

and use that likeness in perpetuity forever," he warned. Studios "want to hold on to their right to take my likeness, in one production. This time, the union says actors' pay has been "severely eroded" by streaming and has warned that artificial intelligence poses "an existential threat."Įzra Knight, SAG-AFTRA New York local president, said AI "threatened to remove real performers from the creative space." The last time the actors' union went on strike, in 1980 over the advent of pay television and home video, it lasted more than three months. "We're part of an industry that has so many people that are front-facing, so that extra PR is gonna be helpful," said Tien Tran, star of sitcom "How I Met Your Father," who was picketing outside Paramount. Top stars enjoy individual contracts with studios that far exceed the union minimums which are the focus of the actors' strike, but their presence on picket lines over the coming weeks could help draw attention to the dispute. SAG-AFTRA represents actors from mega-stars such as Tom Cruise to day-players who take small roles on television series. The A-list cast of Universal's "Oppenheimer," a much-hyped wartime biopic from Christopher Nolan, walked out of their London premiere on Thursday. Ongoing production of movies including superhero flick "Deadpool 3" and historical epic sequel "Gladiator 2" were also expected to shutter, and their release dates could be postponed if industrial action drags on.Īctors are now prohibited from promoting some of the year's biggest movies, at the peak of the summer blockbuster season.
#Marta bus drags car series
TV shows that had continued to shoot amid the writer's strike, such as "Star Wars" series "Andor," will shut down.


"We want to be able to live in the place that we work," she said.īut for now, the "double strike" has essentially shut down all US productions, with limited exceptions such as reality and game shows. In Manhattan, 36-year-old actress Casey Killoran told AFP that actors are "just trying to make a minimum wage, a living wage in New York City. Protesters came out in force on both coasts for Friday's protests.

"It is time for us to lock down the contracts that are going to serve generations of actors to come. "We're in this for the long haul, but this is a historic moment," said Vera Cherny, 44, who has had roles in "The Americans" and "For All Mankind." The union's demands have focused on dwindling pay in the streaming era, and the threat posed by artificial intelligence. The studios "look like the devil," she told AFP, at the picket line outside Netflix.Īctors formally went on strike at midnight Thursday after negotiations to reach a new deal with production studios ended without an agreement. The fact that SAG-AFTRA went on strike brought a lot of energy, and there's incredible solidarity," said "Friends" co-creator Marta Kauffman. Screen Actors Guild (SAG-AFTRA) members joined writers who have been on strike for weeks, triggering the first industry-wide walkout for 63 years and effectively shutting down Hollywood. "The studios are tone-deaf and greedy, and they need to wake up - because we are the ones that made them rich," actress Frances Fisher, who starred in "Titanic," told AFP while marching outside Paramount Pictures. In New York, Jason Sudeikis and Susan Sarandon were among A-listers who showed up for demonstrations, triggered by the refusal of studio bosses to meet actors' demands for better pay and job security.
#Marta bus drags car drivers
Hundreds of strikers marched with placards at the Netflix building on Los Angeles' famed Sunset Boulevard, as well as at Disney, Paramount, Warner and Amazon premises, with passing drivers honking their horns in support.
#Marta bus drags car movie
Actors took to picket lines outside studio headquarters from California to New York on Friday as movie and television production ground to a halt in the most serious Hollywood strike in decades.
