Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I feel sorry for all the regular grunts suffering through this strike. Like a PP said, that's the vast majority living on limited income to begin with and now nothing.
Ok but if you can barely survive than maybe being an actor isn't a great job and they should move on to something else.
Movie sales and tv watching in general has declined and it's not going to go back up because time and technology are moving on and Hollywood is stuck back in the 1950s. Content that is created by average people in their home is gaining more viewing time these days than a produced tv show with professional actors and that trend is going to continue. It's hard when your industry finally comes to terms with technology.
Anonymous wrote:I feel sorry for all the regular grunts suffering through this strike. Like a PP said, that's the vast majority living on limited income to begin with and now nothing.
Anonymous wrote:This is a just strike and much needed. In fact it is an important mark for all labor unions and for us here who are workers/serfs and not serf owners.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Presumably she is in California, right? So if she is earning under $26k/year, she can get insurance through Medi-Cal which would be free or highly subsidized depending on how much she earned.
And what about actors who aren't based in CA?
Some are based in places like Atlanta (huge film and TV production industry) and other cities around the country. Just noting that. Not only in relation to health insurance but overall. This isn't a CA problem or a CA strike.
Anonymous wrote:I feel sorry for all the regular grunts suffering through this strike. Like a PP said, that's the vast majority living on limited income to begin with and now nothing.
Anonymous wrote:I say let Hollywood go on strike for a long long time. We can happily do without them.
Anonymous wrote:AI should replace these types of jobs, no one should get paid millions to act in a movie.
Anonymous wrote:I say let Hollywood go on strike for a long long time. We can happily do without them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I may just turn off my tv entirely for the duration. When AI comes for my job, I’d like the support of the other workers. When it comes for my sons’ job, I’d like them to have society’s support as well. It doesn’t matter how overpaid some celebrities are. What matters is that human work needs to continue to be valued for society to function.
I watched the Q&A from the press conference and the union was proposed an AI proposal that blows my mind: background performers should be scanned and paid for one day’s work and the company would own the image, likeness, the scan and any product from it and be allowed to use it, in perpetuity. HFS!
That's insane, NO!
Anonymous wrote:I feel sorry for all the regular grunts suffering through this strike. Like a PP said, that's the vast majority living on limited income to begin with and now nothing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm confused. What are they striking about?
And don't they realize that halting everything only hurts themselves (no premieres, no upcoming movie/TV releases and the revenue, etc)?
Why don't you read an article and come back?
One article. Even just skim it.
+1
plenty of good coverage of both the writers' and now the actors' strikes.
I hope folks can access this--the Post has a paywall but I think maybe the first article is visible?
https://www.washingtonpost.com/arts-entertainment/2023/07/13/why-actors-writers-strike-sag-wga-issues/
There are some truly existential issues at stake for actors as well as writers. And the PP who noted that studios want to pay actors ONCE to scan their likenesses and then use those likenesses as background AI "extras" forever is correct. It's indvidious. It's also not acting. Doing work as an extra is how quite a few actors make some initial money and start moving up to a line, then maybe a tiny role, then onward....
But there are many issues. Read the Post article or hey, just do one quick Google search, PPs who are confused.
Technology has forced a lot of people from their jobs or forced them to pivot. Why should acting be some holy grail that can’t be touched? The reality? Thru could not even hire an extra in the first place and instead just use AI for all extras.
And maybe it’s time that acting became a regular paying job across the board. Why do we need to pay actors millions of dollars in salary? What if they were paid a standard $250k salary a year or even less? Plenty of people who would still want to do it.
Your 250K a year as steady income is a pipe dream for most actors. Please dont' think that "actors (make) millions of dollars a year." That's a tiny handful of people like the Tom Cruises of the world.
But rather than go into more details I'm going to just drop one fact here which puts pay into perspective. Bear this in mind: The pay mentioned here is gig-based, freelance, so it's a figure that most (not all, but most) actors have to cobble together on their own from a role here, a role there, never being guaranteed any role at all.
"As a SAG-AFTRA member, you have to make $26,000 a year to get health insurance. 87 percent of union members don't qualify annually." (source: SAG-AFTRA national board member, actor Dule Hill)
In other words: 87 percent of union members make less than $26,000 a year from acting. That's not Tom Cruise "millions." Gig work is tough. Actors do it because they love it, and we consumers lap it up but it's the studios who make billions who benefit, not the jobbing actors. Do not conflate TV series stars or "celebrities" with jobbing actors.
You do not understand how acting in TV and films actually works, day to day, year in and year out. It is a gig economy. Freelance. Freelancers don't get paid a "standard salary" in a "regular paying job across the board." Even actors employed in TV series filming year after year are working on contracts which are negotiated and renegotiated over and over and over and the studios always want more for less. Studios will NOT ever want to treat actors like they're office workers who get X dollars a year as a "standard salary." Studios want to use them then let them go -- and studios are letting them go much faster than in the past. Think about it. Old-school broadcast TV series used to run (some still do) anywhere from 20 to 24 episodes per season, but increasingly, "seasons" on streaming--where the work is moving--are four, six, eight episodes. Huge difference in the number of months of work, and income, per year that a series job provides to an actor. The amount of assured work and steady income is dwindling. On purpose. It saves the studios money. I'm not saying that creators should be forced to turn a six-episode concept into a 22-episode one just to keep more actors employed longer. Even the actors wouldn't want to mess with the creative side like that. But the reality is that actors work fewer weeks and have longer hiatuses between work and now there's even talk of taking away work as extras--if you don't get why it's both impoverishing and insulting to be reduced to an AI avatar forever and ever, well, I can't make you get it.
You missed my point - Tom Cruise should also be making $250K salary a year and that's it.
And if he quits, oh well, plenty of people in line to replace him.
And I'm sure the money the studio saves on capping Tom Cruise's salary would definitely go to the extras and not on renovations to their 4th vacation home. Trickle down economics works, right?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I may just turn off my tv entirely for the duration. When AI comes for my job, I’d like the support of the other workers. When it comes for my sons’ job, I’d like them to have society’s support as well. It doesn’t matter how overpaid some celebrities are. What matters is that human work needs to continue to be valued for society to function.
I watched the Q&A from the press conference and the union was proposed an AI proposal that blows my mind: background performers should be scanned and paid for one day’s work and the company would own the image, likeness, the scan and any product from it and be allowed to use it, in perpetuity. HFS!
Anonymous wrote:I may just turn off my tv entirely for the duration. When AI comes for my job, I’d like the support of the other workers. When it comes for my sons’ job, I’d like them to have society’s support as well. It doesn’t matter how overpaid some celebrities are. What matters is that human work needs to continue to be valued for society to function.