How divided are SAG-AFTRA and the studios? Here’s what the two sides say
SAG-AFTRA, the union representing Hollywood actors and other performers, has laid out its contract proposals — and what it said were the film and television studios’ responses — shedding more light on the impasse that led to its walkout last week.
In a message to its 160,000 members Monday, SAG-AFTRA accused the Alliance of Motion Picture and Television Producers of stonewalling and not engaging in talks over their most critical issues.
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The guild also released a 12-page document with details illustrating, from its perspective, how far apart the two sides were when SAG-AFTRA began its historic strike, with actors joining writers in the first such simultaneous work stoppage in more than 60 years.
“We marched ahead because they intentionally dragged their feet,” the union said. “After we agreed to their compressed bargaining schedule, the AMPTP subjected us to repeated stonewalling and delays.”
The studio alliance said SAG-AFTRA’s news release mischaracterized the negotiations and was an attempt to “deliberately distort” the studios’ offers.
“The deal that SAG-AFTRA walked away from on July 12 is worth more than $1 billion in wage increases, pension &health contributions and residual increases and includes first-of-their-kind protections over its three-year term, including expressly with respect to AI,” AMPTP said. “For SAG-AFTRA to assert that we have not been responsive to the needs of its membership is disingenuous at best.”
The heated back-and-forth, which mirrors the war of words during the early days of the writers’ strike, gives a sense of how much work will have to be done to reach a deal once the union and the studios return to the negotiating table.
SAG-AFTRA hit the picket lines on Friday, joining Writers Guild of America members who’ve been striking since May 2, adding momentum to the labor movement.
The dual strike is a major blow to the entertainment industry, hobbling TV and film production at a time when studios and media companies are dealing with the transition to streaming, a recovering box office and accelerating declines in pay-TV subscriptions.
The union said it asked for general wage increases of 11%, then 4% and 4%, over the three-year contract, and that the studios offered 5%, 4% and 3.5%. The union said that, with inflation, the studios’ offer would be equivalent to members working for less than 2020 wages in 2026.
AI technology, which is developing rapidly and is seen by many labor groups as a threat, emerged as another major sticking point.
SAG-AFTRA said it proposed a “comprehensive set of provisions” for consent and compensation when a so-called digital replica of a performer is made or if their performance is changed using artificial intelligence.
The union said the studios’ AI proposal would allow them to scan a background performer’s image for half a day’s pay and use it in perpetuity without the performer’s consent. The studios also wanted to be able to make changes to performers’ dialogue without consent, according to SAG-AFTRA.
The AMPTP has disputed SAG-AFTRA’s characterization of its offer, calling it “false” and saying that background actors would be given consent over the use of their digital likenesses.
Other proposals where the sides remain split were meant to address the ways streaming services have roiled the industry with changing business practices.
For example, the union said it proposed a revenue-sharing plan for shows and films on streaming platforms, which would allow actors to participate in the success of big online hits, but that the studios rejected this without a counteroffer.