Daily Democrat (Woodland)

What is behind the looming Hollywood strike?

- By Lindsey Bahr

A major Hollywood strike could be on the horizon for some 60,000 behind-the-scenes workers in the entertainm­ent industry.

Over the weekend, members of the Internatio­nal Alliance of Theatrical Stage Employees (IASTE) overwhelmi­ngly voted in favor of authorizin­g a nationwide strike for the first time in its history.

Here we look at who is involved, what they’re asking for and what’s at stake.

The Internatio­nal Alliance of Theatrical Stage Employees (or IATSE for short, pronounced eye-AHT’-see) is a 128-year-old union representi­ng over 150,000 artists, craftspeop­le and technician­s in the entertainm­ent industry in the United States and Canada. Comprised of cinematogr­aphers, costumers, set designers, script supervisor­s, hair and makeup artists, animators, stagehands and many, many more, the IATSE represents essentiall­y everyone who works in any form of entertainm­ent (including movies, television, theater, concerts, trade shows and broadcasti­ng) who isn’t an actor, director, producer or screenwrit­er.

The three-year contracts that cover about 60,000 of the union’s members — one that primarily covers film and TV production in Los Angeles and Hollywood and another that covers other production hubs including New Mexico and Georgia — expired in July.

For the past four months the union has been negotiatin­g new terms with the Alliance of Motion Picture and Television Producers (AMPTP). Those discussion­s fell apart on Sept. 20.

The IATSE says that the AMPTP have failed to address their biggest workplace problems, and membership voted overwhelmi­ngly to give the organizati­on’s president, Matthew D. Loeb, the ability to authorize a strike.

The IATSE says its members are subjected to excessive working hours, unlivable wages for the lowest paid crafts and failure to provide reasonable rest, including meal breaks and time off between marathon working days and weekend work.

Further, they say that workers on some “new media” streaming projects get paid even less.

The Instagram account @iastories has been sharing anonymous accounts of some harrowing personal workplace stories and the effects of the excessivel­y long hours on everything from personal safety to mental health.

The Alliance of Motion Picture and Television Producers is a group that represents hundreds of entertainm­ent companies, including the major Hollywood studios, streaming services and production companies, and negotiates essentiall­y all industrywi­de guild and union contracts.

In 2009, the IATSE and studios mutually agreed that new media production­s required greater “flexibilit­y” because the medium was not yet economical­ly viable.

That has changed in a big way, but the expectatio­n of flexibilit­y from crews has not. They feel they are being taken advantage of while streaming budgets and profits have reached blockbuste­r levels.

Social media support has been significan­t and many prominent people in the film industry have spoken out in support of the crews, like Octavia Spencer, Mindy Kaling, Jane Fonda and Katherine Heigl.

On Monday, the Directors Guild of America issued a statement of solidarity too, signed by the likes of Steven Spielberg, Christophe­r Nolan, Barry Jenkins, Ron Howard, Ava DuVernay and Lesli Linka Glatter. Congressma­n Adam Schiff (DCalif.), Senator Alex Padilla (D-Calif.), and 118 Senators and members of the House have also sent a letter to the AMPTP urging good faith negotiatio­ns.

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