Los Angeles Times

Telemundo, actor union in dispute over wages

SAG-AFTRA alleges network pays talent far less than Englishlan­guage counterpar­ts.

- By Yvonne Villarreal

Telemundo is coming off of a big summer. The network has been steadily closing the ratings gap with Univision, long the Spanish-language heavyweigh­t in broadcast television.

But just as Miami-based Telemundo is riding high, it is facing mounting questions from Hollywood’s largest union over the treatment of its talent.

SAG-AFTRA has been locked in a protracted dispute with the network over its efforts to unionize Spanish-language performers on Telemundo production­s, mainly telenovela­s. The union has accused the network’s corporate owner, NBC-Universal, of embracing a “double standard” when it comes to Spanishlan­guage and English-language performers.

According to the union, Telemundo pays its performers half what their English-language counterpar­ts earn on other NBC-Universal-owned networks. The union also contends the network doesn’t provide its telenovela actors healthcare, contribute to their pensions, or pay standard overtime — benefits shared by their English-language counterpar­ts at NBC.

“The disparity of wage earning for Spanish-speaking performers versus English-speaking is stunning,” SAG-AFTRA President Gabrielle Carteris said in an interview. “The idea that they do the same work and just because they’re doing it in Spanish it’s half the wages, is unacceptab­le.”

The labor dispute comes as Hollywood is facing scrutiny over its lack of diversity and questions about whether nonwhite actors and other members of the creative community are unfairly treated by the industry.

Although Telemundo is not under contract with SAG-AFTRA, its sister company, NBC, has long been a union signatory.

Telemundo spokesman Alfredo Richard disputed the union’s claims that it mistreats its actors. He said the company supports “our employees’ right to join a union or not,” and that they should be able to conduct a secret ballot election to decide whether to join SAGAFTRA.

“We remain committed to making Telemundo a great place to work for our employees and continue to invest in them to ensure their salaries and working conditions are competitiv­e,” Richard said. “We are

dedicated to Telemundo’s continued growth, which has created hundreds of high-value jobs in the U.S. and provided a valuable service to the Hispanic community.”

Telemundo recently announced that it would offer healthcare and retirement benefits to performers next year. Pay discrepanc­ies reflect the vast difference­s in budgets between Englishlan­guage broadcast networks and their Spanishlan­guage counterpar­ts. A show such as CBS’ “The Big Bang Theory” can garner 14 million viewers, as it did last week. By contrast, a Telemundo program might average just under 2 million viewers.

For years, the Univision and Telemundo networks have worked to secure a larger percentage of advertiser­s’ budgets — pressing their case that the more than 50 million Latino consumers wield significan­t spending power. But they continue to yield less per eyeballs than English-language networks can bring in.

SAG-AFTRA’s organizing campaign dates to 2001, when NBCUnivers­al bought Telemundo. But the push to unionize has intensifie­d in the last year as Telemundo has made gains in its programmin­g and business.

In late August, SAGAFTRA aired a 30-second commercial that called for parity in pay between English-language and Spanishlan­guage talent at NBCUnivers­al. It aired on Spanishlan­guage stations in Los Angeles, New York and Miami.

Tensions seemed to have eased last month when SAG-AFTRA announced it would represent performers and hosts for Telemundo’s Latin American Music Awards, which will be televised from the Dolby Theatre in Hollywood on Thursday. But the contract was secured through the show’s producer CMS Production­s and Telemundo maintained that the agreement did not apply to their talent.

SAG-AFTRA’s goal is to sit down with NBCUnivers­al and work out ground rules on how to proceed, said Steve Sidawi, the union’s organizing director.

“We don’t believe there could be a fair vote in the current environmen­t,” Sidawi said. “The ground rules we hope to establish would include determinin­g who would be eligible to vote in an election and how to make sure performers are able to make choices without fear of retaliatio­n or production flight.”

A person close to Telemundo said SAG-AFTRA rejected the company’s invitation to have a secret election. A SAG-AFTRA representa­tive said there was no such invitation.

Alex Ruiz, a Mexico City native who appeared in Telemundo’s telenovela “¿Quién es quién?” (Who is who?), said he was paid roughly $5,000 per month. Telemundo paid Ruiz, who had a supporting role, though his manager, who he says took 10%.

Ruiz, 35, said he made about the same amount in just five days of shooting “Touch,” a short-lived Fox TV show that aired in 2012.

He said he often worked 12 hour days, without scheduled breaks. He also said that some stars were on set until 11 at night, and had to show up ready to work at 7:00am the next morning.

“They work you until you drop,” said Ruiz. “You feel like you are being taken advantage of. If you are paying me less, at least the treatment should be better.”

 ?? Alan Diaz Associated Press ?? SAG-AFTRA wants to unionize Telemundo’s Spanish-language performers. Above, Adriana Fonseca and Jose Luis Resendez of “Corazon Valiente.”
Alan Diaz Associated Press SAG-AFTRA wants to unionize Telemundo’s Spanish-language performers. Above, Adriana Fonseca and Jose Luis Resendez of “Corazon Valiente.”
 ?? Al Seib Los Angeles Times ?? “THE DISPARITY of wage earning for Spanish-speaking performers versus English-speaking is stunning,” SAG-AFTRA President Gabrielle Carteris said in an interview. Above, Carteris at SAG nomination­s last year.
Al Seib Los Angeles Times “THE DISPARITY of wage earning for Spanish-speaking performers versus English-speaking is stunning,” SAG-AFTRA President Gabrielle Carteris said in an interview. Above, Carteris at SAG nomination­s last year.

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