Dec 10 2008 03:15 PM ET

SAG moves one step closer to potential strike

Categories: Strike, TV Biz

The Screen Actors Guild took another step toward a potential strike today by announcing its strike authorization schedule. Ballots will go out to paid up members on Friday, Jan. 2 and are due back for tabulation on Friday, Jan. 23. Seventy-five percent of the voting members must vote yes to approve a strike, which the 120,000-plus member union is expected to use as a negotiating ploy to seek further gains from the conglomerates. Should the union fail to achieve what they want in a new contract, SAG national board of directors must call for a strike before picketing can actually begin.

SAG has been working without a contract since June and is the last Hollywood union without a new deal. In a statement to members, SAG President Alan Rosenberg said, “SAG Members must understand that their futures as professional actors are at stake, and I believe that SAG members will evaluate the Alliance of Motion Picture and Television Producers’ June 30 offer and vote to send us back to the table with the threat of a strike. A yes vote sends a strong message that we are serious about fending off rollbacks and getting what is fair for actors in new media.”

The authorization vote was delayed until after the holidays to give SAG a chance to educate members about the perceived benefits of a strike authorization. “Our objective remains to get a deal that SAG members will ratify,” added Doug Allen, SAG’s national exec director and chief negotiator, “not to go on strike.”

The AMPTP reacted with a statement of its own: “It’s now official: SAG members are going to be asked to bail out a failed negotiating strategy by going on strike during one of the worst economic crises in history. We hope that working actors will study our contract offer carefully and come to the conclusion that no strike can solve the problems that have been created by SAG’s own failed negotiation strategy.”

Timing of the vote should come as a huge relief to the Hollywood Foreign Press Association, which was surely wringing its hands over a possible repeat of last season’s disastrous Golden Globes (the previous ceremony occurred in the midst of the writers strike and was subsequently boycotted by actors). Since results of the authorization vote aren’t due until late January, the Globes should go on as scheduled Jan. 11. Brooke Shields, together with Elizabeth Banks, Terrence Howard, Rainn Wilson, and HFPA President Jorge Camara, will announce the nominations tomorrow morning.

More on Hollywood labor:
SAG-AMPTP talks fail
Private Practice stars voted to SAG board
Actors sound off on potential SAG strike
The Golden Globes are off!

Comments (1-30) of 34 Add your comment

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  • Thomas

    Filthy rich greedy actors looking for more money at a time when were in a deep recession and people are struggling for food. A*holes!

  • Anonymous

    i thought 75 percent “yes” vote was required for strike authorization…?

  • Mozz

    oh, that means, potentially, no Academy Awards… that sounds like fun… wooo hooo.

  • mike

    Whatever benefits this union may win will be more than offset by the networks march toward all reality/game/talk all the time. Jay Leno will be on 5 nights a week in prime time!!! Hello!

  • Branden

    Wow.. We’re in the middle of a recession and here they are.. typical greedy stars… oh boo hoo.. you only make 250k+ a year doing 6 months of filming for tv as opposed to making 300k…
    Cry us a river and shut up. If they strike I hope they all lose their jobs and come down to reality with the rest of America.

  • Maria

    i hate them! They want more money and more money while the rest of us work like dogs for just enough for our families.

  • kb

    first we must kill all the unions!!!they were necessary evils during upton sinclairs days, but now their greed is simply putting america out of work…next we must kill hollywood…it had merit in the days when film making, script writing, and acting were noble arts, but those days are long gone…let them strike and see how much sympathy they receive…

  • Linda

    For those of you who are attacking the actors, let me educate you. Only 5% of those you are attacking are the filthy rich. The other Union actors are barely getting by. I represent Actors, and I fight to get some kind of money for the actors. The rates are ridiculous. Advertising agencies and Producers and Clients are making billions out of consumers, but they want to pay Actors $100.00 to make a commercial or a photo shoot. They are not fighting to get richer. SAG is fighting for new media. The internet has practically ruined my business. Clients like Kodak, Wal Mart, Cheerios have found new ways to market and continue to make billions and pay the actor $100.00. So the actors must strike. Time Warner claims they have to raise their rates based on the economy; well actors must get raises based on the economy.

  • Joe

    When the writers strike happened last year I was behind them until a friend convinced me otherwise. The same arguement my friend gave me also applies here. Why is it that (in this case) the actors want a bigger portion of the revenues when they assume none of the financial risk? I understand that if a movie grosses $300M domestic that the actors want profit participation, but if a film bombs, are those same actors going to return their paychecks? If SAG wants more money for their members, then perhaps they should invest and become equal partners in the projects they make with the studios.

  • John Wurts

    I’m a public accountant and see this from another perspective. If there is a strike now it be the death blow to our already devastated economy. 110,000 actors out of work in L A would put 500,000 other people out of work and then we will see even more jobs outsourced from the USA to other countries, including the film industry. I don’t care much for British movies or TV, but that’s what we could be stuck with. Please wait until the economy is strong to push for improvements, otherwise we may cripple media industries here permanently. We no longer make clothes or tires or televisions in the USA because of unions hitting industries at times of weakness. Let’s learn from history and put our community first for now.
    John Wurts
    President
    John Wurts Financial Services
    johnwurtsfinan@aol.com

  • mike

    Okay, I get that most actors aren’t mega-rich. The ones we see on our tv’s and movies are a small percentage of all actors. But you know what – they chose to go into a field that has extremely high competition – there are many more actors than there are jobs, and only a select few really make it big. Already, their pay for 1 day of work is almost more than I make in a three days of work. And that’s fair, how? Sure, they may only work a day or two a month but again, that isn’t anyone’s fault – that’s the reality of the profession. To be willing to put thousands out of a job in this economy so THEY can make even more per hour than they do now, so they can get extra money for this or that – well, there may be an argument to fight for this another day, but to do it now when others who can’t afford it will feel the consequences of their actions is completely unconscionable.

  • Nerwen Aldarion

    I understand that not all actors are as rich as Angelina Jolie, however I cannot condone another strike after we are still reeling from the WGA strike last year. The economy is not doing well and another strike to benefit the actors is going to hurt EVERYONE associated with films and TV shows at a time when they really need their jobs. I hope the SGA members take this into account and vote no on this, they aren’t going to have any sympathy from the public.

  • rkar726

    A strike would be a huge public relations mistake for both sides. This is not a good time and I would fear the backlash.

  • Mel

    How convenient to wait to have a strike AFTER their award show. And while thousands of people are laid off from their jobs every day these ‘actors’ (with the exception of Mike Farell and a few others) have the nerve to refuse the same deal that the writers and other unions took. Selfish morons! I hope the studios close if there is a strike, lock out the writers, producers and everyone and fill the T.V. with reality and foreign shows.

  • Mel

    Joe, I like your comment on financial risk. Makes a lot of sense to me. Maybe the studios should quickly stick this in their terms with the unions.

  • patrice

    Greedy, Greedy. That is the only word I can use to describe actors (as well as writers, directors etc.) I know that most actors have two jobs, but is striking now the correct and humane thing to do with the global economy suffering? Don’t you idiots realize that an actors strike could help push the US into a depression? Haven’t enough people lost their jobs, homes etc. due to the writers strike? Now you morons (actors) want to put more people on the street to fatten your own wallets? I am so disgusted by the actors and the entertainment industry in general and the greed that goes with the industry. You actors wonder why productions are moving out of Hollywood? Due to your greed and obvious uncaring attitude towards the people below the line, who work their butts off (12 hour days, 7 days a week) just to make 70k a year, they are once again being screwed. If you strike, I hope you all lose your homes, cars and can’t feed your families just like the rest of us who are suffering.

  • Ren

    If the actors strike I will be very disappointed. With the economy the way it is now – movies are a great diversion – but if I can’t afford to see a movie – how then, will the actors get paid? HMMMM! They should think before striking. It’ll be more “foreign” movies and tv for me..

  • S.H._Drew

    It seems to me that the President of SAG should be an actor who in industry actually wants to hire. Of course Alan Rosenburg wants a strike – it won’t affect his paycheck because last time I checked, no one’s banging down his door to offer him parts anyway. Seriously, have the actors learned NOTHING from the damage the industry suffered from the writer’s strike? I imagine most of them will be way worse off after a strike than before it. And I agree with the earlier comment that stated the actors themselves can’t whine about their pay because they chose to go into that profession. If they are unhappy, let them work jobs where they work 8 hours a day for minimum wage. Then I’m sure they’d be VERY happy with their current acting pay

  • Douglas Ford

    “To vote or NOT to vote; that is the question!”
    So I say to SAG members, ALL members, whether you have worked just one day this year, or every day for the last ten years – “Put up, or hang your head” The only way to resolve this dispute is to VOTE! Which way is down to you, your conscience and common sense. At least have the guts to show the industry and the country and the film business around the world that the GUILD does what YOU, the membership, want and not the other way around. Anything less than 90% of Guild members voting will not reflect a TRUE vote. And one further point, remember this contract will expire in 2011 so you can expect to start negotiations for the next one at end of 2010 and that’s only two years away… remember the golden rule of successful negotiation, “One side would (happily) have taken less and the other would have (been pleased) given more” So whichever way you’re going to vote, send your ballot back ASAP.

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