive the demands of writers and actors easier than they'll survive the strike if it lasts too long.
Given the endless delays, and the original expected date of next spring, I guess my expectation/assumption was that the film was pretty far along in production (given the greater lead times for animation). My take on it was that Sony was, effectively, “saving a trump card”, so to speak. They have enough films, enough viably profitable films, to make it through 24. But, if the strike continues for several months, you’re looking at an increasingly lean 25. In which case, the sequel to a beloved film released in late spring/early summer 25 would help boost revenues for the year. Hell, Across the Spiderverse is still putting up solid numbers after 60 days in theaters. Imagine what the sequel might do in an even dryer market.
What is the point in even making up new release dates when you don't know when you can get back to work?
I think it’s one part “claiming a stake” and one part confidence assurance. If a company just “empties the slate”, it prevents partners from planning out their marketing and product plans. And it shows confidence to investors and money people that the studio intends to get back to work and making money. An empty slate might spook investors who might dump stock, tanking the stock.
 


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