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View Full Version : USA: Hollywood Actors & Writers no longer on strike


arista
13-07-2023, 07:20 PM
Live on SkyNewsHD

Strike starts Midnight LA Time/


Matt Damon walked out
in the UK at the Film Premier, "Oppenheimer,"
he left, as his phone alerted him of the strikes,
with all the other actors




[Hollywood actors announce strike after
SAG-AFTRA union and studios fail to
reach pay deal

American stars will walk out to join
writers on strike - demanding better pay and
increased safeguarding around AI rights - and leaving
the Hollywood film industry in the dark.]


The Writers already on Strike,
now get a Powerful backing.


If the Strike goes on
TV Series and Films and Netflix
could lose Billions


https://news.sky.com/story/hollywood-actors-announce-strike-after-sag-aftra-union-and-studios-fail-to-reach-pay-deal-12920451

Oliver_W
13-07-2023, 08:07 PM
Tbh just let all the major studios wither and die. Let them become as financially bankrupt as they are creatively.

UserSince2005
13-07-2023, 08:15 PM
Good, more reality tv please

arista
13-07-2023, 08:16 PM
No Oliver
Loads of Technicians and woodworkers
need their Jobs


It is a Massive amount of industries
all out of work.

I have been in Hollywood,
it is a great industry.

arista
13-07-2023, 08:17 PM
Good, more reality tv please

Yes that can increase


But I want my Thrillers

Oliver_W
13-07-2023, 08:20 PM
No Oliver
Loads of Technicians and woodworkers
need their Jobs


It is a Massive amount of industries
all out of work.

I have been in Hollywood,
it is a great industry.

Okay then, so let's stop computers from being made because of the threat it represents to the typewriter industry.

Ink ribbon merchants need the work!

arista
13-07-2023, 09:58 PM
Okay then, so let's stop computers from being made because of the threat it represents to the typewriter industry.

Ink ribbon merchants need the work!


That Ship has Sailed away
long time ago

arista
14-07-2023, 09:07 AM
https://video.dailymail.co.uk/preview/mol/2023/07/14/8610080269332860303/964x580_JPG-SINGLE_8610080269332860303.jpg


https://i.dailymail.co.uk/1s/2023/07/14/09/73211411-12298431-Josh_Hartnett_arrives_at_The_Corinthia_Hotel_in_Lo ndon_last_nigh-m-64_1689324779199.jpg
Josh Hartnett popped in and pooped out

[The moment Oppenheimer's star-studded cast
went on strike: Emotional Emily Blunt
and Florence Pugh lead stars making
an early exit from the UK premiere
as acting unions bring the industry
to a halt]

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/tvshowbiz/article-12298431/The-moment-Oppenheimers-cast-walked-premiere-actors-strike.html

bots
14-07-2023, 09:14 AM
As i said at the writers strike, the ones that will feel the pinch first will be the streaming companies. If there is no new content, people wont pay their subs. It's simple economics. There is probably about a 3 month lag before it seriously bites, but it will bite hard

user104658
14-07-2023, 11:25 AM
As i said at the writers strike, the ones that will feel the pinch first will be the streaming companies. If there is no new content, people wont pay their subs. It's simple economics. There is probably about a 3 month lag before it seriously bites, but it will bite hard

They'll start buying up rights to stream popular legacy shows that have finished; for example, I noticed that for some reason "Gossip Girl" is sitting at #7 streamed shows on Netflix this week. I assume they recently got the rights to that, can't think of any other reason it would suddenly have surged in popularity.

Basically shows that were popular maybe 10 years back with a young adult audience... still relevant enough to find a new YA audience in 2023 but old enough that there's a whole generation that it's "new" for. Sort of like how my sister-in-law (27) and my daughter (14) both grew up watching shows like iCarly, VicTorious, Wizards of Waverly Place etc.

One generation saw them on SKY, a whole new generation discovered them on Netflix/Disney+.

user104658
14-07-2023, 11:27 AM
Also worth pointing out that this is a US strike, Netflix has had loads of success with sourcing shows globally, some of their most successful shows are non-US (Dark, Squid Game, All Of Us Are Dead etc.) ... might see a bit more of that.

bots
14-07-2023, 11:30 AM
yes, the foreign sources could save them if they use AI to narrate them :laugh:

There is talk of equity coming out in support of their american colleagues

arista
14-07-2023, 11:33 AM
Netflix have Cut the Repeat fees
to all actors in their series.

Netflix are getting Evil.

Nicky91
14-07-2023, 12:42 PM
Good, more reality tv please

no thank you

no more of that reality trash

Nicky91
14-07-2023, 12:47 PM
thankfully i don't have Netflix anymore

that one is truly vile


also not many good things being said about Amazon Prime, also got mentioned on our news this morning




yes, get rid of AI technology asap, real acting over AI edited acting so i support them in this strike

Gusto Brunt
14-07-2023, 05:20 PM
Good, more reality tv please

Most TV these days is utter ****e. As are the films.

I am getting to be an old bloke because I watch the TV and films my dad watched in the 1970s. Good stuff back then.:hee:

So they can strike forever as far as I am concerned. :p

Crimson Dynamo
14-07-2023, 05:39 PM
thankfully i don't have Netflix anymore

that one is truly vile


also not many good things being said about Amazon Prime, also got mentioned on our news this morning




yes, get rid of AI technology asap, real acting over AI edited acting so i support them in this strike

It may also affect Disney kids shows so dont speak too soon

Mystic Mock
15-07-2023, 02:50 AM
No Oliver
Loads of Technicians and woodworkers
need their Jobs


It is a Massive amount of industries
all out of work.

I have been in Hollywood,
it is a great industry.

Hollywood needs to get it's act together imo.

I mean there aren't many new Movies or TV Shows that are actually any good nowadays imo, which is terrible because Really the newer stuff should be making the older works look dated, not the other way around.

I agree with you on the workers in other departments though Arista like the Technicians, it'll be a shame to see them out of a job.

Mystic Mock
15-07-2023, 02:53 AM
Okay then, so let's stop computers from being made because of the threat it represents to the typewriter industry.

Ink ribbon merchants need the work!

Ink Ribbons.:flutter:

You've just made me nostalgic for PS1 Resident Evil Games.

James
15-07-2023, 06:19 AM
A lot of films have been flopping recently, the movie-going business is not what it was pre-pandemic.

The streamers are losing billions also.

Alf
15-07-2023, 06:37 AM
A lot of films have been flopping recently, the movie-going business is not what it was pre-pandemic.

The streamers are losing billions also.Go woke, go broke.

Nicky91
15-07-2023, 06:57 AM
It may also affect Disney kids shows so dont speak too soon

so

i have plenty of older films, series to watch still on Disney



and if i get bored, i can always begin with the 33 seasons of lightheart entertainment iconicness that is The Simpsons



i just understand the actors their fears of being replaced by AI technology

James
15-07-2023, 02:17 PM
The Marvel show Secret Invasion being shown now cost $212 million. Got 994,000 viewers on Disney+ in the first five days.

Interesting article -


Disney Shells Out $212 Million On Marvel’s ‘Secret Invasion’
Caroline Reid

Jul 8, 2023,07:50am EDT


Disney has revealed that its super hero spy drama Secret Invasion is expected to be over budget as its costs have ballooned to $211.6 million (£166.2 million.)

The six-part streaming series stars Samuel L. Jackson and Oscar-winner Olivia Colman as rival agents trying to track down an army of shape-shifting aliens who have infiltrated the corridors of power.

It debuted on the Disney+ platform at the end of last month to the second-lowest audience of any Marvel Comics streaming series according to media analysts Samba TV. Its data showed that 994,000 viewers watched Secret Invasion in its first five days, only just beating Ms. Marvel, which attracted a total of 775,000.

It stands in stark contrast to shows like Loki with 2.5 million viewers and Moon Knight with 1.8 million. Secret Invasion was expected to top them all as it is based on a beloved comic book series and has a heavyweight cast with Jackson joined by his Avengers co-stars Don Cheadle and Cobie Smulders.




Some have praised the show's gritty atmosphere whilst others have lamented its lack of Marvel's trademark action scenes. It is a welcome tonal shift for the studio after a string of lighthearted box office busts including Thor: Love and Thunder and Ant Man and the Wasp: Quantumania. It was a costly gamble.

Secret Invasion was filmed at the historic Pinewood Studios just outside London and was also shot on location across the United Kingdom. One of the aliens' bases is located in the UK capital's hip borough of Brixton and London's streets even doubled for Moscow.

Forbes Daily: Get our best stories, exclusive reporting and essential analysis of the day’s news in your inbox every weekday.

Jackson and co also ventured north and filmed scenes in the less glitzy cities of Leeds, Halifax and Huddersfield. It's a far cry from tinsel town and this shines a spotlight on the otherwise secretive cost of film-making.


Budgets of streaming shows are usually confidential as studios combine the cost of them in their overall expenses and don't itemize how much they spent on each one.

Shows made in the UK are an exception. They benefit from the government's Television Tax Relief scheme which allows studios to claim a cash reimbursement of up to 25% of the money they spend in the country.

To qualify, shows must pass a points test based on factors such as how much filming was done in the UK, the level of UK content and how much they promote UK heritage which explains why Brixton was chosen as the location of the aliens’ base.

At least 10% of the core costs of the production need to derive from work in the UK. In order to demonstrate this to the government, studios set up separate UK companies to make each streaming series and they have to file publicly-available financial statements.

The companies usually have code names so that they don’t raise attention when filing for permits to film on location. The Disney subsidiary behind Secret Invasion is called Grass-Fed Productions in a nod to the green hue of the aliens.

As we recently revealed in the UK's Daily Express newspaper, the financial statements for Grass-Fed Productions show that the series is "forecast to be over the production budget". Although no reason is given for this, it is believed that extensive reshoots contributed to it.

Filming wrapped in April last year but Jackson later confirmed that he would return to London to work on reshoots which reportedly took a total of four months. They finished in September and even involved a new writer being hired to work on the additional material. It came at quite a cost.

The financial statements reveal that in just over two years to the end of September 2022, Disney spent $211.6 million (£166.2 million) on making Secret Invasion. It is more than double the production cost of the first season of The Witcher, 20% more than its second season and even 20% more than the cost of 2011's big screen blockbuster Captain America.

It puts the cost of Secret Invasion at $35.3 million (£27.7 million) per hour which is around 30 times the minimum spend required to receive the cash reimbursement. Secret Invasion qualified with flying colors and the financial statements reveal that it received a $41.3 million (£32.2 million) reimbursement. Every cent of it was needed.

The Disney+ streaming platform hasn't been profitable since it was launched in 2019 and made an operating loss of $659 million in the first quarter of 2023 alone. In February, Disney's CEO Bob Iger announced cuts to its content as part of a plan to make $5.5 billion of company-wide cost savings. Marvel was right in the middle of his crosshairs.

In an interview with Entertainment Weekly, Marvel Studios president Kevin Feige explained that "the pace at which we're putting out the Disney+ shows will change so they can each get a chance to shine." He added that this means both having more time between projects and putting out fewer each year.

Secret Invasion was commissioned long before the studio's current woes, but its blockbuster budget adds to the pressure for Marvel, Disney and its prestigious Pixar animation division.

Last year, Pixar's Lightyear and Disney's Strange World animated movies were both branded woke and together only grossed $300 million. More recently, the live action version of classic cartoon The Little Mermaid floundered at the box office whilst last month's Elemental earned $29.5 million over the three days of its first weekend giving it the lowest debut of a Pixar film since Toy Story in 1995.

These expensive flops put even more importance on Secret Invasion's cash reimbursement which reduced its net costs to $170.3 million. It had a heroic impact on the UK.

Filming generates economic impact as studios spend on local services such as security, catering and visual effects firms. It also keeps local workers in jobs and one of Grass-Fed Production's biggest single expenses was the $20.8 million (£16.2 million) paid to production staff. They peaked at 314 workers without even including freelance workers who make up the majority of the crew. So even if Secret Invasion doesn't ignite viewers' interest, it will still have a happy ending in the UK.


https://www.forbes.com/sites/carolinereid/2023/07/08/disney-shells-out-212-million-on-secret-invasion/

bots
15-07-2023, 02:57 PM
that is an interesting read. It can be sustainable long term, so they will have to shake things up

Oliver_W
15-07-2023, 03:03 PM
You can tell the writer of the article isn't from the UK - referring to Brixton as "hip" :joker:

Crimson Dynamo
15-07-2023, 03:24 PM
https://twitter.com/Jason/status/1679992269217345537?s=20

Nicky91
15-07-2023, 03:37 PM
as if DC is doing much better LOL in fact they are doing much much worse :fan:


but yeah you have silly negative moaners everywhere sadly :idc:



even Ms Marvel, 775k people watched it, well i found it very enjoyable


She Hulk was a nice attempt at sitcom vibes

Nicky91
15-07-2023, 03:45 PM
i still have to watch Secret Invasion, but anything with Samuel L Jackson and also our current top oscars actress Olivia Colman should be considered quality tbh


rather wish those critics would be harsher on HBO Max or Netflix, more HBO on taking way too long with new seasons for House of the Dragon, The Last of us, they are your ways of making profits and they put so many years between seasons 1 and 2 :facepalm: (even long before the writers and actors strike that is)



everyone is affected by this strike, not just Disney, but every streaming service ;)


good thing Disney has many bingewatch worthy older series too (Grey's Anatomy, Bones, Angel, Buffy the Vampire Slayer, Once Upon a Time)


and i'm sure this strike won't last for many many years either, i mean a solution must come soon, because no new content is bad for everyone

no money for the actors, writers, producers, no income for cinema's, no new profitable content for streaming services


and tbh we don't need AI acting, did we have that bull**** 20 years or 30 years ago, NOPE and everything was fine


get rid of AI usage in hollywood, and i'm sure this strike can end

bots
15-07-2023, 05:16 PM
https://twitter.com/Jason/status/1679992269217345537?s=20

that guy comes across as weird and unpleasant in all his acting roles too. Looks like he wasn't doing much acting

Parmy
15-07-2023, 05:28 PM
https://twitter.com/Jason/status/1679992269217345537?s=20

That's the best acting hes ever done...the scab that he is.

Nicky91
25-08-2023, 01:23 PM
3GSGu2e-yEQ

Nicky91
26-09-2023, 08:33 AM
Hollywood reached an agreement with the Studio's


now just the union left to also come to an agreement


more pay for all actors apparently


so once union also agreed to these terms, they can go back to work, after more than 150 days of strike

Nicky91
26-09-2023, 08:40 AM
i hope they can indeed continue with their work soon


lots of new films, series still to come


many MCU new projects
- the Blade reboot
- the new Captain America


but also post-production work for Alien: Romulus, so they can begin releasing first promo's, revealing character details etc


The Santa Clauses second season to go in post-production so it is done in time before christmas season (filming of which already complete)


Star Trek Prodigy to resume its negotiations of a new home for its series and continuation with season 2 (all episodes of which already completed, into final stages of production)

bots
27-09-2023, 05:59 AM
Hollywood’s writers strike was declared over after nearly five months Tuesday night when board members from their union approved a contract agreement with studios, bringing the industry at least partly back from a historic halt in production.

Crimson Dynamo
27-09-2023, 10:19 PM
1707154763110924618?s=20

Mystic Mock
28-09-2023, 01:06 AM
Is it written in a way that comes across as Propaganda?

Because personally blatant Propaganda shouldn't be being endorsed, especially if it's potentially extreme viewpoints, which we all know about Religious extremism.

bots
28-09-2023, 03:48 AM
Arista needs to update the thread title to indicate the strike is over

Nicky91
28-09-2023, 06:49 AM
Is it written in a way that comes across as Propaganda?

Because personally blatant Propaganda shouldn't be being endorsed, especially if it's potentially extreme viewpoints, which we all know about Religious extremism.

rightfully that it was rejected by two hollywood studios


that sort of content shouldn't be endorsed indeed


also that whole Robertson family is truly vile, family of professional hunters :yuk:

Nicky91
27-10-2023, 01:29 PM
https://www.thewrap.com/studios-sag-strike-one-week-deadline/


Hollywood studios are giving one more week to negotiations with SAG-AFTRA before they are ready to pack it in for the rest of the year, TheWrap has learned.

According to an individual with knowledge of their thinking, the studios believe that if they can’t reach a deal in the next week with the Screen Actors Guild, which has been on strike since July 14, then no new production will be able to start before 2024.

If that is the case, the studios further believe, then the fall television season is lost, and new movies won’t be able to come out until next summer. In this scenario, early November would be the drop-dead date to salvage any ability to put television or movies into production. Once the calendar hits Thanksgiving, it is unlikely any project would begin production, pushing off everything to the new year, this individual said, and killing the studios’ incentive to push for a deal.

All that puts significant pressure on the talks going on this week.

The CEOs from four of the major entertainment conglomerates – Disney’s Bob Iger, Netflix’s Ted Sarandos, Warner Bros. Discovery’s David Zaslav and NBCUniversal’s Donna Langley – will meet anew on Thursday with SAG-AFTRA President Fran Drescher and chief negotiator Duncan Crabtree-Ireland and their legal teams in an effort to reach a contract.

The negotiations restarted this week on Tuesday after the CEOs walked away two weeks ago over a new demand that SAG-AFTRA receive a $1-per-subscription fee from streaming divisions on top of raises and other benefits that had been negotiated between the two sides. The studios considered that proposal, along with two previous ones seeking a percentage of all streaming revenue, as a non-starter.

Meanwhile the CEOs, who are negotiating on behalf of the Alliance of Motion Picture and Television Producers (AMPTP), presented their counter-offer to the guild on Tuesday.

The guild decided to skip further bargaining on Wednesday so they could discuss the offer.

An insider familiar with the studio side of talks said there was some surprise among the AMPTP ranks when the SAG-AFTRA negotiating committee requested the delay, but they are taking it as a hopeful sign that there will be progress when the two sides do meet again.

Tuesday’s meeting was the first since Oct. 11, when the Alliance of Motion Picture and Television Producers, which represents the studios in contract talks, abruptly walked away from talks. The primary disagreement behind that decision concerned SAG-AFTRA’s proposed streaming revenue-sharing plan, which AMPTP leaders characterized as a “levy” on streaming services.

SAG-AFTRA estimated its proposal to average to about 57 cents per streaming subscriber, with that revenue being paid to the guild who would in turn distribute it to performers whose work appears on the streaming service. The AMPTP, which says the fee in the actors’ union proposal actually was a $1-per-subscription fee, rejected the proposal in a statement released on Oct. 11, calling it an “untenable economic burden.”

The AMPTP is pushing for a viewership bonus model similar to the one agreed to with the WGA and had believed when talks first resumed that it would have been sufficient to reach a deal with the actors guild. But SAG-AFTRA believes that the revenue-sharing plan is a better model to ensure increased pay for performers throughout the union’s membership for the work they do on streaming films and TV shows.

A SAG-AFTRA representative did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Nicky91
27-10-2023, 01:32 PM
writers are already back to work so while they can't film anything new now for the time being, scripts can already be made ;)


and tbh the writers strike also took a while before they reached an agreement so i think the actors and the union will also reach an agreement (idk what day but i don't think those actors want to be on strike like forever)

Nicky91
09-11-2023, 07:26 AM
https://apnews.com/article/actors-strike-ends-hollywood-5769ab584bca99fe708c67d00d2ec241

official now: Actors Strike is finally over as they reached a deal with the studios, more salary


LOS ANGELES (AP) — On Thursday, for the first time in more than six months, neither Hollywood’s actors nor its writers will be on strike.

The long-awaited clearing in the industry’s stormiest season in decades comes as a deal was reached late Wednesday to end what was, at nearly four months, the longest strike ever for film and television actors.

The three-year contract must be approved by the board of the Screen Actors Guild-American Federation of Television and Radio Artists and its members in the coming days. But union leadership declared that the strike will end at 12:01 a.m. on Thursday, putting all of the parts of production back into action for the first time since spring.

.

Nicky91
09-11-2023, 07:27 AM
they can go back to work


filmings can resume again, also begin for the new projects the writers have already been able to work at, since some weeks ago

Zizu
09-11-2023, 07:28 AM
Whooo - ooooo

Despool 3 !!!

( followed by 4 , 5 and 6 In concurrent years )


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk Pro

Mystic Mock
09-11-2023, 07:51 AM
rightfully that it was rejected by two hollywood studios


that sort of content shouldn't be endorsed indeed


also that whole Robertson family is truly vile, family of professional hunters :yuk:

Do they hunt for Sport?

Mystic Mock
09-11-2023, 07:54 AM
Hopefully with the wage rises comes better products.:fc:

Do I dare hope.

Nicky91
09-11-2023, 08:45 AM
maybe


there are some upcoming projects which have my interest



Alien: Romulus

Star Trek: Prodigy (season 2)

Jurassic World: Chaos Theory

Deadpool 3

Captain America: Brave New World

James
09-11-2023, 09:08 AM
They can start back up filming Cobra Kai S6. :thumbs:

bots
09-11-2023, 09:12 AM
there is good new content coming out all the time, you just need to dig a bit to find it