From Newsgroup: rec.arts.disney.parks
Actor Billy Porter may have won an Emmy and appeared in a string of major studio productionsubut the ongoing Hollywood strikes are forcing even him
to make tough financial decisions.
ActorsA union SAG-AFTRA, which has around 160,000 members, went on strike
last month over pay, working conditions, and concerns related to the use
of A.I. in the film industry.
It joined the Writers Guild of Americaua union representing thousands of Hollywood writers, who havenAt worked since early Mayumarking the
industryAs biggest shutdown in more than six decades.
Ahead of SAG-AFTRA announcing its strike, Deadline reported that studio executives were gearing up for an extended stalemate between actors and
the Alliance of Motion Picture and Television Producers (AMPTP)uwith
sources telling the publication that studios were willing wait it out for months.
oThe end game is to allow things to drag on until union members start
losing their apartments and losing their houses,o an anonymous studio executive told Deadline, with several other sources reportedly echoing the same stance.
Now, it appears that the strikes may be crossing that threshold.
Porteruwho starred in the television series Pose and AmazonAs 2021 version
of Cinderella, as well as making history as the first openly gay Black man
to win an Emmyutold British newspaper the Evening Standard he was being
forced to make major sacrifices because of the strikes.
oI have to sell my house,o he revealed in the interview.
oWeAre on strike, and I donAt know when weAre going to go back [to work],o Porter said. oThe life of an artist, until you make f***-you moneyuwhich I havenAt made yetuis still check to check.o
Representatives for the SAG-AFTRA Foundation and AMPTP were not available
for comment.
Porter told the Standard he was lined up to appear in a movie and a TV
show from Septemberubut now onone of that is happening.o
oSo to the person who said: aWeAre going to starve them out until they
have to sell their apartments'uyouAve already starved me out,o he said.
For the actors on strike, much of the breakdown in negotiations with AMPTP
has been related to residual payments, the amount actors are paid for
reruns of a movie or show they appeared in, which have been squeezed with
the rise of streaming platforms.
Many of those on the picket lines have taken to sharing their paychecks on social media, with some revealing they have received checks for as little
as 3 cents for their parts in content made by major studios.
Taking on Disney
Porter also lashed out at Disney CEO Bob Iger, who publicly labeled
striking actorsA and writersA demands as unrealistic and odisturbingo last month.
oTo hear Bob Iger say that our demands for a living wage are unrealistic? While he makes $78,000 a day? I donAt have any words for it, but: f***
you,o he said in the Standard interview which took place in London.
When Iger returned to the helm of the entertainment giant last year, the annual compensation package Disney offered him was worth $27 million
(almost $74,000 a day).
A spokesperson for Disney was not available for comment on PorterAs
interview.
oIAve kept my mouth shut. I havenAt engaged, because IAm so enraged,o
Porter said in last weekAs interview. oIAm glad IAve been over here. But
when I go back [to the U.S.] I will join the picket lines.o
Porter isnAt the only actor facing tough financial circumstances because
of the strike. The SAG-AFTRA Foundation, which assists striking members of
the union financially, has been asking ohigh-profile talento for donations
to help those on the picket lines who it says are facing odire necessity.o
This story was originally featured on Fortune.com
https://finance.yahoo.com/news/hollywood-studios-reportedly-want-strikes- 150707089.html
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