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SAG to strike LOS ANGELES – The Screen Actors Guild plans to send strike authorization ballots to more than 100,000 union members on Jan. 2, a date that leaves the Golden Globes safe but puts Oscar night within reach of a potential boycott.
Votes will be counted on Jan. 23, nearly two weeks after the Golden Globe Awards ceremony, but ahead of the Feb. 22 Academy Awards, the most important date on the Hollywood calendar. Approval by 75 percent of voting members is required to pass the measure. If it is approved, the SAG national board can call a strike. Guild President Alan Rosenberg has said a strike is the last resort to force a resolution in stalled contract talks with major movie studios, but that if it is necessary, it would be timed to have the most impact. "SAG members understand that their futures as professional actors are at stake," Rosenberg said in a statement Wednesday. The guild is at odds with the studios over the treatment of Internet productions and the benefits that actors can get when earthquakes or other unforeseen events, such as a strike by another union, shut down productions. For instance, actors have an outstanding claim for payments they say they are due for work lost during the 100-day strike by writers last season. That strike reduced the Golden Globes this past January to a glorified press conference. In the Internet debate, the guild wants union coverage of all shows made for the Web, regardless of budget, and residual payments for actors on made-for-Internet shows that are reused online. Currently, almost all provisions for made-for-Internet productions are negotiable or at the producer's discretion. Major studios called the strike vote poorly timed. "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," said a statement by the Alliance of Motion Picture and Television Producers. That group represents studios such as Viacom Inc.'s Paramount Pictures and Time Warner Inc.'s Warner Bros. The alliance has stuck to what it called its final offer made when the previous contract expired June 30. Similar deals have already been accepted by other unions, including those representing directors, writers, stagehands and a smaller actors union. On its Web site, the movie and TV producers' group says the Screen Actors Guild has so far foregone more than $37 million in pay increases by continuing to work under the terms of the old deal. On Monday, the guild held a closed-door town hall-style meeting at the Harmony Gold Theater in Hollywood, and Rosenberg said he was "encouraged by the response" by the 500 members in attendance. But the guild, which had expected to send out ballots this month, pushed back the strike vote date after the producers' alliance accused it of using the holidays to ensure a low turnout and leave more working actors out of the process. "We want SAG members to have time to focus on this critical referendum," Rosenberg said. The guild plans another town hall meeting in New York on Monday and one in Hollywood on Dec. 17. As well, the guild is sending out e-mails and fact sheets to members, and will put up testimonials from prominent actors such as Hal Holbrook and Ed Asner on its Web site to urge actors to vote yes. But actors are divided. In guild elections in September, an upstart group called Unite For Strength broke up the majority control of the national board that had been held by a faction that supports Rosenberg. However, the Unite group has not clarified its position on the strike vote. Lisa Rinna, a reality-TV regular and former "Melrose Place" and "Days of Our Lives" star, said she's hoping actors won't strike. "But the unfortunate thing is it's the only way we're going to get what we want in these times, when it's the worst of the worst," she said Wednesday night at a private book-launch party in Beverly Hills. Last week, at a benefit performance at the University of California, Los Angeles, "Mad Men" actor Jon Hamm told The Associated Press that he hoped the labor strife would not affect next year's TV season. "I wish it was not happening. I wish there were sound heads on both sides who were able to discuss this like adults," he said. "If history is any judge, it's not looking good, but we'll see, especially given the financial climate." ___ AP Entertainment Writer Derrik J. Lang contributed to this report. Under certain circumstances, urgent circumstances, desperate circumstances, profanity provides a relief denied even to prayer. | |
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they were threatening this over the summer during the writers strike i thought the issue was resolved since it didn't happen You CANNOT use the name of God, or religion, to justify acts of violence, to hurt, to hate, to discriminate- Madonna
authentic power is service- Pope Francis | |
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yeah...I was hoping it doesnt happen. The whole time during the summer I was quite nervous. It would really stink. Less money that can be earned and more reality TV shows....ugh! Going to church doesn’t make you a Christian, any more than standing in a garage makes you a car. | |
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I was reading an article about a lot of shows on Broadway closing due to the financial situation in the U.S.
In addition, I read an article about Cali going bankrupt by March? I am not so sure a strike is a good idea right now? It seems a little greedy considering the economic climate. | |
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I hope they come to an arrangement soon enough. The last strike certainly didn't do some shows good. | |
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Is this about me! ^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^
Being happy doesn't mean that everything is perfect, it means you've decided to look beyond the imperfections... unknown | |
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wow, really didn't want a a strike to happen | |
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What else is new | |
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They want pay raises for all the crap they make | |
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