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AI, residuals, and lack of trust. Can Hollywood find a happy ending?

Tourists hoping to spot A-list actors, ready for their close-ups here on Sunset Boulevard, will be disappointed. Most of the 160,000 members of the Screen Actors Guild-American Federation of Television and Radio Artists are journeyman actors working in video games, audiobooks, commercials – even puppetry. 

“We’re not people that are living in mansions … drinking green smoothies all day,” says Gabriel Rissa, who works in a restaurant to supplement his roles in TV shows such as “Scandal” and “American Auto.” “It’s people that believe so strongly in their art that they’re willing to make sacrifices.”

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What led to the first double strike of actors and writers in more than 60 years? Both sides point to a business model under severe strain even before the pandemic and a breakdown in trust.

At a time of upheaval in the entertainment industry, the question of who should make sacrifices is at the core of this double strike – the first time both actors and writers have walked off the job together in 63 years. They point to a vanishing middle-class life, brought on by the shift to streaming models. For their part, studio executives point to cratering revenues that meant they were laying off thousands of employees before the creative talent walked off the job. Both sides are gearing up for a long fight. And the sharp rhetoric reveals a breakdown of trust amid profound industry disruption. 

“People are recognizing that this is a historic moment,” says Brian Welk, a senior business reporter for IndieWire.

Outside Netflix headquarters, the sidewalk is filled with actors and writers marching together in a historic strike. It’s over 90 degrees Fahrenheit. A few palm trees, towering over the street like giant dandelions, offer scant shade. Yet the protesters, holding fans and picket signs, are in good spirits as they chant slogans such as “LA is a union town, on strike, shut it down …” 

Actors put down their scripts and walked off sets last week. That is, off the movies and TV shows that hadn’t already paused production when the Writers Guild of America commenced its strike in May. The unions representing performers and writers have each reached an impasse with the Alliance of Motion Picture and Television Producers during their respective contract negotiations. 

Tourists hoping to spot A-list actors, ready for their close-ups here on Sunset Boulevard, will be disappointed. Most of the 160,000 members of the Screen Actors Guild-American Federation of Television and Radio Artists (SAG-AFTRA) are journeyman actors working in video games, audiobooks, commercials, corporate or educational videos, and even puppetry. 

Why We Wrote This

A story focused on

What led to the first double strike of actors and writers in more than 60 years? Both sides point to a business model under severe strain even before the pandemic and a breakdown in trust.

“We’re not people that are living in mansions, living in luxury, drinking green smoothies all day,” says Gabriel Rissa, who works in a restaurant to supplement his roles in TV shows such as “Scandal” and “American Auto.” “It’s people that believe so strongly in their art that they’re willing to make sacrifices.”

Ali Martin/The Christian Science Monitor

Gabriel Rissa pickets in front of Netflix’s Los Angeles offices, July 17, 2023. Mr. Rissa has been acting for more than 15 years and has concerns about changes to pay structures and the impact of artificial intelligence on the entertainment industry when he already needs a second job.

At a time of upheaval in the entertainment industry, the question of who should make sacrifices is at the core of this double strike – the first time both unions have walked off the job together in 63 years. Actors, and before them writers, point to a vanishing middle-class life, brought on by the shift to streaming models that weren’t governed by previous agreements. That erosion of quality of life began before the pandemic, and prior to the recent rapid advances in artificial intelligence. For their part, studio executives at Walt Disney Co. and others point to cratering revenues and stock prices that meant they were laying off thousands of employees before the creative talent walked off the job. Both sides are gearing up for a long fight. And the sharp rhetoric reveals a breakdown of trust amid profound industry disruption. 

“People are recognizing that this is a historic moment,” says Brian Welk, a senior business reporter for IndieWire, a film industry site. “It was shocking to me to see just how many actors and writers together were all very much on the same page in terms of their agenda and how unified they were.”

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